ESPN Just Backed The Dolphins Reset In A Way Fans Wont Expect

With strategic offseason moves and a daring quarterback acquisition, the Miami Dolphins earn high marks from ESPN as they brace for a transformative 2026 season.

The Miami Dolphins spent the offseason tearing things down, and ESPN’s Seth Walder says the work they did in the process deserves a strong grade.

In Walder’s annual offseason report cards, Miami landed an A- after what he called a deliberate reset. The Dolphins moved on from several important pieces from last season, including quarterback Tua Tagovailoa and wide receivers Tyreek Hill and Jaylen Waddle, and the front office has clearly chosen a different path heading into 2026.

The headline move, in Walder’s view, was the signing of Malik Willis to a three-year, $67.5 million deal. He described it as a “smart risk” for a team that is fully retooling.

The upside is what makes the bet worthwhile, even if the sample is still limited. In four starts for the Green Bay Packers in 2025, Willis completed 85% of his passes for 422 yards, threw three touchdowns, and added 123 rushing yards and two more scores on the ground.

That said, Miami’s new quarterback is walking into a roster with obvious questions at receiver. The Dolphins tried to address that area in April by drafting Chris Bell, Caleb Douglas and Kevin Coleman Jr., but Walder still sees a group that is thin across the board.

His broader read is that Miami may not be finished making moves, but the direction is clear. The Dolphins are in a full reset, and with the third-most cap space in 2027, Walder believes they are set up to keep improving from here.

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Tyreek Hills Next Chapter Is Already Taking Shape Without Miami

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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

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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 🡒]