Pressure Point: ’72 Dolphins undefeated, feistier than ever
MIAMI GARDENS
An hour before the How Low Can You Go Bowl, and just how far the Miami Dolphins have fallen was exemplified by a gathering outside Hard Rock Stadium.
Cue, Springsteen’s “Glory Days” in your head.
The song is ancient, and so are these gray-haired men in aqua blazers gathered yet again Sunday to take a bow for what they achieved nearly half a century ago.
But the years haven’t diminished the accomplishment of the 1972 Dolphins, who went 17-0 on the way to winning the first of back-to-back Super Bowl titles. As part of ‘NFL 100 Greatest’ celebration of the league’s first century, those undefeated Dolphins were chosen as the greatest team.
They celebrated with a champagne toast at halftime of Sunday’s game between the lowly 2019 Dolphins facing the even lowlier Bengals.
Likewise, the passage of time hasn’t diminished the passion of the players who achieved it.
On being greatest team: ‘We took it’
That was evident when never-give-an-inch fullback Larry Csonka was asked about the honor.
“No, no, the NFL did not name us the greatest team, we took the god-damned thing. I’m tired of people telling me how they named us. They named us shit! We took it,” Csonka barked.
Then he smiled and added, “I don’t have any emotional response to that.”
Considering that other rankings of greatest teams have snubbed the Perfect Season Dolphins in favor of Bears and Steelers and Patriots champions that followed in other eras, was Csonka surprised the NFL chose to put them at the top this time?
“No. I’m not surprised,” he said, then became animated again. “Fellas, you’re missing the whole point. It’s a team sport. When you achieve perfection there is no single entity that leads in that perspective. You don’t have the leading rusher, you might not have the leading wide receiver, you might not have the leading tackler in the game.
“The fact of the matter is that you concentrate more on winning than individual performance. So when you talk about great entities in the league, those are detrimental to the winning aspect because you become one dimensional.
“So if you all work together and don’t let your egos get in the way, which is easy when [coach Don] Shula has his foot up your butt, then, and only then, you may attain a perfect season.”
Tanking is an illusion
For awhile early this season it appeared the current Dolphins might pursue absolute imperfection in aiming for a winless season for the chance to pick at the top of the draft. Instead, they came into Sunday’s game at 3-11 against the 1-13 Bengals, who had a virtual lock on the top pick in the 2020 draft.
As to be expected, the notion of a team built to lose is anathema to the Perfect Dolphins.
“That’s not an idea, that’s an illusion,” former running back Mercury Morris said. “… They’re dreaming now to think that you can take and lose a game and then therefore next year that’s going to help you win and make you more competitive. That can’t happen that way.
“You should be able to take who you have and cultivate what you’ve got and make that into your team.”
Admiration for Patriots
Morris pointed to the model of that in the present NFL.
“I like the New England Patriots because they’re the most competitive team that’s out there. … I have the utmost respect for the Patriots team because they’re closer to us … in terms of their respect for the game and how they can take whatever they have and win. Everybody else is chasing that.”
As for the Dolphins’ ambitions of reprising “Glory Days,” Morris suggested the current strategy is pure gamble.
“I hope all these draft picks they have that they’re going to get from trading away all their good players. I hope those dice work,” he said. “Because that’s what it is. It’s a flip of a coin.”
Craig Davis has covered South Florida sports and teams, including the Dolphins, for four decades. Follow him on Twitter @CraigDavisRuns
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