The Miami Dolphins don’t need their 2026 rookie class to be perfect. They need it to hit fast.
That’s the real swing factor in South Beach after a brutal roster reset left Jon-Eric Sullivan with a team that looks nothing like the one Miami had in 2025. Sullivan’s first offseason pushed the Dolphins into the 2026 NFL Draft as a primary source of help, and the result was a haul of 13 drafted rookies plus a wave of undrafted free agent additions. For better or worse, this is now a young team built to be judged quickly.
The Athletic’s NFL staff recently identified the one question hanging over every team, and for Miami it came down to one thing: how fast this rookie class can adjust to the league.
That question matters because the Dolphins had almost no financial wiggle room after moving on from Tua Tagovailoa, Bradley Chubb, and Tyreek Hill, while also handing a sizable deal to new starting quarterback Malik Willis. Sullivan had to attack the draft with urgency, knowing his first crop of rookies would be asked to do more than most first-year classes can reasonably handle.
Still, there’s at least some reason for optimism. “The Dolphins made approximately 100 picks in April, and our NFL Draft guru, Dane Brugler, was a fan of their work,” The Athletic's Jim Ayello said. “This team desperately needed an infusion of young talent, and while it’s great to be optimistic about youngsters in the offseason, they need to show something this season.”
The challenge now is turning that offseason enthusiasm into real production on the field, and Miami may not have to wait long to find out what it has. Kadyn Proctor, the first-round pick, is already lined up to start at left guard.
Another first-rounder, Chris Johnson, looks set for a versatile role in Jeff Hafley’s secondary. Second-round linebacker Jacob Rodriguez will compete for a job next to All-Pro Jordyn Brooks, while third-round receivers Caleb Douglas and Chris Bell, once Bell is back from the knee injury he suffered last season, should have a chance to earn targets in a thin receiver group.
The rookies with a chance to matter extend beyond that core. Third-round tight end Will Kacmarek is expected to serve as the main blocker alongside Greg Dulcich, and Day 3 selections Trey Moore, Kyle Louis, Michael Taafe, and Kevin Coleman Jr. all have a path to meaningful snaps as first-year players.
Ayello pointed to the Browns a year ago as the kind of template Miami would love to follow, with the key being multiple rookies who can become difference-makers right away.
There’s no guarantee the Dolphins get that kind of immediate return. But if they do, it could reshape not just 2026, but the outlook in Miami well beyond it.
In Other News...
ESPN Just Backed The Dolphins Reset In A Way Fans Wont Expect
The Dolphins spent the 2026 offseason acting like a team that was willing to take a hard look at its own timeline and start over. Miami reshaped the roster in a major way, added Malik Willis at quarterback, and turned to the draft to help rebuild the receiver room with Chris Bell, Caleb Douglas and Kevin Coleman Jr. all brought in as part of the effort to add depth and flexibility on offense.
ESPNs offseason review reflected that direction, giving Miami an A- and framing the operation as a full reset rather than a quick patch job. The encouraging part for Dolphins fans is that the plan does not stop with the moves already made, since the organization appears to be setting itself up to keep improving from here, with more room to maneuver down the road than many teams in this situation usually have. [Read more 🡒]
Tyreek Hills Next Chapter Is Already Taking Shape Without Miami
Tyreek Hills next move is still taking shape, but it is no longer tied to Miami. After the Dolphins moved on from the veteran receiver, the focus has shifted to his recovery and what his market might look like once he is ready to play again. At 32, Hill has been documenting the rehabilitation process from the knee injury that ended his previous season, keeping his name in the conversation even without a team attached.
A mini-documentary has offered a glimpse into that comeback, including a doctor check-up and a message that his progress is going in the right direction. If Hill does hit the open market for his next NFL chapter, several clubs have already been floated as possible fits, with Baltimore, Washington and Atlanta among the teams mentioned. For now, though, the only certainty is that Hills return to the field will draw plenty of attention wherever it lands. [Read more 🡒]
Dolphins Suddenly Have A Tight End Problem They Thought Was Solved
The Dolphins brought in Ben Sims to compete for a roster spot, adding another body to a tight end room that still needs sorting as camp approaches. Sims, who has spent time with the Packers and Vikings, is viewed mostly as a blocking tight end, and Miami is betting that his familiarity with the job can at least give the group a steady in-line option.
So far, though, Sims has not made a strong enough early impression during offseason work to lock anything down. Miami is still hopeful he can take a step once training camp starts, but if that doesn't happen, the team may not just stand pat and wait for the answer to arrive on its own. [Read more 🡒]
