Miami, FL
Gase Latest Former Dolphins Coach to Join Media
A former Miami Dolphins head coach has a new venture.
Adam Gase is joining The 33rd Team, a media and technology company, as a strategic advisor. Gase will be joined in his role by former New England Patriots coaches Bill Belichick and Matt Patricia, along with a host of other retired players, coaches, and executives.
The 33rd Team was founded by former Dolphins senior vice president of football operations Mike Tannenbaum, who also hired Gase to the Dolphins before the 2016 season.
Gase isn’t the first former Dolphins head coach to enter the media business.
Dave Wannstedt will work with Gase at The 33rd Team and contribute to NBCSports Chicago. Nick Saban recently joined ESPN on College GameDay, and Jimmy Johnson has worked on Fox’s NFL pregame show since 2002.
Although most Dolphins fans probably don’t have many fond memories of Gase’s tenure, it did start well. Miami finished 10-6 in 2016, making the playoffs behind an impressive running game that helped Jay Ajayi produce 1,272 yards and eight touchdowns.
Ironically, Gase’s first season mirrored Mike McDaniel’s in some ways. The Dolphins made the playoffs and lost in the first round while being forced to start a backup quarterback.
For Gase, it was starting Matt Moore instead of the injured Ryan Tannehill against the Pittsburgh Steelers. McDaniel was forced to start Skylar Thompson — the third-string quarterback — against the Buffalo Bills after Tua Tagovailoa and Teddy Bridgewater went down.
Both McDaniel and Gase’s teams lost those games, but one was much closer than the other. Miami lost 30-12 to the Steelers, but McDaniel’s Dolphins lost 34-31 in a closely contested game.
After the playoff appearance, it was all downhill for Gase. The Dolphins finished 6-10 in 2017 and 7-9 in 2018. Miami was mired by injuries to Tannehill in both seasons. The quarterback missed all of 2017 (forcing the team to sign Jay Cutler) and five games in 2018.
Gase did help produce one major highlight in his final season as Dolphins head coach, designing the play that would deliver the famous “Miami Miracle” against the New England Patriots.
Gase was fired Dec. 31, 2018, one day after Miami lost 42-17 to the Buffalo Bills, as part of sweeping organizational changes. He finished with a 23-25 regular-season record as Miami’s head coach.
Current general manager Chris Grier took over football operations, and Tannenbaum was “reassigned” but quickly left the team to join ESPN and start The 33rd Team.
Miami, FL
Who is Rueben Bain Jr\ufeff? Miami Hurricanes draft prospect visits Bengals
Bengals head coach Zac Taylor at the NFL’s annual meetings
Bengals head coach Zac Taylor discussed a number of topics at the NFL’s annual meetings during the AFC head coach breakfast
2026 NFL draft prospects Jacob Rodriguez of Texas Tech and Rueben Bain Jr. of University of Miami visited the Cincinnati Bengals on April 10, according to NFL Network, along with fellow Miami Hurricanes edge Akheem Mesidor.
Nicknamed “Hurricane,” Bain is expected to be selected in the first round of the upcoming draft, and could be gone when the Bengals are scheduled to select at 10th overall.
Todd McShay has said he expects the Bengals to strongly consider Bain with the 10th pick. Yahoo! Sports’ Nate Tice has the Bengals taking Bain at No. 10.
“The Bengals go with the antithesis of their first-round selection from a year ago, trading the high-end tools and low-end production of Shemar Stewart with the top-end production and effort but lack of ideal length of Bain,” Tice wrote. “If Stewart taps into even a small portion of his talent and with Boye Mafe joining in free agency, the Bengals’ edge spots could be more impactful in a hurry and feel a lot different soon.”
What to know about Bain, who was a college teammate of Bengals offensive lineman Jalen Rivers for two seasons:
Bain played three seasons for the Hurricanes.
As a junior in 2025, Bain was named second-team Associated Press All-American, ACC defensive player of the year and first-team All-ACC.
Bain started all 16 games in his final season at Miami, recording 54 tackles and 15.5 tackles for loss with 9.5 sacks, an interception, a pass breakup and a forced fumble).
Bain earned the Ted Hendricks Award, given annually to college football’s top defensive end. He was a finalist for the Lott IMPACT Trophy, given to the nation’s top defender with Integrity, Maturity, Performance, Academics, Community, Tenacity.
As a sophomore in 2024, Bain was named honorable mention all-ACC. He started nine games, and missed four games because of an injury.
A freshman All-American, Bain was named third-team all-ACC and ACC defensive rookie of the year in his first season with the ‘Canes. He led the team that season with three forced fumbles, and tied for the team lead with 7.5 sacks.
Lance Zierlein’s NFL comparison for Bain is the Philadelphia Eagles’ Brandon Graham.
“Note taker, grudge holder and block destructor with a compact frame and defensive tackle play strength,” Zierlein wrote in Bain’s NFL.com draft profile. “Bain is ill-tempered with his take-ons, hitting blockers with heavy hand strikes. … Bain’s explosive power and toughness should translate, giving him a high floor as an NFL starter.”
Daniel Jeremiah compares Bain to former NFL linebacker Melvin Ingram.
A USA Today mock draft had Bain going ninth overall, to the Chiefs.
Interestingly, Bain visited Kansas City one day before his reported Cincinnati visit.
Bain has dismissed post-combine discussion of his arm length. At 30 7/8 inches, Bain’s arms are among the shortest in the class.
“I didn’t hear it until later in the year, but it kind of surprised me because I never heard it all my life,” Bain said at the combine. “I don’t give it the time of day, honestly.”
“Mike Tyson, he wasn’t the tallest guy, wasn’t the longest-limbed guy, but when you felt him, you felt him,” Bain told NFL Network’s Cameron Wolfe. “You kept your distance.”
Miami, FL
Police investigate 2 Miami scenes after a shooting that left a man hospitalized
A man is in the hospital after being shot in Liberty City on Wednesday evening, prompting a police investigation that spans two scenes, according to the Miami Police Department (MPD).
The victim, a man in his late 40s, was located at a second scene after the initial gunfire and was rushed to Ryder Trauma Center via ground transport under a “trauma alert”.
The shooting investigation began after MPD received a ShotSpotter alert around 7:21 p.m.. The first scene, where crime scene investigators were seen taking photos outside an apartment building, is along Northwest 58th Street and 13th Avenue. When officers arrived, they found shell casings but no victim.
A short time later, the Miami-Dade Sheriff’s Office contacted Miami police regarding a second location—Northwest 69th Street and 21st Avenue—tied to the same alert. The victim was found at this second location before being taken to the hospital.
It remains unclear how the victim ended up at the second location. No arrests have been made in connection with the shooting.
Miami, FL
American Airlines Eyes April 30 Return to Venezuela With Miami–Caracas Flights
DALLAS — American Airlines (AA) announced today plans to resume daily nonstop service between Miami (MIA) and Caracas (CCS) as early as April 30. The restart depends on final government approval, security checks, and operational readiness. Envoy Air, American’s regional subsidiary, will operate the route with Embraer 175 aircraft.
The Fort Worth-based carrier continues to coordinate with authorities in both the United States and Venezuela to restore the route. In January, AA announced its intention to be the first airline to reconnect Venezuela with the United States, emphasizing that service would begin only after regulatory approval and security assessments.
American began serving Venezuela in 1987 and was the largest U.S. airline in the country before suspending operations in 2019. Chief Commercial Officer Nat Pieper described the return to Caracas as both a restoration of a long-standing market and a strategic extension of Miami’s role as AA’s primary Latin America gateway.
This announcement follows the U.S. Department of State’s March 19, 2026 update, which lowered Venezuela’s travel advisory to Level 3, “Reconsider Travel,” but continues to warn of risks such as crime, kidnapping, terrorism, and inadequate health infrastructure. Routine consular services in Venezuela remain suspended, with most services provided through the U.S. Embassy in Bogotá as the United States begins a phased resumption of embassy operations.
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