MIAMI, FL — The Miami Dolphins just handed the keys of the franchise to Malik Willis, but they forgot to check if the car has tires. After a week of Miami Dolphins free agency moves that saw the team dump Tua Tagovailoa’s record $99.2 million dead cap hit and sign Willis to a three-year, $67.5 million deal, the front office has pivoted to a “budget-buy” mentality that puts their new quarterback in immediate peril.
The Malik Willis Paradox
General Manager Jon-Eric Sullivan didn’t hesitate to burn the old blueprints. By releasing Tyreek Hill and Bradley Chubb, Miami cleared over $56 million in cap space, yet they are spending it like they’re afraid of the bill. The team signed Jamaree Salyer to patch a hole at right guard, but the foundation remains shaky. Salyer has experience, sure, but he isn’t the elite protector a dual-threat QB like Willis needs to survive a 17-game gauntlet.
The Dolphins didn’t just lose players; they lost gravity. Tyreek Hill forced every safety in the league to play 20 yards deep. Without that threat, the field shrinks. Miami is betting that Jalen Tolbert and Tutu Atwell can fill that void on one-year “prove-it” deals. That is a massive ask for a quarterback trying to find his rhythm in a new zip code. The stadium air feels different now—colder, despite the South Florida humidity. Fans are waiting for a splash, but so far, they’ve only seen ripples.
“We know what the outside world is saying about the roster. But Malik is a fighter. He’s got the arm, he’s got the legs, and we’re going to build this thing the right way, even if it’s not the flashy way people expect.”
— Jeff Hafley, Dolphins Head Coach
The Strategy Gap
There is a glaring inconsistency here. If you commit $45 million in guarantees to Willis, you can’t shop in the bargain bin for his life insurance. Releasing James Daniels and Liam Eichenberg left the interior line in a state of flux. Relying on Greg Dulcich at tight end to be a primary safety valve is optimistic at best. Willis thrived in Green Bay during short bursts because the system was airtight. In Miami, he is being asked to be the system.
On the other side of the ball, the defense looks like a collection of parts rather than a unit. Replacing Bradley Chubb with a rotation of Joshua Uche and David Ojabo is a lateral move that assumes perfect health—something this roster hasn’t seen in years. The secondary is crowded with names like Darrell Baker Jr. and Marco Wilson, but it lacks a true “eraser” at safety to replace the leadership lost in the purge.
Playoff Implications / What’s Next
The Dolphins are currently projected to have $8.4 million in remaining cap space for 2026, which is barely enough to sign their draft class and keep a reserve for injuries. Unless Sullivan has a blockbuster trade up his sleeve or hits a home run with the No. 11 overall pick in April, Willis will enter training camp with one of the thinnest supporting casts in the AFC East. The front office cleared the deck to start fresh, but they may have cleared too much. The next move isn’t about depth; it’s about finding a legitimate WR2 who can keep defenses from collapsing on Jaylen Waddle. If they don’t, the Willis era might hit a wall before the first kickoff.

