As Black Monday approaches and NFL teams around the league are preparing to part ways with their team leaders, Dolphins owner Stephen Ross has released a statement saying that general manager Chris Grier and head coach Mike McDaniel will continue in their roles in 2025. Grier will enter his 10th season as GM, while McDaniel is headed into his fourth year with the team.
In Grier’s nine years, the Dolphins have cycled through three head coaches. Before the arrival of McDaniel, Grier’s Dolphins only made the playoffs once, finding the postseason in his inaugural season with then-head coach Adam Gase and then missing the playoffs in the next five years under Gase and Brian Flores. It is also worth noting Grier has only held full control since 2019, but he has held the GM title throughout three coaching tenures.
McDaniel arrived in Miami in 2022 and took the Dolphins to the playoffs in each of his first two seasons with the team, an immediate improvement. Still in all three playoff appearances under Grier, including the two under McDaniel, Miami has failed to register a single postseason win, going one-and-done in all three appearances. The Dolphins still gave McDaniel an extension this offseason.
In the statement released by Ross, he claimed that the “positive working relationship” between Grier and McDaniel “is an asset” to the team, adding that he believes “in the value of stability.”
He went on, saying, “However, continuity in leadership is not to be confused with an acceptance that status quo is good enough. We will take a hard look at where we have fallen short and make the necessary changes to deliver our ultimate goal of building and sustaining a winning team that competes for championships.”
It’s hard to know exactly where that blame will fall and from where those changes will come. From the outside, lots of criticism has been directed at the building of an expensive roster that has returned middling team results, indicating an issue at the top of the personnel department, namely Ross. What those areas are where they deem themselves to “have fallen short” is yet to be seen.
Despite the obvious improvement since he’s arrived on staff, there were rumblings that McDaniel may find himself on the chopping block, too. Ross’ statement clears the air in that regard, as McDaniel will return for Year 4.
Going 24 years without a playoff win has Dolphins fans desperate for change and answers. Ross’ statement makes it clear that, if changes are indeed on their way, they won’t affect the job statuses of Grier or McDaniel.