The Miami Dolphins are winning the Super Bowl — for preseason dysfunction.What started with Tyreek Hill quitting on his Dolphins teammates has been followed up with Miami’s $212 million quarterback publicly calling out the team’s most dangerous offensive weapon.Tua Tagovailoa is making $212 million but hasn’t won a playoff gameGetty“I’m just trying to hold him (Hill) accountable, because that’s what we try to do with everyone on our team,” Dolphins QB Tua Tagovailoa recently told NFL Network. “And if this is what we say the standard is, that’s what the standard is, and no one is exempt from it.”Hopefully Tagovailoa is including himself in that ‘standard,’ since he’s one of the most overpaid quarterbacks in the NFL and has only made one Pro Bowl in five uneven seasons.Overpaid QB wants to be Dolphins’ leader Josh Allen, Patrick Mahomes, Lamar Jackson Joe Burrow, Jalen Hurts, Jared Goff and Baker Mayfield would instantly be selected before Tagovailoa in an NFL Draft redux.The same for Dak Prescott, even though Jerry Jones‘ biggest problem hasn’t come close to winning a Super Bowl with the Dallas Cowboys.The biggest recurring issue with the Dolphins — other than annual underperformance — is the lingering friction between the team’s best offensive player and often-injured franchise QB.“This is the first time I haven’t been in the playoffs. So I mean, for me, I just gotta do what’s best for me and my family,” Hill said at the end of the 2024 season. “I’m opening the door. I’m out, bro. It was great playing here, but at the end of the day I got to do what’s best for my career. I’m too much of a competitor to be just out there.”Six months later, Hill is trying to repair his broken relationship with the Dolphins, Tagovailoa and Miami’s long-frustrated fanbase.Hill should have been traded during the 2025 NFL Draft for maximum value.Instead, Tagovailoa will start a new season behind a weakened offensive line, and Hill is losing trade value monthly.GettyTagovailoa is trying to rebuild his relationship with Tyreek Hill[/caption]GettyMike McDaniel could be sacked if the Dolphins disappoint again[/caption]GettyHill hasn’t been the same since leaving Patrick Mahomes’ Chiefs[/caption]He’s 31-years-old, a problem off the field, and increasingly unreliable between the lines.“I’m not the only one that heard that. You guys aren’t the only people that heard that,” said Tagovailoa, referring to Hill’s stunning end-of-season comments. “A lot of people that follow football, that follow the Miami Dolphins, that follow Tyreek, that are fans of his, everyone has seen that. So when you say something like that, you don’t just come back from that with, ‘Hey, my bad.’ “You’ve got to work that relationship up, you’ve got to build everything up again. It’s still a work in progress, not just for me but for everybody.”NFL's Greatest......Ranking the top 10......Quarterbacks of all-time – Can anyone better Tom Brady?Wide receivers of all-time – Does Randy Moss or Jerry Rice come out on top?Running backs of all-time – Stacking Jim Brown, Barry Sanders, Walter Payton, Emmitt Smith and moreTight ends of all-time – How does Travis Kelce compare? Team dysfunction could lead to firingAllen’s Bills are coming off a 13-win season and serious Super Bowl contenders in 2025, which means that the AFC East again runs through Buffalo.The New York Jets and New England Patriots both should be improved this year, leaving the Dolphins as potentially the worst team in their division.Anything short of the playoffs should result in the firing of Mike McDaniel, who’s fallen from a media darling to the head coach most likely to be axed in three tumultuous seasons.But this all currently comes down to Tagovailoa, Hill and the Dolphins’ ongoing issues. Tagovailoa and Hill are representing Miami with $310 million of combined contracts, yet the Dolphins haven’t won a playoff game since 2000.Hill hasn’t been the same since leaving Mahomes and the Kansas City Chiefs, where he won a Super Bowl in 2019. Tagovailoa was drafted No. 5 overall a year later to lead Miami to its first big game since 1984.That obviously hasn’t happened, and Zach Wilson won’t inspire immediate hope if Tagovailoa goes down again. While the rest of the NFL is promoting new prospects and flexing big during summer workouts, the Dolphins are only winning at one thing — public dysfunction.