To us touch style waddle stuck into the end zone of Miami tight window. They had to get that touchdown on that play. They get it. What is up, Dolphins? And welcome to the Drive Time Podcast, part of the Miami Dolphins podcast network, covering your team, your Miami Dolphins. How's it going everybody? I am your host, Travis Wingfield. And on today's show, another draft pick joins us here
on Drivetime. We'll hear from Dolphins fourth round pick number one overall wide receiver out of Texas Tech, Eric Easookama. He'll talk to us about learning under a Texas Tech legend and Wes Welker the private workout the two had prior to the draft with the Dolphins wide receiver coach, how he improved throughout his time at Texas Tech, and
much more. Plus will break down his tape and get some reaction from the national media landscape on new Dolphins wide receiver Eric I zoo Kama from the Baptist Health Studios inside the Baptist Health Training Complex. This is the Drivetime Podcast. Let's go ahead and kick off this edition. This special draft pick interview edition of the Drivetime Podcast. My sit down with new Dolphins wide receiver Eric Zukama.
What's up, Dolphins? Travis Springfield here, the host of the Drivetime podcast on the Miami Dolphins podcast network, and I'm happy to be joined today by new Dolphins wide receiver Eric Izokama. I get that right, Azukama, apologize about that. Eric. Welcome in, man, Thanks thanks for joining us. Thank you for having me so first off, welcome to Miami. You get the call come down here today. How you feeling
this it? I'll hit you yet, man. I'm just taking in, you know, step by step and just letting it all sink in and and it's it's very overwhelming. But you know, I feel like once I get some time really just let it all and take it all in. It it's it'll happen eventually. I mean, I'm sure it's It's been a whirlwind weekend for you here. But I wanted to go back to your draft day set up. I wanted to know about how the layout was for you guys. Were you watching TV? Did you have something to kind
of keep your distracticus. I know it can be a little bit nerve wracking. Did you have your family friends that wanted to look like for you guys? Family friends just hanging out. Uh. Woke up day three and kind of just sat on the couch for a little bit, and my friend was like, hey, you know, let's go throw the football outside. And we and I go outside and we're throwing the ball around and we have also have a TV outside. So I'm kind of looking looking at the TV, but I'm not looking at the picks
at the time. And you know, I get a call from for a lot of day and I looked down on my phone and I didn't think it was real. And I look I answered the phone and and coaches like, yeah, you know, we want you in Miami. And I look at the picks on the TV and Miami head is the next, you know, two picks away. So until I saw my name, I didn't, you know, believe it really, but it all it all settled in there and happy.
You don't have to wait very long, I'm sure pretty quickly on on that Saturday morning you got the call or Saturday afternoon should say, you got that call. So, but you had your phone and I was smart to keep the phone on you outside. You gotta have that. But so I want to hear kind of the moment you got the call like the emotions going through your head. You can take us for the moment you got that exact call. And I know you said that didn't feel real yet, but like, how did you feel in that moment?
It was, you know, everything I've ever dreamed of as a kid, you know, and you wait your whole life to be in this opportunity and and to get the call it was. It was just a surreal moment. And I had you know, family and friends around me scramming
in the background, you know, excited for me. And I'm running around the pool like four times, and and I'm trying to you know, keep my composer as I'm talking to like pr team and and and the GM and you know, and just thanking them for you know, taking it, taking a chance on me and giving me the opportunity. It's really good to hear. So you talk about talking to coach McDaniel a little bit and that draft call. What was your impression or having a chance to meet
Coach McDaniel. What's your early impression of him? Man, great guy? Uh, you know, hoping you know, get to know him some more as I'm here as a as a dolphin and very excited for the opportunity, but offensive cornator Frank Smith. Having met him yet, I have not um but looking forward to meeting the whole staff and and letting them pouring to me and and give me all the knowledge
I need to be great here. So I know one guy you did meet and know about really well is a wide receiver coach here, former Texas tech red Raider. You got to be so far I have to learn under West Welker, right man. Uh, yeah, he's a tech legend. You know, I've I've looked at his his pictures all around the facility since I've been there for the last four years. And and to be in the same place as him and learn from him, it's gonna be great. So you had a private workout with him prior to
the draft. What was that like? He came out, you know, he had you know, fans taking pictures and tech legend and executive and then we got to the workout and he's just giving me some gim you know, give me good technique tips and and coaching me up. And and I'm really excited to to work with him and get this opportunity. Is he a pretty high energy coach? Was he was a yelling screaming a little bit, or was
he pretty pretty relaxed? Relaxed, you know, And that's that's really you know, the respects factor you get, you know when you know your coaches relaxed and but he knows exactly what he's talking about, and you know, you gotta listen when he's talking, and you know, I'm just really excited. It's I can tell on your face it's he's I mean, he's a guy that kind of read defined the slot position a little bit. So it's a great guy to
learn from. And he'll have a room where you joined some talents like Tyreek Hill, Chitlin Waddle, Cedric Wilson, Trent Sherfield, Preston Williams, Lynn Bowden, River Craycraft, and the list just goes on and on. Man, how familiar are you with the players in that room? And what excites you most about playing with those receivers? Man, I just want to learn. I feel like I'm I'm gonna come in and the veterans on this squad and a lot of great elite talent in the room, and I'm gonna sit there and
I'm gonna learn. I'm at a lot of questions and you know, I'm gonna watch how West coaches them and and ask the right questions and that as many questions as possible, just so I can gain as much knowledge as I can, uh, you know, during training camp and O T A S and all that, and I'm just excited, you know, to see all the guys and and get to know everybody. A lot of those guys really excelled
with the ball in their hands after the catch. I saw you average right around eight yards after the catch last season, one of the tops and all of college football. I don't know if you knew that, but that's the staff that I found on you. And you talked about your run after the catchability in your in your in your media availability of the day. That's one of the buzzwords around this building this offseason. What makes a receiver good with the ball in his hands and chewing up
yards after the catch? Man, it helps out with everything you know, down in distance, if you need you know that extra two yards, You know that guy is not just gonna get hit and go down. He's gonna try to, you know, gain the extra a couple of yards. And it helps out with the quarterback as well. And you know, making quarterback look good, you know, throwing throwing a little slam and being able to break it for another thirty
forty yards. So uh, and it's it's gonna just you know, revamp the whole offense and and help out this team win those pot past jet sweeps you take for sixty yards. I don't help the quarterback stat line a little bit and didn't have to do a whole lot, just pop the ball out there. You also talked about a tougher catch right, making the contested catches down the field. You talked about growing in that area. How did we able to kind of come along in that that part of
your game at Texas Tech? Just buying into the to the weight room, just learning. You know, my body is bigger than most people. You know, so when the ball is in the air and I jump up for you know, a lot of guys won't be able to just move me out of the way while I'm attacking the balls. So, you know, buying in some way room and eating right and getting in nutrition and you know, playing big to
your size is definitely what helped me. Uh. You know, develop with contested catches probably helps you a little bit in the downfield runblocking game too, right, a big part of that as well. So going back to kind of your your background here a little bit back and fort Worth. You grew up with six siblings, which which child in the pecking order are you? I'm number three, number three, so you've got the experience of older and younger. So you took how was that kind of growing up in that?
And it with with six brothers and sisters? Man, Uh so six brothers and sisters. My mom and my dad were divorced, and uh, you know, just growing up a lot faster than you know, a regular kid would. And you know, with that, you know, it's it's a curse and I'm blessing at the same time because you have all these siblings and you know, uh, you know, you have a lot of people to talk to you Hank, spend time with, play video games and play sports with,
you know, on your downtime. But also like they can you know, be you know, a little little brother can be annoying or you know, tell on you or anything like that. But you know, I love all of them, and we're all like a lot older now, so you know, we're just appreciating each other's company at this point and you know, love each other, keeping each other and check. I'm sure as kids. You mentioned playing some sports, some three on three football games, full time quarterback. That's kind
of how you guys laid it out. Yeah, teaching my little brother how to catch football, you know, make the cutback juke, you know, on the sideline and being able to you know, have family football out there on Thanksgiving. Oh,
that's perfect. What a great turkey bowl that is. And then of course you mentioned your mother, the clue that kind of held everything together for you guys there, and you talked a little bit about how important she was and how you taught how she taught you how to grind the seven to seven, seven and seven pm shift. You talked about at what age did you realize, man, my mom is basically a superwoman. At a really young age.
She used to go to work and then I have a game in the morning, and she picked me up and take me to the game, and then be at the game and while I'm running a touchdown, she's running down the sideline with me and screaming my name, and
then right back to work that day. And it's and I watched her grind every day and it was just like Man, I have no excuse not to, you know, get up and grind, you know, just watching that growing up and being as old as I am now and still watching her do the same thing I was doing when I was when I was a kid. So how was that moment with her in the draft yesterday when you when you guys kind of embraced for the first
time and realized, like, mama made the NFL. It was like, man's we've we've talked about it since I was a kid. My mom was always you know, preached it preached it to me that you know, you have NFL talent and you're going to go to the NFL. And and I've you know, I've always wanted to make it, so I could, you know, prove her right, you know, so basically to be able to actually, you know, say I'm in the NFL and hug her. And we've hugged probably twenty times
in the last twelve hours. So um, you know, it's it's it's been a great feeling. That's what it's all about. Man. I got two more questions for you I get you out of here. What are you most looking forward to about your opportunity here in Miami I'm just I'm looking for the opportunity to win as a team, you know, to learn from great people and you know, leave a
legacy for the next guys that come. Uh you know, coming from Texas Tech, you know, I did everything I could to leave something there for the younger guys behind me. And now I'm in that role to you know, learn and then grow and then leave a legacy behind me again here. So I'm just excited for the opportunity to be able to uh just help this team win. The last question for you, what kind of person and player are the Dolphins getting in you? They're getting a dog.
I'm gonna say that every time anybody's ever asked me that, because that's just what I That's who I am, and I'm gonna go every play and I'm gonna play hard every player. I love to block. Like I said, my rackability. I love when the balls in my hand, I'm looking to score. I don't look to round, a bounce, a get tackled or by one person or anybody. You're just gonna get a hard working guy that has a high motor and and that's gonna bring people with them. I
love that. Go find that pilot right, get getting that end zone as a Comma appreciate time. And there he goes a fun chat with new Dolphins wide receiver Eric Azukama. We're gonna come back on the other side of this break and talk a little bit about more of his background, his film, all the fun stuff we talked about here on the Drivetime podcast Coming your way next, brought to you by Auto Nation. Back here on this draft special, the wide receiver Eric Azukama edition of the Drivetime Podcast.
Here we're taking a look at his background a little bit. We'll get into the tape and segment number three, but I want to go ahead and start off here by just kind of looking around his profile, where he came from, how he got to college and eventually to the Miami Dolphins. And you know, he came from Texas. One of I would say three states between Texas California, and we'll give it to Ohio that can compete with Florida in terms
of high school football talent. Right Like, that's that's about the four states that are in play towards the top, although we all know the really reality is that Florida kind of reigned supreme in that regard. Now the numbers as far as NFL players goes is tilted towards Florida. But those that play ball in Texas will tell you it's just different out there, right, small town Texas high
school football as sure as a lifestyle. But kind of a cool story here about zu Kama is that he played at Timber Creek High School, a school that opened up as recently as two thousand nine, and now he's the first player from that school from Timber Creek High School to be drafted into the National Football League. He was All State his junior season with nearly fiftred receiving yards and twenty touchdowns, twenty of them through the air. Boy,
times have changed since my high school days. We used to run the football fourty times a game and throw at five or six. That was only fifteen years ago. But before those high school years, Azukama was a kid growing up with six siblings. As you heard him discuss, being raised by his mother, Laurette, a frontline nurse who taught Eric how to work, and the mentality she instilled in him was the primary reason why he's here today
a member of your Miami Dolphins. And his own words and he penned and awesome in my own words piece that you can find on Texas Tech, dot Exposure, dot co. In it, he writes about his mother working long hours and still finding ways to get to his games, and how he seemed to play some of his best games
when she was there in attendance. He talks about the support system of his family and also the environment at Texas Tech fostering their players and caring about them as people, and his dream of being drafted, which was really his goal since he was seven years old. In the story,
really cool piece, highly encourage you check it out. Next, Let's go ahead and here from the NFL Draft media on what Zukama scouting reports are and what the Dolphins are getting in this new receiver from Texas Tech and NFL dot COM's Lance Zerline, who we reference here on the podcast Quieter Bit. He has a lot of skin in the draft game. He's been doing it for a long long time now, but he had this to say
of Azukama. He has enough speed to get down the field and challenge coverage while displaying in a Nate sense for protecting and finishing contested catches underneath. We'll talk a lot more about that here in just a moment, and the Draft Network lists their favorite traits of his game as his big playability, competitive toughness and balls els and the expanded notes and their laud his willingness to block and Azokama gives effort to block the defender he's responsible for.
They write, and we'll also hustle down the field for a key block for a teammate, or to throw a key block, I should say, for a teammate down the football field. I just keep going back to what Mike McDaniel talked about saying, this is a football player playing the wide receiver position. I just love that descriptor to this from the Draft Network. A big receiver who can line up in the slot and work the middle of the field and serve as a red zone target with
a big catch radius. They love his hands, the big strong myths that can snatch it off frame. Again, all this will cover in my own tape review here in third segment of this podcast. Let's go ahead and roll the tape here of the moment the draft pick was announced on NFL Network and what a cool moment it was. From Christ the Redeemer in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, as our draft pick was announced overseas by one of our new marketing territories with the National Football League. Let's go
ahead and go to the scouts on the breakdowns. Receiver and as outstanding ends. He has some of the most incredible catches of anybody in this draft class. You can watch him against Florida International on the sideline, just a ridiculous catch, fantastic hands, gonna get down the field and went on jump balls CD. That's what he does best. Yeah, and it's not just all you know, everybody wonders about Texas Tech and the old days of the gimmick offense,
scheming guys, op, what have you. This is a tough receiver who works inside the scenes, also can work out to the perimeter. And we had good look at this. You know what people say, throw short, run long, he can. He can do that for you as well. I really liked his tape going through. I've been able to sit with bid Fedel for a long time. Three days worth. He liked this guy, turned him out and turned him onto me. I was with him totally on that one.
This kid could play. So Charles Davis there of NFL Network, Daniel Jeremiah, their lead draft analysts. They're really good breakdowns there of his game from two of the best in the game. Let's go ahead and take our last break on this edition of the Drivetime Podcast. Your host Travis Winkfield, brought to you by Auto Nation, will come back on the other side and do my favorite thing we do here on the Drivetime Podcast. Take a look at the
tape next Drivetime. Alright back here on this Eric Azukama edition of the Drivetime Podcast, the one of the NFL Draft, the second selection for your Miami Dolphins in this year's draft. Let's go ahead and get right into the tape. Two games I think really portray his skill set, and I watched, you know, I got a little bit greeding. Went to the highlight tapes, I mean receivers. It's a little bit easier to watch highlight reels of them and kind of get a feel for how they compete on the balls
that are targeted for them. You can also watch the full game reels on YouTube, but as far as watching the tape, went through two full games and then gotten to YouTube as well. So going back to you know, I want to go back as well, because I just
think that the full complement of what he did. Their Texas Tech can give you a better snapshot of what his game is because we talked about this right like, there was a lot of tumultuous circumstances around the quarterback situation during his career there, and he still managed to produce some of the most high yardage or the best yardage totals in the Big twelve year and a year out.
So let's go ahead and kick it off with an Oklahoma game I watched, and he starts in the very first play of the game, and this was a theme that I picked up throughout this watch that he really has an innate ability to chew up off coverage by getting out of his stance and onto the defensive backs toes right away, and that helps him snap the route off after getting the defensive back to commit by flipping
their hips. And typically you watch them, they kind of fear when he gets to the outside upfield shoulder quickest because they know that that is a position where he can high point the football and also come back and play the back shoulder ball. Now, on this particular play, he's got a six yard cushion with inside leverage, and you guys know by now the inside leverage means we're gonna lamp on the inside shoulder closer to the quarterback of the wide receiver and try to cut off those
inside releases. So he pushes up attacking that inside shoulder because regardless of where the leverage is, we know where we have to get. We have to take that inside release. We have to stack him to have a chance to catch the football. And that's exactly what he does. He gets the defensive back, he gets his outside shoulder on the DBS inside shoulder cuts that thing back across the middle. That puts the defensive back on his back. That's called
stacking him. And then from there, the ball location on this throw is really really good. It's it's a little bit high up off frame, but kind of throwing away from where the coverage is because again it's it's tight contested type of coverage because he had to get to a spot that was really kind of already you know, spoken for as far as the defense goes. But he goes up there and reels it in like a punt returns.
What I mean by that is the hands are turned over with the palms facing towards the heaven heavens, and the both hands up above the helmet, which if you've ever tried to run under a ball like that and catch it in that way, it's it's not easy. It's these guys make plays look so much easier than they
actually are. But I'm telling you, get yourself a buddy, go out in the backyard and have him throw footballs at you, running as fast as you can up over your head and turn your hands that direction and make the catch, because the hand eye coordination is really put to the test on balls like this, where your visions bouncing as you're running along, because you know you're eyes
don't just stay in one spot when you run. It's the test of soft hands to really slow down that fast ball from a college level quarterback, which who can throw a lot harder than your buddy can without juggling the ball and then putting it at cause for risk for getting tipped up into the air and eventually picked off. Like the details of this stuff really matters in eleven on eleven football and these tight quarters when the game
is moving so fast. The very next dry another first and ten with ten to play in the first quarter, so moving along fast here, it's the same look. He's the z receiver, the one to the field, the wide side of the field, the furthest out receiver, and the corner is off with again inside leverage and as Zukama wants to get inside and he does again, it reminds me a lot of the quick slant thrower as we
saw over the last couple of years. And how to you know, put it in the belly of the back, pull that thing out right it and kind of read the conflict defender and then popping in right behind their head. We talk about this, you know, low, low margin for air type of passing game because of the tight quarters, because of the speed of the game these days. But that's why NFL quarterbacks or NFL quarterbacks, because they can operate, you know, in those keyhole type of situations. And we
saw two of that time and time again. And you can only do that as a quarterback if you trust your pass catcher to one hang on to the football, but two most importantly, keep defensive backs from driving through and getting a hand out of themselves, because that thing goes up into the air in those instances, it's more than likely going to come down in the hands of
the defense. And so we saw him doing that whether it was your Davante Parker on in breaking routes, whether it was Mike gat Sicky on those routes, Preston Williams, even Isaiah Ford mac hollands, like the entire company of the roster as far as the taller receivers went, we're guys that you had to trust to throw those routes too.
And I think that when I look at a Zookamas game that he can kind of take over some of those types of roles and refs as kind of that guy that can win quickly inside and shield the defensive back from getting through. And you saw the Texas Tech quarterback trusted him to do that to keep the dB from coming over the top and getting his hands on
the football. Literally before Azokamma makes his next catch in the game, I'm talking about two similar routes there before he gets his third catch of the game, beginning of the second quarter, Tech has two balls picked off in that span on quick slants working off r P O. Because the defender drove through, the receiver got through, batter of the football up into the air and right into a crowded area and falling into fellows Sumers. Defender's arms, so point in case right there, or case and point
whatever that I'm talking about. So eleven seventy in the second quarter, first and ten. This is the third catch of the game. That dial up a shot and he gets a clean release to the outside. But it's the work up the stem that made me note it. Because corners want to get into phase, they take the outside release,
you know, based upon the release. There's always only so many routes you can run based upon the timing of you know, certain route concepts, and just how long it takes to get into those those routes, those routes from
certain looks and certain releases. But when you go outside release, the cornerback wants to get into phase where he can then kind of get within arm's length and fuel the receiver while turning to locate the football because ideally you're on the receiver and have your eyes in the football. But what Azokama does here and he doesn't often is combat the armbar by doing the old you know rex to take Kwon do break the wrist and walk away
from Napoleon dynamite. Not only does he do this and allow him to maintain the speed by fighting off that armbar, of the defensive back. It gets him on top of the dB because the way he rolls the wrist and gets over the top of him, it kind of propels him forward, and that puts him on top of the defensive backs three or four yards beyond him, stacks him up. The ball sales just long and goes incomplete. But it was a big win on that rent from Azukama to
get open vertically and the quarterback just missed him. Let's go to the Houston game and it was a big one seven for one seventy nine. We start in fourteen o nine to play in the second quarter. It's a second and fourteen. They bring him the two from the boundary in motion behind the quarterback and the gun. So what that means is he's not the furthest out receiver. He's the second closest in receiver from the perimeter, and they're gonna motion him in around the quarterback who's in
the shotgun with the running back. So he's the furthest man back in the formation, and they leave that place side where he's motioning to that defensive end unblocked, and it creates this situation where we talked about time right conflict We're not gonna block the guy. We're gonna put him in conflict with our quarterbacks read and eye ability or I discipline, I should say. And if he bites this way, we go that way. If he bites that way,
we go this way. And there's two windows here first and then after he crosses over and just the football i Q. I thought was kind of on the same page as the quarterback and on display here because they both saw the route for the second window. He doesn't hesitate, doesn't get surprised by the football, just hits it and goes and you know, talking about football, i Q. Kyle Crabs in the Lockdown Dolphins podcast does a great job there.
Sent me a clip of him against Texas Christian TCU almost a Texas tech where he is the only receiver to the boundary on a fourth and short play, so
short side of the formation. He's the receiver that split out wide to that side, and there's two receivers over to the field, you know, three wide set, two to the wide side, one to the short side, and you see him jumping up and down, waving his arms and like emphatically motioning at the receiver on the other side of the field, the one to the field, so we
talked about field dimensions on Monday. I couldn't figure out my off, but fifty three and a third yard, you know, this guy's a solid fifty yards away from him, and he's saying, get lined up right because he is covering up the tight end who's covering up the tackle, which means too many men on the line of scrimmage. He sees it, the guy steps back and they get the playoff. They convert the first down. So the high football, like you know, everybody's position, everybody's job was on display there.
But back to this play, as Zukama catches it right in front of a block on this little swing route, side steps it and gets up the sideline, goes for the pylon and is ruled out right at the one yard line. But big run after the catch. I think Josh Hoots posted a clip of it on his timeline if you guys know who he is. Third quarter, second and ten nine seventeen to play. They throw him a
tunnel screen and it's stacked up. There was nowhere to go, and I posted a picture of the still shot of this where there's five Houston Cougar defenders lying on the ground. After he gets done with it, he spins around a block and right into the potential tackle of two defensive lineman who have retraced back into the tunnel to get
him down to the ground. He just tucks the football, stays on balance, and keeps his feet chopping, and not only do they bounce off of him, they propel him forward and he leaves all five defenders on the turf on the ground right there and takes what looks like a tackle behind the line for a loss into a thirty three yard gain. Once he gets the steam going, he's he's a tough guy to bring down. It's it's
a lot of fun to watch. Okay, last one here, I think, yeah, third quarter, four fifty to play second down and seven. It's the very next drive. And you see the counter to the skill set I mentioned earlier with his ability to get on top of the defensive back by denying the arm bar, by rolling over the top and stacking and winning that hand fight on that vertical stem. You can convert those into automatic back shoulder throws like there's you know, hitch go ball back shoulder
the three route conversion. When you get one on one opportunities to your ex That's a lot of what Davante Parker did for a long time, and especially that big year back in twenty nineteen. We saw two hit a bunch of these last year. Once the defensive back has you know, has to access their recovery speed, they have to get on their horse and start getting towards the the goal line. The quarterback can lay that thing right on the back shoulder and then from there, now the
defensive back has to react to the receiver. It's a tough, tough adjustment for them, but an easier adjustment for the receiver, and Azokama can high point it and keep the ball, you know, up away from the defensive backs. That puts even more urgency for them to get back underneath. And when he does this, he just snatches that thing, puts it up and they can't break the hands. So just a really good looking execution of back shoulder balls consistently
from Azokama. In total. I like the urgency that he creates and defensive backs they threw him a lot of hitches against that off coverage and man, you would see that curel flat defender bust his ass to get out there and help the corner with the tackle because you don't want your guys one on one outside on him.
He would roll through tackles. I also love when he would align in the slot and they throw him swing routes or rather throw swing lefts in his direction and he'd carry his block, you know, ten yards down to the sticks on first and ten. So high effort, high energy, high smarts, and a lot of just big bullyball. This guy plays on tape. Coming up on the Drivetime Podcast Friday, Cameron Good and Skyler Thompson rounding out our draft class. On Monday, will break down the undrafted free agent class.
I have a lot of tape to get to on those guys. We're gonna welcome and Emery Hunt from CBS Sports HQ to help us do that, and we'll keep rolling here three days a week on the Drivetime Podcast plenty to come your way. We're also going to take a comprehensive look at the entire roster coming up sometime next week. Also in the meantime, that is gonna be my time you all, please be sure to subscribe to the podcast on Apple Podcast, Leave us a rating, leave
us a review. You can follow me on Twitter at Wingfield, NFL. Follow the team at Miami Dolphins across all social channels. Check out the Fish Tank podcast as well as our Twitter Spaces show with me, Seth and o J every Wednesday night at eight o'clock. Also check the YouTube channel from my sit downs with each of these draft picks for the media availabilities and Dolphins Today, and last but not least, Miami Dolphins dot com until next time finds up Caroline and Daddy Just coming home.
