The Miami Dolphins may be hiding one of the most dangerous weapons in the entire NFL — and somehow, almost nobody outside the organization is talking about him yet. While most national attention continues focusing on quarterbacks, superstar receivers, and blockbuster trades, there is growing belief inside Miami that Greg Dulcich could quietly become one of the biggest breakout stars of the 2026 season. And honestly, the hype surrounding him inside the building is starting to feel impossible to ignore.

According to Bleacher Report, Dulcich has already been labeled the “best-kept secret” on the Dolphins roster — a shocking statement considering how overlooked he still feels nationally. But people inside Miami reportedly believe the former Denver Broncos draft pick is finally beginning to unlock the potential that once made him one of the most intriguing young tight ends in football.
And the scary part?
The numbers quietly back it up.
Most casual fans look at Greg Dulcich’s raw stats from last season and immediately move on. He finished with just over 330 receiving yards and one touchdown after finally being elevated from Miami’s practice squad midway through the year. On paper, those numbers hardly scream “future star.”
But underneath the surface, something much more interesting was happening.
According to the advanced metrics discussed around Dulcich’s late-season emergence, he ranked near the very top of the NFL among tight ends in several major categories. Among qualifying players at the position, Dulcich reportedly finished second in yards after catch per reception, third in yards per route run, and had zero drops on over 30 targets.

Zero drops.
That immediately caught attention inside the organization.
Because for years, Miami has desperately searched for consistency at tight end. Injuries, inconsistency, and unreliable production constantly plagued the position. Players like Julian Hill frustrated coaches with inconsistency, while veteran options never fully stabilized the offense long term.
Then suddenly, Greg Dulcich arrived late in the season and quietly changed the entire conversation.
The Dolphins reportedly became so impressed with his growth that general manager Jon-Eric Sullivan openly named Dulcich as one of the players expected to take a major leap forward this season. That kind of public endorsement matters enormously, especially considering Miami rewarded him with one of the largest free-agent contracts on the roster outside of Malik Willis.
That is not normal “backup tight end” treatment.
That is investment.
And honestly, Miami’s offseason decisions reveal exactly how much confidence the organization may already have in him.
The Dolphins had opportunities to aggressively pursue bigger names at tight end. There were discussions surrounding players like David Njoku after the NFL Draft. Miami also could have targeted more proven receiving threats in free agency.
They chose not to.
Instead, they doubled down on Greg Dulcich.
That decision suddenly looks extremely intentional.

The Dolphins did draft additional tight ends, but according to the discussion surrounding the roster, players like Will Kaczmarek project primarily as blockers, while Sadu Traore is viewed more as a developmental long-term option.
In other words, the receiving role at tight end belongs to Greg Dulcich right now.
And if his late-season chemistry continues developing, this offense may suddenly become far more dangerous than people realize.
What makes Dulcich especially intriguing is the way he creates offense after the catch. Miami reportedly loves his combination of athleticism, size, and open-field movement. Defenders struggle bringing him down cleanly, and his ability to turn short receptions into explosive gains gives the offense another layer it lacked consistently last season.
That becomes incredibly important for a Dolphins offense still trying to evolve.

Because while defenses continue focusing heavily on Miami’s speed outside, a reliable middle-of-the-field threat could completely change how opposing coordinators attack this team.
And perhaps the biggest reason optimism keeps growing is because Dulcich reportedly finished last season on such a strong stretch. According to the discussion surrounding his final games, he looked dramatically more comfortable, confident, and explosive once Miami finally committed to giving him real opportunities offensively.
That late momentum now has Dolphins fans dreaming big.
Not necessarily superstar numbers.
But legitimate breakout production.
And honestly, if Greg Dulcich becomes the reliable weapon Miami believes he can become, the rest of the AFC may soon realize the Dolphins were hiding one of their most dangerous offensive secrets in plain sight all along.