Transcripts

Christian Wilkins – December 12, 2023 Download PDF version

Tuesday, December 12, 2023

DT Christian Wilkins

(After you got a chance to look at the tape, what do you think went wrong those last couple of drives in the fourth quarter?) – “The biggest thing is in those situations, we need to be a little more locked in and a little more focused, when we get into those situations where you gotta have it. I feel like other than maybe a drive or a few plays throughout the game, we were pretty solid. It’s just when those moments are a little bigger in the game, you need to be a little more locked in. That’s definitely important. You need to be ready to play your best ball in those situations.”

(I know LB Bradley Chubb mentioned in the locker room last night that he felt like maybe you guys took your foot off the gas a little bit up two scores. Did you feel that from that side of the ball?) – “Well obviously it’s a tough situation giving up that many points that late in the game. Like I said, we were pretty solid but we have to have a foot on the throat mentality and get the job done and finish it out. It’s never done. You have to be ready to play a full 60-minute ball game.”

(I wanted to get your thoughts on the pass rush. We saw that there was one sack. I know you guys are without LB Jaelan Phillips and LB Jerome Baker. What did you think? I think you had eight quarterback hits. Did you think the pass rush was effective all game? What did you think of the pass rush on Tennessee’s final two possessions?) – “Yeah, I thought we were doing a decent job. Watching the tape, there’s things you can obviously clean up and make better. It’s like that every game, whether you have one sack or five sacks. There’s always more opportunities out there and things you can clean up. But I thought we were active all game. We were getting back there and had pressure in his face and different things like that. They did a good job of mixing things up with a few play-actions or getting the ball out quick. A lot of different things. But I thought we were solid there. And again, like I talked earlier just when the moment’s get a little bigger in the game, you just have to be better. I don’t think it was necessarily bad or anything. Just continuing on the trend of when those moments are bigger, we have to be at our best.”

(The run defense was really, really strong. You guys were very effective against RB Derrick Henry. How do you view the run defense last night?) – “Yeah, it was solid. There are still some things that we can be better at. Every play wasn’t perfect, but definitely solid. Just continue to build on it and move forward.

(We saw on Hard Knocks that Head Coach Mike McDaniel made a big emphasis on not repeating last December where one loss cascaded into three, four or five. As a leader, what’s your role in making sure that doesn’t happen?) – “The biggest thing is the 24-hour rule in the NFL. We all have to look in the mirror and be grown men about this. What happened last night, take it on the chin. The most important thing is beating the Jets now. We have to turn the page really fast, and even faster now with a short week. The longer we sit and think about this one, even though it’s a tough loss, that’s not going to do anything for everybody. The most important thing now is today. Focus on getting better today, watching the tape, doing what we need to and learning from us so that we have a good week on a short week.”

Duke Riley – December 12, 2023 Download PDF version

Tuesday, December 12, 2023

LB Duke Riley

(How did the whole operation go for you guys with you as the Mike linebacker and the green dot, just can you tell us how that all went down?) – “It went pretty well. A couple of third down calls, it got really loud in there so we kind of had to, I guess you could say signal some of the calls in, but I think it went pretty well. We all got it communicated. they started to do a little hurry-up towards the end of the game and at the end of the second half, I believe. It went well. It’s something I do every day so it’s not like I’m not prepared for it.”

(You mentioned some of the hurry-up late in the game. What do you think went into some of the missed communications that went down in the secondary late?) – “I got to go back and watch the tape. I’ve got to re-watch it again and watch it with my coach and we’ll go from there, but things happen. We’ve just got to be more detailed and have more focus. That’s really it, starting with myself.”

(The thing so far this season has kind of been you guys have beaten yourselves. You haven’t really gotten beat. Do you agree that that was the case last night and is that any better than being outplayed by the opponent?) – “There’s a lot of things that we’ve done to put ourselves in some situations in that game yesterday, but it happens in the NFL. No one’s perfect. I can tell you one thing, there’s no one on this team that wants to make a mistake and everyone wants to play well and do well for each other and we come to work every single day and we work hard. We focus on the day, like we always speak of, focus on the day that’s in front of us and I feel like we do a really good job of that. It’s just sometimes things happen. That’s life. We’re human. We’re not perfect and people make mistakes starting with (me) – I make some as well.”

(Tell me about the mentality of this team because it’s always seemed good. Even last year during the five-game losing streak you guys seemed to keep your heads up. How has it been this season? How was it last night? How is it today?) – “We’ve got a lot of good-character guys on this team so I know one thing, we’re going to learn from this game and it’s just only going to make us better. That’s just like everything we do in life, especially with the guys that we have and the leaders that we have and the captains and leadership that we have on this team. I know that we’re going to look at this game and only get better from it and only make corrections. It’s a blessing and a curse at the same time. No one wants to lose. I know for a fact no one wants to lose in this building. I hate losing. Everyone does. But I know one thing – you learn from every time make a mistake. We have a lot of grown men in this building and a lot of people, like I said, with good character and are going to come back to the drawing board and not point the finger, look at themselves and see what they can do better and improve on, just like myself.”

(What’s the challenge with Defensive Coordinator Vic Fangio’s defense of having moving parts? You guys had a lot – you were one of them – of players that probably weren’t envisioned in the role that you maybe played last night. What’s it take to make it work when you have a bunch of guys that are the next man up?) – “I think a lot of guys have been playing ball their whole life, just like myself. And even when I’m not in that role of being an every-down guy like I was last night, I’m always prepared to be in it. I always look at myself like I’m in it. I don’t go to practice and be like, ‘hey, I’m not going to play this week.’ Something could happen at practice and we’ve seen it happen over and over on every team, so the last thing I do is prepare or go into a game thinking that I’m not going to play. I prepare like I’m a starter regardless of the situation and I think a lot of guys do that as well. At practice, we even rotate a lot of guys in just for moments like that. We always give guys reps. We always keep everyone involved and all of our meetings are pretty much – there’s a lot of communication going on, a lot of people make sure everybody’s on the same page. We always do call outs so everyone on the defense is on the same page. We do a lot of individual meetings with just the players and we all get together to make sure that we’re doing the right things and we’re all on the same page. So like I said, people make mistakes and I know one thing, we have the right group of men on this team that’s going to go back to the drawing board and make the corrections, including myself.”

(I’m wondering even when you’re not starting, how vocal of a guy are you with the team and then how much will you go at a time like this when your team maybe needs leaders stepping up and things like that?) – “I love the game so much that I’m probably one of the most – I mean, everyone can tell you I’m probably one of the most vocal guys on the team. I’m always speaking up and being loud and answering questions and standing in there every single day. At practice, I’m always – I learn plays that I see, things that I see. And yeah, it’s just ball, man. I love the game. It’s what I do and my favorite moment is being on the field so I have the most fun out there and communicating is something I’ve done really well throughout my life.”

(I know you guys don’t want to make any excuses for what happened last night, but is part of the explanation missing personnel – S Jevon Holland, LB Jaelan Phillips, LB Jerome Baker?) – “The building and the organization do a great job of selecting the guys that we get on the 53-man roster every year and it’s always next-man-up mentality. We know that. I feel like everyone on the team can make plays regardless. You just have to be out there. If you’re out there and you’re doing your job and you’re focused on the right and you’re detailed, the plays will come to you if you’re just doing your job. Everyone has to play fundamentally sound football and we didn’t do that as well on some plays yesterday and it came back, and as you can tell, we lost the game.”

(When you are missing personnel and the offensive line is probably the best example of this, how tough is it to adjust? You can speak to it on replacing LB Jerome Baker, but how tough is it? I know that’s part of your job, but there’s got to be a level of difficulty there, right?) – “Some guys play different, some guys see things different and they move different. Yeah, you get that. I can’t speak from an offensive perspective because o-line is a totally different thing that I’ve never done – but as a ‘backer, especially a Mike ‘backer, it’s just all about communication. The more you communicate, the better everyone plays and even if you make the wrong call or if you make a call that wasn’t called and everybody is on the right page, it still doesn’t mean that you’re wrong. If you make the wrong call and everybody is playing that play, then you’re not wrong. You just made a different call than you were supposed to. So I think that’s really all it’s about, just overcommunicating, especially when you don’t have the guys like Jevon Holland who is a great communicator in the back end, and (Jerome) Baker who is a great communicator like myself. Just stuff like that. In those situations, it’s all about overcommunicating, making sure that everyone is on the right page and the same page.”

(Last night, you guys for the most part, were able to keep them off the board until those last two drives and on those two drives, they were getting more than 10, 11 yards per play. Was fatigue a factor at that point, do you think?) – “I wouldn’t say fatigue. I would just say details and getting back to the fundamentals and doing what we do. Watching the tape, there’s a lot of things that we go over and talk about every single day. Like I said, it’s just during those moments, you just need to be more detailed and overcommunicate more than you’ve ever done. Starting with me, we have to get better with that.”

(And from the outside looking in, it seems like a kind of difficult loss to swallow. It was such a stunning fashion the way the game ended. Can you see how at least from the outside looking in how hard it might be for a team to get over a loss like this?) – “Yeah, I know from the outside looking in, but from the inside looking out, it’s tough. It was hard on everybody. We don’t expect to lose with the people we have on the field, regardless of who’s out there, to be honest with you. And in that game, it was like a surreal moment. It didn’t feel real, but it happened and at the end of the day, like I said, we have the right men. We’ve got grown men in this building who come to work and guys with great character who are going to get back to the drawing board and learn from everything that we’ve done wrong, and I know that for a fact. We’ve got another game, a division opponent,this weekend and we’re going to focus on each day and we’re going to get better as a team, like we always do.”

Jalen Ramsey – December 11, 2023 (Postgame)

Monday, Dec. 11, 2023
Postgame – Tennessee Titans

Miami Dolphins CB Jalen Ramsey

(It seemed like there was a play where Titans WR DeAndre Hopkins caught a pass and there might have been like a miscommunication. I don’t know if you could tell us maybe what happened on that play. And one of those late fourth quarter drives looked like he was near you, but maybe not your guy, I don’t know if your guys were out of zone.) – “Dover route? Yeah, yeah, yeah. Another one of those execution things. We got to execute a little bit better. I just got to continue doing what I got to do. Maybe be a little bit tighter, squeeze it a little bit more. And I got to watch the play I didn’t really see, but maybe we’ll hope for a little underneath help on that. But I really got to watch the film to see exactly what happened. I didn’t even watch that play after I’m on the sideline, so I got to see exactly what went on”

( As a veteran, how do you handle a loss like this? Do you do extra work and all that, or do you just go back to your routine?) – “I work hard as hell. I work my ass off every single day, no matter win, lose, it don’t matter. I work my ass off regardless. That’s just the respect I have for the game. I feel that way about my teammates as well. It’s more so just fixing the little things. I keep going back to execution, fixing those things. Maybe that’s being a little bit more detailed in our work. And our communication, we did have a couple guys down. I don’t like to use excuses, but when you don’t get to practice with certain guys, that hurts a little bit sometimes. But regardless, it’s just football, man and we got to figure out a way to play better in those moments.”

Raheem Mostert – December 11, 2023 (Postgame) Download PDF version

Monday, December 11, 2023
Postgame – Tennessee Titans

Miami Dolphins RB Raheem Mostert

(I know you’re about the team, but 18 touchdowns now and the season ties a franchise record. Just the season that you’re having, how much did you expect this?) – “I’ve got a standard for myself and I’m trying to do my best to uphold that standard. And going back, if you would ask me that I’m at 18 touchdowns total, I would have told you – I’d have been on the fence. I’d have been like, ‘I can see it, but then also I just still got to work on it.’ So it’s a blessing and I’m just happy I’m in this position. But I would take all those touchdowns back for a win, that’s for sure. Because it means a lot to me especially for this team. We’re doing unbelievable things and if that means take away a couple touchdowns in order for us to get a win, then I’m all about that”

Bradley Chubb – December 11, 2023 (Postgame) Download PDF version

Monday, Dec. 11, 2023
Postgame – Tennessee Titans

Miami Dolphins LB Bradley Chubb

(Your group is so good about keeping focus this season. Was tonight just football or was it a lack of focus during the week or at times tonight during the game?) – “I wouldn’t say during the week. I feel like we’ve been locked in as a team, taking each day as it comes, attacking each day on the practice field and in the meeting room. So I wouldn’t say during the week. We just probably had a couple plays here and there that we let get the best of us and we just got to be better as a team bringing it all in, reeling it all in and finding ways to win games like this.”

(This is a defense that likes to close out teams. You’ve had that opportunity before. I think they went 64 yards in four plays on that last drive. What happened on that last possession?) – “I have to watch the film and see what actually happened, but probably just guys not playing with each other. At the end of the day, we’re only going to go as far as we take this. That’s going to require us playing together, playing with each other and being on the same (page) at all times. Like I said, I’m not sure what happened but obviously we weren’t on the same key, and we’ve just got to find ways to be better in those situations.”

(Speaking of emotions I know that first half, you got the penalty. Can you take us through that?) – “Just being frustrated with myself and I let my problems be bigger than the team’s problems and hurt the team in a way that I don’t want to do that. Looking back on it now, just two more steps and I would’ve been perfectly fine, so it’s just frustrating when I let my emotions get the best of me, but at the end of the day, I tried to do everything I could to combat that in the second half and after the second quarter so just got to find ways to be better as a player, as a person, as a leader, as a teammate and I will be and it’s just one of those things that lapse judgment got the best of me and I will be better next time for sure in that situation. But hopefully that situation won’t happen again and I’ll make the sack instead of falling off of it.”

Tyreek Hill – December 11, 2023 (Postgame) Download PDF version

Monday, December 11, 2023
Postgame – Tennessee

Miami Dolphins WR Tyreek Hill

Q. Can you explain what you were feeling, what you were going through as you were out of the lineup and then worked your way to get back in?

TYREEK HILL: It was a lot of pain, man. It sucked. When it actually happened, I’ve obviously been dealing with some ankle injuries this whole season, and when it happened, like my first reaction was like, man, my ankle is gone. My adrenaline kicked in, I ran off the field, then I sat for a while and it got stiff and I was going through a lot of pain. Then I just made up in my mind, I came in at halftime, I texted my wife, I was like, ‘this (expletive) hurt.’ I need an ankle massage tonight, and she’s like, ‘you’d better get your ass back in that game, dawg.’ I was like, ‘all right.’ So I just made up my mind that it’s going to hurt. It’s going to suck. Tonight and tomorrow morning. I just went back in the game on my own, without anybody saying ‘Reek, go.’ It was like, no, (expletive) this, I’ve got to get out there and bring some energy and be that spark.

Q. What do you think a team like this can learn from a loss at this point in the season? The margin of error starts to slim up a lot more.

TYREEK HILL: As a team, we can never take any opponent lightly. The Tennessee Titans are a real good team. We’ve seen that tonight. They had a real good defense plan. They got some real good players over there. Coach Vrabel, he’s been doing it for a while now, so he kind of understands how to stop or slow or even contain us. Shout out to them guys. Props to them guys.

Q. You guys have been on such an emotional high for a long time. As one of the team leaders, how do you guys kind of get past what just happened, to blow that kind of lead that late and just move on to the next week?

TYREEK HILL: Well, it starts tomorrow, man, because we’ve got a short week. Once we get back, tomorrow we’ll come in, watch the film, knock it out, correct the errors and stuff like that. That’s when we move on and realize that we can’t make mistakes or turn the ball over or – we’ve even got to get more than three points in the red zone, because every point matters, especially in situations like this, going against a real good team like that. I feel like we’re going to be able to move on pretty quick with the great leaders that we got on this team. I feel like we’ll be fine.

Q. What was the message from Head Coach Mike McDaniel? Obviously it’s been a while since you guys lost. You guys normally take care of business against teams you’ve been expected to. What was the message from Mike after kind of a loss like this?

TYREEK HILL: Oh, kind of what I just said, man. We’ll come in tomorrow. We’ll fix the mistakes. Obviously I feel like to me, this was probably one of my better games blocking, so I can’t speak for nobody else. Just come in tomorrow, fix it, take accountability. If you did mess up, and I feel like every guy on this team will do that because everybody wants to win. Everybody wants to find ways to get better.

Q. While you were out of the game and watching a lot from the sideline, what were you seeing was going on with the offense?

TYREEK HILL: You know, man, our offense is so special. It’s such an electric offense. We were doing good. We were moving the ball up and down the field. Raheem was breaking some runs. ‘Ced’ (Cedrick Wilson Jr.) made a few big plays. I feel like we were doing typical stuff, like what we would normally do.

Q. If you could put a percentage point on how you felt when you reentered the game, were you able to cut and change directions like you normally could?

TYREEK HILL: No, I could not. It was just one of them things where like you just got to make your mind up, like ‘hey, I’m going to do it, man.’ One of them (expletive) them mindsets. You feel me? And it’s going to be like that until the end of the season. I feel like at this point of the season, everybody is typically hurt, and right now I don’t need – nobody is going to give you pity for just being injured, quite frankly. That’s just the reality of this league. My mindset is like I’m going to go in, I’m going to dominate no matter how I feel. If I get locked up, it happens. If I drop a pass, it happens. But just know I’m out there. I’m going. That’s my mindset.

Q. Knowing that this is a marathon and not a sprint, do you then think to yourself, maybe I should sit out a week just to try to get back, or is it just, I’m always going to go?

TYREEK HILL: You know what, man, that’s never a question in my head. That’s never something that I would be thinking about. But if the trainers come to me, if they see something in the scans whenever I get these scans, they say, ‘hey, Reek, you can sit out,’ I do it. But me being me, I don’t want to sit out. I want to be able to help this team any way I can, and that’s just who I am. I just don’t want to miss any games.

Mike McDaniel – December 11, 2023 (Postgame) Download PDF version

Monday, December 11, 2023
Postgame – Tennessee

Miami Dolphins Head Coach Mike McDaniel

Q. From your perspective, what culminated in not being able to put away a 14-point lead with four minutes left in the game?

MIKE McDANIEL: Well, what didn’t. I think it was a legitimate team loss. I think everybody had their hand in it. I don’t think it was intentional. I don’t think people went through the motions during the week. It was a really, really good week of practice, I thought. But you had a lot of yards given up in a short amount of time. You had a shorter field position, and you had an offense that went three-and-out. That’s literally the only way that that could happen. So yeah, we all get to share the blame in my opinion, or at least I know the locker room felt 100 percent responsible. I think that’s what you want. I think there’s a lot of people that are going to be – it’s going to be tough to go to sleep tonight, including myself. That’s not something that you can do and expect to win football games, and you can’t – it’s a hard, hard lesson, but no lead is safe. I think that’s one of the tougher parts about it.

Q. In what ways do you think facing adversity in this game, a loss in December, can be a catalyst for positive change?

MIKE McDANIEL: You know, I know right now it doesn’t feel anything but frustration and regret about what more you can do. I do know the two — I have experience with it personally. The two most successful seasons that I’ve been a part of, around this week we lost a game, and at the end of the season, near December, we’ve spent a lot of time together, and you don’t have – you can do one or two things with a loss like this for me personally, and just my belief in the individuals that I work with on a day-to-day basis, I would expect whatever things haven’t been done in the direction of trying to win football games, collectively I think the guys will rise to the occasion. I think you have to because it’s a humbling game, and you think that you’re a good football team, but then each and every week you have to prove that on the field and you can’t take anything for granted. Right now it feels terrible, but that’s everything that we’ll be trying to do moving forward because these types of losses can be very galvanizing, but it takes literally every person in the locker room and coaching staff, and you have to – as long as guys aren’t pointing fingers, which I feel like there’s a lot of people looking internally, you have that chance, and that’s what we’ll be spending our time doing.

Q. Connor Williams is such a key player. Is his knee injury feared significant?

MIKE McDANIEL: I think we’ll find out more tomorrow. Honestly, so much happened in that game from that point, I haven’t seen talked to the training staff about it as of yet. But I know it would take a lot to keep him out. It’s probably not the most positive.

Q. The offense was kind of (indiscernible) what went wrong for the unit, especially in the red zone the first couple drives?

MIKE McDANIEL: Well, that’s a place that we’ve made a point to do a pretty good job down there, and we did not tonight. You could point that as the No. 1 reason. There’s several people and several phases that will say they’re the No. 1 reason, but you can point to that as the No. 1 reason we didn’t win the game. For me, you call plays for them to work, and they didn’t. So you’re trying to play to the team when you’re making decisions to go for it or not. A couple of those, I felt like we just lost a lot of points there. In two particular instances I think inside the five, that’s eight points total there. We had a blocked field goal. We’ve done out-of-character things to almost find a way to lose the game. The guys still fought, but you have to play a certain type of football to expect to win, and it’s hard to get all the way down there and not to come up with touchdowns. It’s not something that we’ve had success this season, and we haven’t done that. It’ll start with me, but I think that the locker room will — I always just look at it like we have really good players, and we should be successful down there. So when we don’t, I start with that, and then we’ll go comb the tape and make sure that the certain things that kept us from getting in the end zone don’t in the future.

Q. Can you speak to the type of adjustment that it is when Tyreek Hill is out of the lineup for you guys?

MIKE McDANIEL: Yeah, there’s a good amount of offense that goes through him. However, we have – ‘Ced’ (Cedrick Wilson Jr.) made a couple plays. It wasn’t the reason for the lack of first half or really first three-quarter points. I think there were just critical times that we would be off a hair on first or second down and you’re put in a third down situation, and our protection wasn’t exactly what maybe we’d be used to on a play or two. Then there was a misfire on a play or two and those things add up, but I didn’t see it as we were – obviously a player of Tyreek’s caliber, it hurts when he’s not in. However, I think there was plenty of offense to be had and we’ve got a lot of guys that I trust to do that. I think that just bottom line, you have things like that happen in a game, you’re going to lose and those are lessons that are learned usually one way and that’s the hard one.

Q. I know you said that things like this are fickle and that if the play goes the other way, nobody is questioning it. Everybody is praising it. What went into the decision not to run the ball those first few trips to the red zone or stick to the pass those first few trips to the goal line?

MIKE McDANIEL: You know, I think it had – kind of approached it like I usually do and we passed the ball because we thought it was going to work and it didn’t. That will always – that’s not a big deal to me, that it’s like part of inherently in the job, if you’re going to get high fives for success, so that was definitely the wrong call because it didn’t work. You have to try to forecast as much as you can and do right by the time as best you can, and I think anytime we’re that close to the end zone and we don’t come up with a touchdown, I think that it will 100 percent of the time be second-guessed, as it should be, because who am I? Am I above second-guessing? It didn’t work, so that’s the – you’d better be tough in this business if you want to be in it and I would expect nothing less. Stuff didn’t work.

Q. What were the late defensive play calls? How did the Titans work their way down the field so quickly twice?

MIKE McDANIEL: I’m going to have to comb the film. Live, I think there were a couple communication issues on the back end is what I saw, in terms of specifically the crossing routes. There was one big one to ‘D-Hop’ (DeAndre Hopkins) that was pretty hurtful in the overall grand scheme of things. But also you could easily say that that situation, the defense with a couple guys that got hurt within the game should have never been in that situation. I know the defense – specifically multiple players and coaches came up to me and let me know their feeling on how the end of the game went, and it’s not acceptable to them, and that’s how you want the team to look at it. You don’t want people to be like, 14-point lead, however long – you let people hang around and you let them off the hook when you’re inside the five and you have six points as opposed to 14. It changes the math for sure. We’ll work to clean that up. I know that there’s some very, very frustrated individuals on the defensive side of the ball, and we’ll look at the tape. I would hesitate to place all blame – this was as much of a team loss as you could have in my opinion before watching the tape.

Tua Tagovailoa – December 11, 2023 (Postgame) Download PDF version

Monday, December 11, 2023
Postgame – Tennessee

Miami Dolphins QB Tua Tagovailoa

Q. You guys take a two-touchdown lead; did you have any feeling, any inkling that you would actually end up losing that game?

TUA TAGOVAILOA: It’s the NFL. Anything can happen. We’ve got to do a better job finishing the game with the time that we had while we had the ball, not allowing their opposing team’s offense to get that opportunity to potentially go down and score. It’s a team sport. You can’t blame one side. But I would say from an offensive standpoint there’s things that we could have done a lot better to not have gone through what we’ve gone through tonight.

Q. I know Tyreek was in and out of the game with the ankle, but what do you think was kind of the trouble in the passing game? I know the run game, you guys had over 160 yards, but in the passing game what gave you guys struggles?

TUA TAGOVAILOA: I think what they wanted game plan-wise was to put a shell over our team, forcing us to run the ball, forcing us to beat them that way. But when you have someone like Tyreek go down, it does make it tough, but when you also have a couple of your key o-linemen go down, as well, it does hurt the guys up front and sort of the way we operate.

Q. I wanted to ask about that. What was kind of the hardest part of obviously Connor Williams goes down, you’re already without Terron and Rob Hunt. What was the hardest part of getting things aligned?

TUA TAGOVAILOA: Well, I think one of the toughest parts of that is a lot of those guys haven’t gotten reps at some of the positions. It’s not to say that we practice for situations like this to happen. It just so happened that Connor went down and we already had a couple of our guys out. But needless to say, I know the guys up front will get better. I know the guys around me will get better. I will continue to get better. That’s the only way we can grow. We’ve just got to watch the tape. Tough loss tonight, but it’s going to linger like this if we don’t do anything about that.

Q. The final fourth-and-2, can you break that play down from your perspective?

TUA TAGOVAILOA: Well, the play happened. Trying to look for an eligible. Then as I tried to maneuver through the pocket, I was trying to get a clear lane to find someone, but that’s how that went.

Q. How much of a collaborative process is the play calling in the red zone once you get close to the goal line? Has Mike ever asked, what do you see here? Do you chip in? Or is it pretty much him making the decisions?

TUA TAGOVAILOA: We talk about those decisions as far as plays that we like down there with what their defense runs. The night before we sort of go over, talk about each play and reasons as to why we could call this versus this or that versus this. The plays that he’s called, that’s sort of what we went over and what we trusted as far as what we saw on tape from the Titans.

Q. We’ve seen some Dolphin teams in the past have a loss like this in December and things kind of snowball. As one of the leaders here, how do you keep that from happening when you have a result like that at the end of the game?

TUA TAGOVAILOA: Yeah, I don’t think this is the same Dolphins team that everyone thinks about. We’ve got a lot of really good players. We’ve got really good coaches. It’s one loss home this year. It’s not like the world ends because we lost this game. We’re human. We’ll continue to get better from this. This is the NFL; no one is perfect. That’s that.

Q. You now have over 1,000 career completions. At this stage in your career, thinking back to last year, what are some things that you appreciate the most?

TUA TAGOVAILOA: I’m appreciative for the entire journey that I’ve had since I got here, the draft process, the games that I’ve been able to go in, the people that I’ve been able to learn from. But as far as right now, I’m not even worried about any of that. I’m not even thinking of that. I’m a little disappointed that we put out that type of performance offensively, and it should have never been that way today.

Q. What was your perspective on the lost fumble play down near the opponent’s goal line?

TUA TAGOVAILOA: That was my fault. I’ve got to catch the snap. I don’t get as many reps with Liam in practice. I get some reps as far as quarterback-center exchange, but because Connor is our starting center, that’s the only person I’m working with as far as getting those reps. I’ve just got to continue to work those with Liam, but that’s not his fault, that’s my fault and I’ll get better from it.

Q. Did you have a firm grasp on the ball after you picked it up?

TUA TAGOVAILOA: I did, but the problem there is I didn’t drop. I picked it up and turned to throw it already, and the defender was already in my face, and he made a good play on hitting the ball. That’s no one else’s fault but mine.

Search Transcripts

Weekly Archives