‘Light came on’ for Raiders rookie DE Clelin Ferrell, now he needs to ‘keep it going’

‘Light came on’ for Raiders rookie DE Clelin Ferrell, now he needs to ‘keep it going’

In the season opener against the Broncos, Raiders fourth overall pick Clelin Ferrell got his first sack. I asked him about it after the game, and he responded that it was a relief to get it out of the way, so there wouldn’t be so much pressure to get his first NFL sack. Seven games later, he was still sitting on that one sack. Last week that changed in a big way.

Ferrell got to Chargers quarterback Philip Rivers three times in the Thursday night affair for a total of 2.5 sacks. And just like that, Ferrell was second on the team in sacks behind Benson Mayowa (7.0).

To be fair, the entire Raiders line was feasting on the Chargers’ two backup tackles, not just Ferrell. But imagine if even in this favorable position, Ferrell still couldn’t get into the backfield? All he can do is beat the man in front of him, and that’s what he did.

Admittedly when it comes to pass rushers, especially those selected as high in the draft as Ferrell, a lot of emphases are placed on sacks. Perhaps too much. After all, being an every-down starting defensive end is about so much more than getting the quarterback. And even when it is about that, it isn’t always all about sacks. Hits and pressures are also important, as was also shown against the Chargers.

There’s also the matter of run defense. If an end can’t defend the run, he won’t see a lot of time on first and second down. When you consider that aspect of the game, it was the week prior against the Lions that Ferrell really started to turn things around. He only built upon that performance to bring some pass rush last week.

“He’s coming off his best game,” said Raiders defensive coordinator Paul Guenther. “I really think the light came on for him in the second half of the Detroit game. Walking off the field with him, I was like, ‘I think the light just came on for you. Really.’ And then he went out against the Chargers and played really good.”

According to Guenther, it wasn’t just Ferrell’s performance on the field that caused him to believe Ferrell had turned the corner; it was the look in Ferrell’s eyes. Something I’m sure Ferrell confirmed against the Chargers five days later.

The way Guenther has been deploying Ferrell also contributed to Ferrell’s ineffectiveness in the first half of the season. He moved Ferrell inside a lot on obvious passing downs, limiting his chances to get after the quarterback. That’s not to say that was the only reason Ferrell wasn’t making a significant impact because there was no proof of that, but things aligned for him against the Chargers.

Arden Key was placed on injured reserve, and Josh Mauro was out injured as well, putting the Raiders a bit shorthanded. They couldn’t move Ferrell and Mauro inside and bring in edge rushers. Instead, fellow rookie Maxx Crosby started on the other side, and Ferrell was given a chance to get after the quarterback against a backup who was ill-prepared, coming into the game for Russell Okung, who left with an injury.

Everything was aligned for Ferrell. All he needed to do was seize the opportunity. And he did. In a big way. It can’t end there, though. For Ferrell, this needs to be the start of something.

“Yeah, he needs to keep it going,” Guenther added. “[Head] Coach [Jon Gruden] just got done saying you know, ‘with Michael Jordan’s height, you’ve got to get him the ball.”

Sunday Guenther’s former team, the Bengals, comes to Oakland. Guenther had a few defensive ends he drafted there who had Jordan height. Michael Johnson and Carlos Dunlap, in particular, come to mind. He saw them in Ferrell, which prompted his drafting. Both of whom have had long careers in the league. Dunlap got his second sack in his seventh game, Johnson, in week 12.

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Raiders final injury report: CB Lamarcus Joyner OUT for Sunday

Raiders final injury report: CB Lamarcus Joyner OUT for Sunday

The Raiders have announced their final injury report of the week and there are two players have been ruled out; starting slot corner Lamarcus Joyner and swing tackle David Sharpe. Trent Brown is also listed as questionable with a knee injury as well as kick returner Dwayne Harris. Below is the team’s full injury from Friday:

Watch: How Lyle Alzado rule came to be which Myles Garrett broke to receive indefinite suspension

Watch: How Lyle Alzado rule came to be which Myles Garrett broke to receive indefinite suspension

Late in the Thursday Night Football game in Cleveland, Myle Garrett put a late hit on Steelers quarterback Mason Rudolph. Rudolph took exception to it, and a pretty horrific sight ensued.

Garrett would grab Rudolph’s facemask while Rudolph was on the ground, rip his helmet off his head, and slam the helmet across the top of Rudolph’s head. Take a look:

Obviously swinging a helmet at an unprotected player is a considerably dangerous thing to do. Rudolph was lucky to not receive serious injury from it.

The NFL acted swiftly to punish Garrett and others for their parts in the fight. Garrett was suspended indefinitely, which is to include at least the rest of this season and the playoffs, with him needing to seek permission from the commissioner to be reinstated.

The thing is, for there to be a rule such as this, someone had to have been the first to do it. And it may not surprise you, that player was former Raiders defensive end, Lyle Alzado. The rule was named after him.

Her,e former Raiders linebacker Matt Millen remembers the moment Alzado committed the foul that led to the rule. Though in this case, it was throwing the helmet as a projectile, not swinging it as a weapon as Garrett did. But the NFL made sure they used this opportunity to cover all possible uses of the helmet as a weapon.

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Steelers loss puts Raiders in driver’s seat for wild-card berth

Steelers loss puts Raiders in driver’s seat for Wild Card berth

Heading into Week 11, the Raiders, Steelers, and Colts all had the same record (5-4) and were competing for the final wild-card slot in the AFC. But on Thursday night, Pittsburgh fell to the Browns, 21-7, dropping its record down to 5-5.

With an incredibly easy schedule coming up, the Raiders are now in prime position to steal one of the wild-card spots. Oakland will face off against the 0-9 Bengals on Sunday and then will travel to New York to play the 2-7 Jets.

If the Raiders can win those two games, they should start to open up some distance between them and the Steelers and Colts. Both Indianapolis and Pittsburgh have a fairly easy schedule coming up, so getting wins over the next two games against lesser opponents is critical.

Pittsburgh has opened the door for the Raiders to make the playoffs. Now it’s up to them to capitalize on that chance.

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Raiders QB Derek Carr knows firsthand what 0-9 Bengals are going through

Raiders QB Derek Carr knows firsthand what 0-9 Bengals are going through

Winless teams don’t stay that way forever. Each week they play, there is a chance that will be the week things fall the right way, and they pull out their first win. And it doesn’t always happen against the opponent against whom you think it will happen. Often times it’s a team you wouldn’t have expected.

This week the Raiders are hoping to not be THAT opponent as they face the 0-9 Bengals.

Aiding in their ability to fend off complacency is the fact that they have a quarterback and an offensive coordinator who has been here before.

Back in 2014, the Raiders, with rookie quarterback Derek Carr starting every game, and Greg Olson as offensive coordinator were 0-10 before getting their first win. And it wasn’t against a patty cake team either. That win came against a 7-3 Chiefs team coming off five straight wins.

No one thought the Raiders would win that game. If anything, they thought it would be a slaughter. But newly appointed starter Latavius Murray broke off two touchdown runs, and Derek Carr threw a late game-winning touchdown to James Jones to come out with a 24-20 victory.

Carr knows that you don’t take these kinds of games for granted, because it’s any given Sunday and stunners happen.

They are in the middle of installing their system. They are in the middle of trying to figure out what offense and defense fit with their personnel that they are trying to do and all those kinds of things, they are in the middle of that. So, who says it wouldn’t click this week, right? And so, I don’t care about records, man. I prepare every game as if this is the game and so there is no, ‘They haven’t won a game…’.  I don’t care how many games they have or haven’t won, they got Pro Bowlers all over their football team and they are going to bring it, that’s for sure.

Every week the odds go up that the Bengals will get that first win. After all, it was just a couple weeks ago the Dolphins were 0-7, and now they’ve won two straight games. When the Raiders won their first game in 2014, they played .500 (3-3) football the rest of the way.

It’s a benefit to have your quarterback having been on a winless team, figured things out, and pulled out a big win. He knows not to overlook this opponent because he was that opponent once and overcame it. But his experience and outlook can’t simply rub off on the rest of the team. It’s the coaches’ jobs to instill that.

That’s where Greg Olson comes in, having coached Carr and the rest of the offense through that stretch. When he preaches to the players not to take the Bengals lightly, he speaks from experience.

Much like the Raiders in 2014 with Latavius Murray lighting a fire under the offense, the Bengals made a quarterback change last week to trying and shake things up. Rookie Ryan Finley replaced longtime starter, Andy Dalton.

Finley and the Bengals offense scored just 13 points last week against the Ravens, so there was no instant gratification to the change at quarterback. And who knows, Finley could end up like Derek Carr and start his career with a long losing streak. He could also surprise the Raiders because there isn’t a lot of NFL tape of him to study. After all, the Raiders have been most vulnerable against the pass all season,

The problems for the Bengals go well beyond their quarterback. For instance, they have the league’s worst defense.

These factors, along with the Raiders being 5-4 and going 4-1 at home (including the “home” game in London), are why the Raiders are 10.5-point favorites over the Bengals.

In case you were wondering, the Chiefs were 7-point favorites when they lost to the 0-10 Raiders in 2014. There can be no let-up in these Raiders. This week as much or more than any other.

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Raiders-Bengals Thursday injury report: Geno Atkins misses practice with knee injury

Raiders-Bengals Thursday injury report: Geno Atkins misses practice with knee injury

It’s looking like the Bengals could once again be without their best offensive player this week as wide receiver A.J. Green missed another practice. The Pro Bowl receiver has missed all season with an ankle injury, but there was some hope he would have returned by this point.

Now it appears as if the Bengals could be in danger of being without their best defensive player. Geno Atkins practiced fully on Wednesday and wasn’t listed on the injury report. Thursday, he missed practice altogether with a knee injury.

The Bengals have also been without cornerback Dre Kirkpatrick the past three games, and he isn’t expected to return until the end of November.

As for the Raiders, Lamarcus Joyner is still not practicing with a hamstring injury. He was joined on the sideline by David Sharpe, who has a calf injury. Dwayne Harris was downgraded to limited. Otherwise, there were no changes to the injury report from Wednesday.

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Mid-season Busters for the 2019 Oakland Raiders

Midseason Busters for the 2019 Oakland Raiders

While the Raiders pulled out a few hard-fought wins this season, they also got embarrassed a few times. In some of those games, as well as a few they have to dig themselves out of a hole, there were players who had to raise their hand and say ‘my bad, guys.” These are their stories (bong, bong).

DB Lamarcus Joyner

Buster nods: 7

Worst game: Week 4 vs. Colts

Joyner was the one big, highly touted free-agent addition Gruden had this offseason. He was going to fix the issues at the nickel corner spot. Early on, it was apparent that it was not happening.

After Patrick Mahomes and Kirk Cousins lit up the Raiders secondary in weeks 2 and 3, the rest of the secondary stepped up against the Colts. But Jacoby Brissett was stilling making plays, and it was Joyner he picked on all day. The entire secondary has been an issue all season, but even when the opposing QB is struggling, they seem to find yards via Joyner.

He was not named a Baller once this season and just twice didn’t land among the Busters. Now, he has a hamstring injury, so we’ll see what the Raiders can do without him.

CB Gareon Conley

Buster nods: 5

Worst game: Week 7 vs. Packers

This was a tough call for Conley’s worst game. I mean, it was Aaron Rodgers, and Conley had been lit up by the likes of Joe Flacco and Chase Daniel before that. But even against Rodgers, someone has to step up. Conley didn’t step up.

Conley was beaten in several different ways by the Packers. This included a 74-yard touchdown catch, a 59-yard catch that later led to him being out of position to allow Rodgers to jog in for a touchdown.

Conley was traded to the Texans the next day. In part because of the game he had, and in part because someone had to go and he carried the most value. The Raiders got a third-round pick in the deal.

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Terrelle Pryor named biggest one-hit wonder in Raiders history

Raiders QB Terrelle Pryor named biggest one-hit-wonder in franchise history

Throughout the team’s history, the Raiders have had several players who have shined for one season and then disappeared. But no player in franchise history was a bigger one-hit wonder than quarterback Terrelle Pryor.

Selected in the third round of the 2011 NFL supplemental draft, Pryor went on to start nine games at quarterback for the Raiders in 2013. Pryor won three of his first six starts, completing 63 percent of his passes during that stretch.

The most memorable play of his career came on the opening play against Pittsburgh, where he took a read-option to the house to help Oakland defeat the Steelers. But from that point on, it was all downhill for Pryor.

In a recent article by ESPN, Pryor was named the biggest one-hit wonder in franchise history by senior writer Paul Gutierrez. Take a look at his reasoning for selecting Pryor:

After beating the Steelers, he lost two straight, injured a knee and didn’t start again until a loss in the season finale. Pryor — who was never a gifted passer and saw defenses flood the box when he was under center — transitioned to receiver. He spent time with Cleveland, Washington, Buffalo and the Jets, last playing in November 2018.

While Pryor never developed into a franchise quarterback, he did have some success as a receiver. In 2016, he eclipsed 1,000 receiving yards with the Cleveland Browns. He’s bounced around the league some since then, but he carved out a nice six-year career as both a quarterback and a receiver.

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Rookie DE Maxx Crosby leads Raiders in QB pressures

Rookie DE Maxx Crosby leads Raiders in QB pressures

Entering the 2019 NFL draft, it wasn’t a secret that the Raiders were going to select a few defensive ends. However, no one could have expected that their fourth-round pick would outproduce the No. 4 pick in the draft. But that’s precisely what has happened over the first nine games of the season.

Fourth-round pick Maxx Crosby has been fantastic for the Raiders this season, recording seven quarterback hits, five tackles for a loss, and 2.5 sacks. He also leads the team in quarterback pressures with 25, according to Pro Football Focus.

Crosby has everything you would want in a young edge rusher. He’s highly athletic with great size and a non-stop motor. He needs to continue to improve his technique and become more consistent from game to game, but that will come with more playing time.

While it’s fair to be slightly disappointed with the production from the team’s No. 4 pick in the 2019 draft, Crosby has been an incredible find by this front office. Look for him to continue to be a staple for this defensive line for years to come.

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Oakland Raiders vs Cincinnati Bengals: Time, TV schedule, odds, how to watch

Oakland Raiders vs Cincinnati Bengals: Time, TV schedule, odds, how to watch

This week, the Oakland Raiders will host the Cincinnati Bengals in a game Oakland must win in order to stay in the AFC Wild Card contention. To get you prepared for the game, here is everything you need to know about this Week 11 contest:

What: Cincinnati Bengals (0-9) at Oakland Raiders (5-4)
When: Sunday, November 17 at 4:25 p.m. ET
Where: Oakland Alameda Coliseum, Oakland, CA
Radio: 95.7 The Game
Live Stream: fuboTV (try it free)
Odds: Raiders (-10.5)
Referee: Shawn Smith
TV: CBS

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