MIAMI GARDENS, Fla. — Instead of focusing primarily on what has gone wrong amid a 1-5 start to the season, the Miami Dolphins are answering questions again about their team culture following Tua Tagovailoa’s comments calling out unnamed teammates for being late to player-led meetings.
The Dolphins took the lead against the Los Angeles Chargers in the final minute of Sunday’s matchup but failed to hold on for the second straight game.
Asked how to keep up team morale, Tagovailoa, a Saint Louis School graduate from Ewa Beach, appeared to highlight behind-the-scenes issues.
“I think it starts with the leadership in helping articulate that for the guys,” Tagovailoa said, “and then what we’re expecting out of the guys. We’re expecting this. Are we getting that? Are we not getting that?
“We have guys showing up to player-only meetings late. Guys not showing up to player-only meetings. There is a lot that goes into that. Do we have to make that mandatory? Do we not have to make that mandatory? So it’s a lot of things of that nature that we got to get cleaned up. It starts with the little things like that.”
His comments drew widespread scrutiny from former NFL players and analysts criticizing the quarterback for publicly calling out teammates.
“I hated every bit of that. Tua, you’re a captain of this team, you’re a quarterback,” said Devin McCourty, the former defensive back who is now an analyst for NBC. “Go handle it. Get in the locker room, call those guys out by name. … Go fix it in-house. I think that’s true leadership.”
Dolphins coach Mike McDaniel said Monday that while he didn’t believe Tagovailoa’s comments were ill-intentioned, they came at a bad time.
“Regardless of intent and what was on Tua’s mind, after a loss, as the franchise quarterback, that’s not the forum to display that,” McDaniel said. “I think he knows that now. I do honestly believe there was no ill intention. You’re talking about a misguided representation of player-orchestrated film sessions.”
McDaniel said Tagovailoa has spoken with several teammates about his comments since Sunday evening, and that the team needs to move on for this week’s game at Cleveland.
It is set to be the first meeting between starting quarterbacks from Hawaii in a regular-season NFL game. Mililani High graduate Dillon Gabriel is set to make the third start of his rookie season for the Browns.
“You live and you learn,” McDaniel said. “And ultimately, I look at it like everything else. There’s no if, ands or buts about it. Accountability and our team’s performances always lies squarely on my shoulders. The focus — to beat the Cleveland Browns and fix what we need to fix, to go attack the next opponent — nowhere in that lies anything but focusing on what we can do individually.”
The Dolphins have lost four games in which they had the chance to put away their opponents in the second half. Calls for the firings of McDaniel and general manager Chris Grier have circulated since Miami’s blowout loss to Indianapolis in the season opener. The team is without its best player, Tyreek Hill, because of a significant knee injury.
Miami can hardly afford more drama amid a disastrous season that seems to snowball each week.
Several of Tagovailoa’s teammates were asked Monday about his comments. Many declined to discuss any locker-room issues.
“I try to keep those things out of the media,” left tackle Patrick Paul said. “I think that’s something that we should handle internally. I don’t think we should be giving out all the details of that.”
Asked if Tagovailoa’s comments were handled internally, Paul shook his head.
“I’m not sure,” he said.