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The Dolphins‘ defense has been Mike McDaniel’s most persistent headache. Miami allowed 21.4 points per game in 2024, ranking 10th overall, while giving up 314.4 total yards per game, the 4th‑fewest in the NFL. They also collected a mere 35 sacks in 2024, landing outside the top half of the league in pass rush production. The unit bounced between flashes and breakdowns, clamping down on some elite offenses one week, only to cough up explosive plays the next, leaving McDaniel to juggle adaptations on defense while his offense remained consistent.

He was looking for players, and that search led him to Jack Jones, a former Patriots starter who most recently logged 16 starts for the Raiders. According to ESPN’s Adam Schefter, the 27-year-old free agent has agreed to a one-year deal with Miami, marking his return to the AFC East and slamming the door on any Ramsey reunion dreams.

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Jack Jones isn’t rolling into South Beach as a mystery, but his resume shouts. The 5‑foot‑11 corner logged 69 tackles, 16 passes defended, and three interceptions with Las Vegas in 2024, good for a top‑five PD total among NFL corners. Add in his first two seasons with New England, and you get 136 combined tackles, seven picks, and four defensive TDs in just 42 games (21 starters).

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The timing says it all. The Dolphins didn’t just want Jones; they needed him. Hours after Artie Burns tore his ACL on the first day of training camp, Mike McDaniel’s front office pounced on the free agent. The moment Miami placed him on season-ending IR 0without disclosing the nature of the injury, it became obvious a move was coming. And it came fast.

And here’s the Mike McDaniel tie‑in. The Dolphins’ coach has already schemed against him. Week 1 of 2022, McDaniel’s head‑coaching debut, Jones nearly snatched a Tagovailoa pass destined for Tyreek Hill, forcing the rookie HC to adjust on the fly. No clipboard chats, no shared locker room, but plenty of first‑hand respect. McDaniel saw up close how tight Jones stays in a receiver’s hip pocket. That memory and those numbers explain why Miami dialed the ex‑Patriot today.

This signing wasn’t about depth. It was about replacing the identity that vanished with Ramsey’s exit. Jones isn’t perfect. He’s been waived, arrested, and benched. But talent? Never in question. And now he steps into a system that thrives on aggression.

The Dolphins just sent a loud message: the Jalen Ramsey era is over.

What’s your perspective on:

Is Jack Jones the spark Miami's defense needs, or just another gamble in a long line?

Have an interesting take?

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Mike McDaniel shuts down Jalen Ramsey talk

Some breakups happen quietly. Others echo through locker rooms, team meetings, and media scrums. The Miami Dolphins’ parting of ways with Jalen Ramsey? That one thudded like a door slammed shut. After the Dolphins stunned the NFL by reuniting with former first-round pick Minkah Fitzpatrick in a blockbuster trade that sent Jalen Ramsey to the Pittsburgh Steelers, the noise started instantly. Was Minkah better than Ramsey? Was this about fit or frustration?

McDaniel was straight when asked. Jalen Ramsey is a Steeler. I like to talk about the Dolphins. Minkah Fitzpatrick is a Dolphin.” That was it. No more dancing around the elephant in the defensive backfield.

Behind the scenes, tension had quietly been brewing. Multiple Dolphins veterans hinted that the comparison conversations weren’t just media chatter; they were infiltrating practices. Teammates were already analyzing Minkah’s commanding presence during walkthroughs. The tempo changed. The communication felt sharper. The defense? Quicker to the ball. It was the kind of silent shift you only notice if you’ve been in the building long enough.

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But if Ramsey’s exit had any lingering scent of drama, McDaniel wasn’t interested in airing it. He made it personal on purpose. “I’m elated to add Minkah. It’s a real good fit based on his skill set.” That’s more than just coach-speak. That’s a clear endorsement. And it came with something McDaniel rarely offers, raw finality. A decision made not just for schematic reasons, but to cleanse a culture that had grown murky.

Fitzpatrick, now a five-time Pro Bowler and three-time First-Team All-Pro, is the kind of cornerstone defender who doesn’t just play the position; he defines it. He’s surgical in coverage. Violent downhill. And most importantly, dependable. That’s the tone McDaniel wants heading into 2025. What’s next for Ramsey? That’s Pittsburgh’s storyline now. As for Miami? McDaniel made it crystal clear that this is no longer about who left. It’s about who stayed. And who’s coming back home?

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  Debate

Is Jack Jones the spark Miami's defense needs, or just another gamble in a long line?

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