The
last major player of the Dave Wannstedt Era finally ushered himself out.
Good
thing. Otherwise, Nick Saban would have done it for him.
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As
a scout and researcher, ex-Dolphin General Manager Rick Spielman has few peers.
His attention to detail and his capacity for work have earned him praise and
respect throughout the NFL. He knows how to properly run a personnel department
and he does it as well as anyone in the business.
During
Spielman’s tenure, the Dolphin personnel department was improved in many ways,
including the addition of more scouts, more comprehensive college and pro
personnel reporting, and rapid information sharing at the point of need.
Unfortunately,
all of the above is for naught if the due diligence cannot be consistently
converted into sound decisions. In this regard, Spielman was a failure in
Miami.
In
2004, the price of this failure was paid for with a 4-12 record.
4-12
is what happens when a team doesn’t have the talent to win.
That
is why Nick Saban is now the head coach and Spielman and Wannstedt are
elsewhere.
Certainly,
Wannstedt bears his share of the blame for the Dolphin train wreck. But it was
Spielman who was the chief personnel man during Wannstedt’s tenure. It was
Spielman who recommended the players to Wannstedt, or picked them himself.
In
the end, Rick Spielman leaves Miami with mixed feelings and mixed results.
Perhaps
nothing doomed Spielman more than his penchant for trading away valuable draft
picks and failing to secure fair compensation for key players lost to free
agency.
In
the case of free agency, two glaring examples come to mind. Both situations
punched damaging holes in Spielman’s credibility in the eyes of the players and
the fans.
The
first is the lamentable trade of DE Adewale Ogunleye to the Chicago Bears for
less than fair market value (WR Marty Booker and a 2005 third round pick).
No
disrespect towards Booker, a fine player in his own right, but Spielman’s
portrayal of him as equal to first round compensation (which the Dolphins were
entitled to) was a ludicrous boast that no one who truly knows football
believed.
Spielman’s
pick to replace Ogunleye? Chidi Ahanotu, a player who ended up quitting the
team in October.
The
second was the decision to allow RT Todd Wade to walk away in free agency
(Texans).
Not
placing a franchise tag on Wade was a foolish move. Not only did the Dolphins
downgrade themselves at the position, they failed to gain any compensation for
Wade (the team’s second round pick in 2000).
Further,
it forced them to sign free agents (John St. Clair and Damion McIntosh) and
spend high draft picks (Vernon Carey, more on him later) to shore up the
position.
At
the end of the day, it was all in vain. The Dolphins lost big.
In
the case of trading draft picks away, the list of mistakes is long and ugly.
Two
of the more questionable moves were the trades for QB A.J. Feeley (2005 second
round pick) and RB Lamar Gordon (2005 third round pick).
Nothing
against Feeley or Gordon, Spielman simply and badly overpaid.
At
least Feeley has good upside and figures to stick around for a while. Gordon
was a bust in Mike Martz’s system and is far from a sure bet to make the 2005
roster, especially if Ricky Williams returns.
Saban’s
trade of Patrick Surtain to the Kansas City Chiefs was made, in part, to
compensate for the loss of the second rounder.
Of
course few will soon forget Spielman’s notorious mismanagement of the first
round of the 2004 NFL Draft.
Though
he’d never admit it if he did, Saban might have actually laughed at how his old
buddy Bill Belichick helped sucker Spielman into surrendering a fourth round
pick to move up one lousy spot to select Carey.
At
first the move was somewhat understandable. Tackle was a real need position and
the 2004 Draft was shallow in terms of first round quality offensive lineman.
Unfortunately,
Carey hasn’t made a meaningful contribution on the field. To say that Carey is
a “bust” at this point is unfair, though the situation has clearly been a major
disappointment.
Meanwhile,
the guy who Spielman should have picked, DT Vince Wilfork, is playing quality
football for…you got it… Belichick.
With
the retirement of Tim Bowens and the uncertain status of Larry Chester, the Dolphins
sure could have benefited from Wilfork’s services.
As
for trades for players who made zero contribution in 2004, Saban continues to
try and salvage value.
David
Boston (from San Diego for a 2005 sixth round selection and CB Jamar Fletcher)
never made it out of training camp. Boston, a proven injury and behavioral
risk, not surprisingly ended up hurt and, later, in trouble with the law.
In
Ricky Williams’s case, the cost to the team was significantly higher…two first
round draft picks plus an exchange of fourth rounders for a guy who played just two seasons,
quit on a third, and is not a sure bet to be a Dolphin beyond 2005 (provided he
returns to the team).
There
are still more examples to cite, like questionable free agent signings (e.g.
Derrius Thompson), re-signings (Jay Fiedler), and Spielman’s poor track record
of success in the upper rounds of the draft.
You
get the idea.
Spielman
never did. Rather, he was mystified how others couldn’t see the brilliance of
his decisions. In his own world, he was a genius.
Objectively,
Spielman does deserve credit for finding some very good players, many in later
rounds.
Wade
was a second rounder as was Chris Chambers. Seth McKinney was a decent third
round pick, as was Travis Minor. Randy McMichael and Will Poole were terrific
finds in the fourth round. Up and comers Tony Bua (fifth round) and Rex Hadnot
(sixth round) appear to be real steals as is seventh rounder Derrick Pope.
There
were also some good trades, the best example of which was the deal for LB
Junior Seau (2004 fifth rounder). Seau has since won the team’s leadership
award two years running, an honor voted on by the players.
Spielman
is also to be commended for his professionalism in helping Saban prepare for
the draft and free agency. It could not have been easy for Spielman to continue
to work under such uncertain circumstances. By all accounts, he did a good job
supporting Saban’s agenda.
Perhaps
Spielman hoped to convince Saban to keep him in some major capacity, just as he
did in 2004 when he persuaded owner H. Wayne Huizenga to name him GM over a
slew of outsiders, including newly minted GM Randy Mueller.
Spielman
never had a chance. Mueller’s arrival is a stark reminder that things are
indeed different in Miami.
More
of the same is a thing of the past. So, now, is Spielman.