Make No Mistake, Week 1 Must Win For Dolphins

Written by Cody Strahm on .

In the same way we celebrated the start of training camp as the start of the new NFL season, we can celebrate the start of the new week as the beginning of Week 1. That only means it's time to delve into previewing the Dolphins' opener against the Bills.

When the 2010 schedule was fist released I'm sure many fans looked at Week 2 at the Vikings, or the two prime time games against the Jets and Patriots as defining games for the new look Dolphins. Those games may serve as our biggest indicator of how good this team can be, but if you, even for a minute, think Week 1 against the Bills isn't a 10 on a one to ten scale of how important, you are of your mind.

Is it a sexy matchup? No way. But for the Dolphins, losing up at Orchard Park on Sunday could put them in a hole that becomes impossible to dig out of. Don't kid yourself, losing to the Bills on the road is always a possibility, no matter how good or bad each team is.

You can throw records and power rankings out the window whenever the Dolphins and Bills face off. Look no further than last year. Miami traveled up to northern New York in Week 12, very much in the thick of the playoff race. They led 14-7 heading into the fourth quarter, before the wheels came off. Buffalo went on to trounce the Dolphins 24-0 in the fourth, and wound up winning 31-14.

The Dolphins realistically remained in the playoff race until Week 16 and held on to some slim hopes in Week 17, but I think most fans would point to that loss at the Bills as the game that really cost them.

Looking at the schedule in the following weeks, makes Week 1 ten times more crucial. How about at the NFC runner-up Vikings, at home against the Jets and Pats before the bye week, then at Lambeau Field to take on the Pack, back to Miami to take on the Ben Roethlisberger led Steelers, then back on the road to face off against the Bengals and Ravens in back-to-back weeks.

That's got to be one of the toughest seven game stretches that I have ever seen. I don't know if the Dolphins will be favored in any of those contest. Could they get a few upsets after dropping to 0-1 against a team they should beat? I think they can. But they will make it substantially easier on themselves if they win the games they're supposed to.

Losing to Buffalo can't be the type of momentum the Dolphins want kicking off a make or break seven game stretch. My theory is, if the Dolphins can stay right at .500 for those first eight games, they will have a great opportunity to put together a nice run as the schedule gets a bit softer.

Which is more realistic, 4-3 in those seven games, or 3-4? Regardless of how optimistic you are heading into this season, you should know the answer to that.

None of this is even taking into account how the Dolphins have started the last two seasons under Sparano. 0-2/2-4 in 08' and 1-3 in 09' put this team in playoff, win or go home mode at about midseason. Did they rebound nicely? You better believe it, but last year showed that eventually slow starts will catch up to you, as the Dolphins ran out of gas down the stretch of the season.

With this division possessing three legitament contenders this year, they simply can't afford to start slow again, especially against an AFC East opponent.

The Dolphins have gone on record saying it starts in the division, that's how they won it in 2008. And Buffalo, regardless of how bad the media says they will be, accounts for two of Miami's six most important games just like the Jets and Pats do.

Are the Dolphins a better team than the Bills? On paper, absolutely. But as we all know, the games are played on the field, anything can happen. And looking at the games ahead and the team's slow starts the past couple years, the Dolphins are going to be in a world of hurt if they approach this game as an easy win.

Jason Allen to Start Week 1

Written by Cody Strahm on .



A busy day at Dolphins' camp, just got considerably more newsworthy. Jason Allen, not Sean Smith, will reportedly open up the season as starting cornerback opposite Vontae Davis.

Smith had a disappointing training camp and preseason, while Jason Allen quietly came from nowhere. Allen got the nod over Smith against the Falcons two weeks ago, but reports suggested that was purely disciplinary. Give Allen all the credit in the world for having a huge bounce back camp after four seasons of playing like a bust of a first-round pick, but something tells me this is a really bad sign.

I don't think the Dolphins would halt the progression of Smith unless he is so bad right now they are beginning to question if he has what it takes to be a quality starter, or Jason Allen has emerged as a very solid corner. Has Allen improved? Sure. But let's not get ahead of ourselves here.

He's still done nothing, in my eyes anyway, that would suggest he's starting material. I'm not questioning the coaches in saying Allen is ahead of Smith right now. Maybe he is. But if that's the case, it likely has a whole lot more to do with Smith taking a huge step backwards, then it does Allen's transformation.

What does that mean for the secondary? When you throw Will Allen going on IR to the pot, it's probably going to take Mike Nolan working miracles with his exotic blitzes for this secondary to avoid finishing in the bottom half of the league again.

I hate to bring anymore negatively to a team who's been surrounded in it for most of the preseason, but it's just hard to see a secondary people expected to make huge strides this season fall apart like this on paper. On paper is the key word in this sentence.

You never know in this league, but you can't tell me your not licking your chops game planning for this secondary if your an opposing coach or quarterback. Maybe they will prove everybody wrong, maybe they won't.

And just because improvement may have to go on hold against the pass, it's no time to abandon playoff hopes before they even play a game. Despite a few lackluster performances, the offense still has the pieces to break out this year, and the front seven has all the potential in the world.

Let's just hope the secondary doesn't prevent this team from going places it's capable of.

Dolphins Cut Two More, Waive Two More

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The Dolphins aren't done just yet. Omar Kelly is also reporting that they have cut defensive end's Marques Douglas and Charles Grant, and have claimed former Brown's defensive end Clifton Geathers and former Ravens practice squad offensive tackle Joe Reitz off waivers.

Dolphins Claim DL Rob Rose, OT Jeremy Parnell Off Waivers

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Nothing has been confirmed yet, but Brian McIntyre tweeted that the Dolphins have claimed defensive lineman Rob Rose, and the New Orleans Times is reporting they have claimed offensive tackle Jeremy Parnell, who, according to Ben Volin, has also played defensive lineman and tight end.   no comments

Dolphins Cut Procter

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The relief was short lived for offensive guard Cory Procter. A day after learning he had made the 53-man roster, Adam Schefter is reporting that he has been cut. The Dolphins have most likely claimed a guard from the waiver wire, along with another player with Will Allen expected to go on injured reserve. no comments