Looking cuts down Miami un What is up, Dolphans 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 as always I am here to bring you your daily
dose of Miami Dolphins football. And on today's show, we are cooking with gas now as we are onto the defense and the edge defenders in this defense, will break down the Miami pass rush, the scheme that produced the tenth most sacks in the National Football League one year ago, the idea of pressure above all the individuals that make it happen, and much much more. Plus another roster move this week ahead of training camp. All of that in a heck of a lot more here on this edition
of the Drive Time Podcast. So just before we dive into one of the the real glamour positions in the NFL and one of the positions that gets the marquee as kind of build as a premium position, so to speak, we have an addition upfront at a position that is there to attempt to thwart the edge rushers into mown paris. He is now a Miami Dolphin. The team announced on Monday they have signed the offensive tackle. He's six ft six, fifteen pounds. He was undrafted in out of Stony Brook
with Washington. He played there for two years and then with the Falcons, Browns and Washington football team last season, and now he's here in Miami. He's played pretty sparingly in his career. Didn't get any reps last season with an NFL club, just a handful of snaps over his first two years on special teams. But he will come in and compete in a deep offensive line. All right.
So we're talking about edge rushers today, and I feel like amid a roster or a system or offense or defense that is maybe misunderstood by a large percentage of the casual observer. And I like to use that term a lot here on the podcast too. I suppose kind of set up an explanation of something that might be considered a little more esoteric to the fan that likes to just go ahead and crack a beer and watch the game on Sunday and not get much deeper into
it than that. If that's you, and you come to this podcast for educational purposes because you can learn the game while you drive to work, while you get your workout in, while you go for your walk, whatever the case may be. That's kind of my thought process on the podcast is to help give you more inside without
forcing you to go do the work yourself. So here we are, and I think that one of the reasons this defense can be so misunderstood is that it's you know, the NFL in general is a far cry from what it used to be in terms of, you know, used to have a four three defense, and that meant you played four down linemen every single play with three linebackers every single play, and the only time you went to a nickel defense where you had to sub out one of those linebackers for a defensive back was when it
was third and eight and the team brought their third receiver onto the field, or a situation where those four guys up front, they did not leave the field unless they got injured. So if you were a backup nose tackle, you only played snaps if the guy in front of you went down. So defense has evolved tenfold from that point, and Brian Flores and Josh Bowyer and this Dolphins defensive staff have kind of taken that to another level. In terms of the mix of coverages and fronts and blitzes
and different calls. They have different formations. I mean, I've seen the argument on Twitter so many times about is this a base four three or three four? It's neither of those two things, because in the NFL today, your four three and three four defenses are never based because that means you don't have your nickel cornerback on the field or nickel safety whatever it might be, your big nickel.
And if that's the case, I mean we're running five defensive backs in the National Football League at a clip better than six, So that's gonna be your base. And then there are variations up front off of that, because it's never just a three four or a four three. You can go to four, you can go oh four, you can go five, oh like there are. There are endless combinations up front, and I think that gets lost on a lot of fans that again just want to enjoy the game on Sunday and kind of check out
the rest of the week. That's why we're here for you on the podcast. So this defense has so many different fronts that I mean, if I were to go through and list them all and try to go off the lineups of each of the different possibilities they have.
That would be a whole podcast in and of itself, but I want to go ahead and just start here and talk about how ideally, or I guess kind of philosophically and the in football, your coverage typically dictates the front, so you go coverage first, then your your front, and this defense has been built kind of according to that philosophy. In terms of where the money has been allocated. We talked about this, how the secondary has or the cornerback position has the highest pay rate in the NFL, like
the receivers do on offense the passing league. We covered that on the Receiver podcast, and then you kind of round out the rest of the defense with some of these guys are high resource expenditures. You know, Ray Kuan Davis is I around draft pick Christian Wilkins a first round draft pick. That's not to say they don't value the positions. There's just a little bit of of allocation in terms of where the money is on this defense,
and you can kind of read it accordingly. And I saw one tweet from I think it was a Pro Football Focus account. I can't remember exactly which one. It was one of the individuals who had a comment saying
that you can manufacture rush, you cannot manufacture coverage. That was met with some backlash, but I kind of understood where he was going because Brian Floores and Josh Bowyer last year did such a great job of creating pass rush and pressure on quarterbacks through the scheme and getting quarterbacks uncomfortable with a variety of guys that can come
and bring that pressure on the podcast. Now, we'll cover more about the salary allocations later here on the Cornerback Podcast later this week, but I want to talk more about this front here because it's not just guys that can go through and or rather line up and run through an offensive tackle, or a guy that can run right around that offensive tackle like Cameron Wake for instance, was a guy that just on one on one matchups repeatedly,
over and over again. And that's great to have on your defense, but it just isn't the way this defense functions. Not to say those guys can't do that, but that's just not the calling card that guess it's gonna be
something different. Coach Flores loves to mix things up. He's talked about it and So with that in mind, you talk about games up front, loopers, stunts, twist slants, and that's all kind of generated to force the protection to get lost on a certain body, free up somebody for a free run on the quarterback, and that can often generate not just pressure or sacks, but big plays and takeaways,
as we saw last year. So I think you come into year three under Brian Flores and now Josh Boyer as the d C and his second season here in Miami under that position, and I think it's safe to assume that even though there has been some more turnover, it was nothing close to what we saw last year in terms of the roster and the fact that there is a full off season of work on field with the O, T A s and all the stuff the Dolphins people do this offseason that they were not to
do last season. I have to imagine that helps a team that is so multiple, is so versatile, and has so many different calls. I mean, shoot, we saw it last year. It was about I guess Week five ish was when the defense really took off in that San Francisco game when they just beaten better than Niner's quarterbacks who went from Garopplo to then Nick Molin's later in
the game. The Dolphins just did so well or was it C. J. Bethard, I think it was Betther third, But the Dolphins did so well in that game to kind of come together. And we even had a Dolphins defender on the podcast last year who said that trip to San Francisco and staying out there for a couple of days kind of helped galvanize the team and create that camaraderie and get the defense playing at the level that we grew to know the basically the last eleven
weeks of last season. So when you look at this position, I mean, there's so many things that can be valued in this defense. Lateral agility, I think is one of the top ones, because guys have to be able to work not just forwards and backwards, but side to side on those stunts, because often the stunt is gonna be a defensive tackle who slants out and then the defensive vent comes up over the top of him and works inside trying to get the quickest route to the quarterback
through at a gap. It's not just about creating those one on one situations as much as it is putting more bodies on one particular part of the offensive line that they can block with their slide protection or trying to get them to blow a protection call, which happens. It happens. I mean, look at the Emmanuel aug Basch trip sack last year against the Rams, the Andrew van gink Wil touchdown. I mean, he comes clean from the
C gap. That's not supposed to happen, like you are supposed to block that gap on defense, Like you can see corners or safety's coming off the edge buzzing that go unblocked because they didn't get picked up with a defensive end. That's not supposed to happen like ever, So it creates those opportunities for this defense, and that lateral agility and flexibility to play inside outside from so many
of these guys helps contribute to that defense. Now, however, I think you look at the addition of a Jalen Phillips with the eighteenth pick in Miami got that pick in very quickly. Were we were there on Draft night at hard Rock Stadium to pick before goes off, and all of a sudden, Miami's up and the pick is already in on the ESPN telecast, and I think that kind of gives you the idea of how they felt
about Jalen Phillips. That's a great answer to me, Phillips is to the problem that so many defenses have run into with the likes of a Patrick Mahomes or a Josh Allen and Russell Wilson, those types of quarterbacks that are just elusives. I'll get out and can extend and make the big play that really burns you in the end because you can send the house and it can work,
and it does a lot of the time. But those guys are so adept at extending and making plays otherwise that all it does when they do break the tackles and get free of that of that pressure and of that rush, is it puts bodies behind the quarterback. Lessons
the number of bodies you have downfield and coverage. And that's when the big plays downfield happened, because you can bottle up Russell Wilson for an entire game, but then he can, you know, make the big play down the field at the end of the half that put seven points on the board and that winds up being the difference in the ball game. So granted, you know this mixture of rush and coverage and all that fun stuff was very successful at just about every juncture last year
for Miami and this defense they were. They were really productive throughout the course of this season. Heck, they even turned over Patrick Mahomes three times. They had a chance on two or three occasions already called the the Van Noy one that kind of went off the fingertips. And then there was one down the field to Xavien Howard late in that game that he had hands on that just couldn't quite squeeze. That interception off Josh Allen in the September game, you get two or three of those
dropped interceptions. That game changes all of a sudden too. So it's not like they just want to go away from what they were. I'm not saying that whatsoever at all. But the more you can do, right, So, now you pair those two things together, you can incorporate the ability to rush for effectively and play coverage with the confusing blitz is the stunts, the twist the games and different guys dropping whether it's a Christian Wilkins or a Zach Seeler at times. Then you add another element that the
offense has to account for. So you know, let's say you get a protection call blown and it creates a one on one chance for both Agba and Phillips off the edge with seven men in coverage. Man, you have to love your opportunity there to make a big play on defense to get a stop, whatever it might be. And a good example of mixing it up in terms of how you go from one look to another to
confuse the opposing quarterback would be that Chargers game. The Xavian Howard pick at the end of that game on Justin Herbert to close that thing out, because there was a lot of man calls in that game throughout the course of that game in Miami did so well to blanket those receivers that the Chargers have, and that's a good receiving corps. And this Dolphin secondary got after in
that game. But playing a lot of man, lots of Cover zero as we saw last year, the zero blitz zero pressure, bringing guys with no safety over the top and playing man coverage on the back end. Then in that very crucial spot you see the cornerbacks drop out and the safety kind of take the middle of the
field that indicates Cover three. The quarterback throws it maybe anticipating some man coverage out there, and all of a sudden, your cornerbacks in a back pedal where he has eyes on the quarterback, not the man, which indicates his own. He drives on it. He's breaking on the ball before the ball even comes out, and you get yourself a game ceiling interception. Great execution, but the call was just flat out brilliant there from Josh Boyer and Brian Flores.
I think another thing you see is the inclusion in this defense at this position, for for instance, of guys that can play both forward and backwards. Andrew Van Gekl is a great example. I loved his tape at Wisconsin, and he brought that right into the NFL, even in his preseason tape from twent nineteen where he's he's chipping a guy that runs to the flat, he's locating the
slant in and behind him on that combination. Just recognizing the route combinations, getting depth and playing forward and closing down on those guys. Jalen Phillips can certainly do that as well. Vince Bagel has done some of that. Some of the guys on this roster have done that again and again and again, broken record. The more you can do right, So let's go ahead and get into this preview. You can find the written copy up on Miami Dolphins dot com as well as our our training camp preview
rolls right along here. Not very many personnel changes at this position, and the quick disclaimer here is that we're talking about edge defenders today. We did interior defensive lineman on Tuesday, and that's basically your bigger body guys. You're you're heavy ends that work inside from the four technique going inward. This position is the opposite just war technique guys defensive lineman, but typically the more lean builds that go outward towards the five, six, seven, eight nine technique,
So you get the idea there. Additions to this group, Brendan Scarlett comes over from the Houston Texans, Jalen Phillips the eighteenth pick in the draft, and the loan departure from this group was Kyle van Noy, who goes back to New England after one season in Miami. The coaching staff. You know, you gotta put Austin Clark in here too,
because we talked about him on yesterday's podcast. But he is the defensive line coach, so he worked with both groups obviously, but that's kind of a combination of Dolphins have of guys that work with multiple coaches at this position. They talked about it last season with Robb with Rob Leonard, with Austin Clark as well, and we detailed Austin Clark on the Tuesday podcast and go check that out if
you have not heard it yet. But the outside linebackers coach is Rob Leonard, so go ahead and focus on him here today. He's entering his third season in Miami. He served as a defensive line assistant last year and prior to Miami. This is pretty rare for a coach. He spent the first six years of his career with the New York Giant, where he worked as a defensive assistant, assistant, defensive line coach and the outside linebackers coach, so he's
in familiar territory there here in Miami. This group, at a glance, look, they filled up the stat sheet the production chart pretty well last season forty one sacks that was tenth best in the NFL. You know who the players are. Emmanuel Aga had a career year with nine sacks. He made six tackles for loss force three fumbles, and
bad down five passes. Second year linebacker Andrew Van Gigel also force three fumbles in route to his five and a half sack season with nearly double the tackles for lost from his rookie year, going from four and twenty nine team up to seven. Vince Bagel comes back from a torn achilles injury that robbed him of a promising start of his Dolphins tenure in twenty nine team. He misses out on twenty altogether, but he is back this season.
He actually led Miami and quarterback pressures in twenty nineteen with thirty four, and that was after he arrived one week prior to the season via trade with the New Orleans Saints for linebacker Kiko alons Oh and then newcomer Bernand Scarlett. Has played fifty six career games, both on the edge of the defense for the Houston Texans and as an ACE special teamer. We talked about Jalen Phillips.
He was the first edge defender selected either outside linebacker or defensive end in this year's draft, and that comes off the heels of a very dominant season at the U for Phillips, where he notched eight sacks, fifteen and a half tackles for loss and had to pick and three passes defense, and he gets that length that we talked about with Ogball with the rest of this front. These guys are long and strong with powerful hands. They're crafty pass rushers with the lateral agility. He fits right
into that mold. Jason Strowbridge can play inside outside. Coach Flores talked about that from the moment they drafted strow Bridge out of North Carolina. He got himself fifty five snaps last year on defense as a rookie and eleven more on special teams. And then a couple of other players here. Second year Tyshan Render out of Middle Tennessee played eight snaps as a rookie while Nick co was a member of the Dolphins practice squad much like Render was for most of the season. So that's the group
at a glance. The individuals here as we go forward, Jalen Phillips number fifteen. That was a bit of a curveball for me as I prepared the written piece, because I go in order of jersey number, and usually you start sometimes you get in the seventies, every once in a while in the forties, and we'll get to hear linebackers, but thinking about defense events and edge players like fifteen was not on my radar, but that's what he wears. So check out fifteen on the field on practice or
a training camp on the practice field. He's a rookie out of Miami twenty two years old opening day, and this guy's looks like something built out of the lab. I mean the prototypical look and athletic measurements to really play the part of a true edge defender in the NFL. Sky was the number one rated high school prospect coming out of high school back in his day, just edging out Nagy Harris back then. He led a very destructive Miami Hurricanes defense last season and then blew the doors
off his pro day. What a great final season it was for Phillips, leading him up to the eighteenth pick in the NFL Draft. He measured in the percentile or better in the forty yard dash four five six at two hundred and sixty five pounds. That's that's absurd. He also ran four one three shuttle ones on the broad jump and a ten yard split of one five nine. Again,
all of those percent tient or better. At six ft five, two hundred and sixty five pounds, so you have the straight line speed, the change of direction, your lateral agility, your explosive lower half, and ten yards split and the broad jump there to measure how he can get off the ball and really put the tackle in a bind
from the minute the ball is snapped. In addition to the sack production, Phillips registered forty quarterback pressures via Pro Football Focus on just two hundred and eighty six pass rush reps. That is a pressure every six point eight drop backs. And he's more than just a rusher. He had eighteen run stops last year. Those, of course, are tackles within two yards of the line of scrimmage that landed in the ninety percent tile among college edge defenders
on PFF last season. We go on to Andrew Van Ginkle speaking of the forties Jersey numbers number forty three out of Wisconsin. He's got two years in the bag so far, entering his third twenty six years old come opening day, and since he came back off the i R in week number twelve because he was having a great camp his rookie year. Then he got injured, missed
the first eleven weeks of the season. He comes back and starts making, starts producing right away for this Dolphins defense, and as he goes deeper into his career, his production per snaps play continues to impress me. I mean, he recorded one sack, six QB pressures, and seven run stops with four tackles for a loss as a rookie, and then he had that big year to jump We've talked about on this podcast a lot, and he did it
with five and a half sacks. He picked up nine team pressures on two hundred and twelve pass rush reps. That's one every eleven point two reps. And he talked about this as well as Coach Clark and Coach Leonard and coach Hobby last year as well. Adding strength was a point of emphasis for Van Ginkl and his coaches. In the result was twenty two run stops on one d and ninety six run defense snaps. Eleven point two percent of the time he's making a run stop on
that defense. So I mean, you consider that even half the runs come in your direction, he's making one fifth of those plays two yards or less of the line of scrimmage. And the third year linebacker has also displayed the ability to win his one on one pass rush situations. We saw him do that last year in the Vegas game and then playing backwards and coverage. Talked about it off the top. His ability to recognize route concepts has always been a favorite trait of his of mine. He
defeats blocks and route to the ball carrier. I've got clips on Twitter at winkol NFL Andrew Van Ginkle. Click on that video link. You're gonna see plenty of clips of him going in there, knifing in, flattening the edge, bowling up a guard, pulling guard or a fullback or a tight end, coming over and split zone and getting his hands into the trash and tripping up running backs and making plays that way. And how about the ball production. I mean three forced fumbles last year on five and
a half sacks. He also blocked a punt that turned into immediate points for the Dolphins. And you go back to college, there's no fluke or no small sample size, whatever you want to call it, because he had six force fumbles in college, a couple of picks, passes broken up. He was just a monster of finding the football at Wisconsin as well. And you go back to last year trying to project these guys as they finished out the season and what that might mean going into the new
season for them. From week twelve to seventeen last year, he ended up as PFF number twelve overall graded edge defender, picking up three sacks and ten run stops over that time. What a year Van Ginkle had to close out last season. Speaking of Wisconsin, Van Ginkel's Wisconsin teammate Vince Bagels back number forty seven four years in the NFL so far, twenty eight years old on opening day and again thirty four quarterback pressures in twenty nineteen led the team. He
also led the way with seven tackles for lost. That was tied with sam eeg Van, who will be on tomorrow's Off Ball Linebacker podcast. By the way, and Bigle achieved those feats despite playing just forty nine snaps over the first four games of that season because he was September arrival coming over in that trade for Kiko Alonso.
His season comes to an end in training camp with the achilles injury, but over the final twelve games of twenty nineteen, after he kind of got his feet wet got acclimated to the defense, he recorded at least two pressures and nine of those twelve of games and piled up twenty one run stops over that same period. He added a pick plus. You watch his highlight reel or his his all twenty two reel. There are so many hustle plays where he's chasing down guys from the back side.
There was a great clip against the Colton twenty nineteen where Brian Hoyer uh gets in trouble and has to leak out the other side of the formation after Beagle was the one that kind of disrupted the play front side, and Hoyer tried to escape backside, and Beagle just runs him all the way down across the formation and gets a big stop. He also has some really nice pass rush moves when on one against quality upon It's go watch the Monday night football game that year against the Steelers.
He had a lot of good reps in that game as a pass rusher. Moving on to the fifties, another newcomer here Brandon Scarlett, number fifty seven, five years in the NFL, all with Houston. He played at Stanford, Cal before that the crazy Cal Stanford transfer there twenty seven years old opening day, and during his five years in Houston, he played one thousand, three hundred sixty nine snaps on defense and nine hundred and sixty two more on special teams,
and his career has been interesting one to track. He's kind of had the best. He had the best start of his career in ten with two QB hits and five run stops and interception and a pass breakup, really checking off the stat sheet there, but then he got hurt prematurely with an injury or a season ended prematurely, I should say with the injury and had to cut that season short. Then nineteen picks up where he left off by posting a career year with nineteen QB pressures,
nineteen run stops, three tackles for a loss. Is kind of rotational edge in that defense. He missed five games but posted four QB pressures and eleven run stops. He's been a when he was healthy, five hundred snaptaker other years to three hundred snaps in those range when he misses time. But he is big and posing and he loves the physical element of the game. He hits people.
He sets a strong edge and they can feel it when he gets when he gets their hands on him because they conally kind of have that knock back you look for on the defensive line, and tight ends are gonna have to work to access a clean release off the line when he's out there, because he will reroute you until you're blue in the face. Scarlett's motor is perhaps the most evident on actial teams, where he's recorded fourteen tackles on coverage teams over his career. Jason Strowbridge,
number fifty eight. He's in his second season out of North Carolina. He'll be twenty five years old on opening day. He had a great Senior Bowl back in playing some three TEX and five tech different positions up front on the defensive line. Very versatile defensive lineman who plays you know he can play multiple spots. Coach Floors has talked about that in his final year at UNC QB pressures and thirty run stops via Pro Football Focus most of his time last year on the practice squad, got about
fifty five reps on defense. Will get a better look at Jason Strobridge here this training camp and then number Emmanuel five seasons as a pro out of Oklahoma State, twenty seven years old. A great blend of length and power and heavy hands and the lateral agility we talked about.
He condensed in size of three technique a lot last year in addition to playing off that edge, and he enjoyed that breakout season with sixty six quarterback pressures that was third among all edge defenders via Pro Football Focus, and his twenty six run stops checked in inside the top twenty as well. He was a consistent snap eater who played both off the edge and inside and filled up that stat suet with the five batted passes, three forced fumbles, including two that were scooped up and scored
by his teammates. And he's got a great variety of past rush moves, but none better than the patented deadly cross chop. We go ahead and go back to the February podcast with the Manual where he talked about that move.
Some good inside there from a Dolphins defensive end at that particular job, and you know, Ogba really kind of embodies what made this group so so special last year in terms of the fact that a lot of these guys played, you know, forty fifty snaps a game and and they didn't really have to challenge their depth that often on this particular position group. But this year I think the group is deeper, so maybe you get even fresher, you get some more reps. We'll see how it plays
outcome camp, come preseason, and come the regular season. How about a guy that maybe you haven't heard a lot
from in a while. Jonathan led Better Number had one game his rookie season out of Georgia a U d f A. He'll be twenty four years old opening day, and he went from U d f A where you have to climb the depth chart to start her on opening day of that rookie campaign, and he had a health of a game against the Ravens and that opener fifty one snaps in that game, he had a sack, he had two more quarterback pressures and four run stops
in that game. And if he can recover from the knee injury that cost him last year when he was working out in the off season after missing fifteen games in twenty nineteen. But he's an intriguing player because of what he offers from a physical skill set standpoint. He's big and posing. He's long, he's two two pounds six ft four, can condense inside, play the edge a little bit too, so he has some pop in his game and a couple more guys here, Tyshan Render number ninety six.
He has one year experience so far, mostly on practice squad out of Middle Tennessee. Twenty four years old on opening day and he made the debut with most of his work coming on special teams on defense. Didn't play a whole lot, but as final year in college, he had ten TFLs, three and a half sacks, he forced two fumbles, had an interception, and he also won mts US Defensive Player of the Week six times and won the team's Grinder Award for his work in the program
spring practices. So you know he's going to come willing and ready to work every single day when he shows up out their great hustle players saw it last year at camp every single day hustles but around special teams on defense and otherwise. We finish up here with one more player who spent the entire year on the Dolphins practice squad, Nick co out of Auburn. And if you notice the theme here, a lot of these guys can play that big heavy end position, two eight pounds at
that spot. Number one year experience, all on the practice squad out of Auburn and played alongside Marlon Davidson and Derrick Brown and that really disruptive front of the Auburn Tigers a couple of years back. He'll be twenty four years old come opening day, and he did rex shop in college, twenty one TFLs and nine sacks rushing all
over the formation there at Auburn. He finished his college career with fifty five QB pressures and fifty run stops, and again on the practice squad the entire year for
the Miami Dolphins. So again, this group just like the in your defensive line, just like the receivers, just like the offensive line, every position we've talked about so far, depth competition skill at the top that you know you can count on for the way they've produced on their previous resumes in the NFL, but also upside intrigue and competition abound. Man Training camp is almost here. We are one week away from practices. Next Wednesday, we have a
Dolphins practice on the field at the new facility. I cannot wait. We're going to have training camp notes up on Miami Dolphins dot com Travis's notebook, as well as daily updates on the podcast here, So keep it locked right here. The Drive Time podcast. We are with you every single day throughout the rest of the football season, and if the Dolphins are practicing, we have a podcast. You might recall last training camp we were six days
a week. Some day some weeks we had the scrimmage, and this year will have preseason games and crossover joint practices plenty to come here on the podcast. You do not want to miss any of it. That time of year is coming right around the corner. And one last note before we get out of here. The NFL Network a now earlier this week they're going to air a record twenty three live preseason games, So you're August has already booked in full full of football games, especially to
national television games. The Dolphins will have. Out of their three this season, the Week one game against the Bears will air on NFL Network. That's gonna be August fourteenth at Saturday at one o'clock Eastern at Soldier Field. The Week two game will not be nationally televised, will be local here in Miami CBS four against the Falcons and the Week three game, and all these will be on CBS four for you guys here locally in South Florida, but The Week three game will be on the CBS
National broadcast. That's a four o'clock kickoff against the Bengals on August twenty nights. So that's your preseason information. I can't wait for those games. Man. It's been a long time since we had preseason football and I love it. I know I'm rare in that sense, but preseason ball coming on the pike, just by training camp practices, just like your Drivetime podcast reviews. As for this edition of
Drive Time, that's gonna be my time. You all, please be sure to subscribe to the podcast on Apple pod Cast, Leave us a rating, leave us a review. You can follow me on Twitter at Winfold NFL, follow the team at Miami Dolphins check out Set and o J on the Fish Tank podcast, John and Bo on the Audible, and of course Miami Dolphins dot com your daily source of written training camp review content and that can serve as your training camp guy when you're out there at
practice as well. And until next time, fins up.
