MIAMI, FL — The Pete Carroll era in Las Vegas crashed and burned, and the fallout is sending shockwaves straight to South Beach. Rumors linking Geno Smith and the Miami Dolphins are heating up fast. The Raiders hold the No. 1 overall pick and are heavily projected to draft rookie prodigy Fernando Mendoza. That leaves the 35-year-old Smith searching for a new home. Miami needs a steady hand. Geno needs a lifeline. The math simply makes sense.
A Marriage Born Out of Necessity
Smith’s 2025 season in Las Vegas was ugly. The Raiders limped to a horrific finish, and Smith absorbed the brunt of the blame. But look closer. Just one year prior, he led the NFL in passing yards for the Seattle Seahawks. The talent did not just evaporate overnight. He thrives when a system supports him, and he falters when an offensive line collapses.
Miami presents a clean slate. General Manager Jon-Eric Sullivan and head coach Jeff Hafley are reportedly ready to move on from Tua Tagovailoa. Releasing or trading Tagovailoa comes with a massive dead cap headache, meaning the front office cannot afford luxury free agents like Malik Willis or Kyler Murray. They need a budget-friendly bridge quarterback. Releasing Smith saves the Raiders $8 million against the cap. Miami can swoop in, sign a seasoned leader on a manageable deal, and instantly stabilize the locker room.
I stood on the sidelines during the Raiders’ frigid Week 16 loss to the Texans. You could feel the exhaustion radiating from Smith. He took massive hits, threw off his back foot under relentless pressure, yet never pointed fingers. He dragged that offense to 21 points purely on guts. That grit is exactly what a rebuilding Miami roster needs right now.
“All season long there’s been a lot of things that I wish we could’ve done better, but what I’m really proud of is just the way that we continue to fight. The spirit of this team and the spirit of the locker room, guys are continuing to hold the rope and that’s really all you can ask of the guys.”
— Geno Smith, Las Vegas Raiders Quarterback
The Human Element: Geno’s Second Comeback
Smith’s career refuses to die. He fought his way out of the backup shadows in Seattle to win Comeback Player of the Year, only to get shipped to a dysfunctional Raiders franchise. Critics threw in the towel on him again. But Smith processes adversity better than anyone in the league. Stepping into the Miami humidity offers him a chance to rewrite his football story. The bright lights of Hard Rock Stadium will not intimidate a guy who already resurrected his career once.
Playoff Implications / What’s Next
If Sullivan and Hafley pull the trigger on Smith, the entire AFC East hierarchy shifts. Miami avoids a total rebuild by plugging in a veteran who knows how to dissect zone coverages and limit catastrophic turnovers. For Las Vegas, shedding Smith’s contract clears the deck for their new rookie to take the reins without a veteran casting a shadow.
Expect the Dolphins to make a formal push before the new league year officially kicks off. If the Raiders cut him with a post-June 1 designation to maximize savings, Miami gets their guy for pennies on the dollar.

