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Dave Hyde: Want to feel better about Dolphins' offseason? Check out the AFC East.

Dave Hyde, South Florida Sun-Sentinel on

Published in Football

Somewhere in the past two Miami Dolphins decades — the precise fallen era eludes me — I suggested that somehow, someway, those holding this franchise in the center of the universe will emerge from another squashed season with renewed hope.

And now that way is clear: The rest of the AFC East. It isn’t just in disarray. It’s in freefall. That’s the beacon of light in a dim Dolphins offseason that’s down to a limited draft and signing scraps of possibility. Just look around the division.

The New York Jets were so happy with the results of their 40-year-old quarterback last year they’ve taken that aging-and-injured approach across the roster this offseason. They’ll look great in August, gone by December.

The New England Patriots are in the midst of a walkabout and don’t realize it. Check back in a decade.

The bickering Buffalo Bills, the division champs for four years running, the ones to come the closest and be tortured the most by the champion Kansas City Chiefs, spent $31 million in cap space this past week to rid themselves of receiver Stefon Diggs. Guess counseling didn’t work.

The conversation entering last season was the AFC East as the best division of all. That’s not quite how it played out. Every team slinked into the offseason to repair wounds and rosters. And the question now is if any team has enough of the necessary triumvirate-at-the-top to contend: General manager, coach and quarterback.

 

Each is a star on championship teams. Does any AFC East team have all those positions right? Any team have it clearly two-thirds right?

New England thinks one role supersedes all others. The Krafts, Robert and Jonathan, father and son, have gone from the best model of owner to the worst in the plunge from two decades of dominance. The best owner makes the one important hire (in this case, Bill Belichick), provides the financially and emotional support for sustained success and understands the good fortune of it all.

The worst owner thinks he’s responsible for the good fortune. The Krafts produced an absurd docuseries, “The Dynasty,” where the underlying narrative is the partnership of Belichick and Tom Brady weren’t responsible for six Super Bowl titles. They were with Brady. It’s comedy.

Now the Patriots have an unproven personnel guy, a rookie coach and a quarterback to be drafted later. For every Houston Texans team that emerges quickly and spectacularly from such rebuilds, there’s franchises like the Dolphins that haven’t returned because they couldn’t get the triumvirate right. The Patriots look destined to the Dolphins’ sentence.

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