Tuesday, September 20, 2011

Bush’s role with Dolphins already lessened


Did the Dolphins lie to Reggie Bush or just to themselves?
Since late July, when the Dolphins pulled off the trade to get Bush from the New Orleans Saints, the talk had consistently been about Bush getting a chance to prove that he’s an every-down back and not just some hybrid specialty player.

That talk was still strong before the Dolphins played the Houston Texans on Sunday in a game that nearly ended the Dolphins’ long streak of home sellouts. Miami coach Tony Sparano talked about how Bush, who had 11 carries and nine receptions in the season-opening loss to the New England Patriots, would get about 20 touches a game.

During the loss to Houston, Bush got seven (six carries and one catch), gaining a grand total of 21 yards. In two games, Bush has 17 carries for 56 yards, which is pretty much in line with his career numbers. Considering rookieDaniel Thomas had 107 yards on 18 carries in his debut Sunday, you can understand why Bush’s time as the fulltime back is probably over only seconds after it started – even if Bush still wants to hang on to the dream.
“I can be that type of runner. I know I can handle the work,” Bush said in a matter-of-fact tone.
Bush isn’t whining about his plight, he’s just firm in his belief. Can’t blame a guy for that.
The problem for Bush is that his game doesn’t play well between the tackles. Never has, not even in college. Bush is a weapon of mass destruction, not part of the infantry. He should be used as such.
That’s why it was so disappointing to listen to Sparano talk about how the team planned to mix Bush and Thomas. The two were on the field at the same time exactly once on Sunday and Sparano explained why in very simple terms.
“That’s a way to do it, it’s just somebody got to block if you’re doing that,” Sparano said of the two-halfback notion.
Coming from the coach who brought you the Wildcat, that statement is a bit of a head-scratcher. Then again, maybe not. The Wildcat was built with more blocking in mind. It eliminated the true quarterback and gave the running back an extra blocker, which was interesting until defenses countered by bringing an extra defender into the box every time the Dolphins lined up that way.
Bush is the anti-Wildcat player. Bush needs open space more than he needs blockers. Anytime he’s in the game, he has a polarizing effect on defensive players.
“All I know is that guy is a headache,” Tampa Bay Buccaneers cornerbackRonde Barber said.
When Bush was in New Orleans, there were enough other weapons around him that coach Sean Payton could use him sparingly. Coupled with injuries, that’s why Bush never had more than 243 touches in a season and that total was during his rookie season.
In Miami, the Dolphins need to find ways to maximize Bush even if Thomas is obviously going to be the bellcow runner. Bush is the only player on the team who can consistently demand a double team or any type of specialized coverage. Wide receiverBrandon Marshall is close, but Marshall is not so much explosive as he is powerful.
In short, Bush inspires fear. Marshall inspires concern. The rest of the Dolphins offense? Eh, not so much.
There is hope, of course. Sparano hinted that the “package” of plays the team has for Bush and Thomas (who missed a lot of camp with a hamstring injury) hasn’t been expanded yet. After all, the Houston game was the first time Thomas had played.
“We didn’t expand on the package a whole lot. We just weren’t sure by week’s end with Daniel with where he was physically going into the ball game,” Sparano said.
Fair enough, this may be only the beginning of something that will become interesting. But based on what’s happening now, that expansion better happen fast.

Author: Jason Cole
Source: Yahoo sports

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