Tua Tagovailoa is Making The Miami Dolphins Look Stupid

Miami Dolphins quarterback Tua Tagovailoa is showing signs of regression, and it’s becoming a serious concern. He no longer looks like the confident quarterback we’ve seen flashes of in the past. If his first read isn’t there, he seems to panic — something that, frankly, shouldn’t still be happening in year four of his career.

Tua is one of the most puzzling quarterbacks in the NFL. For years, it’s been difficult to determine if he’s a legitimate top-tier QB or if he’s replaceable. But now, two weeks into the 2025 NFL season, it seems we finally have our answer — and it’s not a good one.

Miami has had a rough start to their season. In Week 1, they were blown out by the Colts, 33–8, a game where Daniel Jones, a quarterback many had written off, completely outplayed Tua. While the Dolphins defense deserves blame, the offense, particularly Tua, looked lifeless. He threw for only 114 yards with one touchdown and two interceptions. This wasn’t just a bad game — it was a red flag.

Week 2 offered a statistical bounce-back for Tua, as he threw for over 300 yards and two touchdowns in a loss to the Patriots. But the tape tells a different story. Despite the improved numbers, Tua still looked uncomfortable and indecisive. He struggled with progressions and often forced the ball to Tyreek Hill, even when the play clearly wasn’t there.

One glaring example came on a third-down play where Tua had a clean pocket, a solid route concept against a basic cover-2 defense, and yet he stared down Tyreek Hill and forced a throw into coverage — nearly getting intercepted. That pick was only wiped out due to a defensive penalty, but the decision-making was highly questionable.

Tua later admitted to force-feeding Hill, telling the media, “We need a spark from the offense, and Reek, I’m coming to you. No matter what they do, you’ve got to make it right.” That’s not leadership — that’s desperation.

In another sequence, Tua threw a deep ball to Tyreek that turned into a 47-yard gain. On paper, it looked like a great throw. In reality, the ball fluttered in the air and came up short. It should’ve been intercepted — but poor play from the Patriots defenders bailed him out. This throw, by the way, was one yard shy of Tua’s career-high in air yards — a reminder of his limited arm strength. Compared to quarterbacks like Justin Herbert, who was passed over by Miami in the 2020 Draft, or even Daniel Jones, Tua simply can’t push the ball downfield in the same way.

His arm limitations aren’t the only issue. In a crucial 4th-and-9 late in the game, Tua made all the right moves — stepping up in the pocket to avoid pressure, buying time — but then completely missed a wide-open tight end releasing into the flat. Instead, he forced the ball into triple coverage and got picked off, essentially sealing the loss.