What a weird season, when there’s pessimism after two consecutive wins for a team whose roster is as thin and talent deficient as a what we see this year in Miami. Dolphins fans everywhere should be thrilled with the work of Brian Flores and his coaching staff — given the way they’ve seen players buy into their process and approach. The Dolphins came into the year with over 60% of their roster brand new in 2019, but many of them coming as former busts or as undrafted free agents.

That gave the general public the perception that the Dolphins are something of an “island of misfit toys.” There were jokes that the Dolphins would lose to XFL teams and college teams. The morning shows bemoaned the Dolphins for putting players on the field and risking their health because they’re not good enough to be on the field.

Suddenly, this same group of players (sans CB Xavien Howard, S Reshad Jones, C Daniel Kilgore, RB Mark Walton and others) is good enough to win two consecutive football games in the NFL?

Maybe the Dolphins just took a lot of low-risk, high-reward investments instead? And Miami certainly hasn’t hit on all of them — QB Josh Rosen and DL Robert Nkemdiche are the two notable swings and misses. But what about LB Vince Biegel? What about OL Evan Boehm? Moving Bobby McCain to safety? DE Taco Charlton? The Dolphins are seeing several of their young investments really flip the switch and become constant plus contributors, which is an indication that Miami’s coaches are connecting with their players.

These are all players who can be contributors for Miami in 2019, 2020 and beyond — which is a root approach to this season for the Dolphins. Find who you can build around, who is a complementary player, and develop them. Polish them and get them comfortable with the Dolphins’ playbook and their role.

Seeing that come to life? That’s exciting, because it means Miami’s vision for what this team could and should look like two years from now is rooted in reality and not a pipe dream. And that deserves to be celebrated.