The
Miami Dolphins are a professional football team based in
the Miami
, Florida
metropolitan
area
. They play home games at Land Shark
Stadium
, in the suburb of Miami Gardens
. They are headquartered at the Miami Dolphins Training
Facility in Davie,
Florida
. The Dolphins belong to the Eastern Division
of the American Football Conference (AFC) in the
National Football League (NFL). The
Dolphins were founded by
Joseph
Robbie, and began play in the
American Football League as an
expansion team in 1966, an example of
that seminal league's expanding the sport to areas that were not
then represented. Miami joined the NFL as part of the
AFL-NFL merger.
The Dolphins are the
oldest continuous major-league
professional sports franchise in the state of Florida
. (The
first Florida sports franchise was the Miami Seahawks of the AAFC
in 1946.)
The team made its first
Super Bowl
appearance following the 1971 season in
Super Bowl VI, but lost to the
Dallas Cowboys. In
1972, the Dolphins completed the NFL's first
and only
perfect season culminating
in a Super Bowl win, winning all 14 regular season games, two
playoff games and
Super Bowl VII. The
achievement became the fourth pro football team to accomplish the
feat along with the 1937 Los Angeles Bulldogs (16-0-0, AFL), the
1948 Calgary Stampeders (14-0-0, CFL) and the 1948 Cleveland Browns
(15-0-0, AAFC).
The 1972 Dolphins held the fourth perfect regular season in NFL
history, but the other three teams were beaten in the NFL
Championship game. The team also won
Super Bowl VIII, becoming the first team to
appear in three consecutive Super Bowls, and the second team (first
AFL/AFC team) to win back-to-back championships. Miami also
appeared in
Super Bowl XVII and
Super Bowl XIX, losing both
games.
For most of their history, the Dolphins were coached by
Don Shula, the most successful head coach in
professional football history. His Dolphins teams posted losing
records in only two of his 26 seasons with the club. Six future
Hall of Fame members played for Miami during the 1970s, including
running back
Larry Csonka and
quarterback
Bob Griese. During the 1980s
and 1990s quarterback
Dan Marino became
the most prolific passer in NFL history, breaking numerous league
passing records. He led the Dolphins to five division titles, 10
playoff appearances and Super Bowl XIX before retiring after the
1999 season.
History
Miami joined the American Football League (AFL) when an expansion
team franchise and was awarded to lawyer Joseph Robbie and actor
Danny Thomas in 1965 for $7.5 million
dollars, although Thomas would eventually sell his stake in the
team to Robbie. A contest was held in 1965 to find the name of the
new Miami franchise for the American Football League. A total of
19,843 entries were submitted with over a thousand different names.
A dozen finalists were screened through by a seven-member committee
made up of the local media, names considered included the Mariners,
Marauders, Mustangs, Missiles, Moons, Sharks, and Suns. The winning
name, "Dolphins," was submitted by 622 entrants.
Mrs. Robert Swanson of
West Miami won lifetime passes to Dolphin games when her nickname
entry successfully predicted the winner and score of the 1965
football game between Notre Dame
and the University of Miami
, a scoreless tie.
1970s
The Dolphins had a combined 15–39–2 record in their first four
seasons (under head coach
George Wilson) when Don Shula
was hired as head coach. Shula was a former
Paul Brown disciple who had been lured from the
Baltimore Colts
after first losing
Super Bowl III two
seasons earlier to the AFL's New York Jets and finishing 8–5–1 the
following season. The Colts charged the Dolphins with tampering in
their hiring of Shula, costing the Dolphins their first round draft
pick in 1970. Shula introduced himself to the Miami press by saying
that he didn't have any magic formulas and that the only way he
knew to make his teams successful was through hard work. Shula's
early training camps with the Dolphins, with four workouts a day,
would soon be the stuff of sweltering, painful legend. But Shula's
hard work paid immediate dividends, as Miami improved to a 10–4
record and their first-ever playoff appearance, losing 21–14 at
Oakland.
The Dolphins were successful in the early 1970s, becoming the first
team to advance to the
Super Bowl for
three consecutive seasons. They captured the AFC championship in
1971 behind quarterback
Bob Griese,
running backs
Larry Csonka and
Jim Kiick, and wide receiver
Paul Warfield. The AFC Divisional Playoff
Game, in which the Dolphins defeated the
Kansas City Chiefs, was the longest
contest in NFL history (82 minutes 40 seconds). In
Super Bowl VI, however, Miami lost to the
Dallas Cowboys 24–3.
In 1972 the Dolphins completed the
NFL's first
perfect season, winning 14 regular season games, two playoff games
and
Super Bowl VII, defeating the
Washington Redskins 14-7. QB
Griese fell victim to a broken leg and dislocated ankle in Week 5
versus the
San Diego Chargers and
was replaced by veteran
Earl Morrall
for the rest of the regular season, but returned to the field as a
substitute during the AFC Championship game versus the
Pittsburgh Steelers and then started in
Super Bowl VII. The Dolphins set the
NFL single-season rushing record, and running backs Csonka and
Mercury Morris became the first
teammates to each rush for 1,000 yards in a season. The offensive
line included future Hall of Fame members
Jim
Langer and
Larry Little and Pro
Bowler
Bob Kuechenberg. The 1972
Dolphins defensive unit, called the No-Name Defense because Miami’s
impressive offense received much more publicity, was the league’s
best that year. It was led by linebacker
Nick Buoniconti, end
Bill Stanfill, tackle
Manny Fernandez and
safeties
Dick Anderson and
Jake Scott.
Before the 1972 Dolphins, only the
Chicago
Bears, in
1934 and
1942, had finished an NFL regular season
with no losses or ties. The 1934 team lost the
NFL Championship Game that year
to the
New York Football Giants, and
the 1942 team lost the
Championship to the Redskins.
The
Cleveland Browns were
undefeated in the 1948
All-America Football
Conference season.
The Dolphins finished 12–2 after the 1973 regular season and
repeated as NFL Champions, beating the
Minnesota Vikings 24–7 in
Super Bowl VIII at Rice Stadium in Houston.
Miami reached the playoffs again in 1974 but lost in the first
round to the
Oakland Raiders, in
what has entered
NFL lore as the "
Sea of Hands" game, considered one of the
greatest games ever played. Following the 1974 season, the Dolphins
lost Csonka, Kiick, and Warfield to the
World Football League.
Miami rebounded from a 6–8 record in 1976 by winning ten or more
games in four of the next five seasons. Shula built a solid defense
around a new set of stars, including linebacker
A.J. Duhe and linemen
Bob Baumhower and
Doug Betters. The Dolphins went 10–4 again in
1977, but again lost the division title (and playoff spot) to the
Colts. They made the playoffs as a wild card in 1978, but lost in
the first round to the
Houston
Oilers 17-9.
Csonka returned to the Dolphins in time for the 1979 season.
After
winning the division with a 10–6 record, the Dolphins lost the
divisional playoff 34–14 to the eventual Super Bowl champion
Pittsburgh Steelers at Three Rivers Stadium
.
1980s
In 1980,
David Woodley, an athletic
quarterback out of
LSU, took over for Bob
Griese, who severely injured his shoulder in a game against the
Baltimore Colts. Griese would never play again, retiring after the
season. The Dolphins finished 8–8 and did not make the
playoffs.
The Dolphins were back up on top of the AFC East in the
1981 NFL season, with an 11–4–1 record. That
season, the Dolphins quarterback position was actually manned by
both Woodley and back-up quarterback
Don
Strock, causing the local
media to
identify the Miami quarterback as "Woodstrock." They reached the
divisional
playoff against the San Diego
Chargers, known as
The Epic in
Miami and remembered as one of the most memorable games in NFL
history, After being down 24–0 after the end of the first quarter,
back-up quarterback Don Strock entered the game and engineered a
frenetic comeback, culminating in the historic "Hook and Lateral"
play, in which wide receiver
Duriel
Harris caught a pass from Strock and immediately lateralled the
ball to the streaking running back
Tony
Nathan for the score on the last play of the half, which cut
the Chargers lead to 24–17. After the Dolphins took the lead in the
4th quarter, San Diego tied it up 38–38 with under a minute to
play. Chargers tight end
Kellen
Winslow, playing through exhaustion, blocked
Uwe von Schamann's field goal try on the
last play of regulation. In overtime, Von Schamann had another
field goal attempt blocked, and
Rolf
Benirschke kicked the game-winner for San Diego (final score
41-38) after missing a chip shot field goal earlier. Strock
finished the game with 403 passing yards and 4 touchdowns.
Killer B's
In the
strike-shortened
1982 NFL season, the Dolphins, led by the
"Killer B's" defense (
Bob Baumhower,
Bill Barnett,
Lyle Blackwood,
Kim
Bokamper,
Glenn Blackwood,
Charles Bowser,
Doug Betters, and
Bob
Brudzinski), held five of their nine opponents to 14 or fewer
points en route to their fourth Super Bowl appearance. During the
first two rounds of the
1982–83 NFL playoffs, they got
revenge for previous losses, crushing the Patriots, 28–13 (revenge
for the infamous Snow Plow game at Schaeffer Stadium played earlier
in the season) and the San Diego Chargers, 34–13 at the Orange
Bowl. After shutting out the
New York
Jets in the
AFC Championship
14–0 (aided by Shula's instructions to the Stadium's grounds crew
to leave the field uncovered throughout a week long rain in Miami).
This was done to negate the Jets superior edge in team speed. They
lost Super Bowl XVII to Washington, 27–17. After enjoying success
rooted in a defense-first philosophy, and employing a
ball control offense to take pressure off of
lackluster quarterbacks, the next 17 seasons would be marked by an
average rushing game and defense that limited a great
quarterback.
During the third game of the 1983 season at the Los Angeles Raiders
on Monday Night Football, Shula replaced quarterback David Woodley
with rookie
Dan Marino, who went on to
win the AFC passing title with a ratio of 20 touchdowns versus 6
interceptions. Seldom sacked by defenders, Marino was protected by
an outstanding
offensive line as he
passed to receivers such as
Mark
Clayton and
Mark Duper. Despite the
regular season success (the Dolphins went 12–4 winning their last
five regular season games, the only team in the AFC East with a
winning record), they were upset in the divisional playoff by the
Seattle Seahawks at the Orange
Bowl. Defensive end Doug Betters was named the
NFL Defensive Player of the
Year.
In 1984, the Dolphins won their first 11 games
en route to
a 14–2 season (the franchise's best 16-game season to date).
Marino, in his first full season, produced the most impressive set
of passing statistics in NFL history, setting single-season records
for most yards (5,084), touchdown passes (48), and completions
(362). He was voted NFL
MVP. Miami avenged the
Seahawks loss from the previous year 31-10
and crushed the Steelers 45–28 in the AFC Championship to get to
Super Bowl XIX. In the title game, however, Miami lost to the
San Francisco 49ers 38-16. It
would be Marino's only Super Bowl appearance.
Miami finished 12-4-0 in 1985 and, in an epic Monday Night Football
showdown, handed the previously-undefeated
Chicago Bears their only defeat of the season.
After rallying from a 21-3 third quarter deficit in the divisional
playoffs to beat the Cleveland Browns 24–21, many people were
looking forward to a rematch with Chicago in
Super Bowl XX. The
Cinderella New England Patriots, the Dolphins'
opponents in the AFC Championship, had different plans. New England
forced six
turnovers on the way
to a 31–14 win - the Patriots' first in Miami since 1966. The
Patriots had lost 18 games in a row at the Orange Bowl. In 1969,
the Boston Patriots had beaten the Dolphins at Tampa Stadium.
In 1986, the Dolphins, hampered by defensive struggles, stumbled to
a 2–5 start and finished 8–8, missing the playoffs for the first
time since 1980. The Dolphins lost their last ever game at the
Orange Bowl to the New England Patriots 34–27 on Monday Night
Football. The problems continued in 1987, with an 8–7 (7-5 in
non-strike games) record in a
strike-shortened year, their first at new
Joe Robbie Stadium. Miami had their first losing season (6–10)
since 1976 in 1988, and finished 8–8 following the 1989 regular
season.
1990s
1990–1991
By 1990, the Dolphins had finally shaped up on defense and finished
with a 12–4 record, second in the AFC East. They came from behind
to beat the Kansas City Chiefs 17–16 in the Wild Card round, but
lost to the Buffalo Bills 44–34 in the divisional playoffs. The
team struggled with defensive injuries in 1991, and narrowly missed
the playoffs in an overtime loss to the New York Jets during the
final week of the season, losing the AFC's final playoff berth to
their arch rivals fromNew York.
1992
The Dolphins rebounded in 1992 and started the season 6-0 and then
finished 11–5 and capturing the AFC East title behind a career year
from running back
Mark Higgs and tight
end
Keith Jackson, newly
acquired from the
Philadelphia
Eagles as an unrestricted free agent. They crushed the Chargers
in the divisional playoffs 31–0, but were defeated by the Buffalo
Bills 29–10 in the AFC Championship.
1993–1994
A season-ending Achilles injury to Dan Marino led to the team
missing the playoffs in 1993 despite a league-leading 9-2 start.
Marino returned in 1994 to lead the Dolphins to a 10–6 record and
the AFC East crown. After defeating Joe Montana and the Kansas City
Chiefs in the Wild Card round, the Dolphins gave up a 15-point
halftime lead and suffered a heart-breaking 22–21 loss to the San
Diego Chargers.
Pete Stoyanovich
missed a 46 yard field goal on the last play of the game and denied
Marino a chance to play the Steelers in his hometown of Pittsburgh
in the AFC Championship.
1995
In 1995, Marino broke the career passing records formerly held by
Fran Tarkenton for yards (48,841),
touchdowns (352), and completions (3,913), though two of the games
where he broke those records were losses to the
Indianapolis Colts. The Dolphins finished
9–7, second in the AFC East, but still made the playoffs as a wild
card, losing to Buffalo in the first round. Following the 1995
season, Don Shula retired and became an executive in the Dolphins’
front office.
Jimmy
Johnson, who had won a collegiate national championship at the
University of Miami and two Super Bowls with the Dallas Cowboys,
was named as Shula’s replacement. At the press conference
announcing his retirement, Shula said that he "agreed to step
aside", leading some to speculate that Huizenga had all but fired
him.
1996–1998
In 1996, Miami finished 8-8 and out of the playoffs, with rookie
Karim Abdul-Jabbar's
1,116-yard rushing season and the standout play of rookie
linebacker Zach Thomas serving as two of the few bright spots. In
1997, Miami stumbled late and backed into the playoffs with a 9–7
season, losing to the
New England
Patriots in the Wild Card round.
Miami had a solid 10-6 season in 1998 with a career season for
receiver
O.J. McDuffie, but it was not enough to get past
the New York Jets into first place in the division. The Dolphins
beat the Bills in the Wild Card round, but lost in the next round
to the eventual champion
Denver
Broncos. (The Broncos lost only two regular season games in
1998, one of which was to the Dolphins.)
1999
In 1999, the team advanced to the playoffs at 9-7. After a close
win at Seattle in the Wild Card round 20-17, they suffered the
second worst playoff loss in NFL history against the
Jacksonville Jaguars: 62-7. Noteworthy,
in the 1940 NFL Championship game, the Chicago Bears beat the host
Washington Redskins 73-0 for the worst playoff game in history.
After the season, Jimmy Johnson left the team and Marino
retired.
2000s
2000–01
Before the 2000 season,
Dave
Wannstedt, formerly of the Chicago Bears, became the new coach,
and ex-Jacksonville Jaguars backup
Jay
Fiedler became the new quarterback, even though former Marino
backup Damon Huard had been considered the favorite. Despite
lowered expectations, the defense broke through with
Jason Taylor and
Trace Armstrong each getting 10 sacks, and
four players (
Sam Madison,
Brian Walker,
Brock Marion and
Patrick Surtain) tallying at least five
interceptions. All-pro linebacker
Zach
Thomas also contributed many tackles. In addition,
Lamar Smith rushed for 1,139 yards, and
Miami finished atop the AFC East with an 11–5 record. In the first
round of the playoffs, Miami took the
Indianapolis Colts to
overtime and won on a Lamar Smith touchdown run. Smith finished
with 209 yards on 40 carries, but in the next round, the Dolphins
were shut out by the Oakland Raiders, and a worn-out Smith was
barely able to run.
The 2001 offseason brought in rookie
Chris Chambers at wide receiver, but Trace
Armstrong left, as did two offensive linemen,
Richmond Webb, a Pro Bowl anchor since 1990,
and Kevin Donnalley. During the 2001 season, the Dolphins relied on
a strong defense to finish 11–5, earning a Wild Card spot and
finishing second in the AFC East behind the eventual Super Bowl
champions, the
New
England Patriots. The Dolphins lost in the first round of the
playoffs 20–3 to the
Baltimore Ravens.
2002
Ricky Williams during a Pro Bowl stint
revitalized its running game in time for the 2002 season by trading
for
New Orleans Saints running
back
Ricky Williams. In addition,
rookie tight end
Randy McMichael
made his presence felt. The Dolphins, behind a new offensive scheme
under freshly hired offensive coordinator Norv Turner, and a power
running game led by Williams, quickly rushed out to a 5–1 start,
including an incredible last minute comeback by Fiedler against the
Broncos. However, Fiedler
injured his thumb and would be out for an extended period of time.
This intrigued some Dolphins fans, who believed backup
Ray Lucas could outdo the much-maligned Fiedler.
However, Lucas was abysmal in his first two games and merely
average in his third, and the team dropped three straight. Miami
rebounded with wins over
Baltimore and an impressive
thumping of
San
Diego, but lost to
Buffalo. Still, Miami pulled off
an impressive win over the
Oakland Raiders and sat at 9–5
with two weeks left in the season, in prime position to steal the
AFC East. However, despite dominating the New England Patriots for
most of the game in Week 17, the Dolphins blew an 11-point lead
late in the fourth quarter of a devastating loss. Due to a
tiebreaker, both the Dolphins and Patriots lost out on the playoffs
as the Jets took the AFC East title. Many fans called for
Wannstedt's firing, but he was kept on for the 2003 season. Despite
it all, the team believed it had plenty to look forward to, as
Ricky Williams broke Dolphins records with 1,853 rushing yards and
16 touchdowns on the ground.
2003
The 2003 Miami Dolphins were a hard team to pinpoint. The defense
was again solid and forced a lot of turnovers, and opposing
offenses found running the ball extremely difficult. However, poor
offensive line play (despite most of the starters returning) gave
little room for Ricky to run, and the offense was stagnant. The
Dolphins began with a repeat of 2002's season end, with a complete
meltdown against the
Houston
Texans, but they rebounded to win four straight games. During a
crushing overtime loss at the hands of the Patriots, Jay Fiedler
was injured, forcing newly acquired backup
Brian Griese to lead the Dolphins to victory
the next week over San Diego. That, however, was Griese's high
point, and after a good showing against
Indianapolis in a losing
effort, he was lousy against the
Titans and highly ineffective
against the
Ravens.
When Griese and the Dolphins fell behind to the
Washington Redskins, Jay
Fiedler came off the bench and saved their season, leading them to
a comeback victory, 24–23. Miami looked like it might rebound
thanks to a victory over the
Dallas Cowboys that took them to
8–4, but two key losses to the
Patriots and the
Eagles ended Miami's
postseason hopes. Miami finished 10–6.
2004
The 2004 offseason was disastrous for the Dolphins. Tight end Randy
McMichael was arrested for domestic violence and wide receiver
David Boston (signed from San Diego)
suffered an injury in training camp and missed the entire season
(Boston also failed a drug test for
steroids later in the season). But the biggest
shock came when Ricky Williams retired for then-unspecified
reasons, until it was eventually revealed that a) Williams had
recently suffered his third strike under the NFL's substance abuse
policy, and b) to a lesser degree felt he was unnecessarily
overused by Wannstedt. Many experts predicted a disastrous season
for the Dolphins. These predictions proved right as Miami dropped
their first six games of the 2004 season, marking the worst start
in franchise history at the time. After the team fell to 1–8,
Wannstedt resigned on November 9, 2004. He was replaced on an
interim basis by defensive coordinator
Jim Bates. The Dolphins fared
slightly better under Bates, winning three of their final seven
games, including a 29–28 upset victory over the defending champion
Patriots on December
20 in a nationally televised
Monday Night Football contest.
Despite this, the Dolphins decided not to hire Bates for the
permanent coaching position.
2005–06
After a 4-12 season, the Dolphins selected running back Ronnie
Brown with their first pick.
of retaining Jim Bates, the Dolphins hired
LSU coach
Nick
Saban. With the second pick the
2005
NFL Draft, Nick Saban elected to go with
Auburn running back
Ronnie Brown. And with that, the Nick Saban era
kicked off with a 34–10 win against the Denver Broncos. From there,
however, the Dolphins struggled, losing seven of their next nine
games to fall to 3–7.
The two wins came over the Carolina Panthers and the New Orleans Saints, a game that took
place in Tiger
Stadium
due to Hurricane
Katrina. After a frustrating two months, however, the
Dolphins would rally late in the season, as they won their final
six games, including a win to end the season over the New England
Patriots. The team finished the year 9–7, and narrowly missed the
playoffs.
In Saban's second season, the Dolphins were expected to contend for
a playoff spot. The season, however, turned out to be a major
disappointment. Quarterback
Daunte
Culpepper never recovered from his devastating knee injury from
the previous season, and was ultimately benched after the fourth
game of the season and eventually put on Injured Reserve. After
starting the season 1–6, they won four straight games, back in the
playoff hunt at 5–6, but a few losses later ended their playoff
hopes. This was Saban's first and last losing season as a head
coach of the Miami Dolphins.
On January
3, 2007, Saban announced that he had accepted a contract for eight
years and a guaranteed $32 million to coach at the University of
Alabama
. Saban left despite making several public
statements in the preceding weeks assuring fans and owner Wayne
Huizenga that he would be staying on as coach of the Dolphins.
Cam Cameron, previously the
offensive coordinator for the San
Diego Chargers, was then introduced as the new head coach of the
Dolphins.
2007
The Dolphins began their season with
Trent
Green as their starting quarterback but after four games, Green
was put on the injured reserve. For the rest of the way, the
Dolphins went with
Cleo Lemon and rookie
John Beck as their
quarterbacks. The Dolphins also suffered another setback with then
NFL leading rusher
Ronnie Brown went
down for the season with a knee injury.
Midway
through the 2007 season, the NFL scheduled the Dolphins' home game
against the New York Giants to be
played in London
's Wembley
Stadium
; this was the NFL's first regular-season game to be
played outside of North
America. The Giants defeated the Dolphins, 13-10.
Shortly afterwards, one of Miami's top wide receivers
Chris Chambers, who was acquired in 2001, was
traded to the
San Diego Chargers.
On December 16, the Dolphins ended a 16 game losing streak by
defeating the
Baltimore Ravens at
home 22–16 in overtime on a 64 yard touchdown from
Cleo Lemon to
Greg
Camarillo, making the wideout an instant cult hero with the
fans. Despite the win over the Ravens, the team would lose its next
two games to finish an NFL worst 1–15, which tied the then NFL
record for most losses in a season with 15, a record shared by 7
other teams. The record for most losses has since been broken by
the 2008
Detroit Lions with an 0–16
record.
2008
Late in the 2007 season, two-time Super Bowl winning coach
Bill Parcells was named Executive Vice
President of the Dolphins football operations. Shortly after the
season finale, Parcells fired general manager
Randy Mueller and on January 3, 2008, head
coach
Cam Cameron was fired along with
almost all of his staff. That same offseason, the Dolphins also
parted ways with two
Pro Bowlers and
long-time Dolphins, releasing
linebacker
Zach Thomas (who later signed with the
Dallas Cowboys) and trading
defensive end Jason Taylor to the
Washington Redskins for a second
round draft pick.
Parcells then proceeded to hire
Tony
Sparano, who was previously an assistant under Parcells during
his days as the head coach of the
Dallas
Cowboys.
The Dolphins ultimately took Jake Long, star offensive lineman out of the
University
of Michigan
with the first pick of the 2008 draft and drafted
quarterback Chad Henne with their second
round pick (the second consecutive year they drafted a QB in the
second round). After the
New York
Jets traded for
Brett Favre and
released quarterback
Chad Pennington
the same day, the Dolphins quickly signed Pennington, who was a
former Parcells draft pick.
Going into their bye week (week 4), the only Dolphins victory was
over the New England Patriots in week 3. Their next game was
against the San Diego Chargers on October 5, 2008 in which the
Dolphins prevailed 17–10 and earned a .500 record 2–2; however, the
two wins were against the two teams that contested the 2007–08
AFC Championship game. The
implementation of the "
Wildcat"
offense or
single-wing offense was
covered heavily by the media, despite the package being used
sparingly during their two upset victories vs the Patriots and
Chargers.
Early on, Miami suffered the narrowest of defeats when they lost
29–28 to the
Houston Texans. The
team, however, would bounce back with four consecutive victories
over the
Buffalo Bills,
Denver Broncos,
Seattle Seahawks, and
Oakland Raiders. After a crushing twenty
point loss to New England, the Dolphins fell to third in the
AFC East division.
Again Miami rebounded
to win their next four games, against the (St. Louis Rams, Bills in Toronto
, 49ers, and
Chiefs). This brought
their record to 10–5 and let them control their destiny against the
New York Jets in the regular season
finale.
Pennington, the former Jet, outdueled
Brett
Favre to lead the Dolphins to victory 24–17 to win the AFC East
past the New England Patriots. A year after going 1–15, the
Dolphins completed a turnaround under first-year coach
Tony Sparano, joining the 1999 Indianapolis
Colts as the only teams in NFL history to make 10-win improvements.
Miami, which ended the regular season by winning five straight and
nine of 10, made the playoffs for the first time in seven seasons.
It was the Dolphins' first AFC East title since 2000. However, the
Dolphins lost in the first round of the playoffs to the Baltimore
Ravens 27–9.
2009
On March 25, 2009 it was reported by
ESPN
reporter
Chris Mortensen that the
Dolphins intend to have Chad Henne as the starting quarterback by
the 2010 season. That leaves current starting quarterback, Chad
Pennington, with his future with the team in doubt after the 2009
season. Henne will receive at least 12 quarters of play in the 2009
preseason to prepare him for the 2010 season.
Chad Pennington recently suffered a shoulder injury against the San
Diego Chargers and is out for the 2009 season. Chad Henne replaced
him as the starting quarterback. Under Henne, the Dolphins defeated
the Bills in week 4 and the Jets in a Monday Night classic. After
their bye week, they lost to the Saints after leading them 24–3
towards the end of the first half. The Miami Dolphins will have to
finish the rest of the season without a key player, Ronnie Brown
due to a right knee injury in which he will have surgery on. Miami
is currently 5–5 on the season after a recent 24–17 win over
Carolina Panthers.
Facilities
Stadiums
The
Dolphins originally played at all of their home games in the
Orange
Bowl
in Miami, Florida. After the 1986 season,
they moved to Joe Robbie Stadium. Later the stadium would change
names to Pro Player Stadium, then to Dolphins Stadium, and then
Dolphin Stadium, and as of spring 2009, Land Shark Stadium.
Land
Shark Stadium is located in Miami Gardens
, a suburb of Miami located approximately fifteen
miles north of downtown Miami.
Training
According to a local newspaper, St. Petersburg Beach hosted the
Dolphins very first training camp in 1966. The players were housed
next to Sea World.
The Dolphins trained at Biscayne College, later renamed
St. Thomas University, from 1970 until
1993.
In 1993,
the Dolphins opened the Miami Dolphins Training Facility at
Nova Southeastern
University in Davie
,
Florida. In 2006, the facility added a domed field which
allows the team to practice during thunderstorms which are frequent
during summer training camps.
Franchise Information
Logos and uniforms
The Dolphin logo 1997-current.
The Dolphins logo and uniforms have remained essentially the same
since the team's founding. The team's colors are aqua and orange;
navy was added as a trim color in 1997. The logo consists of a
flaming hoop (or, sunburst) with a leaping dolphin wearing a
football helmet bearing the letter M. At their debut in 1966, the
dolphin's head was near the center of the sunburst. By 1974, the
dolphin's body was centered on the sunburst. The most substantial
revision took place in 1997: the sunburst was simplified and the
dolphin was darkened and given a more serious game-face
expression.

Miami Dolphins uniform
combination

Miami Dolphins uniform:
1974-1986

Miami Dolphins alternate uniform:
2003-2004, 2009
The uniform features white helmets with either white or aqua
jerseys and either white or aqua pants. The pants are composed of a
high grade cotton/lycra polymer. The most substantial revisions
took place in 1997. Navy was introduced as a trim color. The logo
was reworked to make the dolphin appear proportionally larger and
more three-dimensional in effect. The hashmarks around the
perimeters of the logo's sunburst were removed. Navy drop shadows
were added to the uniform numbers. The new road uniform featured
aqua rather than white pants. The Dolphins made a cameo appearance
in
Ace Ventura: Pet
Detective.
For much of their history the Dolphins have worn their white
jerseys at home for daytime games, thus forcing their opponents to
suffer in their darker jerseys in the humid weather that is typical
of South Florida for most of the year. The aqua home jerseys are
typically worn for night games. The Dolphins began this tradition
during the perfect season of 1972 and have continued it ever since.
Aqua jerseys are also sometimes worn for road games against
opponents such as the
Houston Texans,
San Diego Chargers, or other teams who choose to wear white at home
in the early season. Three NFL teams—Miami,
Dallas and
Washington--prefer to wear white at home
all season.
In 2003 the Dolphins introduced an alternate orange jersey worn
once each season for home night contests in 2003 and 2004. They
recorded wins both times, against Washington in 2003 and New
England in 2004. The alternate jersey was worn again on
Monday Night Football against the
New York Jets on October 12, 2009.The
Dolphins also won this game, 31-27.
In 2005 and 2006 the Dolphins wore white pants with the white
jerseys, recalling the solid-white look worn in Super Bowl VII by
the undefeated 1972 team. From 2000 through 2004 the Dolphins
usually wore all-white at home and aqua pants with white jerseys on
the road under former coach Dave Wannstedt (2000–2004) and interim
coach Jim Bates (2004). This trend continued in 2007 under head
coach Cam Cameron. However, in a pre-season game on August 16, 2008
at Jacksonville, the Dolphins did wear the white jersey/aqua pants
road combination made popular in the 1990s/2000s. The aqua pants
were once again worn on September 14, 2008 against the
Arizona Cardinals and the rest of the
season's away games when other teams were wearing their color
jerseys.
On three occasions the Dolphins have worn an all-aqua combination
for prime-time games: a win over the Chicago Bears in 2002, a loss
to the Philadelphia Eagles in 2003, and a win over the Cleveland
Browns in 2004.
For 2008 the navy blue drop shadow on the uniform numbers were
thinned in order to make them easier to read. Despite rumors, the
Dolphins have no plans to change the logo.
Fight song
The Dolphins fight song is played once at every home game at the
end of the third quarter. The song was written and composed by Lee
Ofman. Ofman approached the Dolphins with it before the 1972 season
because he wanted music to inspire his favorite team. The fight
song would soon serve as a good luck charm for the Dolphins that
season. The Dolphins became the first team in NFL history to record
an undefeated season, going 17-0 en route to victory over the
Washington Redskins in
Super Bowl VII. The following season, Miami
posted an equally impressive 15-2 record, and capped the season
with another title, defeating the Minnesota Vikings in
Super Bowl VIII. The back-to-back
championship runs, coupled with the popularity of the fight song
amongst Dolphins fans, have ensured the song's longevity. The
Dolphins revealed a new fight song by
T-Pain
&
Jimmy Buffett featuring
Pitbull on August 7, 2009 which will be
introduced for the '09/10 NFL season. The fight song was played
during the preseason home opener against the Jacksonville Jaguars
on August 17, 2009, but was not played during the second preseason
game against the Carolina Panthers on August 22, 2009 after being
booed heavily in the first game. Furthermore, the team has
preferred to play Buffett's song "
Fins"
after scores during the 2009 regular season instead of the
traditional fight song. The Dolphins shorthand nickname, "The
Fins," has been recognized and used by the team.
Cheerleaders

Miami Dolphins Cheerleaders in
performance
The team's
cheerleaders are known
collectively as the Miami Dolphins Cheerleaders. The company had
its debut in 1978 as the Dolphins Starbrites. (The name referred to
the co-sponsor, Starbrite Car Polish.) The cheerleaders' founding
choreographer was
June Taylor, famed
colleague of
Jackie Gleason, who led
the squad until her retirement in 1990.
The Dolphin Dolls, a 125-member pep squad of girls aged 8 to 18,
cheered the team at home games from 1966 to 1977.
Mascots
On Friday, April 18, 1997, the first "official" mascot of the Miami
Dolphins was introduced. The 7 foot mascot made his public debut on
April 19 at Pro Player Stadium during the team's draft day party.
The team then made a "Name the Mascot" contest that drew over
13,000 enteries covering all 50 states and 22 countries. 529 names
were suggested. The winning entry, was announced at the annual
Dolphins Awards Banquet on June 4, 1997.
Denny Sym, cheered on the Miami Dolphins for 33 years as a one-man
sideline show leading Miami crowds in cheers and chants in his
glittering orange and aqua hat since the Dolphins’ first game in
1966 until 2000. Sym died in 2007.
Flipper
From 1966 to 1968 a live dolphin who was situated in a fish tank in
the open (east) end of the Orange Bowl. He would jump in the tank
and celebrate touchdowns and field goals. Flipper was removed from
the Orange Bowl after 1968 in order to save costs. In
Ace Ventura, a live dolphin who did tricks
after the Dolphins scored a touchdown named Snowflake was the basis
of the film after he is kidnapped as part of a
revenge plot against Dan Marino.
Radio and television
Season-by-season records
Players
Current roster
- Paul Warfield 42, WR (1970–74),
Elected 1983
- Larry Csonka 39, FB (1968–74,
1979), Elected 1987
- Jim Langer 62, C (1970–79), Elected
1987
- Bob Griese 12, QB (1968–80), Elected
1990
- Larry Little 66, G (1969–80),
Elected 1993
- Don Shula, Head Coach (1970–95),
Elected 1997
- Dwight Stephenson 57, C
(1980–87), Elected 1998
- Nick Buoniconti 85, LB
(1969–76), Elected 2001
- Dan Marino 13, QB (1983–99), Elected
2005
Each of these players is honored with a placard on the facing of
the upper level of one end zone at Land Shark Stadium. So is team
founder-owner Joe Robbie, who has not yet been elected to the Hall
of Fame. In place of a uniform number, Shula has the number 347,
representing his record number of NFL coaching victories, 274 of
them as Dolphins head coach.
Retired numbers
- 12 Bob Griese, QB, 1967–80 (retired May 6, 1982, at the
Dolphins' annual awards banquet)
- 13 Dan Marino, QB, 1983–99 (retired September 17, 2000, at
halftime of the Dolphins-Baltimore Ravens game)
- 39 Larry Csonka, FB, 1968–74, 1979 (retired December 9, 2002,
at halftime of the Dolphins-Chicago Bears game)
Dolphins Honor Roll
The Miami Dolphin Honor
Roll is a ring around the second tier of Dolphins Stadium that
honor former players, coaches, owners and contributors that have
made significant contributions to the Miami Dolphins franchise
throughout their history.
Bold indicates those
elected to the NFL Hall of Fame. The Inductees as of 2008
include:
- Joe Robbie, Owner/Founder
(1966–1989), Inducted 1990
- Larry Csonka 39,
FB (1968–74, 1979), Inducted 1990
- Bob Griese 12, QB
(1967–80), Inducted 1990
- Jim Langer 62, C
(1970–79), Inducted 1990
- Paul Warfield 42,
WR (1970–74), Inducted 1990
- Nick Buoniconti
85, LB (1969–76), Inducted 1991
- 1972 Undefeated Team,
(1972), Inducted 1992
- Larry Little 66, G
(1969–80), Inducted 1993
- Dwight
Stephenson 57, C (1980–87), Inducted 1994
- Bob Kuechenberg 67, G
(1970–1984), Inducted 1995
- Don Shula, Head Coach
(1970–1995), Inducted 1996
- Nat Moore 89, WR (1974–1986), Inducted
1999
- Dan Marino 13, QB
(1983–1999), Inducted 2000
- Mark Clayton 83, WR (1983–1992),
Inducted 2003
- Mark Duper 85, WR (1982–1992),
Inducted 2003
- Dick Anderson 40, S (1968–1977),
Inducted 2006
- Richmond Webb 78, OT (1990–2000),
Inducted 2006
- Bob Baumhower 73, DT (1977–1986),
Inducted 2008
- Doug Betters 75, DE (1978–1987),
Inducted 2008
All-time first-round draft picks
Staff
Head coaches
Current staff
See also
References
- CarlyNovoselskys History AFL awarding Miami
franchise. Accessed 20 April 2006.
- NFL Historical Standings
- NFL Historical Standings
- Miami Dolphins know it's time to make room for Chad
Henne
- ASATI
- Dolphins History Logo design information.
Accessed 15 April 2006.
- Miami Dolphins Official Online Pro Shop Example
of white jersey referred as the home jersey. Accessed 20 April
2006.
-
http://www.miamidolphins.com/newsite/theater/photogalleries/2008Regularseason.asp
- T-Pain, Pitbull Remake Miami Dolphins Fight
Song
- Dolphins Tickets Example of use of Fins by
team. Accessed 21 December 2008.
- Fins Frenzy Contest Example of use of Fins by
team. Accessed 21 December 2008.
-
http://www.miamidolphins.com/newsite/cheerleaders/cheerleaderhistory/cheerleaderhistory.asp
- http://sports.espn.go.com/nfl/news/story?id=2803843
- Dolphins History Griese retired jersey
information. Accessed 15 April 2006.
- Dolphins History Marino tribute section.
Accessed 15 April 2006.
- Dolphins History Csonka retired jersey
information. Accessed 15 April 2006.
External links