The disrespect for one of the Miami Dolphins’ position rooms has, officially, jumped the shark
We have officially exhausted all of the takes. Bring on Miami Dolphins training camp.
Enough! Bring on training camp. The Miami Dolphins‘ practices cannot get here soon enough.
July is, in football media, considered to be “list season”. There’s a list for the best players in the league, a list for the best players at every position, lists for the season ahead, and so on. But a recently curated list of offensive line power rankings should mark as the end of “list season”. Because we’ve officially lost the plot.
The disrespect for one of the Miami Dolphins’ position rooms has, officially, jumped the shark
30th! The aggregate ranking for the 2026 Miami Dolphins’ offensive line across six different outlets is 30th out of 32 franchises. I will, happily, take the over on this one when things are all said and done. The Dolphins have their fair share of questions up front, yes. The health and durability of Austin Jackson at right tackle has been a problem for two seasons now. Jonah Savaiinaea’s performance at right guard is very much a concern.
But the Miami Dolphins boast one of the brightest growing young left tackles in all of football in Patrick Paul, and one of the best interior linemen in the game via Aaron Brewer. Savaiinaea is a top-50 player whose talent did not show last season — but he is quite physically gifted. The other two spots are held by top-20 draft selections.
The law of averages says at least one of Kadyn Proctor, Jackson, and Savaiinaea will be fine, if not good. And I don’t know very many offensive lines that have ranked bottom tier in the league that have had three good players on them. Perhaps injuries decimate this unit. At that point, yes. The Dolphins don’t have the depth to withstand several salvos of injury. But neither does any other team. So miss me with this one — I’m not buying. And I’m ready to call it a wrap for list season after this.
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