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The Honolulu Advertiser
Posted on: Sunday, January 4, 2009

Dolphins seek redemption

By Steven Wine
Associated Press

Hawaii news photo - The Honolulu Advertiser

Tony Sparano

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MIAMI — Six weeks into the season, the Miami Dolphins still looked a lot like a punch line.

They were 2-4, last in the AFC East and licking their wounds after being manhandled by the Baltimore Ravens. That defeat made it 22 losses in 25 games, and as coach Tony Sparano bemoaned deficiencies in blocking and tackling, it seemed the rebuilding project under the new Bill Parcells regime might take several seasons.

Now, Miami is the NFL's most improbable playoff entrant and three wins from the Super Bowl. With a rookie coach, a castoff quarterback and a roster low on star power, the Dolphins (11-5) have won nine of their last 10 games to claim the AFC East title and make the postseason for the first time since 2001.

Their reward in the first round today: another crack at Baltimore.

This is a rematch in more ways than one, because the Ravens (11-5) are making their third trip to Miami in 13 months. The Dolphins earned their only victory of 2007 by beating Baltimore, 22-16, in overtime; the Ravens exacted revenge by winning, 27-13, on Oct. 19.

Everyone agrees the Dolphins have improved greatly in the past 2 1/2 months. Baltimore is better, too. Starting with the victory at Miami, the Ravens have won nine of their last 11 games.

"Everybody talks about the Dolphins being on this ride," Baltimore linebacker Ray Lewis says. "We don't care about the Dolphins' ride. We're on our own ride."

At the wheel for the Ravens is rookie Joe Flacco, who in the last 11 games has thrown only five interceptions with 13 TD passes.

"Where they've grown the most is at the quarterback position," Sparano says. "He has total command of the entire playbook. He can keep the play alive, kind of Tony Romo-like. I just see a completely different kid back there right now from the first time we played."

To the astonishment of Miami fans, Flacco has apparently benefited from the tutelage of offensive coordinator Cam Cameron, who went 1-15 in his only season as Dolphins head coach last year.

Against the Ravens, Miami's Wildcat formation netted 4 yards in five plays, but they figure they'll see it again today

"They have expanded that package," Baltimore coach John Harbaugh says. "It looks more and more like the complete package, so it's tougher to defend than it was earlier in the year."

While Miami's trickery failed to work in the earlier meeting, Baltimore was physically superior in that game, bruising more than just the Dolphins' egos.

"That's kind of their M.O.," Miami cornerback Andre Goodman says. "They do their best to intimidate you. They did a good job of it the first game. But this is a different team."

It's a team that belongs in a fantasy league, considering the storybook nature of the Dolphins' transformation. Leading the turnaround has been quarterback Chad Pennington, released by the New York Jets in August and now the AP Comeback Player of the Year.