Most encouraging for the Dolphins is that big plays on both sides of the ball seem to come from a different player each week. Linebacker Jerome Baker basically bench-pressed Jets running back Michael Carter and skated him into Wilson for one of his two sacks on Sunday. Dolphins running back Duke Johnson, who was born in Miami, rushed for 107 yards on 22 carries with two touchdowns, a standout performance for a former second-round draft pick who has bounced between the team’s practice squad and active roster.
Exiting the field, Dolphins fans greeted Johnson with cheers of “Duuuuuke.” Defensive tackle Christian Wilkins, who caught a touchdown, engaged in a love fest with the team’s mascot and did “the worm” in the end zone. There’s an ecstatic energy now for a team that had every reason to quit on the season a month and a half ago.
Tagovailoa noted after Sunday’s game that players simply started putting more work in.
At 7-7, and third in the division, Miami is somehow still mathematically alive in the playoff hunt, with a 7 percent chance of playing in the postseason, according to the New York Times playoff predictor. If the Dolphins win their final three games — at New Orleans, at Tennessee and at home against New England — their odds jump to 70 percent.
But Miami does not need that miracle to know its investment in this team has shown dividends.
The Lions may actually be capable of biting some kneecaps.