"Channing Crowder is going toa few lines in the water and see if he gets a bite, perhaps from another kind of dolphin.
Greg Camarillo is going to test his best lines behind a microphone and see if it produces any nibbles toward a future in broadcasting.
Ricky Williams, world traveler, is staying put.
Brandon Fields will try to prevent kids from doing the same.
The Dolphins are approaching what passes for vacation time in the NFL.
Starting next week, they won't have to report to their Nova Southeastern University facility until training camp opens at the end of July.
How will they spend their free time?
Receiver Greg Camarillo will head to another kind of camp, spending three days at the "NFL Broadcast Boot Camp" at NFL Films' headquarters in Mt. Laurel, N.J. His instructors will include James Brown, Ron Jaworski and Dick Vermeil.
"Another one of the programs that smooths the transition from football to real life," Camarillo said Wednesday, during a team workout. "Over the years as I've become more involved with the media, I've enjoyed it, so it's a chance to learn from the pros, hone your skills and start practicing, just in case a broadcasting career pops up."
Camarillo, 28, would like to be an analyst even though doing so would mean criticizing players. He figures he's used to doing that.
"You should always be your own toughest critic," he said. "I've criticized my football play enough; now it's time to criticize myself on TV."
Asked by one of roughly 30 reporters Wednesday whether he could picture Camarillo someday being among the media horde, coach Tony Sparano cracked, "God, I hope not."
But Sparano added of Camarillo, from Stanford, "He likes digging for facts.""