Dolphins’ Jaylen Waddle isn’t getting enough credit for Tyreek Hill’s success

Over the last few weeks, Jaylen Waddle’s breakout season has somehow become old news, as if everyone expected him to suddenly produce like a top-10 receiver. During press conferences, just about every question Dolphins head coach Mike McDaniel fields about Waddle is also about Tyreek Hiil.

It’s as if they’re a package deal. And to some degree, they are. There’s no doubt that Waddle’s emergence is also a credit to Hill. But, perhaps less acknowledged, there’s no doubt that Hill’s record-setting pace is also a credit Waddle. The tandem creates one hell of a conundrum for opposing defense.

“Yeah, that’s exactly what it is,” Tua said earlier this month. “If one gets doubled, we’re looking for the other, and if that one is doubled, as well, if they double both of them, then we’ve got to find the next guy.”

But they don’t often have to go to the next guy. Hill or Waddle has led the Dophins in receiving yards in every week of the season. In Week 10, the Browns did what they could to limit Miami from finding their top two options, with Waddle logging 66 receiving yards and Hill getting 44 and a touchdown. But the Dolphins also made use of receiver Trent Sherfield, fullback Alec Ingold and tight end Mike Gesicki. Miami put up 39 points. And they made it look easy.

Heading into the bye week, the Dolphins receivers both sit in the league’s top five in terms of receiving yards. Hill has 81 catches for 1,148 yards and four touchdowns. Waddle has 51 catches for 878 yards and six touchdowns. It’s not as simple as saying Waddle is up there with the likes of Cooper KuppStefon Diggs and Justin Jefferson, the other wideouts who comprise the top five. But it’s also unfair to discount him completely from elite WR status.

“Jaylen Waddle doesn’t get enough credit for what he truly does,” Hill said last Thursday.

Related: FOX Sports’ NFL writing staff ranks the league’s top 10 receivers

The tricky part of evaluating Waddle as a truly elite receiver is that he’s the WR2. That means he generally draws coverage from teams’ second-best cornerback. That context muddles the picture of how to rank him among the top receivers. If Waddle is not already in the top 10, he is doubtless among the top 30. After all, he was the top receiver in the truly awful Miami offense last year and managed 104 catches for 1,015 yards and six touchdowns. That proved he could hold up the mantle of WR1 — perhaps especially given the fact that he put up yardage in an offense where he was the center of attention for defenses.

Advanced statistics reveal more of what the counting stats show. Waddle ranks as the eighth-best receiver in the NFL by PFF grades. While Hill is well-known as the yards-after-catch machine, it’s actually Waddle (not Hill) who ranks in the top 10 among receivers in YAC, with 6.5 yards after catch per catch, which is a full two yards more than his expected yards after catch per catch, according to Next Gen Stats. In other words, Waddle is generating big plays. He’s not just allowing the offense — schemed up by McDaniel — to generate the big plays for him.

In so many ways, Waddle is in Hill’s echelon. Even receivers coach Wes Welker couldn’t stop himself from talking about one without the other.

“Those guys are just different. It makes our job a lot easier,” Welker said. “Where there can be a little bit of error with them, a lot of guys have to be more perfect, especially in the NFL, and all those different things, but the line of error for them is a little more than others.”

Waddle isn’t one to say much or pump his chest. Even his iconic touchdown celebration — The Waddle — is a little goofy. (Whereas Hill’s self-aggrandizing touchdown celebrations belong in a gymnastics gym.) Hill will remain in the spotlight and Waddle seems content to let him have it. But given what Waddle has accomplished this season, there’s little doubt that he could be a No. 1 receiver on another team. Instead, he’s No. 1b in the highest-octane offense in the NFL.

And Miami isn’t going to stop feeding their top two options unless the NFL makes them. Tagovailoa was asked recently how many times he’s willing to target Waddle and Hill.

“However many times they can get open,” Tua said.

Prior to joining FOX Sports as the AFC East reporter, Henry McKenna spent seven years covering the Patriots for USA TODAY Sports Media Group and Boston Globe Media. Follow him on Twitter at @McKennAnalysis.


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