20 things we learned: Dallas Cowboys 24, Miami Dolphins 14
Brent Grimes shadowed Cowboys receiver Dez Bryant all game and somewhat redeemed himself for his poor Buffalo game, where he was roasted by Sammy Watkins for over 100 yards worth of catches. Grimes pulled down an interception on a pass intended for Bryant, who finished the game with four catches for 45 yards and one touchdown on his nine targets. But the touchdown Bryant scored didn’t involve Grimes because Bryant was covered by Dolphins linebacker Neville Hewitt and safety Walt Aikens. -- OK
(Lynne Sladky / AP)South Florida Sun-Sentinel
The Cowboys looked at home in Sun Life Stadium as the Miami offense continued to look ill-equipped to compete at an NFL level.
Jamar Taylor (22), who started his second straight game, struggled all game against Tony Romo. Taylor, the Dolphins’ 2013 second-round pick, allowed Cowboys receiver Terrence Williams to score a 31-yard touchdown. He was constantly under attack by Romo, who shied away from throwing Brent Grimes’ way. Now that the Dolphins have relegated Brice McCain to nickel duty it would be ideal if they had Taylor and rookie Bobby McCain split the boundary reps. -- OK
(Rob Foldy / Getty Images)Olivier Vernon has had a quiet season so far, but the Dolphins starting right defensive end heated up as a pass rusher against the Cowboys. Vernon, who tallied five tackles and one sack, consistently gave Pro Bowl left tackle Tyron Smith, trouble on the edge. The Dolphins also moved Vernon to the left side from time to time, and it created a few pressures for Miami. Every sack is important to this former University of Miami standout because he’s a free agent this offseason. -- OK
(Joe Robbins / Getty Images)(Rob Foldy / Getty Images)
Fox (74), who was serving as Ja’Wuan James’ replacement for the third week because of James’ broken toe, committed two critical holding penalties. Fox has struggled in every start this season. James’ toe injury was supposed to need four weeks to heal. This begins week four and Miami desperately needs its 2014 first-round pick back. -- OK
(Lynne Sladky / AP)Considering NFL teams averaged 24 points a game heading into Week 10, it’s troubling that Bill Lazor’s offense continues to fall short of expectations. It’s hard to win football games when a defense needs to be flawless. -- OK
(Wilfredo Lee / AP)In the game’s first two minutes, Miller ran three times for 23 yards. His next carry came in the second quarter, a 16-yarder. He finished the half with five totes and then had two more in the second half as the Dolphins finished with 70 yards on the ground on 14 runs. -- SS
(Rob Foldy / Getty Images)In the workup to the 2010 NFL draft, reports leaked that then-GM Jeff Ireland had asked untoward questions about Bryant’s mother as part of the interview process. The Dolphins, selecting 12th, traded down to 28, letting Dallas gobble up the future stud wideout at No. 24. Who did the Dolphins get? In essence, Jason Odrick, Koa Misi and A.J. Edds. -- SS
(Wilfredo Lee / AP)The former LSU standout -- signed as an undrafted free agent by Dallas after his likely first-round draft status was destroyed by his name being linked to a double homicide (though police said he wasn’t a suspect) -- showed flashes of athleticism and strength as part of what is considered the NFL’s best offensive line. -- SS
(Lynne Sladky / AP)Hardy was a handful and led a swarming Dallas front four. He now has 4.5 sacks in his six games for the Cowboys. -- SS
(Wilfredo Lee / AP)Omar Kelly is an NFL columnist and Dolphins beat writer for the Sun Sentinel. A Florida A&M University graduate and South Florida native, he has covered the Florida State Seminoles, Miami Hurricanes, Miami Heat and Miami Dolphins during his career as a sports reporter, which began in 1997.
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Steve Svekis has been at the Sun Sentinel since 1989. He has been the sports Sunday editor and page designer, assistant sports editor over high schools, business columnist and now web producer. He wrote and voiced a web-animated parody of the Miami Dolphins in 2004 and 2005 that earned an EPpy, beating out the New York Times and Toronto Star. He was a Dolphins beat writer in 2010.