Greg Cote

FINS AT 50


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      Herald Books

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      This is a work of nonfiction adapted from articles and content by journalists of the Miami Herald and el Nuevo Herald published with permission.

      Front Cover Image: January 13, 1974 (John Walther/Miami Herald)

      Back Cover Image: December 31, 1994 (David Bergman/ Miami Herald)

      FINS AT 50 Miami Dolphins 50th Anniversary

      ISBN: 978-1-63353-375-2

      It’s a reward, it’s the country officially receiving a team that accomplished something special.

      Bob Griese, at August 21, 2013 White House ceremony for the 1972, 17-0 Miami Dolphins

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      TABLE OF CONTENTS

      Foreword 6

      Chapter 1: A Franchise Is Born12

      Chapter 2: Shula And The Glory Years26

      Chapter 3: After Perfection48

      Chapter 4: The Marino Era62

      Chapter 5: New Millennium Memories106

      Chapter 6: Dolphin Hall Of Famers166

      Chapter 7: Protecting Perfection194

      Chapter 8: 50 Greatest Dolphins Of All-Time200

      Chapter 9: Still Perfect218

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      The Miami Dolphins in their first 50 years won a unique place in professional football history for the first — and still only — unblemished year, forever capitalized as the Perfect Season. Say “1972” in South Florida and it means only one thing, conjuring the ageless snapshot of Coach Don Shula riding jubilantly on the shoulders of celebrating players after that early Super Bowl, the first of two straight won by Miami.

      Shula, the winningest coach in National Football League history, and Dan Marino, who would retire as the most prolific quarterback the sport had ever seen, stand tallest as the most accomplished,

      defining figures from the franchise’s first half century.

      I think of something else unique about this club, though, something that separates it from any team before or since. I think of the beginning, of that very first night, and wonder if any franchise ever, in any sport, launched quite like this one did.

      No way.

      The opening kickoff from the Oakland Raiders boomed into the humid night air. It was Sept. 2, 1966. Vietnam and anti-war protests were escalating. There were race riots in America. The Beatles reigned.

      I was there in the Orange Bowl that first night, at age 11, with my father. We only went because my dad had scored free

      Greg Cote (Miami Herald)

      FOREWORD

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      tickets. He’d been a carpenter at the old and long-since demolished Everglades Hotel on Biscayne Boulevard, where the newborn Dolphins had held their “touchdown club” rallies to drum up interest. We didn’t lack for elbowroom that evening. They said later the crowd numbered 26,776 curiosity seekers, filling only about one-third of the stadium despite the newborn team’s papering the town with free tickets. In that respect only, it proved an inauspicious debut.

      Everything else was magical.

      It didn’t matter that the expansion Dolphins would lose the game, as expected. The franchise known for the Perfect Season was about to experience the Perfect Start.

      The kickoff fell to Joe Auer. You pronounced his last name “our,” and fittingly so. He was from nearby Coral Gables High. He caught the ball at the five-yard line and didn’t stop until 95 yards later. You wouldn’t dare write such a thing in a script. Too corny. But it happened. A local kid, a hometown hero, returned the opening kickoff of the opening game for a touchdown.

      I remember my father and I standing, cheering and then hugging. (The high-five and fist-bump hadn’t been invented yet.) Half a century later that memory is kept like a family heirloom. Doesn’t sports hold that power over us? It was the first time in pro football history a franchise had been christened with a touchdown on the first play of its first regulation game.

      Everybody was watching Auer, of course, but if you were looking at the Dolphins sideline you saw the oddest sight. Sprinting the length of the field along with Auer, raised arms flailing, was Amos Muzyad Yakhoob Kairouz, a Lebanese entertainer better known as Danny Thomas, then a

      major American television personality and one of the Dolphins’ original part owners.

      As Auer crossed the goal line and a huffing television star followed, a live dolphin rose majestically in acrobatic leaps from a large tank in the open east end zone. “Flipper” was the team’s mascot from 1966 to ’68, trained to perform whenever the Dolphins scored. (The mammal actually was a female dolphin named Patty who was transported from the Miami Seaquarium to the Orange Bowl for every home game).

      And so, with a hometown hero scoring, a famous TV comedian sprinting, and a dolphin flipping in midair for an exclamation point, the Miami Dolphins were born.

      The city had had pro football before, though fleetingly, and now a nearly forgotten footnote. The Miami Seahawks played in 1946 at Burdine Stadium (not yet called the Orange Bowl) in the inaugural year of the All-America Football Conference, but that team folded after one season, and the league did three years later.

      Two decades later Miami’s entry into the American Football League was bigger, much, because a merger with the NFL was coming. It was approved soon after the Dolphins’ first game, and would happen in 1970.

      The seed that became Miami’s flagship sports franchise had been planted in early 1965 because Joe Foss, then the AFL commissioner, happened to be a close friend of Joseph Robbie, a Minneapolis lawyer. They’d met a decade earlier in South Dakota political circles.

      Foss confided that the AFL (with the encouragement of the NFL) wished to expand to the South, including Miami, and suggested his old friend apply for the franchise. Imagine the serendipity of it: The

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      Miami Dolphins might never have happened if not for the 1950s friendship of two legislators from the capital halls of Pierre, South Dakota.

      Robbie and his celebrity partner, Thomas, bought the franchise for $7.5 million, a sum that today is less than current quarterback Ryan Tannehill makes in one year.

      The team was named “Dolphins” in a write-in vote of fans. Little known is that the second-place nickname suggested was the rather politically incorrect “Missiles,” with the Bay of Pigs invasion and Cuban Missile Crisis from the early ’60s still fresh on South Florida’s mind.

      Those early expansion years were a different time.

      Royal Castle, the iconic hamburger chain, handed out player cards. The influx of Cuban exiles via U.S.-sponsored “freedom flights” had just begun. The “Jackie Gleason Show” began broadcasting from Miami Beach.