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A major change has come to the Miami Dolphins. The Dolphins have moved on from General Manager Chris Grier, one day after a 28-6 prime-time home loss to the Ravens that dropped Miami to 2-7.

“This morning, I made the decision along with general manager Chris Grier to mutually part ways,” owner Stephen Ross said in a statement. “I have incredible respect for Chris and his family, and I want to thank him for his many contributions to the Miami Dolphins over the past 26 years. “As I assessed the state of the team and in my discussions with Chris, it became clear to both of us that change could not wait. We must improve — in 2025, 2026 and beyond — and it needs to start right now.”

Grier was first hired by the Dolphins in 2000, predating the arrival of Stephen Ross as controlling owner by nearly a decade. Grier became the General Manager in 2016.

He has been heavily criticized for failing to build a consistently competitive roster. To make matters worse, Grier signed off on a long-term extension for quarterback Tua Tagovailoa that pays $150 million over three years, fully-guaranteed. The contract was offered and accepted at a time when the Dolphins could have allowed Tagovailoa to play under his fifth-year option at $23.2 million, with multiple franchise tags available beyond the 2024 season.

The Dolphins have announced that senior personnel executive Champ Kelly will serve as the interim G.M.

It’s a critical moment for the franchise. The trade deadline arrives in four days, and the Dolphins are squarely in “seller” mode.

Meanwhile, coach Mike McDaniel remains. For now. It seems inevitable that a change will be made, at the very latest when the current season ends.


After falling to 2-7 after Thursday night’s loss, the Dolphins could be sellers at the trade deadline. And three pass rushers could be on the trade block.

Dolphins pass rushers Jaelan Phillips, Bradley Chubb and Matt Judon all played on Thursday night and all know the game might be their last with the Dolphins, according to the Miami Herald.

“I understand the business of football,” Chubb said. “But at the end of the day, I love these guys. I got the C on my shirt for a reason.”

Phillips had similar sentiments.

“It’s out of my control. I would love to stay here,” Phillips said. “But if I get traded I get traded.”

The Dolphins look like they have a big rebuilding effort ahead of them, and trading away veteran players to get future draft picks could aid in that effort. The NFL trade deadline is four days away.


Thursday night’s loss led to another round of speculation about whether the Dolphins will make a coaching change, but dropping to 2-7 didn’t lead to a move before Mike McDaniel’s Friday press conference.

McDaniel met the media to discuss the 28-6 loss to the Ravens and one of the questions he fielded had to do with whether players are still listening to the message that he’s sending them as the head coach. Thursday night’s loss featured the kind of frustrated mistakes one would associate with a team that’s tuned out, but McDaniel said he does not believe that is the case.

“I would say so because they just used my messaging,” McDaniel said, via Barry Jackson of the Miami Herald. “Understand the details are the nitty gritty. I think the message is getting through . . . sometimes those details are being lost in the heat of battle. We did it the week before, but didn’t do it this week.”

The Dolphins missed the playoffs last season and they’ve been even worse this season, so it feels like major changes are inevitable in Miami. Whether they start to happen before Tuesday’s trade deadline or the end of the regular season, it seems all but certain that there are going to be new messages and messengers at some point in 2026.


The Dolphins had their best day of the season in Atlanta in Week 8, but there was no carryover from their 34-10 win over the Falcons to Thursday night’s game against the Ravens.

Instead of Tua Tagovailoa throwing four touchdown passes, it was Ravens quarterback Lamar Jackson lighting things up and the Dolphins were back to making the kind of errors that have been commonplace during their 2-7 start to the season. Those mistakes included a false start on a fourth-and-1 in the first quarter that led the team to change plans and try a 35-yard field goal.

Riley Patterson missed the kick and the Ravens went up 14-3 a short time later. They would go on to win 28-6 and many of the Dolphins fans that stuck around through the end could be heard booing the home team over the course of their latest loss. When the game was over, head coach Mike McDaniel lamented his team’s inability to handle the “controllable” elements of the game and said he couldn’t blame fans for having that reaction.

“Personally, you want to dictate the terms,” McDaniel said. “You want to fix stuff, and, yeah, it sucks. That sucks. All of that does. I think it’s a pretty consistent formula of fans enjoy winning. Our expectation is that we have to do the work and do the right things for fans to enjoy the experience, and, unfortunately, we didn’t do that tonight, so we’ve got to get back to work to give them something to cheer about.”

Cameras caught Dolphins fans wearing popcorn buckets on their heads in a twist on the old paper bags that used to pop up in the stands of losing teams and there’s no legitimate reason to think or hope things are going to get any better for the team this season. That’s led to speculation that McDaniel may not have to worry about fan reaction much longer, but he’s still the one hearing the jeers for now.


Ravens fans made themselves heard in Miami on Thursday night.

In the first quarter, the Dolphins faced a fourth-and-1 at the Ravens’ 12-yard line and lined up to go for it, but offensive lineman Larry Borom false started. After the five-yard penalty, the Dolphins missed a 35-yard field goal, coming away with no points on a drive that looked like it was heading for the end zone.

After the game, Dolphins quarterback Tua Tagovailoa said he thought that false start was caused by fans of the visiting team cheering so loudly that Borom was struggling to hear his calls, and that afterward the Dolphins’ offense had to adjust.

“I would say with the Ravens fans, it maybe got a little muffled with my cadence and the crowd noise,” Tagovailoa said. “We talked about that on the sideline after and got that corrected.”

The Dolphins haven’t given their fans much to cheer for this season, so it’s unsurprising that plenty of tickets were available for the visiting team’s fans. And those fans made a difference in the Ravens’ win.