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Miami Dolphins' Jaylen Waddle: Our new assistants are 'strict' and 'hold us accountable'
Miami Dolphins' Jaylen Waddle: Our new assistants are 'strict' and 'hold us accountable'

Yahoo

time08-08-2025

  • Sport
  • Yahoo

Miami Dolphins' Jaylen Waddle: Our new assistants are 'strict' and 'hold us accountable'

MIAMI GARDENS ― Jaylen Waddle backed up Tyreek Hill on this: the two new Miami Dolphins offensive assistants are no-nonsense. "Yeah, they're very strict," Waddle said of wide receivers coach Robert Prince and senior pass game coordinator Bobby Slowik. Waddle spoke about the new guys after Miami's ninth training camp practice. "They're very on to the little details in the offense," Waddle said. "And they just harp on the little things each and every day. They're going to show you on film if you mess up, if you do good too. But yeah, RP and Slope, they bringing that edge to us, that just holding us accountable each and every day to the same standard, no matter the circumstances. And yeah, man, they just bring a lot of energy." Miami Dolphins coaches are strict on accountability: Jaylen Waddle Prince replaced Wes Welker. The Dolphins clearly wanted Hill and Waddle to be accountable in all areas of on- and off-the-field professional life. Waddle has shown marked improvement on the field this summer. He appears quicker and has been a more consistent ball catcher. Hill has promised to show up earlier and be better-conditioned. "Me and Cheetah got a brother-like relationship, on and off the field," Waddle said. "So us communicating, just us playing together for, what, three, four years now, it's like second nature. He can get on me, I can get on him. I can tell him we need more." That's very interesting. Waddle, 26, has grown a stronger voice entering his fifth NFL season. "He can tell me the same thing, vice versa," Waddle said. "So we have that type of relationship, and we know that it's not downplaying or down-talking each other. We just want the best for each other. It just helps the team." Waddle had only 744 yards receiving last year, after more than 1,000 in his first three seasons. "Really learn not to take stuff for granted and nothing is guaranteed," Waddle said. "You have so much success early on. You kind of forget how hard it is to reach the landmark." Miami Dolphins training camp practice report: Jack Jones INT on Zach Wilson Tyreek Hill: 'I didn't understand the offense' my first three seasons with Miami Dolphins Miami Dolphins Fins Up/Fins Down: Aaron Brewer returns for Day 9 training camp Joe Schad is a journalist covering the Miami Dolphins and the NFL at The Palm Beach Post. You can reach him at jschad@ and follow him on Instagram and on X @schadjoe. Sign up for Joe's free weekly Dolphins Pulse Newsletter. Help support our work by subscribing today. This article originally appeared on Palm Beach Post: Miami Dolphins' Jaylen Waddle reveals what he learned from last season

Tyreek Hill: 'I didn't understand the offense' my first three seasons with Miami Dolphins
Tyreek Hill: 'I didn't understand the offense' my first three seasons with Miami Dolphins

Yahoo

time01-08-2025

  • Sport
  • Yahoo

Tyreek Hill: 'I didn't understand the offense' my first three seasons with Miami Dolphins

MIAMI GARDENS — It can be hard to know exactly how many grains of truth there are in some of Tyreek Hill's comments. But the Miami Dolphins' wide receiver seemed to indicate after the eighth training camp practice of the summer that finally knows the offense. Entering Year 4 with the Dolphins. "I'm gonna' be completely honest," Hill said. "I didn't understand the offense for the first three years of me being here. But this year, I feel like Coach (Bobby Slowik) has explained it a lot." Slowik is Miami's first-year senior pass game coordinator. Hill also indicated that first-year receivers coach Robert Prince has made an impact. "Coach RP, he's been great," Hill said. "From the moment he has gotten here, he has been getting on me and (Jaylen) Waddle's nerve since he's got here. But I think it's great though that accountability piece is something that we needed and then also pushing us every day." Miami Dolphins' Tyreek Hill: New coach holds us accountable Prince replaced Wes Welker. It's hard to know how much truth there is to this, but Hill also said he's taking notes "for the first time." Said Hill: "And we're taking notes in the meeting rooms, which is great, something I've never done in my career. I'm taking notes in meeting rooms. So he definitely helped us all, man. He's been great." Bad injury: Miami Dolphins CB Kader Kohou out for season Balling out: Tua Tagovailoa praises Miami Dolphins rookie Quinn Ewers Joe Schad is a journalist covering the Miami Dolphins and the NFL at The Palm Beach Post. You can reach him at jschad@ and follow him on Instagram and on X @schadjoe. Sign up for Joe's free weekly Dolphins Pulse Newsletter. Help support our work by subscribing today. This article originally appeared on Palm Beach Post: Miami Dolphins' Tyreek Hill: I'm taking notes for first time in career

Dolphins receiver Waddle juggles the basics as he looks to bounce back in 2025
Dolphins receiver Waddle juggles the basics as he looks to bounce back in 2025

Miami Herald

time03-06-2025

  • Health
  • Miami Herald

Dolphins receiver Waddle juggles the basics as he looks to bounce back in 2025

Jaylen Waddle was happy during the Miami Dolphins' Tuesday afternoon practice despite the dreary, rainy weather. In between plays, Waddle and former University of Alabama teammate Tua Tagovailoa were talking it up on the sidelines — laughing and chatting as the air horn blew, ending the day. During these practices during organized team activities, Waddle can often be found chatting it up with defenders, raising the stakes of practice. Few passes found their way in Waddle's direction on Tuesday, but he was a top standout performer in last week's practice the media attended. And he has mastered one of the challenges new position coach Robert Prince is laboring to teach, working with all the receivers on the art of juggling, which is aimed at improving their hand-eye coordination. 'I learned in two days!' Waddle bragged, pointing out he used TikTok as an instructional tool. 'RP [Robert Prince] challenged us to learn, [and] it's actually pretty fun. I'm trying to learn some new techniques.' He's also trying to refine his game, running better routes and becoming more consistent with his hands. After a disappointing 2024 season, where the 26-year-old averaged 49.6 yards per game and totaled 744 receiving yards, Waddle's gearing up for 2025 by 'smoothing out' his routes, with the goal of taking his game to another level. The Dolphins' offense had a shaky season in 2024, averaging 325.4 yards per game. That's a far cry from the 2023 season where Miami delivered the top-ranked offense. With his $85 million contract extension, which runs through 2028, the hope is that Waddle begins to step up and performs like he's one of the NFL's 15 highest-paid receivers. 'One thing that has been really cool to watch is his understanding of who he is on the team, how much we depend on his playmaking ability, but also how much we depend on how he is as a football player in extremely non-selfish ways,' coach Mike McDaniel said. 'I'm really excited about what 2025 has in store for him, based upon the excitement that he gives me every day attacking this craft.' In last week's OTA practices, Waddle had two catchers more than 30 yards and was easily a standout player from the practice. This week, on a short pass from Tagovailoa, he made a clean break through a crowded defense and pulled down a reception that was good for 20-plus yards. As fellow receiver Tyreek Hill's future on the team remains uncertain, due to his ongoing wrist injury, age, and a potential trade he initially requested and then backed off, this could be the year Waddle steps up as the number one receiver. 'I just go out there and do my job, man,' said Waddle, who missed three games because of a knee injury he sustained in early December. 'Whatever they ask me to do, I just go out there and do it, [and] try to do it at a high level.' In his first season with the Dolphins after becoming the sixth overall pick in the 2021 NFL Draft, Waddle showed promise with 63.4 yards per game and 1,015 receiving yards. He set a rookie record for receiving yards in that season. In 2022, he had his best season yet, balancing out the Dolphins offense with 1,356 receiving yards, averaging 79.8 per game. He also scored eight touchdowns. Now, the question remains if his first three seasons were flashes in a pan, and is his 2024 performance the new norm? Or can Waddle work his way back into a starring role for this Dolphins offense? '[Last season was] definitely not the year that we wanted as a team, definitely a year I didn't want as an individual,' Waddle said. 'But lucky for me, we get to go back [with the] same quarterback, same head coach, [offensive coordinator] and running back. Man, I think the foundation that we set here in OTA is going to really help us.'

New Dolphins WR coach reportedly interviewed to be Saints offensive coordinator
New Dolphins WR coach reportedly interviewed to be Saints offensive coordinator

Miami Herald

time16-02-2025

  • Sport
  • Miami Herald

New Dolphins WR coach reportedly interviewed to be Saints offensive coordinator

The Miami Dolphins could once again be in need of another wide receivers coach. Less than a month after Robert Prince was originally hired, he reportedly interviewed Saturday night to be the New Orleans Saints offensive coordinator, per NFL Network's Tom Pelissero. Prince joined the Dolphins Jan 29., roughly three weeks after the Dolphins parted ways with former receiver coach Wes Welker. Prince has been a NFL mainstay for nearly 40 years. He spent the past three years as the Dallas Cowboys receivers coach where the veteran helped unlock CeeDee Lamb. Lamb has gone to three consecutive Pro Bowls. His other receiver coach stops include the Houston Texans, Seattle Seahawks and Detroit Lions. With the Lions, Prince coached Golden Tate and Pro Football Hall of Famer Calvin Johnson into the sixth duo in franchise history to exceed 1,000 yards receiving in the same season. Prince's other NFL stops include assistant wide receivers coach with the Jacksonville Jaguars as well as assistant quarterbacks coach and offensive assistant with the Atlanta Falcons. He also did internships with the San Francisco 49ers and the then-San Diego Chargers. Prince also spent more than 15 years at the collegiate level including offensive coordinator at Boise State and Portland State as well as receivers coach at Colorado. The connection between Prince and the Saints stems from newly installed head coach Kellen Moore. Prince and Moore spent time together during the tenure with the Cowboys. If Prince leaves, the Dolphins receiver coach should be somewhat of a hot commodity due to the talent at the position. Despite a relatively down year in 2024, Miami still boasts an elite group of receivers that include Tyreek Hill and Jaylen Waddle.

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