MIAMI GARDENS, Fla. — The Cheetah has run his last race in Aqua and Orange. In a move that signals a scorched-earth rebuild for the Miami Dolphins, the team released eight-time Pro Bowl wide receiver Tyreek Hill on Monday. The decision, reported by ESPN’s Adam Schefter, saves the franchise $22.8 million against the cap but leaves a $28.2 million dead money crater in its wake. This isn’t just a roster move; it’s the official demolition of the “Greatest Show on Surf” era.
The Monday Massacre: Why Miami Pulled the Plug
General Manager Jon-Eric Sullivan didn’t use a scalpel on Monday; he used a sledgehammer. Hill wasn’t the only casualty. The Dolphins also parted ways with edge rusher Bradley Chubb, veteran guard James Daniels, and wideout Nick Westbrook-Ikhine. The four moves flip Miami from $17.4 million over the cap to roughly $40 million in the green.
For Hill, the math simply stopped working. The 31-year-old was set to count a staggering $51.1 million against the 2026 salary cap. Combine that financial anchor with the dislocated kneecap and torn ligaments he suffered in Week 4 against the Jets last season, and the writing was on the wall. Hill managed just 21 catches for 265 yards in his abbreviated 2025 campaign before the turf at MetLife Stadium claimed another victim.
Hill turns 32 in March. While his agent Drew Rosenhaus has preached optimism about a Week 1 return, NFL Network’s Tom Pelissero reports that medical evaluations are far murkier. Paying top-tier quarterback money to an aging speedster with a reconstructed knee was a gamble the new front office refused to take.
“It’s a business, man. We all know that. But watching ‘Reek walk out that door… that’s the heartbeat of this offense gone. We gotta find a new identity fast.”
— Jaylen Waddle, Dolphins Wide Receiver
Playoff Implications / What’s Next
The keys to the kingdom now belong entirely to Jaylen Waddle. With Hill gone and the roster stripped to the studs, expect Head Coach Jeff Hafley to lean heavily on the draft to rebuild the receiver room. The immediate question shifts to quarterback Tua Tagovailoa. With his primary weapon gone and the offensive line gutted by the release of Daniels, Tua is staring down a 2026 season with a depleted arsenal. If Miami is truly hitting the reset button, Tagovailoa could be the next domino to fall before the draft in April.

