By using this site, you agree to the Privacy Policy and Terms of Use.
Accept
BigPaulSportsBigPaulSports
Notification Show More
Latest News
Matt Campbell: Cy-Hawk Game 'Unbelievable Opportunity' for Iowa State
Matt Campbell: Cy-Hawk Game ‘Unbelievable Opportunity’ for Iowa State
Game Analysis
NBA Reportedly Finalizing Another New Format for This Season's All-Star Game
NBA Reportedly Finalizing Another New Format for This Season’s All-Star Game
Game Analysis
Chiefs-Buccaneers Rematch? 'First Things First' Crew Predicts Super Bowl LX
Chiefs-Buccaneers Rematch? ‘First Things First’ Crew Predicts Super Bowl LX
Game Analysis NFL
How Matt Patricia, Caleb Downs 'Bamboozled' a Heisman Campaign Before It Began
How Matt Patricia, Caleb Downs ‘Bamboozled’ a Heisman Campaign Before It Began
Game Analysis
Most-Watched Week 1 CFB Game in History: Texas-OSU Has 16.6 Million Viewers
Most-Watched Week 1 CFB Game in History: Texas-OSU Has 16.6 Million Viewers
Game Analysis
Aa
  • Big Paul Sports
  • Services
  • Game Analysis
  • Free Picks
  • Premium Content
  • Registration
  • Member Login
Reading: Four ways Tua Tagovailoa can build on his promising 2023 season
Share
Aa
BigPaulSportsBigPaulSports
  • Big Paul Sports
  • Services
  • Game Analysis
  • Free Picks
  • Premium Content
  • Registration
  • Member Login
Search
  • Big Paul Sports
  • Services
  • Game Analysis
  • Free Picks
  • Premium Content
  • Registration
  • Member Login
Have an existing account? Sign In
Follow US
BigPaulSports > Blog > NFL > Four ways Tua Tagovailoa can build on his promising 2023 season
NFLSports News

Four ways Tua Tagovailoa can build on his promising 2023 season

BigP
Last updated: 2024/02/10 at 9:12 PM
BigP Published February 10, 2024
Share
Four ways Tua Tagovailoa can build on his promising 2023 season
SHARE
  • Marcel Louis-Jacques, ESPNFeb 10, 2024, 06:00 AM ET

    Contents
    Best of NFL Nation1. Time to Throw2. Throwing outside the pocket3. Scrambling4. Taking care of the ballEditor’s Picks
    Close

      Marcel Louis-Jacques joined ESPN in 2019 as a beat reporter covering the Buffalo Bills, before switching to the Miami Dolphins in 2021. The former Carolina Panthers beat writer for the Charlotte Observer won the APSE award for breaking news and the South Carolina Press Association award for enterprise writing in 2018.

MIAMI — Miami Dolphins quarterback Tua Tagovailoa‘s offseasons generally have a theme.

In 2021, he was transitioning into the team’s starter. In 2022, he learned a new offense entering a season in which he needed to prove his capability as a franchise quarterback.

Then of course, last year he focused on building up his body so he could withstand the punishment of a full football season.

Best of NFL Nation

&#8226 What scoring a TD in the SB means
&#8226 Lamar Jackson’s journey to 2nd MVP
&#8226 Panthers’ new GM seeking dawgs
&#8226 Boyd’s days with Bengals over?
&#8226 What to expect from Morris, Falcons

So what is his goal this year?

“There’s probably four things that I want to get better at,” Tagovailoa told Pro Football Network. “Am I gonna share? Probably not. But I’m looking forward to OTAs when we get to see you guys again and you guys can see us.”

The 2023 season featured myriad positives for the former No. 5 overall pick in 2020. He led the league in passing yards with a career-high 4,624, while also setting career-highs with 29 passing touchdowns and a 69.3% completion percentage.

Still, there are always things to improve. Here are four possible areas Tagovailoa could focus on for 2024.

1. Time to Throw

Let’s make this clear, Tagovailoa’s 2.36-second time to throw was faster than any quarterback in the NFL this season. His 78.9 QBR on passes taking less than 2.5 seconds to attempt was third-best in the league, trailing only the Los Angeles Chargers‘ Justin Herbert and Dallas Cowboys‘ Dak Prescott.

When he was forced to hang onto the ball longer than 2.5 seconds, however, that QBR dropped to 43.2 and his completion percentage dipped to 58.8%. As a result, 9 of his 14 interceptions this season came on passes of this nature.

Tagovailoa is not a one-read quarterback, but he can statistically improve when his first read is covered.

2. Throwing outside the pocket

Off-platform throwing was a focal point of Tagovailoa’s offseason in 2022, and while he was visibly improved last season in that category, he completed just 58.1% of his passes from outside the pocket, compared to 70.7% inside the pocket.

He was off-target on 21.2% of his throws outside the pocket, which ranked middle-of-the-pack among NFL quarterbacks — not debilitating by any means, but still an area to continue working on as he progresses in his career.

“Is Tua going to be a zone-read option quarterback? No,” Dolphins coach Mike McDaniel said. “But I think he has developed in some [areas] — like buying extra time when necessary. I think that will continue to improve where you can just maybe move off the spot a little bit and not necessarily run for a first down, but you can extend the play. I think those things improve with a lot of things — the continuity of an offensive line group that you learn where guys are generally blocking from the launch point, and so then you know your safe spot is in the pocket.

“All these things, it’s all about progression. I think he just needs to continue to do what he has been doing in terms of progressing and I’ll be very much happy with that.”

Tua led the league in passing yards, while setting career-highs with 29 passing touchdowns and a 69.3% completion percentage in 2023. But there’s still room for improvement. Rebecca Blackwell/AP Photo

3. Scrambling

Tagovailoa is not Lamar Jackson or Josh Allen. As McDaniel said, he will probably never be known as a scrambler, although he was the nation’s No. 1 dual-threat quarterback when he signed with Alabama out of high school in 2017.

It’s also understandable that the Dolphins don’t want Tagovailoa opening himself up to hits after suffering two concussions in the 2022 season. But he was a non-factor as a runner in 2023.

Tagovailoa recorded 74 rushing yards this season and converted 5 first downs on the ground in 17 games. For reference, Easton Stick, Taylor Heinicke, Tyson Bagent, Anthony Richardson, Tommy DeVito and Jake Browning all eclipsed those numbers despite playing in fewer than 10 games.

Defenses don’t see Tagovailoa as a threat to run when he leaves the pocket, which means there’s a lower chance they bust their coverage when he extends a play.

There shouldn’t be any expectation for him to take off and run on any given down, but showing more of a willingness to do so may force a defense to take that into account, and game plan accordingly — opening up more passing lanes for him outside the pocket.

4. Taking care of the ball

No analytics necessary for this one.

Tagovailoa threw a career-high 14 interceptions in 2023, despite going more than a month without one from Nov. 24 to Dec. 31. He threw multiple interceptions in four games, also a career-high.

Editor’s Picks

2 Related

Sure, there were a few that weren’t entirely on him, where a receiver ran an incorrect route or a penalty wasn’t called. But there were also plays where defenders dropped a potential interception. It’s more efficient to address results instead of who was at fault, or what could have happened.

Taking better care of the ball is a broad goal but one Tagovailoa must accomplish for the Dolphins to reach the next step of their Super Bowl hunt.

McDaniel believes his quarterback has the exact temperament to do so.

“I just want to see him make sure the curve continues to be exponential in his growth,” McDaniel said. “We’ve seen at every stretch of the way him improving. That doesn’t mean it’s void of a result that isn’t desired. But what we’ve seen is him learn from all the things that he goes through.

“I think that’s the one thing that I can say in my two years of experience with him, is he’s as good of a learner as I’ve ever seen.”

Sponsored Content

Juega en grande con cryptomonedas

You Might Also Like

Chiefs-Buccaneers Rematch? ‘First Things First’ Crew Predicts Super Bowl LX

Chiefs are NOT on top of Nick’s Week 1 tiers, Browns, Saints on hunt for Arch | First Things First

2025 NFL Week 1 Picks: Best Bets for Every Game — Will’s Wagers

2025 NFL Midweek Betting Report: ‘Action is Pouring in Like a Playoff Weekend’

BigP February 10, 2024
Share this Article
Facebook Twitter Email Print

Follow US

Find US on Social Medias
Facebook Like
Twitter Follow
Youtube Subscribe
Telegram Follow
newsletter featurednewsletter featured

Weekly Newsletter

Subscribe to our newsletter to get our newest articles instantly!

    Popular News
    GM Nick Caserio knows 'clock is ticking' to turn Houston Texans around
    NFLSports News

    GM Nick Caserio knows ‘clock is ticking’ to turn Houston Texans around

    BigP BigP January 17, 2023
    Decisions on Mack, Bosa, Allen and Ekeler loom for next regime
    A Northern Illinois stunner, a Cy-Hawk thriller and the week chaos returned to college football
    Oregon’s familiar look among best Week 12 uniform combinations
    PSU QB Clifford caps career with Rose Bowl win
    - Advertisement -
    Ad imageAd image

    Categories

    • Sports

    About US

    We offer information and tips on US Sports and evernts all over the world.
    Top Categories
    • Game Analysis
    • Free Picks
    • Services
    • Premium Content

    Subscribe US

    Subscribe to our newsletter to get our newest articles instantly!

      © Foxiz News Network. Ruby Design Company. All Rights Reserved.

      Removed from reading list

      Undo
      Welcome Back!

      Sign in to your account

      Lost your password?