| Miami Dolphins Team History
  No 
                  pro football club in history ever advanced more quickly from 
                  the first-year dregs every expansion team faces to the ultimate 
                  achievement in its sport than the Miami Dolphins did in the 
                  six-year period between 1967 and 1972. In 1967, they began their 
                  pro football life as the ninth member of the American Football 
                  League. Six years later, Miami became the only National Football 
                  League team ever to record a perfect season. 
 The 1972 Miami Dolphins won the AFC Eastern division and AFC 
                  championships and then defeated the Washington Redskins 14-7 
                  in Super Bowl VII to complete an unblemished 17-0-0 record. 
                  The Dolphins, who were founded by Joseph Robbie, also got off 
                  to a perfect start in the first game of their first AFL season 
                  when running back Joe Auer returned the opening kickoff for 
                  a 95-yard touchdown against the Oakland Raiders. But the Miami 
                  team returned to reality even before the end of its first game. 
                  Oakland rallied to win and the Dolphins finished their first 
                  season with a 4-10 record.
 George Wilson was the Dolphins' first coach. He finished his 
                  four-year AFL tenure after the 1969 season with a 15-39-2 record. 
                  But those were not wasted years for the Dolphins because they 
                  were steadily adding new talent -- quarterback Bob Griese in 
                  1967, running back Larry Csonka in 1968 and guard Larry Little 
                  in 1969 -- that would eventually turn them into winners.
 
 The transition from losing to winning came in just one season 
                  in 1970 when new coach Don Shula led the Dolphins to an AFC 
                  wild-card playoff berth with a 10-4 record. Miami then followed 
                  with three straight AFC championships in 1971, 1972 and 1973 
                  and victories in Super Bowls VII and VIII. Their combined 1972-1973 
                  record was 32-2, also an all-time mark. From 1970 to 1974, their 
                  cumulative record was 65-15-1.
 There is no telling what heights the Dolphins might have reached 
                  had not three of their finest stars, Csonka, Jim Kiick and Paul 
                  Warfield, defected to the rival World Football League after 
                  the 1974 season. Miami never again reached the world championship 
                  level the Dolphins attained in 1972 and 1973. But Shula, who 
                  in 1993 surpassed George Halas' record of 324 coaching victories 
                  to become the all-time leader, kept the Dolphins among the league's 
                  elite year after year.
 
 The Dolphins since 1970 have won 11 AFC Eastern division championships 
                  and five AFC titles, the last two coming in 1982 and 1984. In 
                  the 1984 season, quarterback Dan Marino threw a then-record 48 
                  touchdown passes.
 
 The Dolphins first playing home was the Orange Bowl in Miami. 
                  Fan support was excellent … in 1973, the Dolphins established 
                  an NFL record with 74,961 season ticket sales. But Robbie had 
                  long dreamed of his own privately-funded stadium and, on August 
                  16, 1987, he proudly unveiled a spanking new 73,000-seat stadium. 
                  Two years later, the stadium served as the site for Super Bowl 
                  XXIII and again hosted a Super Bowl in January, 1995.
 
 The Joe Robbie era ended with his death on January 7, 1990. 
                  Early in 1994, the NFL approved the acquisition of the Dolphins 
                  by H. Wayne Huizenga, a well-known Florida sportsman. Following 
                  the 1995 season, the legendary Shula retired as coach of the 
                  Dolphins. Since that time, the team has been led by Jimmy Johnson, 
                  Dave Wannstedt, and Jim Bates.  In 2005, Nick Saban was 
                  named the franchise's sixth head coach.
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