Monday Night’s Week 15 game was a make or break contest for the Dolphins.
Miami, FL
Winderman’s view: A solid Heat trip, but a reality check in Denver
DENVER – Observations and other notes of interest from Thursday night’s 103-97 loss to the Denver Nuggets:
– This ability to remain competitive with anyone and anything that happens to be available is impressive, and has been for weeks.
– But ultimate success still is predicated on having everyone.
– This time, it was no Tyler Herro or Kevin Love.
– As well as still no Josh Richardson.
– All as Nikola Jovic continues to get worked into a rotation.
– And as Haywood Highsmith moves toward being an outsider.
– Smoke, mirrors, zone defensive, timely 3-pointers are great when it comes to sustaining a season.
– But the sooner the Heat get to see Herro back with this mix, the sooner we’ll know.
– Especially as the Heat sort out the precise fit with Terry Rozier.
– Whose aggression kept the Heat afloat in this one.
– The Heat now with an attacker when Jimmy Butler dares take a rest.
– Certainly a heartening trip.
– But lessons still to be learned.
– With ample components for something yet further compelling.
– Something beyond grasping for a postseason spot beyond the play-in.
– The Heat’s lineup count for the season remained at a franchise-record-tying 31, opening for the second consecutive game with Jovic, Rozier, Butler, Bam Adebayo and Duncan Robinson.
– Adebayo against length continues to stand as somewhat of a concern.
– Before the game, Nuggets coach Michael Malone noted the Heat’s injuries and the resulting 31 lineups the Heat have had to deal with.
– “That’s crazy,” he said. “And they’ve had guys in and out of the lineup. So you give it to Spo, he deserves every dollar they just gave him and then some.”
– There still was plenty of shuffling in the rotation, with Herro, Love and others out.
– Jaime Jaquez Jr. and Caleb Martin entered together as the Heat’s first two substitutes.
– Delon Wright then followed.
– With Orlando Robinson making it nine deep.
– Robinson remains anonymous to the degree that he was not even introduced when he entered.
– Jaquez was active and aggressive, playing beyond his stat line.
– He helped energize the comeback from the early 16-point deficit.
– Martin’s first offensive rebound was the 250th of his career,
– Butler extended his career-best streak to 13 games with at least one 3-pointer.
– Butler extended his season-best streak 12 consecutive games with at least one steal.
– The Nuggets’ Malone hardly was pleased with getting the Heat on the second night of a back-to-back for his team.
– “Well,” he said pregame, “isn’t it great that the first matchup of the two teams that were in the NBA Finals is on the second night of a back-to-back?”
– As for those NBA Finals, Malone said June and winning the championship seemed like a long time ago.
– “I told our coaches,” he said, “it’s really weird, ‘You know how long ago the Finals feel for me?’ It feels like a long time ago. I’m not sure why that is, but it was such a quick turnaround for us.”
– Of the two teams since that matchup, Malone said, “They’re different. We’re different.”
– The game was the sixth ever for the Heat on Leap Day (Feb. 29) over their 36 seasons, with a 2-3 record going in in such games.
– The game was the last the Heat play this season beyond the central time zone.
Miami, FL
Five Things I Think I Think About the Miami Dolphins – Week 15
As Enrique Martin so poignently asked: Do you really want it?
The Steelers said “Here we go! Ale ale ale!”
The Dolphins said: “No, no, no; no thank you, that’s okay!”
Everything was aligned against the Fins
You know the drill: December game, away, in the cold, in prime time, the Dolphins’ playoff hopes (no matter how small) on the line.
If there’s ever been anything more sure than a Miami loss in those circumstances, I’ve never encountered it.
This time had the addition of a little Mike on Mike violence as Mike ‘Oh no, we should fire him because we only finish over .500 every year for our entire lifetimes, boo hoo’ Tomlin went against Mike ‘I will lose this and still be your coach for the next decade, just watch how bad this can get’ McDaniel battled it out from the sidelines.
People love to play up narratives in NFL games, probably because they run out of interesting things to say after roughly their third season of trying to come up with engaging commentary (which I would know nothing about since I am always innovative and delightful and all of my observations are fresh and new and SHUT UP JERK).
That said, people play them up because they often prove true. NBC flashed the career records of Tua and Aaron Rodgers in games below 40 degrees and, while I can’t remember Rodgers’ because it had too many big numbers involved, Tua’s was 0-5.
Of course, if temperature alone is enough to ensure a loss for you as a professional athlete making more money than some small nations, I would be forced to consider that kind of pathetic.
There was no way that Tua and Company would so easily be defeated by something as innocuous as collective narratives spread by media talking heads with no meaningful perspectives to offer on game day.
Miami would obviously buck the trend.
The Fins would overcome the challenges.
The Fins did not overcome the challenges
Miami didn’t buck the trend. They didn’t defeat the narrative(s). They got thumped and played exactly as poorly as every version of the team you’ve ever seen that has encountered the same situation.
Why huddle? Why drag ass like it’s the National Donkey Pulling Championship?
I’m back in Pennsylvania for the holidays and it’s always so eye opening talking to people who aren’t Dolphins fans when the Dolphins play, especially when it’s against a local team.
The response is never gloating (since it’s always during or after a loss). It’s never “Man, we destroyed you guys! We rule and you got dominated!”
Instead, it’s almost always confusion: “Oh. Yikes. Are you guys, like, okay? What happened? Is that normal? That’s a full NFL team, right?”
What an embarassing conclusion to playoff eligibility.
Why are they passing? Not just early or late, like, at all?
Dear everyone involved in game planning and play calling: How dumb do you have to be?
Week 13 against the Saints, Miami rushed for 164 yards and won 21-17.
Week 14 against the Jets, Miami rushed for 239 yards and won 34-10.
Week 15, they should have rushed for 300 yards and won 42-7.
Instead, they rushed for 63 yards (despite De’Von Achane averaging 5.0 YPC) and lost 15-28.
That’s dumb. You’re all being dumb.
Analysts can try to present evidence that Pittsburgh went all in to take away the run and make Tua beat them (as Troy Aikman contended during the broadcast), but at 5.0 YPC, it didn’t work. MM just freaked out and went away from what was the obvious solution in a northeast winter game and got jack slapped.
Did you know Miami scored 27 points in the 3rd quarter?
That’s my last offensive fact. Read that word with whichever pronunciation you prefer.
The defense was jekyll and hyde
Early on, Miami’s defense was looking sharp. They were swarming to the ball, making solid tackles, and stifling the Steelers’ offense.
Then, after what I have to imagine was a literal funeral dirge at halftime, they came out and decided to be the worst version of themselves possible.
Every non-Minkah safety was suddenly bad. The line could get no pressure against a 4th string LT playing his first snaps as an adult. There was an inexplicable taunting penalty that rivals the most ridiculous things I’ve ever seen.
And worst of all: no one could tackle anymore.
I have this pet theory that Madden (the video game franchise, not the jolly announcer who was afraid of airplanes) has been making NFL players worse for years due to the introduction of the Hit Stick.
A bunch of kids grew up playing Madden, flicking the hit stick, annihiliating their opponents, and receiving positive reinforcement all along the way. Then, those kids realize that they’re some of the world’s best athletes, weasel their way onto an NFL roster, and start trying to Hit Stick (TM) people in real life.
Turns out, you still have to wrap up and tackle the way you were taught in Pop Warner.
Throwing shoulders to get a highlight on the long defunct Jacked Up segment of Sportscenter is a great way to not actually bring a guy to the ground and watch him run away from you for a score. See: DK Metcalf.
For as well as Anthony Weaver’s defense has shown it’s able to play, this display should warrant a back-to-the-basics reassessment of what it means to tackle the ball carrier instead of trying to get on an imaginary highlight reel.
And speaking of things that make my hair turn gray and knees start to feel the oncoming rains as I shake my fist at clouds:
Tush pushing is a nightmare
Sure, it has a rhyming name. That’s where its cuteness ends.
As a regular ol’ fan, I’m so bored of this.
4th and 1: here comes the butt brigade.
Make a rule change and get this mess out of here. It’s boring to watch, it’s repetitive, and the Dolphins don’t even use it because they’re too stupid to take advantage of the most obvious freebee on Earth.
Put Julian Hill under center and get a free 1st down.
Until the league fixes it: Be part of the problem, guys.
Then at least the boredom I feel would be overcome by the brief excitement of the Dolphins being successful.
Until the next snap, anyway.
Weekly Overreaction: Tua should be done
“For how long? For the rest of this year? For next year? For his career?”
I don’t know, pretend bro. But at least for a while.
I’ve been a Tua Middler (like Bette Midler, but not at all the same) since he’s arrived: I think at his peak, he can be elite at the things he does best (a la 2023) and at his worst, he’s a borderline joke (like this week).
But this whole season, it seems like he’s taken such a massive step back that I think it’s in the Fins’ best interest to see what they have elsewhere.
I realize that his contract saddles them with him for next year unless they take a huge salary cap penalty, but it’s pretty clear to me that he’s suffered some long term effects from his previous injuries that have limited him. He’s comically immobile in and around the pocket, his arm strength has lessened, and (unrelated to the injury angle) his ability to read the defense and fire off a quick, accurate pass has nearly disappeared.
Until garbage time, he looked completely incapable against Pittsburgh. For a guy getting a boatload of cash in a do-or-die game: that’s pitiful.
Now, he wasn’t alone. By the 3rd quarter, no one was holding up their end of the bargain. But he’s included in that ‘no one’ and he’s getting paid the most and has the highest expectations among them to not be hot garbage.
Ewers probably isn’t either, but at least he’s as yet unquantified.
Tua, it pains me to say, can’t be it anymore.
It seems like the Dolphins better get drafting.
And at least they have one thing going for them: their offseason starts today.
Why do we do this to ourselves? Do we really need to watch three more of these? What if we all just agreed to meet on Sundays and do puzzles and fist fight? Sling mud in the comments below.
Miami, FL
Miami takes on Brooklyn, seeks to end 5-game skid
Miami Heat (14-12, ninth in the Eastern Conference) vs. Brooklyn Nets (7-18, 13th in the Eastern Conference)
New York; Thursday, 7:30 p.m. EST
BETMGM SPORTSBOOK LINE: Heat -6.5; over/under is 227.5
BOTTOM LINE: Miami aims to break its five-game skid with a win over Brooklyn.
The Nets have gone 6-13 against Eastern Conference teams. Brooklyn is ninth in the Eastern Conference with 25.7 assists per game led by Nic Claxton averaging 4.4.
The Heat are 8-7 against Eastern Conference opponents. Miami is third in the league scoring 56.2 points per game in the paint led by Jaime Jaquez Jr. averaging 10.9.
The Nets score 110.2 points per game, 7.5 fewer points than the 117.7 the Heat allow. The Heat average 120.7 points per game, 4.8 more than the 115.9 the Nets give up.
TOP PERFORMERS: Michael Porter Jr. is scoring 25.6 points per game with 7.3 rebounds and 3.2 assists for the Nets. Egor Demin is averaging 17.0 points and 3.0 rebounds while shooting 75.0% over the last 10 games.
Kel’el Ware is averaging 11.1 points and 10.2 rebounds for the Heat. Bam Adebayo is averaging 20.0 points over the last 10 games.
LAST 10 GAMES: Nets: 4-6, averaging 110.7 points, 41.6 rebounds, 26.6 assists, 7.5 steals and 5.1 blocks per game while shooting 45.8% from the field. Their opponents have averaged 109.4 points per game.
Heat: 4-6, averaging 114.2 points, 45.6 rebounds, 26.7 assists, 8.3 steals and 5.9 blocks per game while shooting 46.7% from the field. Their opponents have averaged 115.7 points.
INJURIES: Nets: Haywood Highsmith: out (knee), Ben Saraf: day to day (illness), Cam Thomas: out (hamstring).
Heat: Nikola Jovic: day to day (arm), Tyler Herro: day to day (toe), Pelle Larsson: out (ankle).
___
The Associated Press created this story using technology provided by Data Skrive and data from Sportradar.
Miami, FL
An immersive ‘Survivor’ experience and fan café will open in Miami in January
Miami is about to get voted onto the island.
This January, Jungle Island will transform into a full-on tribute to one of TV’s longest-running juggernauts with the arrival of the Survivor Ultimate Fan Cafe, a limited-time immersive experience celebrating the show’s 50th season.
RECOMMENDED: The best immersive experiences in the U.S. to visit right now
Opening on January 29, 2026, the café is a collaboration between Bucket Listers and CBS, timed to build buzz ahead of the milestone anniversary season, which premieres on February 25. The concept goes way beyond themed cocktails and logo merch, though. This is designed as a hands-on playground for fans who’ve spent decades yelling strategy advice at their TVs.
“This Ultimate Fan Cafe is more than an event; it’s an immersive tribute to the fan community that has kept CBS’ Survivor thriving for 50 seasons,” said Mike Benson, president and chief marketing officer, Paramount Television, in an official statement. “From iconic photo moments to themed food and real Survivor-style challenges, we’re inviting fans to live the adventure like never before.”
Inside the custom-built space at Jungle Island, guests will be able to test their skills with a rotating lineup of physical and mental challenges inspired by the show, all adapted for safe, indoor play. You won’t be dangling over the ocean or shivering by a fire to stay warm, but you will get a taste of the competitive spirit that’s defined Survivor since its debut in 2000.
Between challenges, castaways will refuel with a Polynesian-fusion menu created by chef Becky Brown, a MasterChef finalist and Chopped champion. The themed offerings include dishes like sole Survivor ceviche, campfire carnitas tacos, new era laksa noodles and a double elimination burger. There will be desserts, kid-friendly options and plenty of comfort food for those who prefer spectating to scheming.
The drink menu will keep the island vibes flowing with themed cocktails and mocktails, plus beer and wine. Also expect shareable pitchers of jungle juice or hidden immunity punch, which feels very on-brand for plotting alliances.
Photo ops will be baked into every corner of the experience, from a tribal council-style fire pit to a voting confessional booth and a winner’s wall designed for brag-worthy pics. Exclusive Survivor merchandise will also be available for purchase.
Tickets include a food and beverage credit and cover a 90-minute reservation. A waitlist is now open through Bucket Listers, with ticket sales launching exclusively on the platform. For more information, click here.
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