Late take on Brandon Marshall stabbing

Written by Cody Strahm on .


As all of you are well aware by now, Brandon Marshall was stabbed late last night/early this morning by his wife Michi Nogami-Marshall, but is apparently okay and has already been released from the hospital. I caught wind of the incident before I had to go out of town for the day, so I had no time to write up a post about it until now.

The knife reportedly didn’t harm any of Marshall’s internal organs, which is extremely fortunate considering it was likely inches, if not centimeters away from possibly seriously threatening his life. Marshall’s wife was arrested by the Broward County Sherriff’s department on a domestic-violence charge of aggravated battery with a deadly weapon, but was released on $7,500 bond this afternoon.

Those are the important details.

There will surely be plenty of he said, she said in the coming days, but right now Brandon Marshall, his family, and the entire Dolphins organization needs to count their blessings because this could have been much, much worse.

Now comes the speculation. Marshall’s wife claims she stabbed her husband out of self-defense. If you know anything about Marshall’s past, you know this isn’t the first time he’s had a domestic dispute. He’s been arrested at least three times for domestic disputes involving women, including getting arrested in Atlanta, Georgia in March 2009 for a dispute with Michi Nogami-Marshall, who was then his fiancé.

Although, Marshall has relatively behaved since being acquired by the Dolphins, his troubled past in Denver suggest he likely wasn’t simply the victim last night. But is it really fair to make that sort of assumption? Not enough details are present to know for sure.

You don’t want to completely let Marshall off the hook by saying we don’t know what really happened yet, because his wife had to be provoked to some degree. I don’t think we can jump to conclusions yet either, though, because Marshall’s wife could very well be mentally unstable enough to stab her husband over a simple fight. I guess we will have to wait for the legal process to run its course before we can make such judgments.

Luckily for Brandon at least, the police didn’t report any wounds or bruises on his wife, so it will likely be hard to prove that she was being physically threatened enough to take such a drastic measure. Marshall did, however, reportedly lie to police in a sworn testimony by saying he slipped on a vase. But that’s enough speculation for one night. The important thing is that Marshall is okay. But I’m sure the Dolphins will wrestle with the question of whether or not they did the right thing when they invested two second-round picks and $50 million in Marshall a year ago.

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Dolphins Buffet: King sees Dalton to Miami, Marshall endorses Mallett, and Taiwan Jones is rising

Written by Cody Strahm on .

Peter King predicts Dolphins will take TCU’s Andy Dalton in first
Peter King is one of the most respected sports writers in the business, so when he pencils in Andy Dalton to the Dolphins 15th overall in his latest mock draft, as much of a reach as that may be, it may be time to expect the unexpected in next week’s draft. King’s inside information into Dalton’s latest visit with the Dolphins may have something to do with that prediction.

King writes that the Dolphins sent a portion of their playbook to Dalton only a few days before they were scheduled to meet with him and told him to digest every one of the 100 something formations- including all of the motions, shifts, and protections. According to Dalton, he did fairly well when tested over the playbook by the Dolphins. He didn’t think he fared quite as well on the other test offensive coordinator Brian Daboll threw at him, though.

Daboll supposedly flew into the meeting room shouting at Dalton about not getting the football thrown his way, supposedly to simulate how Dalton would handle a disgruntled receiver like, oh I don’t know, a Brandon Marshall. That’s quite the microscope the Dolphins put on Dalton, even if they do similar test to every quarterback they’ve met with in the pre-draft process. Call Peter King crazy for thinking the Dolphins could be targeting Dalton in the first round, but you have to believe he could at least become a strong possibility in the second and third rounds if Miami hasn’t drafted a quarterback yet and Dalton is still on the board.

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Dolphins 2011 Schedule Release

Written by Cody Strahm on .

We already knew which opponents the Dolphins would face in 2011, but tonight we learned when they would play those teams. The 2011 NFL season is still about five months away and who knows how long the lockout will continue to jeopardize the year. But the new schedule gives the Dolphins a clean slate and a renewed sense of optimism after the bitter taste last year’s 7-9 record left in our mouths. Let’s take a look at the brand new schedule.

Week 1: Monday, Sep. 12 7:00 p.m.
Dolphins vs. Patriots

Week 2: Sunday, Sep. 18 4:15 p.m.
Dolphins vs. Texans

Week 3: Sunday, Sep. 25 1:00 p.m.
Dolphins at Browns

Week 4: Sunday, Oct. 02 4:15 p.m.
Dolphins at Chargers

Week 5: Bye

Week 6: Monday, Oct. 17 8:30 p.m.
Dolphins at Jets

Week 7: Sunday, Oct. 23 1:00 p.m.
Broncos at Dolphins

Week 8: Sunday, Oct. 30 1:00 p.m.
Dolphins at Giants

Week 9: Sunday Nov. 06 1:00 p.m.
Dolphins at Chiefs

Week 10: Sunday, Nov. 13 1:00 p.m.
Redskins at Dolphins

Week 11: Sunday, Nov. 20 1:00 p.m.
Bills at Dolphins

Week 12: Thursday, Nov. 24 4:15 p.m.
Dolphins at Cowboys

Week 13: Sunday, Dec. 04 1:00 p.m.
Raiders at Dolphins

Week 14: Sunday, Dec. 11 1:00 p.m.
Eagles at Dolphins

Week 15: Sunday, Dec. 18 1:00 p.m.
Dolphins at Bills

Week 16: Saturday, Dec. 24 1:00 p.m.
Dolphins at Patriots

Week 17: Sunday, Jan. 01 1:00 p.m.
Jets at Dolphins

The first thing that stands out is obviously the big Monday Night Football opener Week 1 against the Pats and the other MNF game Week 6 at the Jets. For the second year in a row the NFL has given the Dolphins a golden opportunity to make a strong early season push in the AFC East race on primetime. Last year Miami squandered away a great opportunity to jump out to any early lead in the division with back-to-back losses to the Jets and Patriots at home on primetime. They surely can’t afford to the same in 2011 if they want to be a legitimate contender in one of the league’s toughest divisions.

Thanksgiving provides another exciting opportunity for the Dolphins. In a game that has provided some memorable moments in years past, the Dolphins get to travel to Dallas to play the Cowboys on Thanksgiving. Football on Thanksgiving is one of the league’s most meaningful traditions, and it’s always more special when the Dolphins get to be a part of that.

On a concerning note, the Dolphins will have a difficult road in the season’s final three weeks. The Dolphins will face all three of their AFC East rivals in consecutive weeks and will be forced to travel to Buffalo in Week 15 and to Foxboro in Week 16, games that figure to produce frigid conditions if not snowstorms.

In what is basically a meaningless statistic, the Dolphins have the 11th hardest schedule in 2011, as their opponents were a combined 132-124 in 2010.

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Dolphins Quarterback Options: Colin Kaepernick

Written by Cody Strahm on .


If you’ve visited this blog before, it’s fairly obvious what I want the Dolphins to do in next week’s draft. I would love to see them trade down and acquire a second-round pick, but at the end of the day, I firmly believe their number one priority in the draft’s first round should be landing Ryan Mallett. I don’t care if they stay put at fifteen, trade back, or trade up, if the Dolphins are on the clock when Ryan Mallett is still on the board it just makes too much sense to pull the trigger on the only quarterback in this year’s class that has all the tools to be a franchise quarterback.

However, if we must play devil’s advocate for a moment, the Dolphins are a team that prefers to draft high-character guys. In last year’s draft they made a concentrated effort to select players who were captains in college and who were widely thought of as good kids. If the Dolphins are planning on going that route again in 2011, Colin Kaepernick may be the quarterback prospect they have secretly been targeting all along. If it was me, I’m holding out for a veteran in free agency to compete with Chad Henne if the Dolphins pass on Ryan Mallett, but it’s easy to see why the front office could have a strong interest in Kaepernick.

Colin Kaepernick
School: Nevada
Size: 6-4, 233
40: 4.53
Projected Round: 1-2

Pros: Physically, Kaepernick’s measurables are about as eye popping as Mallett’s. At 6’4, 233 pounds, Kaepernick has the prototypical size you look for in an NFL QB, and he accompanies that size with superb athleticism. His 4.53 forty at the combine is almost off the charts for a quarterback with his size. Doesn’t have great acceleration, but because he’s such a long strider, he’s tough to catch once he gets going. He also throws very well on the move, which suggest he will be very useful on rollouts and broken plays at the next level.

Don’t label him exclusively as a scrambler, though. The kid has the arm strength to make any throw in football and was fairly accurate in the short to intermediate passing game at Nevada. Many GM’s believe the theory that the biggest factor in determining which quarterbacks will succeed and which quarterbacks will bust is experience. Kaepernick was a four-year starter at Nevada, where he became the only quarterback in Division 1 history to pass for over 10,000 yards and rush for over 4,000 yards in a career.

And if the Dolphins are looking for a guy who’s got a good head on his shoulders and has excellent leadership ability, unlike Ryan Mallett in the former and Chad Henne in the latter, Kaepernick may be their man. His stock significantly varies depending on which expert you talk to. It would be a little unexpected if the Dolphins were to use their first-round pick on Kaepernick, but I wouldn’t be shocked. Ideally, though, if they are convicted on Kaepernick as the new potential long-term solution in Miami, the Dolphins will trade back into the late first round and use their newly acquired second-round selection on him.

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Miami Dolphins 2011 Draft Board: Tight Ends

Written by Cody Strahm on .

Stepping aside from the first-round debate for a moment, where all the talk and speculation is revolving around the likes of Ryan Mallett, Mark Ingram, and whether or not the Dolphins will trade down from the 15th overall selection, let’s take a look at the tight end prospects in this year’s class that could potentially upgrade a huge position of need for the Dolphins.

Anthony Fasano has been a solid starter in Miami for three seasons now as a fantastic blocker that can contribute some in the passing game as well. But the Dolphins lack a tight end of the athletic mold that can consistently make a living in the middle of the field as a receiver. With all the attention Brandon Marshall attracts on the outside, a seam-stretching tight end would have the space needed to make an immense impact on the Dolphins’ offense.

Regardless of whether or not the Dolphins invest a high-draft choice on a rookie or stick with Chad Henne, a receiving tight end would truly be an asset for whoever the signal caller is as a crutch in the short to intermediate passing game and an extra red zone weapon on an offense that was pitiful in the red area in 2010.

Kyle Rudolph
School: Notre Dame
Size: 6-6, 259
40: 4.78
Projected Round: 2
If only tight end was the Dolphins’ primary need, Rudolph would potentially be Miami’s most coveted player in the 2011 draft. He excels at exactly what the Dolphins are missing from their tight end corps. Rudolph possesses great size, adequate speed, and has elite ball skills as a tight end that catches the ball with his hands, not his body and can make difficult receptions in traffic.

There are concerns about Rudolph’s blocking and whether or not he can get clean releases because he spent so much time in the slot at Notre Dame, but his skill set would greatly compliment former Irish Anthony Fasano. Doesn’t look like a realistic option for the Dolphins, but if they are able to trade down, pick up a second-round pick, and Rudolph slides some, you never know.

Lance Kendricks
School: Wisconsin
Size: 6-2, 243
40: 4.75
Projected Round: 2-3
Doesn’t have ideal size, but has the initial burst and speed to be a threat in the passing game. Runs routes well and receiving comes pretty natural to him. Would fit what the Dolphins are missing as a receiving first tight end, but don’t underestimate Kendricks’ blocking ability.

He was rarely used as a lead blocker at Wisconsin, but he has the ability to seal off the edge. Kendricks is flying under the radar a bit, but he could be a mid-round option for the Dolphins when they figure to begin to consider addressing the position in round three.

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