Mike Wallace is a winner, plain and simple.
He won in Pittsburgh in 2008, and nearly did it again in 2010. He's made a career on long, highlight-reel touchdown catches. He's known for his speed and his ability to get open on any given play.
So what happens when the winning, and the being wide open, and catching sixty yard bombs, suddenly goes away?
Well, in Wallace's case, and in Miami's case, nothing good.
My how times have changed in South Florida.
Wasn't it nearly two years ago now that everything was great in Miami? Remember that March day, when then GM Jeff Ireland inked Wallace to a five-year, $60 million contract? Remember how great it felt to finally have that deep ball threat? To finally have that type of player?
Everything was rosy. Everyone was on the Miami Dolphins bandwagon.
Until the 2013 season opener in Cleveland. Ironically, it was his first game as a Dolphin where the relationship started going downhill.
One catch, 15 yards, and a visibly upset Wallace walking off the field following a Miami victory.
Fast forward to last month, where the embattled receiver reportedly refused to play in the second half of a 37-24 loss to the New York Jets, and it appears the roller-coaster marriage could be headed towards an unthinkable conclusion.
Do the Dolphins cut Mike Wallace?
That's the hot topic swirling around South Beach right now, and it's one that's been met with great debate.
On one hand, you have a receiver who led the team in touchdowns this year with 10. You have a gifted player, with all-world speed, who can change the course of a game at any given moment.
On the other hand, you have all the drama and friction that comes with him. You have a guy who gets angry when you win, and refuses to play when thing's aren't going right.
What do you do?
To answer that question, I'll ask you one in return: Can you find a guy to replace Wallace's 10 TD's? More importantly, do you have the money to find a guy like that?
The answer to that is no. It's a resounding NO.
This isn't the 2013 Miami Dolphins who had all the money in the world. This is the 2015 Dolphins, who are now going to have to make some difficult financial decisions.
Think of it like this: Jeff Ireland used a credit card to sign all those players in 2013, and now it's time for Dennis Hickey to pay the bill.
Brian Hartline has a huge contract that will either be restructured, or cut. The same concept applies to guys like Brandon Gibson, Dannell Ellerbe, and Philip Wheeler.
It's not different for Wallace, either.
If the Dolphins want to trade Wallace they'll be hard-pressed to find a team willing to take on his $12.1 million in 2015.
If they want to cut him they'll have a decision to make: If they do it before June 1 they'll save $6.9 million in cap space and carry over $5.2 million. If they cut him before then they'll carry a $9.6 million cap hit against only a $2.6 million savings.
But that's just the financial side of it. What about the football side?
Let's not sugarcoat it here, the Mike Wallace/Ryan Tannehill connection isn't where it needs to be after two seasons together. It stinks.
Tannehill can't hit the deep ball, and that's what Wallace does best. Why do you think Jarvis Landry saw the success he did this season? Because he's perfectly suited to Tannehill's strengths, which are short to medium range passes.
But even with all of that in mind, Mike Wallace STILL had 10 touchdowns this season, which tied a career high (2010). Think about that for a second—a speed receiver, who was turned into a possession receiver (something he's not known for), still produced double-digit touchdowns for the season.
Mike Wallace is simply too talented to just cut ties with. This isn't a Brandon Marshall situation from three years ago, where the supremely gifted Marshall was traded away following his second season.
Marshall was a cancer in the Miami locker room; he didn't get along with the quarterback, and he didn't get along with some of the coaching staff either.
That's not Mike Wallace. I've covered Wallace up close, I've talked to him, heck I've even stood in the lunch line with him after practice.
Players love Wallace. The media loves Mike Wallace. Even though he's most definitely frustrated with him, he still has yet to publicly say anything bad about Ryan Tannehill.
The guy works harder than anyone else on the team. Again, I've seen this up close, when he stood in front of a jugs machine catching balls for an hour after practice ended every single day this summer.
Mike Wallace is a winner, and he hasn't won yet in Miami. Some of that is on him, some of that is on Ryan Tannehill, and some of that is on the coaching staff.
But it can all be fixed. Now is not the time to be cutting your star receivers. Not when you're in win-now mode. Not when next year is a must-win year for everybody, and I mean everybody, in that locker room.
The Miami Dolphins/Mike Wallace marriage hasn't gotten off to the best of starts, not even close.
But that doesn't mean you quit; not when there's so much at stake, and so much on the line.
With the status of their star receiver in limbo, now is not the time to cut ties with Mike Wallace.
Now is the time to strengthen them.