Mike McDaniel reflects on his journey to becoming Miami Dolphins head coach
Week Four in the NFL continues on Sunday night when the Miami Dolphins face the Buffalo Bills, with coverage starting at 5pm ahead of kick-off from 6 p.m. live on Sky Sports, followed by the New England Patriots at the Dallas Cowboys and the Kansas City Chiefs at the New York Jets
With his first head coaching role, he has moulded the Miami Dolphins into an offensive powerhouse and emerging contender, a long-awaited top job that has been built on years of learning behind the scenes inside some of the league’s most potent systems.
Mastering the Xs and Os of football was one thing; imparting that knowledge to an entire roster of players was another. So far, so good for a man whose team just put up 70 points and over 700 yards of offense against the Denver Broncos to stay unbeaten so far this season.
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“I think that there’s a lot of commonalities in the human experience,” McDaniel told Sky Sports. “And I think being able to go on the NFL journey, from a coaching staff perspective, you experienced a lot of things personally, and then you witnessed a lot of things. And you can see how interconnected it is.
“What I was very fortunate to experience was having to be a coach at a young age at the NFL level. I was pretty young; I was 22 and 23 for my first two jobs.
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“You already know, early on, that ‘hey, I don’t totally look the part’. And so I should be able to help a player. You turn the page and realise that if you can help them, they don’t care what it looks like. And for me, that was huge.”
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Before life with the Dolphins, McDaniel spent five years working with Kyle Shanahan at the San Francisco 49ers as an instrumental hand in one of the NFL’s most creative rushing attacks. Earlier in his career, he had spent time under Mike Shanahan as a quality control coach, the job specification of which usually entails gruelling first-in-last-out hours of studying film, drawing up play designs, logging statistics, and being prepared to relay all of the above to their staff on demand. They are the ultimate fly-on-the-wall, whose work is integral to helping an entire team function.
“Everybody has their own path. Being a quality control coach, relative to your experience in life and coaching, is a very important job. And it’s very difficult. And I think the biggest thing—the only thing that gives me a chance to, you know, have you sit here in this interview as a head coach—is making sure that you’re 100 percent immersed in the job that you have.
“With anyone that does have that career path, you have to be surrounded with very, very special people that teach you the right way. So there’s a lot of personal work that you have to have; you have to be pretty fortunate.
“Mike Shanahan, a Hall of Famer, was my first boss; that’s pretty fortunate. And then one of the most innovative football coaches in our generation, one of arguably the best offensive minds, Kyle Shanahan.”
McDaniel dedicated his time to being an unfiltered football geek, familiarising himself with every intricate wrinkle and concept and evolving them with his own touch of spice. He worked with some of the most esteemed offensive coaches in modern history in the process.
Even then, he accepts that nothing could have quite prepared him for life at the head of the table.