Legends of The Fall: Dan Marino

When you ask someone what their definition of a great quarterback is, you invariably wind up with several answers. The one attribute in everyone’s criteria is that of a great passer. It can be argued that Dan Marino was the best pure passer in NFL history.  Everyone mentions his quick release but forgets how fiery his delivery of the football was.

Marino's legendary release.

Marino’s legendary release.

To define his quick release, for the football coaching impaired, is the time it took to complete his throwing motion. The easiest way to measure this back then were to slow film down to individual frames. The average QB release would take 15 frames where Marino was routinely between 8 & 9. So the ball was coming out half a second sooner.

The direct results were more passes getting downfield and less sacks. If we look at his peak years of 1984-1986, Marino was only sacked 48 times while attempting 1,754 passes. The Dolphins led the league in fewest sacks all 3 seasons. Yet through that explosive delivery was the zip and hutzpah he put on the football. For he had one of the strongest arms in league history.

Unlike Peyton Manning and Drew Brees, who had league rules altered year after year to make them record breakers, Marino came in and shattered records through sheer ability. People talk of the great class of 1983 and most want to talk about John Elway first. Oh yeah?? Take a look at something:

  • Marino ’84-’86 – 1076 of 1754 for 13,967 yards & 122 TDs
  • Elway ’84-’86 –  821 of 1489 for 9,974 yards & 59 TDs

* To match Marino’s 122 TD total you would have to have Elway’s total from 1984 to the 13th week of the 1990 season! Almost 4 more years!

During this time both Marino and Elway had taken their teams to Super Bowl XIX and XXI respectively. Of these vids, if you only watch one, watch the 1986 vignette. Yet I digress… take a look at Marino’s record breaking fast pitch 1984:

Then you have 1985 where he led the Dolphins back to the AFC Championship Game. Had they won, we would have had a rematch between Marino and Chicago’s 46 defense in Super Bowl XX. Considering Miami gave the 18-1 Bears their only defeat, its something to think about.

Then you have perhaps his greatest season in 1986:

What made his 1986 season special is he was truly all they had and teams still couldn’t stop him. In 1984 he still had many teammates who had made it to Super Bowl XVII the year before he was drafted. The Killer Bs defense was there but aging. By 1986 most of those teammates were gone as a rebuliding phase had started. Still he went 378 of 623 for 4,746 yards and 44 touchdowns. The 44 was 8 more than the previous record and he was within 56 yards of Fouts’ other mark of 4,802.

Dan Marino bust

Also because it was the second time scaling those heights. He had set the record of 5,084 yards and 48 touchdowns in his 1984 campaign. He shattered the old record of 36 touchdowns which had stood for 21 years. He did it in his first full season as a starter. Not his 7th or 8th when Manning and Brady finally topped his mark.

Ultimately it was the fact that the game had passed by Don Shula as to why Marino didn’t make it back to the Super Bowl. The rest of his career the Dolphins failed to get a prime time receiver or runner. In 1995 they were the poster child for why the quick fix free agent route wasn’t the best place to build a team.

Yet when you look back at the promise of a young Dan Marino, the sky was the limit. He was definitely a legend of the fall.

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10 thoughts on “Legends of The Fall: Dan Marino

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  6. The personnel acquired around Marino was poor. Shula was no GM. Bum Phillips summed up Shula best: “He could take his’n and beat your’n, then he could take your’n and beat his’n”… in other words, he could coach whatever personnel you gave him (unlike a Bill Walsh, who drafted players to fit a specific system). Problem for Shula—-and Marino—-was that Shula simply wasn’t a great personnel guy. It wasn’t so much that the game had passed him by, but rather Shula wasn’t ever a great personnel guy. The personnel for the Dolphin Dynasty of the 70s was assembled by people other than Don Shula. It’s truly a sports tragedy that Dan Marino did not have personnel around him commensurate with his ability. The amazing thing is that during Marino’s career, despite having lacking supports (of the 28 franchises in existence when Marino was a rookie, Miami had the 2nd worst combined ranking between total rushing yards on offense & total yards allowed on defense), Miami won the 3rd most games in the NFL (1 win behind Denver for 2nd). Marino did more with less support than anyone in the league. And the organization is to blame for not having a better guy at acquiring talent than they did. There’s no arguing this.

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    • It had…James Pruitt and all the bad receivers and running backs they brought in from 1986-1993 was abysmal. They finally got him some help once free agency started but these were players past their prime. James Pruitt, Toy Stradford, Eddie Chavis, Scott Schwedes, Fred Banks, Mark Higgs, they get Tony Martin and don’t develop him. He goes on to the Super Bowl with San Diego and Atlanta as their legitimate deep threat. Because he’s the winningest head coach, folks want to give him a pass on poor personnel decisions that kept Marino from maximizing his talent. Oronde Gadsen…come on these guys were all marginal at best. So when Duper and Clayton got old Marino’s game went in decline. You have to blame Shula in that regard.

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