The Dolphins improved to 7–6 with the victory and remained in contention for a postseason berth and an
AFC East title. For the Patriots, the loss prevented them from clinching the AFC East, although they maintained their division lead. The play proved inconsequential to the season as the Dolphins lost all of their remaining games to finish 7–9 and miss the playoffs for a second consecutive year. The Patriots clinched the division for a 10th consecutive year and a first-round bye with a 11–5 record and although the defeat cost them the home-field advantage throughout the
AFC playoffs as the No. 1 seed, their season ultimately concluded with a 13–3 victory over the
Los Angeles Rams in
Super Bowl LIII. After the Super Bowl, Patriots quarterback
Tom Brady said he didn't consider the Miami game a loss. The game was also the final victory with the Dolphins for head coach
Adam Gase, who was fired after the season, and quarterback
Ryan Tannehill, who was traded to the
Tennessee Titans. Gase was succeeded by Patriots assistant coach
Brian Flores, the team's defensive playcaller in 2018. In their final game of following season, Flores led the Dolphins to an upset victory over New England, which dropped the Patriots to the conference's third seed and forced them to play the Titans in the wild card round. Tannehill went on to help Tennessee defeat the Patriots in Brady's final game with the team. Four years later on December 18, 2022, the Patriots attempted a
lateral pass play of their own against the
Las Vegas Raiders with the game tied, but the attempt notably failed and resulted in the opposite intended effect: a walk-off game-winning touchdown for the Raiders, as Las Vegas defensive end (and former Patriot)
Chandler Jones picked off New England's second lateral pass attempt and ran it in for the score. The Patriots were later criticized for the play, with some analysts such as Charles Curtis of
USA Today Sports comparing it to the
Butt Fumble,
Colts Catastrophe, and other inept plays in NFL history. ==Officials==