Miami Dolphins – Ronnie Brown injury
The Dolphins season nearly came to an end earlier today.
With a visit to rapidly-improving Carolina up next, the Dolphins have some major problems, beginning with key injuries and a penchant for fourth-quarter collapses.
Running back Ronnie Brown’s ankle tops the list because who’s going to replace him?
The Dolphins didn’t seem to miss LB Joey Porter much, either.
On the second one, Henne threw Bess open while the defender’s back was turned, a quality coach Tony Sparano praised in Drew Brees a few weeks back.
Tampa Bay’s TD makes 96 points scored against Miami in the fourth quarter, second-worst in the NFL to Buffalo (101, including 24 Sunday).
Running back Ricky Williams had a big day, finishing with 102 rushing yards, capped by a 27-yard scamper to set up the game-winning FG.
1. Running back Lex Hilliard is likely to get his chance this week. But with no carries this season, will Hilliard be ready?
It was performances like that that earned him a spot on the Miami roster, though to be fair he’s retained it until now with strong special teams play.
Miami will need a strong running game against Carolina, whose own running game entered this week’s games leading the NFC in rushing. Just as Brown and Ricky Williams were a great 1-2 punch, Hilliard and Williams make for a tandem that could pound away at a Carolina run defense, which was ranked 23rd entering the weekend.
2. Linebacker Charlie Anderson made a bigger impact than Joey Porter has all season. But Anderson’s inconsistency, not his talent, has held him back.
{Anderson stepped in for Porter and had one of his best games in two seasons as a Dolphin, with five solo tackles, including a sack, and two forced fumbles.
Anderson, a sixth-year pro, showed big-time flashes a few times a season ago, highlighted by his performance in Toronto against Buffalo (four solos, a sack, two FFs). He followed it with nice outing against San Francisco, including a key sack late in the game.
But Porter has been banged-up and played at a sub-par level, so Anderson needs to build on Sunday’s performance.
3. Kicker Dan Carpenter answered the challenge of training camp nemesis Connor Barth.
The Dolphins signed Barth during training camp to push Carpenter, who was struggling and admitted he was too focused on mechanics.
But the move made sense, given Carpenter had proven himself to be a consistent and clutch kicker for Miami as a rookie in 2008.