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The Miami Dolphins kicked off their rookie minicamp, signaling a new era under GM Jon-Eric Sullivan and coach Jeff Hafley. This shift emphasizes a more traditional, hard-working football approach.
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(Amy Beth Bennett/South Florida Sun-Sentinel/TNS)
MIAMI GARDENS â Football is back. And I donât mean that in the sense that the Miami Dolphins held their first day of their rookie minicamp Friday.
When I say âfootball is back,â I mean the focus is on hand-in-the-dirt, hard hat-and-lunch pail football under general manager Jon-Eric Sullivan and coach Jeff Hafley.
Thatâs important to note because a few miles away former Dolphins wide receiver Tyreek Hill, a Hall of Fame talent â and Hall of Fame knucklehead, was in court, having been sued for $75,000 by a female social media influencer who claims Hill broke her leg while the two were doing football drills in Hillâs backyard.
Yeah, the lawsuit is as crazy as it sounds. And itâs what the Dolphins dealt with on a regular basis under the old regime.
So, when I say âfootball is back,â I also mean Tyreekâs type of craziness is gone from the Dolphins locker room. Hopefully forever.
Granted, rookie minicamp doesnât offer everlasting insight into the direction of the new regime or the type of players they drafted a few weeks ago.
But the tone and messaging of the new regime start to surface.
For example, players were running sprints after Fridayâs practice, a sight not seen regularly in previous years.
The new management is focusing on a traditional, hard-working football approach, emphasizing physicality and discipline.
Jon-Eric Sullivan is the new general manager of the Miami Dolphins.
Tyreek Hill was sued for $75,000 by a social media influencer who claims he broke her leg during football drills in his backyard.
The Miami Dolphins held their rookie minicamp on Friday.

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And messaging is being sent.
âWeâre trying to be a physical team,â said tight end Will Kacmarek, the third-round pick from Ohio State. âWeâre trying to get after people in the run game, the pass game. I think weâre trying to be explosive. Weâre still learning a lot of the scheme right now, but what weâve heard in the first couple of meetings is weâre trying to play fast and physical.â
This is my 17th or 18th rookie minicamp. I lose count.
Trust me, theyâre largely insignificant.
What happens on May 8 wonât matter on, say, Sept. 14, or Oct. 16, or Dec. 10, when youâre well into the regular season.
Hereâs what matters most in rookie minicamp: setting a positive, hard-working, no-nonsense tone that still exists on Sept. 14 or Oct. 16 or Dec. 10.
Thatâs the true value of these offseason gatherings.
You let everyone know the standard to which theyâll be judged every day.
Look, it was great to see guard-tackle Kadyn Proctor, the first-round pick from Alabama, moving around on the field for the 30 minutes or so the media was allowed to watch Fridayâs practice.
At 6-foot-7, 352 pounds, he appeared slim, athletic, agile, and, you guessed it, big.
Cornerback Chris Johnson, the first-round pick from San Diego State, seemed smooth and capable as he progressed through the practice that didnât feature any offense vs. defense drills, and linebacker Jacob Rodriguez, the second-round pick from Texas Tech, looked good in drills.
Fellow linebackers Trey Moore, the fourth-round pick from Texas, and Kyle Louis, the fourth-round pick from Pitt, who figure to be hybrid players (Moore a cross between defensive end and linebacker, and Louis a cross between linebacker and safety) went through drills with Rodriguez.
On and on it goes through the undrafted rookies, first-year players and tryout invitees.
I noticed defensive lineman Alex Huntley, who spent much of last season on Miamiâs practice squad, often being at the head of the line for defensive line drills, an indication of leadership skills among players of his caliber.
Defensive end Jordan Lawson, a 6-foot-4, 251-pound minicamp invitee who recorded 5.0 sacks and 15.0 TFL (tackles for loss) last season for Louisiana, was impressive in both size and actions.
I like the tone that Sullivan and Hafley have set so far. Itâs workmanlike. Thereâs an all-business feeling when they speak. Thereâs a seriousness in their demeanor.
And I like what I saw Friday.
Itâs important that the tone is felt by the rookies.
Itâs crucial that that tone is carried out by veterans such as linebacker Jordyn Brooks, center Aaron Brewer, defensive tackle Zach Sieler, left tackle Patrick Paul, quarterback Malik Willis and other team leaders.
So far, it seems as though the tone of things is being set.
On a related topic, donât focus on the Dolphinsâ record this season.
They might win four games.
They might win seven games.
The bigger focus is on the teamâs tone and demeanor, and whether Sullivan and Hafley have gathered the right types of players.
If you pay attention to the record, you miss the entire point of the 2026 season.
Yes, the Dolphins want to win.
But itâs more important to set the right tone and have the right type of players.
Thatâs the point of the Dolphinsâ 2026 season.
And much of having the right type of player starts with contrasting what happened in Miami Gardens on Friday with what happened in a Broward County courtroom with Tyreek. Thatâs all you need to consider to understand that a new era is here in more ways than one.