Things we learned in Miami Dolphins' 31-6 loss at the Cleveland Browns
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Things we learned in Miami Dolphins' 31-6 loss at the Cleveland Browns
"The Dolphins looked awful. Their largely dink-and-dunk offense was hampered by dropped passes, the defense was haunted by numerous errors, special teams committed a turnover, and penalties (11 penalties, 103 yards) were constant. Oh, and tight end Darren Waller had no targets before leaving with a pectoral injury in the secxond quarter. This was ugly, and it's yet another indication the era of general manager Chris Grier, McDaniel and Tagovailoa might be coming to an end."
"Dolphins coach Mike McDaniel saw his regular season record fall to 29-29 (.500), and his overall record fall to 29-31 (.483), including his 0-2 record in the playoffs. As a reminder, in the regular season Brian Flores was 24-25 (.490), Adam Gase was 23-25 (.479), Joe Philbin was 24-28 (.462) and Tony Sparano was 29-32 (.475). By season's end, McDaniel could have a worse winning percentage than all but Philbin."
The Dolphins dropped to 1-6 following a 31-6 loss at Cleveland marked by dropped passes, defensive errors, a special teams turnover and 11 penalties for 103 yards. Quarterback Tua Tagovailoa was at the center of a week-long controversy, while the roster has shown season-long fatigue and poor execution. Tight end Darren Waller exited with a pectoral injury after receiving no targets in the second quarter. Mike McDaniel's regular season record fell to 29-29 (.500) and his overall mark to 29-31 (.483) with an 0-2 playoff record. The team has underachieved despite talent gathered by general manager Chris Grier.
Read at Sun Sentinel
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