"The window is now for this team," wide receiver Tyreek Hill
said.
Added quarterback Tua Tagovailoa: "We're not afraid to talk
about Super Bowls here."
Miami will aim to keep the good vibes intact Sunday as the
Dolphins officially pass the midway point of the season with a
visit to the Chicago Bears, who sold various valuable pieces at
the deadline amid a new regime and rebuild.
The Dolphins (5-3) are trying to match the three-game winning
streak they used to start the season before a three-game slide
seemingly brought expectations back to Earth.
Miami is coming off a 31-27, come-from-behind road victory
against Chicago's NFC North counterpart, the Detroit Lions.
After trailing 27-17 at halftime, Miami pulled ahead with two
touchdowns in the third quarter.
Tagovailoa capped the rally with an 11-yard touchdown pass to
Mike Gesicki. Jaylen Waddle snagged a pair of touchdown passes
as part of an eight-catch, 106-yard day, while Hill had 12
receptions for 188 yards.
Chicago, naturally, is bracing itself. The Bears (3-5) allowed
442 total yards during Sunday's 49-29 loss at Dallas, including
242 through the air.
Now the team braces for a jelling Miami attack without
linebacker Roquan Smith, shopped this week to Baltimore. Smith
leads the NFL with 83 tackles. In what Chicago hopes isn't a
harbinger to its matchup with the Dolphins, however, defensive
backs Eddie Jackson (11) and Jaquan Brisker (nine) were the
team's top tacklers against Dallas. Jackson (hip) was limited in
practice to begin the week.
As for the loss of Smith?
"You have a Pro Bowl player that was leading the NFL in tackles.
I'm not sure that you do, really, replicate that," Bears coach
Matt Eberflus said. "So what you shift guys around, move guys
around and put guys in place and next-man-up, he plays, and it's
gonna be good for that linebacker room, getting experience and
getting some playing time."
The Bears also added wide receiver Chase Claypool in a trade
with Pittsburgh as they hope to add a big-play threat for
quarterback Justin Fields.
Chicago leads the NFL with 1,507 rushing yards and is tied for
second with 5.3 yards per carry after running 43 times for 240
yards against Dallas.
Still, the franchise wants to diversify its attack beyond the
ground game, whose top threats are running backs Khalil Herbert
and David Montgomery, as well as Fields.
Claypool called himself "a dynamic playmaker" when describing
what the Bears were getting.
"I'm a playmaker and I'm excited to make plays. I feel like I
didn't have the full opportunity to show what I can do this
year, but I think I've been able to show that in the past,"
Claypool said. "I'm excited to be able to gain that trust with
Justin, too, where he knows if he needs a play he can come to me
and, frankly, any receiver out there."
Miami leads the all-time series 9-4, including a 27-14 victory
in the teams' most recent meeting in Chicago, on Oct. 19, 2014.
--Field Level Media
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