Jeff Hafley steps into Miami with a tough hand, and the early history of Dolphins coaches suggests there’s no easy way to make a first impression. The new head coach becomes the 12th full-time leader in franchise history after Mike McDaniel was fired in January, and he arrives with a roster full of holes, plenty of uncertainty, and a schedule that doesn’t exactly offer a soft landing.
That matters because Miami’s coaching timeline is full of first seasons that swung wildly in every direction. Some coaches walked into better situations than others.
Some inherited messes. Some found quick answers.
A few never found any at all. Hafley’s situation, though, lines up most closely with Brian Flores: a stripped-down roster, limited expectations, and the kind of setup that makes even modest progress feel meaningful.
Stephen Ross is expected to give him time, with at least three seasons of runway unless something unexpected happens. That patience was not there for Flores in 2019, for reasons that were many.
The benchmark for Hafley may be Flores himself. Flores opened 0-7, and while the season never turned into a winning one on the field, Miami’s five victories still counted as more than most had imagined from that group. That kind of start would qualify as a serious win for Hafley given the roster and the schedule he’s facing.
Miami’s history also shows just how rough things can get for a first-year coach. Cam Cameron opened 0-13, though his first game did go to overtime against the then Washington Redskins, and six of those losses came by three points.
George Wilson started 0-5 before finally breaking through in Week 6 against the Broncos. His first season ended at 3-11 after back-to-back wins over the Broncos and Oilers, then another win over the Oilers in the finale.
At the other end of the spectrum are the fast starters, the coaches who barely needed a warm-up. Tony Sparano began 0-2 before the WildCat flipped Miami’s season on its head.
The Dolphins won nine of their final 10 games, finished 11-5, captured the AFC East and reached the playoffs in one of the great turnarounds in NFL history. Adam Gase also opened 0-2, then finished 10-6, good for second in the AFC East and a playoff berth before a Wild Card loss to the Steelers.
There were also coaches who started with a single stumble and then found their footing. Joe Philbin lost his opener, then guided Miami to a 7-9 finish.
Dave Wannstedt, taking over a strong roster, lost his second game after winning the opener, then ripped off four straight victories. Miami won the AFC East in 2000, finished 11-5, and reached the playoffs before falling to the Raiders.
Don Shula’s Miami story began with a loss too, even if what followed became franchise lore. After taking over from Wilson, he dropped his first game, then beat the Boston Patriots 27-14, which sparked a four-game winning streak. A three-game skid came next, but the Dolphins answered with six straight wins to earn the first playoff appearance in franchise history and finish 10-4.
Jimmy Johnson and Mike McDaniel each started 3-0, though the shape of those beginnings was different. Johnson arrived as the big-name hire after Wayne Huizenga decided it was time for a change and Shula retired. He could not turn Miami into the kind of dynasty he built in Dallas, and the Dolphins never got deep into the playoffs under him, but that first season still opened with three straight wins before settling into an 8-8 finish.
McDaniel, meanwhile, came in as the opposite of Flores. He inherited a good team that needed direction, not demolition.
His style was lighter, more energetic, and players responded right away. Miami won nine games and made the playoffs, losing to the Bills by three without Tua Tagovailoa.
The energy worked early, but over time it wasn’t enough when the Dolphins needed more discipline. McDaniel never quite found the right balance.
That’s the backdrop for Hafley now: a coach walking into a franchise where first impressions have ranged from disastrous to dazzling. The roster and schedule won’t make the opening act easy. History says the first chapter in Miami can tell you a lot, but not everything.
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