Transcripts

Ryan Fitzpatrick – May 21, 2020 Download PDF version

Thursday, May 21, 2020

QB Ryan Fitzpatrick

(How long has the beard been going?) – ”Ever since they shut down barbershops. There is really only two people in the country that I trust to touch this thing. One is in Tampa, one is in New Jersey. It’s been going ever since everything got shutdown. But, the neck hair is out of control right now. I’m glad you can’t see it. (laughter)”

(Tell us what’s it been like locked in the house with all of those kids running around?) – “It’s been a little bit crazy, but we’re out in Arizona and my brother lives next door and he has five kids, so that’s 12 running around every day. We have a bit of space here, so that part of it, the kids haven’t even noticed other than having to go to school online and doing some of their school work right away. It’s actually been a good time just to get away from everything else and reconnect with everybody and just be with family and enjoy each other. We have breakfast, lunch and dinner together. We haven’t left the house a whole lot, other than to go get groceries or the golf course every now and then. It’s been good for us in the sense that we’ve gotten to spend a lot of quality time together.”

(I’m sure you had expected the Dolphins to take a quarterback. Obviously they did so. What’s you thought process on that and your role in QB Tua Tagovailoa’s development?) – “I think just like everybody else, it was expected that if there was a guy that they liked in one of those selections, they were going to pick somebody. Tua happened to be the guy in that spot and obviously they really liked him. So for me, I’ve been in this situation before a little bit. I just try to go in every day and be myself. Even in the Zoom meetings right now, I just be myself. I’m an open book and try to make sure that they know and are comfortable with coming to me with questions. I’m also going to express my opinions and thoughts on plays that we are watching and 2-minute drives. We’ve been going over some of that stuff, and my mind and the process and how I think through it, right or wrong, just to provide some perspective. I’m excited for him to be here. I loved watching him play in college. I think he’s going to be an awesome addition to the team for a long time.”

(You had one of your best statistical seasons of your career playing for Offensive Coordinator Chan Gailey. How similar to what you did then are you learning now and why did you have so much success under Chan back in New York?) – “I think being in his system for five years and a couple of different teams with a bunch of personnel, Chan was really the first guy to truly believe in me and gave me my shot as a starter. I’ve just always wanted to prove him right and to play well for him. He’s the guy that allows players to play to their strengths, he’s got an offense that is not very complicated to learn, but very complicated for defenses in the way it is presented to them. He does a great job utilizing different guy’s talents and putting them in position to succeed. Not necessarily telling them there is a certain way to do it, but allowing them some freedom and some creativity within certain constraints, to do the best job that they can. I think guys have enjoyed playing for him for that reason. I’ve got a ton of confidence and trust in him, and I know he feels that same way about me.”

(You obviously have seen what the team has done this offseason. What are your thoughts about the 2020 Dolphins as they look on paper?) – “It’s difficult not being there because we are very young. There is going to be a lot of new faces with guys they brought in through free agency or guys the brought in through the draft. There are a lot of new faces, a lot of youth, so with that, you want to get on the field, you want to start practicing, you want to start learning the system and learning each other. I think they’ve evaluated this team. They got to watch 16 games last year and figure out what they liked and what they didn’t like. For us as players, we just sit back and hope we can be a part of it. We trust that they are doing the right thing and bringing in the right guys. The holdovers, or the guys that are still here, are the guys they obviously liked last year and have some of the right attributes and some of the right things they are looking for. Having the fifth pick in the draft, obviously it wasn’t a successful year last year; but I think there is some stuff that happened that we can really build on. With these new guys coming in, bringing them up to speed and making sure their mentality fits what we are trying to get done, that will be important for us. It’s been tough on those Zoom meetings, but we are doing the best we can with what we have.”

(You’ve been in the league for a while, you’ve had a lot of teammates from teams over the years, players that you’ve been in contact with now. What’s the general gist that you get from players around the league and including yourself about returning to the facilities, playing football with this coronavirus thing going on, and how safe you would feel getting back to the field and back into the building?) – “There is so much uncertainty right now, so I think a lot of it for us as players, and kind of the approach or mentality that we have to take, is we’re going to trust the experts. Whatever they say, the guidelines that they set forth, we’ve got to trust them because we know they are going to error on the side of caution. This thing, it changes every day. There is new information, there’s different information, there’s shifts every single day, so it’s hard for us. I think the approach that we are taking is focus every day on what we can control, and that’s our Zoom meetings and trying to do the best we can to learn this offense and communicate, and getting the workouts in on our own – trying to get ourselves in shape so that whenever this thing starts back up, that we are ready to go. It’s been difficult. The lockout year, the 2011 deal, was nothing like this because even finding fields or going to throw with guys, or guys getting on airplanes, that’s just not happening right now. There are a lot of things that are even different from the offseason that we experienced that year. I think the biggest thing is trust the experts and we will see where it goes.”

(What was it like to hear – I don’t know if you did hear but in the offseason, Head Coach Brian Flores and General Manager Chris Grier sang praises of you and what you did last season. They basically said this is your team. What’s that like and do you remember at a point, maybe the Bills, where someone said this is your team as a quarterback?) – “My career has definitely been a progression – finally becoming a starter and then trying to hang onto that job, trying to hang onto that job, wavering in confidence a little bit. Right now where I’m at in my career, it’s nice to hear those things; but those are things that you see and feel every day with your teammates, that I was able to see and feel every day at the end of last year. The way we kind of had things going and the confidence we had in the building. So that stuff is nice to hear but you can kind of feel it throughout the building as well. For me, the position of quarterback is such a leadership position, and I think it’s important to have somebody the guys look up to and respect, the way that you work, the way that you go about your business. It’s humbling for me to hear those things but also knowing the way my teammates feel about me.”

(I know you said that you haven’t been able to get out and through or anything like that. But are there people there in Arizona that you can at least have run routes for you? Do the 12 kids go out there and catch balls for you or anything like that. Are you getting any of that type of work in?) “I really don’t – the past eight or nine years, I don’t throw a whole lot during the offseason. I just like to let my arm rest a little bit, then as OTAs start to ramp up – we’ll see what happens here in the next few weeks. I don’t like to take more throws in the offseason than I need to. I’m doing a little bit right now but nothing crazy.”

(I know you had talked to your buddy Eric Wood on your podcast this week. You mentioned that you will be Tua Tagovailoa’s biggest cheerleader. How do you balance that – him being the future – with you knowing that you’re obviously a competitor that wants to be that 2020 present?) – “I’m as competitive as they come, so I want to go out there and start. I know there are a lot of forces that go into it from all kinds of different sides. Whether that happens or not, who knows. I know that in order for our team to be successful, whoever is playing from that quarterback room has to be successful. Whether that’s me out there, doing everything I can to put the team in position to win, or whether that’s somebody else – be it Tua that is out there doing it – I’m going to do the best I can to help him to make sure our position is doing the things that are going to make our team win. That’s my mentality, that’s how I think about it. You know me very well I think from last year, and you know I want to be out there competing on Sundays.”

(I’m really interested in those two hour Zoom calls you guys have been doing. Can you kind of help me explain how Offensive Coordinator Chan Gailey and others sort of install an offense virtually? Is it a dry erase board, is it a chalkboard? Do they put plays on the screen digitally?) – “I think every team is probably doing it a little differently; but some of it you have to rely on guys to do some studying away from those calls at home. I think one of the things that we have found – this is new for everybody so it’s still a work in progress for us – but the one thing we’ve found is instead of having humongous meetings where it’s the whole offense, or the whole team, being able to break it down to individual groups and have a couple of groups in a Zoom at the same time where there can be open and fluid conversations and questions, that’s been the most effective for us. Really breaking it down into small groups and having an open forum and having guys ask questions. I think because of the setting we’re in, guys will be a little bit more free to ask questions and maybe not as shy to chime in or to raise their hand virtually – the different things you can do. I think they have been pretty productive. I don’t think it’s been perfect by any means and I’d much rather do it in person; but we’re doing the best we can and I think they have been productive.”

Davon Godchaux – May 21, 2020 Download PDF version

Thursday, May 21, 2020

DT Davon Godchaux

(First of all, how are you doing? How has this experience been for you personally and how has the team managed to do some work all spread out around the country?) – “First of all, I’m doing good. Same for you guys – I hope you guys are doing well. (I am) just kind of working out each and every morning – waking up 6:45, 7 o’clock. I have my chef come in and cook my breakfast. I head to Pete Bommarito and get my workout in – my weightlifting, my field work. Then I come back and do the virtual meetings with the Dolphins, and I think that’s been going pretty good. I’m not the biggest fan of virtual; but I mean hey, that’s what we have to do right now with this pandemic going on. I think the Miami Dolphins have done a great job with it.”

(Obviously this is a tough offseason for everybody, but with you going into a contract year how important is it one, for you to get on the field and two, for you to secure your future?) – “I just kind of look at it taking it day by day. I don’t kind of look at it as a ‘big year’ or ‘contract year.’ I think every year is a big year because it’s the next year, but I think each game I take that same approach where you have to go out and always put good stuff on film with my teammates. I think that kind of takes the pressure off me once I think like that. I don’t think ‘Okay, it’s my fourth year, last year in my contract. I have to ball out. I have to have a big year.’ That’s kind of my motto every year; but at the end of the day – I kind of get the question that you’re asking, but at the end of the day I just try to elevate my play, raise my play, do more, work on more things, working on my weaknesses and strengthening my strengths. I think if I take that approach, I’ll be good.”

(What stood out to you this offseason about the Dolphins’ moves? Obviously they drafted QB Tua Tagovailoa and made a lot of splash. What stood out to you on all the additions?) – “Obviously all the fans – everybody wanted a quarterback, so I think it was big, drafting Tua out of Alabama. The guy had a great career at Alabama. I’m still an LSU guy; but hey, hats off to him. What he did at Alabama, he had a great career. I think drafting Raekwon Davis in the second round is going to add some additions to our d-line. (We) added a safety in the back end, you added Robert Hunt, the second-round o-lineman; so I think just keep getting depth and keep getting stronger, younger; but just always be ready. Like I said with ‘Coach Flo’ (Head Coach Brian Flores), he’s going to be consistent with who he is. He’s going to expect great things out of you. If you did something great last game, he’s going to expect the same out of you, so I think having that mindset as a head coach, I think that’ll kind of keep us on our toes. He’s always going to look to bring in competition, so I think a lot of people don’t get that aspect of ‘Coach Flo.’ He’s always going to try to create competition. Creating competition is what makes your team elevate to the next level, so I think by him doing things like that, I think the sky’s the limit for our team in the future – if we just keep day-by-day when we get ready to go out for training camp and just day-by-day just chopping wood. Just keep it one day at a time.”

(In all of what you just said, do you think the team will be better and if so, why?) – “I mean of course everybody wants to (say), ‘Oh yeah, the Dolphins are going to be – we’ve got a quarterback.’ None of that stuff means (anything) unless you go and put the work in. What I know we want, if we go in and lollygag and not go out there and work hard in practice, it doesn’t matter that we got a first-round quarterback. It doesn’t matter about (any) of that stuff. Like I said, the biggest thing in football is trusting the man outside of you, next to you – me trusting Christian Wilkins, Shaq Lawson, Emmanuel Ogbah – trusting all those guys on the d-line the same way they have to trust me. I think that’s the biggest thing in football. I think when we do that, like I said – I’m going to keep saying it – you’re going to hear that from my mouth a bunch of times – that the sky’s the limit for this team. Adding guys like Byron Jones – the other corner on the other side of ‘X’ (Xavien Howard) and the first-round draft pick – the rookie from Auburn (Noah Igbinoghene). I think things like that, just keep building and just keep digging and just keep chopping wood each and every day and grinding and getting better. We’ll see. At the end of the day, I’m not the type to say, ‘the Dolphins are about to go 16-0.’ It’s a process. Everything looks good on paper. You’ve still got to put the work in, so I think when we get back hopefully for training camp, I’m excited about it. I’m excited to see especially this defense and the new pieces we got – Kyle Van Noy, a guy who played in New England and played under this system – so I’m excited.”

(I’m curious with the new Defensive Coordinator Josh Boyer, what have you learned about him? How would you describe his personality and leadership style? Does he have something he just seems to always say all the time? Fill me in.) – “Josh played a big role last year. Josh filled in a lot of things with ‘P.G.’ (Patrick Graham), so he said a lot of things last year, so I’m kind of used to him having the voice of the room, if that makes sense. Josh is going to tell it– like I said about ‘Flo’ – Josh is going to be straight up with you. For instance, we were getting ready for Week 1 (last year) – we were getting ready to play Baltimore – and we were practicing and ‘Flo’ was like, ‘if that’s a single block, I expect you to win that all the time. If they double you, then somebody else is going to make the play,’ but he basically told me, ‘if it’s a single block, I expect you to win.’ Josh kind of has the same mindset. Just coming down from New England, he and ‘Flo’ were in New England for a long time, so I think he’s going to have the same mindset. He’s going to expect excellence out of you. You’re going to get better each and every day. He’s going to expect the same thing from you every day – no switch-up, no sugarcoat – so I think having that mindset as a DC, players feed off of that.”

(First of all, I hope the Chauxdown is still going on this year. I’d hate for the d-line to lose that. What I’m asking about is I’m doing a story on what if there’s no draft this year for whatever reason – Covid-19 or whatever – and you would just fill your roster by recruiting players. That’s what teams would do like you do in college and my question to you – you can take any aspect of that – would that be better for the league or better for the team? Would that be better for the player because you can pick the system that fits you? And knowing now what you know about the league and the way things work, what would be the most important thing in your decision in choosing a team if it worked that way?) – “I’m going to go ahead and answer your last question right now. First of all, when I’m choosing a team, if there was no draft or anything like that – let’s just say that – I’m looking at the position depth. So I’m a d-tackle. If I’m coming out of college, I’m looking at who the Miami Dolphins have at d-tackle. Is this guy on the last year of his contract? Things like that. That’s going to be important to me. If I was a receiver, what receiver, how many receivers do they have? How many guys got hurt last year? How many guys are on the last year of their contract? So all of those things right there, I’m looking at if I’m choosing a team without any draft; but the end of the day I think guys should – if there was no draft – I think they should choose specifically what the team needs. If the team needs a receiver, if the team needs a defensive tackle, then go play that position, but if there’s no draft – I think there always should be a draft because guys who worked hard, guys who earned that (opportunity) to go to that green room in the first round, they deserve that because they worked hard in college. They probably won the Heisman, they had crazy stats; so I think like the first 32 picks, I think there should be a draft so those guys can have the chance to sit in the green room with their family, once-in-a-lifetime (opportunity) to hear their name called by the Commissioner Roger Goodell. I think things like that should always take place. But if there was no draft I think all those things like guys seeing what the team needs in their position should be a big factor.”

(You’re one of the players who have under the previous coach Adam Gase, you’ve dealt with everything in all of the first year of the rebuild last season. Being here at this point with the new additions, the excitement, what do you think the rest of this rebuild has in store for the team and the franchise?) – “Everybody just wants to win, but everybody has to take the steps to actually win. You just don’t come out winning. New England didn’t just win overnight. They built the process and they took days to build the process. They had probably one of the greatest quarterbacks of all time that played for them and probably one of the greatest head coaches that coached of all time. It’s always a process, but I think it’s our time. Why not the Miami Dolphins? I think we kicked it off with a good draft this year drafting (11) guys. We kicked it off with a good draft. I think just taking that step and taking that process and coming in and hopefully being here for training camp, taking it day by day. We’ll see. To me on paper, the sky’s the limit, but paper doesn’t win games. You still have to go out there and work at it, so I’m excited to see it.”

(I wanted to know about the bike riding in terms of how far are you going and when did you realize you could actually do this?) – “(laughter) Well, it’s actually funny. One of my neighbors came to me. She’s from Germany. She’s in pretty good shape actually. She came to me and she was talking about the bike riding the whole time. Like she came to me and she knocked on my door. She was like, ‘Hey Davon, you’ve got to get a bike.’ I was like, ‘Man I haven’t ridden a bike since probably like middle school or elementary. Like a 300-pound guy riding a bike. I (haven’t) ridden a bike in a minute.’ So I finally – she talked me into it – we went to the bike store, got a bike and the rest is history. I’m up to – she wrote a map. Last Saturday we were supposed to do 40 miles. We ended up – her map only was like 31 miles so I was kind of mad because I wanted to hit that 40-mile mark. We ended up doing 38.6 miles. I haven’t hit the 40-mile mark yet, but I kind of toned it down  a little bit because I wanted to not exhaust my body, so I kind of toned it down a little bit. I’ve been doing like 20-25 miles, but the most I did so far was 38.6 miles. It’s a great exercise and this is after my Pete Bommarito weight lift, my Pete Bommarito conditioning, and then a bike ride will be later on that day just to get some extra cardio just to stay on top. Like I said, I feel like I’m in the best shape I’ve been in these last four years. I’m going on four years of my NFL career, so I feel good.”

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