Cowboys at Dolphins: Miami completes a shutout of a division foe

Before the Seahawks-Eagles Monday night tilt, the Dolphins rank second in the league in sacks with 48, which is just one shy of the team record of 49. Miami is tops in the league in QB hits with 117. Most of the teams near the top of these lists feature a single sack artist who carries the load with contributions from the rest of the squad.

It takes a whole team effort for Miami. In terms of sacks this season, Zach Sieler (7.5), Christian Wilkins (8.0), and Bradley Chubb (9.5) are all in the top 30. With Justin Madubuike and Denico Autry as his teammates at defensive tackle, Wilkins and Sieler are ranked third and fourth, respectively.

Going even further, the Fins are the only team with five players in the top 50 (Emmanuel Ogbah, 6.0) and four inside the top 40 (Jaelan Phillips, 6.5).

November 25, 1993 is the date. were at Texas Stadium for the Thanksgiving Day game between the Miami Dolphins, who were visiting from their hometown, and the Dallas Cowboys. Dallas leads the game by one point, but in the closing seconds, Miami is setting up for a field goal. A powerful kick

On Sunday, Miami showed off its swarming rush, dunking the Jets quarterbacks six times overall and five times in the first half. Miami outgained the Jets 197 yards to four at the half.

And the turnovers started to mount up. With two of his three sacks resulting in forced fumbles, Chubb now leads the NFL with six for the season.

After recording just one interception in the first half, Brandon Jones doubled his career total with two picks in the second half.

Miami accomplished all of this without three secondary starters. Due to Xavien Howard’s injury, Jalen Ramsey had to cover Jets wide receiver Garrett Wilson in a shadow capacity. Wilson was covered by Ramsey on 23 of his 42 routes run, according to Next Gen Stats, and he only managed to score one target, a

After the Dolphins thrash the Jets 30-0, we’re going to discover just how good Miami truly is | Greg Cote, Miami Herald, has an opinion.
Even though Miami won handily, the real test is still to come.

Quarterback Tua Tagovailoa stated, “What we put out Monday was embarrassing.” We wished to avoid experiencing that once more. Possibly have gone either way. Could have been self-pitying. But you moved on and let that go.

After Miami’s defeat on Monday, there was a sense that Miami needed to win on Sunday because a second straight loss could have jeopardised the division title and created anxiety. Rather, the Fins won their first shutout and their first home game since blanking the same dejected Jets 24-0 on October 18, 2020.

Coach Mike McDaniel described the performance on Sunday as “as proud as I’ve been of any performance.”

Only what comes next matters now.

The next three games will either reveal the Dolphins as pretenders or provide proof that they are legitimate Super Bowl contenders if they are to win the AFC East.

However, Sunday didn’t reveal much about the true calibre of these Dolphins.

The next chapter will reveal almost everything.

Westerners. Ravens. Cash.

“This year, we can have something really, really special,” Tagovailoa declared.

In the words of Mostert: “Act in February. In Las Vegas.

They are correct, I think.

For Miami, this Super Bowl feels more intimate than it has in nearly four decades. However, we are still unsure of the precise proximity.

The clear-cut discovery comes next.

On Christmas Eve, it begins.

Miami is hoping that some defensive players will return despite playing a shutout.

Miami, which defeated the New York Jets 30-0 on Sunday, will evaluate all three of its veterans this week to see if they can be cleared medically to play on Sunday. Pro Bowl cornerback Xavien Howard is recovering from a hip injury he sustained last week, and starting safeties DeShon Elliott (concussion) and Jevon Holland (two MCL sprains) are also sidelined.

Unexpectedly, Howard missed his third game of the year due to what was described as a “game-time decision.” The Miami coaches have consistently expressed their intention to keep Howard from returning to action hurt, as he did for the majority of the previous campaign due to groyne strains.

The four-time Pro Bowl is the aim.

Elliott is nearly done with the concussion protocol.

Elliott was sidelined for the entire week of practice after suffering a concussion during Miami’s 28-27 loss to the Tennessee Titans. The 47-game starter is almost done with the NFL’s concussion protocol, according to McDaniel.

In order to reach his final stages, he must attend practices this week and avoid experiencing any concussion aftereffects.

He has been making good progress, and we anticipate reaching the end of the concussion protocol. But once more—concussions—we’re unfortunately well-versed in that, so I just want to make sure he’s cleared to play and not worry too much about when it will happen, head coach Mike McDaniel said. But as you can see, [we] are really optimistic.

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