
Which three Secret Superstars on the 2025 Dolphins roster can help the team get past 2024’s disappointments — both on and off the field?
Generally speaking, professional organizations that talk a lot abut “culture” don’t have enough of the right kind in the building. That would seem to apply to the Miami Dolphins of late, a franchise that has had to deal with more than its share of veterans unhappy with the ways in which things have been going, and some to the point where they want out of town outright.
Tyreek Hill had to deny his own rather pointed statements about wanting a trade back in January, and now, Hill is lobbying the team to avoid trading cornerback Jalen Ramsey. Earlier this month, edge-rusher Bradley Chubb said that the team was not entirely aboveboard when speaking of a culture change in 2024.
“I’m going to say last year, we were lying, honestly,” Chubb said with a laugh. “Point blank, period. We felt it. We put our toe in the water, but we didn’t dive all the way in. We didn’t get all the way there with each other. We weren’t making the effort to go the extra mile, and I would say this year, we’re doing that. I’m not sure how it’s going to turn out for us, but we are putting forth that foot to change it because last year, like I said, we said we wanted to change, yeah, we’re doing this, we’re doing that — but it’s not going exactly how we want to.
“But this year, I feel like everybody has the right mindset and moving forward, so if it works out, it’s going to work out. If it doesn’t, we’re going to get back to the drawing board and make sure it works out.”
That’s the intangible stuff. The tangible stuff amounts to the 2024 season being the first missed postseason under head coach Mike McDaniel, and everything fell a bit off the plank when it came to both offensive and defensive efficiency. There are those who would say that the NFL has figured these Dolphins out from an offensive perspective; those looking on the brighter side might insist that when everyone’s healthy, it’s a lot tougher to suss out what any team is doing.
“It would have been awesome if he would have told me on the front end when they were lying,” McDaniel said on June 12 of Chubb’s comments. “Beyond that, 2024, unless I’m using it directly for an analogy, I’m much more concerned with 2025. I think you do a lot more for the organization if you spend your time thinking forward in terms of not this, that, or the other, or whose fault it was. No, we want it like this, let’s do it like this and this is who we are. I don’t even – what year did you speak of? I guess I’ll read about that in history books.”
Well, if the 2025 Dolphins are to get past last season’s disappointments, it will take the entire roster to get that done. In the continuation of our “Hidden Gems” series, where we look at one Secret Superstar veteran, free-agent signing, and draft pick for every NFL team, we turn our attention to these Dolphins, and the under-the-radar guys who could help make things better.
Underrated Veteran: DL Zach Sieler

Paul Rutherford-Imagn Images
In the entire history of the Ferris State Bulldogs’ football program, exactly two alumni have found themselves drafted by an NFL team: Running back Ricky Patton, who was selected with the 257th overall pick in the 10th round of the 1978 draft by the Atlanta Falcons, and defensive lineman Zach (the Sack) Sieler, selected with the 238th overall pick in the 2018 draft by the Baltimore Ravens.
Patton didn’t do much in his NFL career, though he did get himself a Super Bowl ring with the 1981 San Francisco 49ers. Sieler, who was waived by the Ravens n December 4, 2019, and signed by the Dolphins one day later, has turned himself into a far greater threat. He had to wait his turn after a grand total of 56 snaps in his time with Baltimore, but once Sieler found his new home, it was off to the proverbial races. He had one sack and four quarterback pressures in just 43 pass-rushing snaps with Miami in 2019, bumped that up to four sacks and 25 pressures in 2020, and he’s been golden on the Dolphins’ defensive since 2022, with 27 sacks and 142 pressures in that three-year span.
Sieler’s 2024 season, in which he totaled 11 sacks, 46 pressures, 25 solo tackles, and 28 stops, might have been his best. At 6’6” and 305 pounds, Sieler can play everywhere on the defensive line, but he’s really carved out a niche for himself from nose tackle to three-tech tackle, where he can use his speed and strength to beat double teams and disrupt in the backfield more often than not.
You know how there are those guys in the NFL who are underrated for so long, and then everybody starts talking about them, and they’re suddenly overrated in their underratedness?
Zach Sieler of the @MiamiDolphins is not one of them. We don’t talk nearly enough about No. 92. pic.twitter.com/KttvduFpfX
— Doug Farrar ✍ (@NFL_DougFarrar) July 25, 2025
And now, with Terron Armstead’s retirement and Calais Campbell moving on (or back) to the Arizona Cardinals, Sieler has become a leader for a team in great need, and he’s more than ready for that responsibility.
“Obviously, losing those guys is tough,” he said in May of Armstead and Campbell. “Two amazing players that just have given their lives to the game and such amazing role models on the field – on and off the field – but the foundation and the groundwork that those guys put in last year, you still feel those waves this year. So for guys that are leading on defense and offense, I think it’s a matter of keeping us together as a group and truly just rolling off of what they laid the foundation for.
“Obviously on the defensive side, I had a lot of experience with Calais, and just seeing him come in here, for me, learning from his techniques and his leadership, fundamentals and how to get a crowd going or get the guys working together and viewpoints and how he does it was really eye-opening to me. Total blessing to have him here last year and so just to be able to carry off that for me up front and [linebacker] Jordyn [Brooks] and the guys in the back, I’m just really excited to see how this rolls.”
It’ll require a lot, but Sieler, who had his number retired by Ferris State this year, is ready for all of it.
Underrated Free-Agent Signing: WR Nick Westbrook-Ikhine

Jeremy Reper-Imagn Images
Then, there’s the addition of Nick Westbrook-Ikhine to the Dolphins’ receiver room on a two-year, $6.5 million contract with $3.2 million guaranteed. This could present a massive issue for enemy pass defenses, because when you have Westbrook-Ikhine, Hill, and Jaylen Waddle on the field at the same time, it’s not just about who you leave one-on-one — it’s also about which receiver will scald the asses of your cornerbacks and safeties with their pure speed.
While Hill and Waddle are smaller receivers, Westbrook-Ikhine clocks in at 6’2 and 215 pounds, though that doesn’t stop him at all from being a ridiculous vertical threat. Last season for the Titans, Westbrook-Ikhine had four catches of 20 or more air yards on eight targets for 197 yards and three touchdowns. Impressive enough on its own, but when you put up those kinds of numbers and tape with Will Levis and Mason Rudolph as your quarterbacks… well, you get bonus points for that.
I had to make sure this one wasn’t a typo. The @MiamiDolphins got WR Nick Westbrook-Ikhine for two years, $6.5 million? Dude was an explosive play machine for the @Titans last season with no QB help at all. Mike McDaniel just got even richer with his deep threats. pic.twitter.com/8Q0XhxyEWQ
— Doug Farrar ✍ (@NFL_DougFarrar) March 13, 2025
Moreover, Westbrook-Ikhine loves to get grimy in the run game as a blocker — at his introductory presser after signing his new contract, that was more a point of focus than even the vertical stuff.
“It’s a gritty game,” he said. “I feel like with wide receiver blocking, you’ve just got to get dirty, you’ve got to find a way to make it work. It’s not going to look pretty half the time. You’ve got really athletic DBs, safeties, linebackers, d-ends sometimes and it’s just finding a way to get a piece of them at the right time so the back can get through. So yeah, it’s something I’m excited to do. I’ve always enjoyed blocking and as a receiver. I feel like it’s a lost art. I’ve luckily been coached pretty well in the last few years about it, and how to get it done.”
Nick Westbrook-Ikhine said after signing with the @dolphins that he really enjoys blocking.
Tape shows that the effort is certainly there. pic.twitter.com/MMEAOtHWKw
— Doug Farrar ✍ (@NFL_DougFarrar) June 24, 2025
Westbrook-Ikhine also said that he loves to box defenders out and win contested-catch situations as a bigger-bodied receiver. The tape also confirms this, so what’s not to like?
Underrated Draft Pick: DI Jordan Phillips

Tommy Gilligan-Imagn Images
There was no question whatsoever that going into the draft, general manager Chris Grier and defensive coordinator Anthony Weaver were on the same page about getting bigger and more physical along the interior of the defensive line. That’s why they took Michigan megadude Kenneth Grant with the 13th pick in the first round, and if you had any questions about this particular philosophy… I mean, they took Georgia Tech’s Zeek Biggers with the 255th pick in the seventh round, and when you take a 6’6, 320-pound man with a last name like that, how much more clear do you need to be?
The interesting guy here, though, could be Maryland’s Jordan Phillips, the 6’3, 320-pound tackle they took with the 143rd overall pick in the fifth round. Phillips may have been an underrated force because he never had a sack in three seasons and 1,045 defensive snaps with the Terps, but there’s a lot more to the tape than you may think if you’re basing his potential NFL oeuvre on nothing but quarterback takedowns.
Last season, Phillips did have five quarterback hits, 11 quarterback hurries, 26 solo tackles, and 20 stops, and if he hadn’t been double-teamed on 266 of his 520 snaps last season, maybe his numbers would have been better. Instead Phillips was tasked to be one of those linemen who soak things up to make life easier for everybody else, and he did that with a great deal of aplomb. Even when doubled as a head-over or shade nose tackle (where he played 71% of his snaps in 2024), Phillips still found ways to get to the pocket with leverage, quickness, and all-out effort.
Maryland’s Jordan Phillips is a fun nose tackle to watch, and he’ll be in tonight’s East-West Shrine Bowl.
Centers and guards tend to be more ambivalent about the experience. 6-foot-3, 320, can squat a house, and he’s out to HUNT. pic.twitter.com/XyPcTitlpk
— Doug Farrar ✍ (@NFL_DougFarrar) January 31, 2025
When Phillips hit Shrine Bowl week, he did everything possible to stand out. The Dolphins paid attention.
In Jordan Phillips, #Dolphins just landed an ascending, powerful, high character DT!
Phillips hasn’t turned 21 years old yet, and he was a 2-year starter and leader for #Maryland
He was one of the most impressive players at @ShrineBowl on the field as a powerful NT, and off the… pic.twitter.com/nM14KPjYiC
— Eric Galko (@EricGalko) April 26, 2025
“With Jordan, one thing is [that] he is a really good run stopper, run player,” Grier said of the pick. “So what he was asked to do for them, he excelled in what he could do. We had some of our coaches work at the East-West game, he was there, and really showed some stuff in the pass rush with different stances and different techniques he was being taught down there. So for us, we were excited watching thatI know Coach Weaver was the first one who came to us, and [defensive line coach] Austin [Clark] were like, ‘Hey, watch this from the East-West and what he was doing.’ He’s 20 years old, has an unbelievable love for football, so we do think there’s some things we can unlock with him.”
Phillips is also a tape fiend who loves to study other interior maulers. Not only was he more than familiar with Kenneth Grant’s tape by the time he was drafted, he’d also done work on another defensive tackle named Jordan Phillips, who was selected in the second round of the 2015 draft by the Dolphins, and played for the team until he was waived following a beef about playing time in 2018.
“Yes,” the new Jordan Phillips said when asked whether he had studied his same-name representative. “Absolutely. So one thing about me, I study every D-tackle that’s like… in terms of being at the top of their game, I study every great D-tackle. And even all different types of D-tackles in the league and I have watched Jordan Phillips, as a matter of fact. I watched him early on in his career when he was with the Dolphins and then when he went to the Cardinals and then now the Bills. He’s [a] physical, real good run stopper. He gets after it pretty good, and he’s a 10-plus-year vet, so that’s great.”
If this Jordan Phillips is able to match the other Jordan Phillips’ 27 sacks, 169 total pressures, 123 solo tackles, and 114 stops in his own 10-year career… well, that’s a pretty sweet deal for a fifth-round pick.
(All advanced metrics courtesy of Pro Football Focus and Sports Info Solutions).