Marino Not Ready for a Lesser Role
- Share via
MIAMI — The Tennessee Oilers would have preferred to see Dan Marino on the bench.
Miami Coach Jimmy Johnson considered benching Marino because of a bad performance last weekend, but the Dolphin quarterback wound up earning a game ball from his coach Sunday.
Following a week of criticism by fans, the media and Johnson, Marino rallied the Dolphins past the Oilers, 16-13, in overtime.
“He came out and figured he had something to prove,” Oiler defensive end Kenny Holmes said, “and he proved it.”
Marino threw for 324 yards and helped Miami overcome a 13-6 fourth-quarter deficit. Irving Spikes returned the overtime kickoff 48 yards, and Olindo Mare’s 29-yard field goal with 12:45 remaining won it.
Miami is 2-0 for the fourth consecutive season.
Tennessee (1-1) missed a chance to win in regulation when Al Del Greco’s 43-yard field-goal attempt on second down with 11 seconds left sailed wide right. Del Greco had made his five previous field-goal attempts this season, including a 33-yarder that beat Oakland in overtime last weekend.
Marino rallied Miami from a fourth-quarter deficit to victory for the 33rd time in his 15-year career. Although he still doesn’t have a touchdown pass this season, he surpassed the 300-yard mark for the first time under Johnson, completing 24 of 43 passes.
“I don’t care if I throw for 400 yards or 100,” Marino said. “I threw the ball like I normally throw it. It just so happens that we hit some plays.”
Marino, the most prolific passer in NFL history, was coming off a 105-yard game, his lowest total since 1989. The performance prompted Johnson to say he considered benching Marino, and that comment sparked considerable fan and media debate.
“Dan responded to a difficult week,” Johnson said. “If physically he is not at the top of his game, I don’t mind putting Craig Erickson in. But Dan is our starting quarterback. He’s going to be in the Hall of Fame, and he’s still playing great football.”
More to Read
Go beyond the scoreboard
Get the latest on L.A.'s teams in the daily Sports Report newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Los Angeles Times.