I'm bored, and this thread got me thinking. So what you're about to read is each draft since Marino retired as if Miami went into saying "we need a first round QB." Hindsight is always 20/20, but let's review
2000 - Miami traded their first round pick to Carolina. If you don't know who was in the QB draft class of 2000 by now, you're not a football fan.
2001 - Took Jamar Fletcher over Drew Brees (well documented botch)
2002 - Miami traded their first round pick to New Orleans for Ricky Williams, missed out on Patrick Ramsey and Josh McCown, both of whom were journeymen who actually at one point or another spent some time on Miami..no harm there
2003 - Miami lost their first round pick when Ricky went over 1,500 yards rushing (condition in the trade). Missed out on Kyle Boller and Rex Grossman. No biggie
2004 - Selected Vernon Carey. Carey ended up being a solid lineman for his career. Missed out on J.P. Losman. I'd rather have Carey.
2005 - Selected Ronnie Brown over Aaron Rodgers. Obvious botch. But 22 other teams passed on Rodgers as well. Jason Campbell was the other first round QB that year in addition to Alex Smith, who is just now finding his groove. Rodgers was obviously the cream of that crop, but who's to say sitting 3 years behind Favre did NOTHING for his career?
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2006 - Miami selected Jason Allen. First round QB's include Vince Young, Matt Leinart, and Jay Cutler. All of which were taken before Miami's selection and none of them are exactly franchise QB's. You can argue Cutler, but he throws a lot of dumb int's for my liking. The only second round QB was Kellen Clemens. Thank god Miami didn't reach on him.
2007 - We all know the scenario, Ted Ginn over Brady Quinn. Neither ended up living up to a first round pick, so let's deem that a wash. Miami could've reached for the likes of Kevin Kolb or Drew Stanton. Both of which went in the 2nd round. Glad they didn't.
2008 - Jake Long over Matt Ryan. This one is one of the great debates of our era. I don't necessarily think Ryan would've had the same success in Miami. Roddy White > Ted Ginn. Michael Turner > Ronnie Brown. Tony Gonzalez > Anthony Fasano. Matt Ryan coming out for the Wildcat? Would there even be a wildcat? Just too many variables to determine who was truly a better pick. I know on paper Matt Ryan is a franchise qb, but another thing that looked good on paper was Communism.
2009 - took Vontae Davis. Stafford, Sanchez, Freeman all off the board already. The next best QB, was Pat White. Whom they took

. Next best after that. Stephen McGee. Who's been third string in Dallas since being drafted.
2010 - Traded down from 12 to 28 and took Jared Odrick. Missed out on....Tim..Tebow. Dear God no. Next best? Jimmy Clausen. Struggled heavily as a rookie, thus they took Cam Newton and the rest is history. Clausen will never get another shot in Carolina unless there's some DEVASTATING injury to Newton. Open ended theory on Clausen, but he wasn't a first round pick.
2011 - Newton, Locker, Ponder (and remember how badly Minnesota reached for Ponder) off the board. Miami took Pouncey. Safe, unsexy, but safe pick. Andy Dalton had an amazing rookie season, but did not have first round prospect talent, thus going in the second round
2012 - Finally Miami takes a QB in the first round.
So basically, what it comes down to is that it's not just as simple as "taking a qb in the first round." It all has to fit. Since Marino retired, Miami missed out on a couple home runs in Brees and Rodgers (Matt Ryan is debatable obviously, and I refuse to acknowledge that Miami had a chance at Brady..EVERY team had a chance on Brady SIX times). The draft is a gamble. Sometimes you win. Sometimes you lose. Sometimes you lose bad. All in all, I think our desire for finally having a franchise QB put some blinders on our eyes towards how slim the pickings actually were