The Miami Dolphins have the most prolific offense in the NFL so far this season as the team has plenty of pieces that make it so dominant. And head coach Mike McDaniel is quite proud of the way all those pieces fit together.
During a recent press conference, Mike McDaniel was asked whether he, quarterback Tua Tagovailoa, or wide receiver Tyreek Hill should get most of the credit for the dominant offense. But McDaniel had a pretty blunt response to the question.
“My answer to that would be who the F cares? Because it is a team, we’re working together, and I know one thing: I’ve coached a long time, I haven’t seen people do what our guys do,” McDaniel said. “As a teammate we’re all dependent on each other and I’m not in any hurry to prove myself without those guys because they’re part of who we are. To try to say it’s this person or that person is missing the point. It’s a team working together, people working together. Myself, Tyreek Hill, Tua, cool. What if no one’s blocking? You know what I mean? We’re all connected in that way.”
McDaniel is right. It truly doesn’t matter who is most responsible for the success as long as the team is indeed dominant.
We’ll have to see if they can carry that dominance into the rest of the season.
About Kevin Harrish
Recent Posts
Dawn Staley sets the record straight on Geno Auriemma’s apology
UConn Huskies head coach Geno Auriemma may have apologized publicly following his heated exchange with South Carolina head...
UCLA blasts South Carolina, wins first national title with an exclamation point
The UCLA Bruins are this year’s national champions in emphatic fashion. While much of the women’s college basketball...
Geno Auriemma blasts referees, calls out Dawn Staley after blowout loss
The UConn Huskies suffered a blowout loss to the South Carolina Gamecocks in the Final Four on Friday...
John Harbaugh thinks Isaiah Likely will have better stats without Lamar Jackson
“That wasn’t the thing in Baltimore..."
The Illinois-UConn Final Four matchup is a Bill Murray special
The actor cheered for Illinois during the 2005 Final Four, and now he's rooting for his son Luke, who's a UConn assistant coach.
LeBron James blasts Memphis Grizzlies: ‘You guys got to move the team’
LeBron James has played for three different teams throughout his NBA career, and there’s a chance he could...