Looks Like Rodgers Will Play

Written by Cody Strahm on .

The Dolphins and Packers released their injury reports earlier today. So much for the Dolphins' defense lucking out by not having to face one of the top quarterbacks in football, but you can hear Chad Henne's big sigh of relief as Clay Matthews is listed as doubtful.

Dolphins

Questionable
DE Jared Odrick (ankle)

Probable
LB Channing Crowder (groin)
OT Jake Long (knee)

Packers

Out
LB Brandon Chillar (shoulder)
LB Nick Barnett (wrist)
TE Jermicheal Finley

Doubtful
LB Clay Matthews (hamstring)
OT Mark Tauscher (shoulder

Questionable
DE Mike Neal (shoulder)
DE Ryan Pickett (ankle)

Probable
QB Aaron Rodgers (concussion)
RB Quinn Johnson (glute)
S Nick Collins (knee)
CB Charles Woodson (toe)
CB Sam Shields (calf)
OT Chad Clifton (knee)
DE Cullen Jenkins (hamstring)
TE Donald Lee (hamstring)

Dolphins at Packers: 5 Questions with the Enemy

Written by Cody Strahm on .

With no Packers blog in the Bloguin network, it looked as though we would have to do without what has become the most interesting read of the week. Thanks to Adam Somers from Ol' Bag of Donuts, though, who reached out to me a couple days ago, we have some quality insight into the Dolphins' opponent for the fifth straight game. Be sure to check out the questions I answered for Adam right here.

Phins Phocus: How optimistic are you that Aaron Rodgers and Clay Matthews will be able to suit up on Sunday? In Rodgers case in particular, how confident are you in Matt Flynn's ability to step in and lead the offense?

Ol' Bag of Donuts:
I am more optimistic about Rodgers starting then I was at the beginning of the week after he has started practicing. However, that doesn't necessarily mean he will be cleared to play Sunday.  Original reports were that the concussion was not too bad, but still the NFL takes head injuries very seriously, as they should, so I would say right here, right now I would give Rodgers a 50-50 chance to play. If he doesn't play, it wouldn't upset me too much because that means he is given another week to recover and avoid another potential concussion.  Then steps in Matt Flynn, a former seventh-round pick from a few years ago.  Flynn has developed very nicely in the Packers system that they waived the other QB from that draft class Brian Brohm.  If the right game plan is in place that is a little more conservative and predicated on short passes, I think Flynn can win some games. He is a proven winner (national championship at LSU) and makes smart decisions.  However, Mike McCarthy hasn't shown anything but stubbornness so far this year in his gameplans and playcalling.

As for Clay Matthews, it is looking more and more that he will not play.  The hamstring injury he suffered is the same that kept him out of almost all of training.  However, the injury is not as serious as it was this summer and knowing Matthews demeanor he will try to tough it out at all costs. It can be argued that Matthews is just as valuable as Rodgers this year, but not to underestimate the Dolphins, the team needs him close to 100% against the Vikings in two weeks. You never want to drop a game in the NFL, but if Rodgers and Matthews are not fully healthy, but can be in two weeks, Sunday's game carries a lot less importance than the one in two weeks.

Phins Phocus: Heading into the season, it seemed like the Packers were a trendy pick to come out of the NFC. While they still are certainly capable of doing just that, they probably haven't lived up to most people's expectations. What were your expectations for them heading into the year, and how have they changed after the first five games of the season?

Ol' Bag of Donuts:
Expectations were extremely high and so were mine, I picked the Packers to win the NFC. Might have been a bit of a homer pick, but there was so much to like about this team.  They haven't met the level of those expectations yet, but the argument can be made that no one in the NFC has yet.  However, through the first five games I do expect them to still win the NFC North. Injuries have played and will play a major factor in all of this, but as long as some of the key cogs - Rodgers, Matthews, Ryan Pickett come back healthy in a couple weeks, there is still plenty of talent on this team to win the division and win a playoff a game or two, even without Jermichael Finley and Ryan Grant.  NFC champions might be a bit of a reach right now, but no one has looked that great so far in the conference and the team that gets hot in the final month will probably be the favorites and I still believe that could be the Packers.

Phins Phocus: If Rodgers does end up playing, how exactly would you go about stopping the Packers' high-powered offense if you were an opposing defensive coordinator?

Ol' Bag of Donuts:
I feel like we say this every week, but you need to get pass rush on the edge early and often.  In the Packers' two losses this year Julius Peppers and Brian Orkapo had monster games.  The offensive line is not any better than they were last year and without a commitment to the run teams are starting to tee off on Rodgers again.  His mobility can curb an inside rush fairly well, but if you can get him on the outside and keep him from rolling out, you should be pretty successful against the Packers.

Phins Phocus: The defense finished second overall a year ago, but find themselves 13th so far this season. Obviously, still a respectable ranking, but what has been the cause for the slight slippage?

Ol' Bag of Donuts:
I never want to use injuries as an excuse, but I will here.  The Packers were already down 3 starters heading into last week - LB's Nick Barnett and Brandon Chillar and rookie safety Morgan Burnett and now will probably be down two more Sunday with Pickett and Matthews sidelined.  There isn't much depth in the secondary with Al Harris and Atari Bigbyon the PUP list and nickel back Sam Shields (from the U!) injured as well.  Sometimes the injuries are just too much take and you are seeing that on defense.  The team is still pretty solid against the run, but can struggle against the pass with no secondary depth beyond Charles Woodson, Tramon Williams and Nick Collins and also Matthews is the only consistent pass rusher the team has seen so far.

Phins Phocus: Finally, who do you see winning this Sunday and why? Final score?

Ol' Bag of Donuts:
It comes down to if Rodgers and/or Matthews can play. I wouldn't be surprised either way if they did or didn't. I think Matt Flynn can sneak out a win IF, and that is a big if, they can control the clock and win the turnover battle. Miami's offense isn't elite yet, but is good enough against a depleted Packers defense.  The loss of Matthews will probably be greater than Rodgers this week because the team has no pass rush so far besides him. If someone can step up and get to Henne that would go a long way, but I don't see that happening. 

If Rodgers can play and put some points on the board and make this a higher scoring game than Miami wants, I think the Packers can win this game at home. However, I am going to assume he will be ruled out (NFL is really protective of concussions now) and will pick against the Packers for the first time all year.  But don't bet against Flynn who will keep the game close.
 
Miami 20, Green Bay 16

Dolphins at Packers: The Kicking Game

Written by Cody Strahm on .

Dolphins Special-Teams
Kicking
Dan Carpenter: 5-7 FG's, Long 50
Punting
Brandon Fields: 40.9 average, 10 IN20, Long 68, 2 punts blocked 
Kickoff Return
Patrick Cobbs: 7 attempts, 21.9 yard average
Nolan Carroll: 2 attempts, 27.0 yard average
Punt Return
Davone Bess: 3 returns, 13.7 yard average

Dolphins Opponents
Kicking: 5-7 FG's, Long 51
Punting: 42.3 average, 4 IN20, Long 68, 0 punts blocked
Kickoff Return: 10 returns, 35.8 yard average, 1 touchdown
Punt Return: 8 returns, 6.5 yard average

Packers Special-Teams
Kicking
Mason Crosby: 7-10 FG's, Long 56
Punting
Tim Masthay: 44.4 yard average, 2 IN20, Long 58, 0 punts blocked
Kickoff Return
Jordy Nelson: 20 returns, 23.7 yard average
Pat Lee: 2 returns, 16.5 yard average
Punt Return
Tramon Williams: 11 returns, 11.6 yard average

Packers Opponents
Kicking:11-14 FG's, Long 52
Punting: 45.5 yard average, 2 IN20, Long 58, 0 punts blocked
Kickoff Return: 22 returns, 24.5 yard average
Punt Return: 10 returns, 16.9 yard average

As you can see, after watching mediocre special-teams play for three weeks and a special-teams meltdown of epic proportions in Week 4 against the Patriots, it was time to stop overlooking the kicking game. We've previewed the passing game and running game before each week, but when you make the kinds of mistakes the Dolphins have made on special-teams you can still clearly lose games regardless of how you play on offense and defense. Darren Rizzi has obviously inherited quite a mess. But avoiding the kind of costly mistakes we saw against the Pats shouldn't be too much to ask. If you play well enough to win offensively and defensively, all you need is the special-teams to go out and not screw it up.

There are some nice building blocks on special-teams for the Dolphins to work with too. Dan Carpenter is a Pro Bowl kicker, Brandon Fields has punted the ball very well this season when he's had time to get it off, and Nolan Carroll has flashed some potential as kick returner.They just can't afford to have any more missed blocking assignments, their kickoff and punt teams need to stay disciplined by filling their lanes properly, and the unit can right the ship in time for the most important stretch of the season.
Edge: Packers

Dolphins at Packers: On the Ground

Written by Cody Strahm on .

Dolphins running game: 107.0 rush ypg (15th)
Packers running game: 107.0 rush ypg (14th)
Dolphins run defense: 117.8 rush ypg (21st)
Packers run defense: 104.8 rush ypg (15th)

It feels great to get back into the swing of things after a long, miserable week off. We still have five more long days to wait, but at least we can start previewing this Sunday's game in Lambeau Field. I said yesterday, after watching Green Bay struggle to pull of a victory against the Lions at home and drop a game to the Redskins on the road this past Sunday, that this game was looking more and more winnable. Now, when you throw Aaron Rodgers possibly being ruled out with a concussion, optimism has officially returned after it's two week hiatus. I know that we are previewing the running game today, but if Rodgers can't go every aspect of this game will be affected. I will explain below.

Packers running game vs. Dolphins run defense
It's something that needs to be said every week. The Dolphins must, I repeat must, set the edge better. We saw the Vikings and Jets have enough success testing the perimeter for New England to run to the outside on just about every run play last Monday night. Cameron Wake has usually been the center of attention on most of those runs. I'm not saying that he's been good setting the edge or anything, but when he has created a little penetration on the outside, cutback lanes have been wide open.

Wake, along with Koa Misi and hopefully more Ikaika Alama-Francis on early downs, need to create more penetration all the while containing the edge, but the backside pursuit must not get caught over committing and they need to fill gaps properly for the Dolphins to stop the bleeding against the run. And that's against anybody. No, the Packers aren't an elite running team, but the way this defense is playing right now, just about anybody is going to be able to get their running game going on the outside.

And I think the Packers have ran the ball better than people have given them credit for. A lot has been made of Ryan Grant being out, but Brandon Jackson's 256 yards on 4.6 yards per carry is pretty solid if you ask me. John Kuhn provides a nice number two option with 4.6 yards per carry as well, totaling 133 yards on the ground.

The big wildcard, though, is obviously Aaron Rodgers' health. If he can't go, the Pack aren't an elite passing team anymore- more on that Thursday. But it also will effect their running game, because if Mike Nolan is smart, and he is, he will load up the box and make the unproven Matt Flynn complete passes to move the ball. Maybe the youngster will do just fine with an outstanding receiving core and get the Dolphins' defense back on their heels a little bit. But I just don't know how you justify not committing to the run until he does.
Edge: Push

Dolphins running game vs. Packers run defense
Enough is enough. It's time for the Dolphins to run the ball like we all know they are capable of. We all saw first hand last Monday night why Chad Henne isn't ready to run a pass first offense yet. It's time to get back to the identity. That doesn't mean go in a shell like we saw in the first two weeks, Henning still needs to trust Henne to make plays down the field for this offense to reach it's full potential and to keep defenses off balanced.

But looking back at the past two seasons, this team has been at its best when they are pounding opposing defenses with a solid dose of Ronnie and Ricky. Obviously they can't just line up and do it, they are going to need better blocking from the interior offensive line. I know I said the same thing two weeks ago, but the Packers defense will present a golden opportunity to finally get the run game going. Are they horrible against the run? No, they have a respectable 15th overall ranking.

But without the Dolphins thinking they need to score early in often to keep up with an Aaron Rodgers led offense (that's if he doesn't play) they may be tested and hopefully exposed a little more. 15th overall against the run is nothing to be ashamed of, but the 4.7 yards per carry they are conceding is actually tied for sixth worst in the entire league. That means they certainly can be ran on.

The Dolphins should come out with a balanced mindset every game in my opinion, but it especially rings true this week. They can't fall in a big hole like we saw against New England, though, causing them to abandon their running game. At the end of the day, this should be a statement game for Ronnie, Ricky, and the offensive line. It's time they remind the league and show the Green Bay Packers what they are all about.
Edge: Dolphins

Back in Business: Moving On From Two Disappointing Loses

Written by Cody Strahm on .

I wasn't planning on it, but the combination of the Dolphins having a bye week and the beating the took Monday night still being fresh in our minds, it was a good week to go on a little vacation from the blog after about ten months straight of posting at least five times a week.

It's always tough to get through a week after a loss, especially of the blowout variety to a division rival, but unfortunately we have to do it all over again this week. That's what makes the bye week so difficult. But it probably couldn't have came at a better time for the Dolphins, after back-to-back letdowns on national television, and with several key players needing to get healthy.

In 2008, the Dolphins followed up their bye week with a huge upset win over the San Diego Chargers, and last year, they jumped out to a shocking 24-3 lead over the eventual Super Bowl champion Saints who had not previously trailed in a game, before getting trounced in the second-half.

Still though, I think it's safe to say this coaching staff has had this team well prepared with two weeks to practice. And boy do they need a simliar effort this week. This game in Green Bay is the first of a four game stretch that will surely make or break the Dolphins' season.

I know I said the same thing about the Jets and Pats games, but that was more of an opportunity. These next four games could either doom or save the year. For the Dolphins to keep their heads above water and stay in the division and wildcard races, they need to at least spit these next four games.

Will that be easy? Obviously not with road games in Green Bay, Cinncinnati, and Baltimore and the only home game coming against Pittsburgh, who is arguably the best team in the entire league right now, and that's been without their two time Super Bowl winning quarterback who is returning next week.

With all that said, though, after watching Green Bay fall to the Redskins yesterday and getting outplayed against the Lions a week ago, this Sunday doesn't look so impossible anymore. And after watching the Bengals fall apart against two mediocre teams at best the last two weeks, the Dolphins should probably even be the favorites in Cincinnati.

Does that mean it's time to jump back on the "it's our year" bandwagon? Of course not. An uphill battle awaits them starting Sunday. But it's way to early to give up on them. If the Dolphins have the type of character you would expect of a Parcells molded team and a Sparano coached one, you would think they would come out with all kinds of fight in this do or die situation they have put themselves in.

Then again, you would have thought they would have given at least a great effort at home, on Monday Night Football, in a must-win game against New England. Not that this an excuse, but I was sort of under the impression that they had a little bit of a Jets hangover after losing such a well contested game in Week 3.

It was obvious how bad they wanted that game. And when you get so psyched up for such a big game and come out on the short end, it's very tough to get refocused on your next opponent. Even when that next opponent is the Patriots, in an equally important division showdown.

But now, the Dolphins will not only be fighting to save their season, but playing for pride as well. They know they are better than what we saw these last two weeks, and as fans, we thought they were better than this too. Now, they have to go back and prove themselves all over again.

We can think about what went wrong the last two games all we want, but what's done is done. Sure, losing to your biggest rivals in back-to-back weeks puts you in a little bit of a hole to dig out of, but these Dolphins have been comeback kids over the past two seasons.

In 2008, they rebounded from a 0-2 start and then a 2-4 start to win 11 games on their way to the division title. Last year, despite the 0-3 start, they fought back into the think of the playoff race up until the last week of the season. And fans are really starting to panic after a 2-2 start?

Yes, expectations are considerably higher this time around, but the season is young, this team has turned it around before, and with an even more talented team, is certainly capable of doing it again. The schedule is less forgiving, but that just makes this even more of an opportunity.

If they can stay right at the .500 level of the next four weeks, they will still be in great shape to make a playoff run as the schedule weakens. Just imagine if they could pull off three wins, or better yet run the table. Not very likely obviously, but it's not impossible with this team.

We saw great signs from the defense in the first two games, and off and on positive signs from the passing game over the past two weeks. If they could just avoid the huge letdowns on special-teams, which isn't too much to ask, and put together some collectively solid performances on both sides of the ball, the sky is the limit.

That is a lot of "ifs," but let's not forget how far this team has come. Many teams find themselves in obscurity for multiple seasons. The Dolphins were able to rebound pretty quickly. If you would have told me after the 2007 season that an AFC East title was just around the corner, they would be in the wildcard race up until Week 17 in 09', and they would be capable of great things this season, I would have taken that in a heartbeat. I'm guessing most of you would too.

So let's all step back, take a deep breath, and buckle up for what should be a great ride the rest of the season. There is so much football left to be played. If they can fall from grace in two short weeks, they are surely capable of righting the ship just as fast. Let's get behind our boys for these next twelve games and hopefully beyond.

By the way, GO VIKINGS! The bye week will be considerably more tolerable if the last unbeaten team goes down (pop some champagne for the 72' Dolphins) and the Jets lose a big game on Monday Night Football.

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