Raiders rookie DT Darius Stills changes to college number

Raiders rookie DT Darius Stills changes to college number

There was some number shuffling that happened today. The key one was undrafted rookie Darius Stills, who nabbed the number 56 which he wore at West Virginia.

The undrafted free agent was a topic of conversation throughout OTAs and minicamp with two different Raiders defensive linemen calling him out as a standout in practices so far.

The reigning Big-12 Defensive Lineman of the Year and consensus All-American recently told me he was expecting to be a day three pick in April’s draft after an outstanding season for the Mountaineers. He has the talent but was knocked for his size (6-0, 278). Getting his college number could be a sign the Raiders think he could wear it a while.

Stills wore the number 79 in practices, which ended last week. With the switch, newly re-signed tackle Sam Young took up that number, switching from number 69. Young wore number 70 last season for the Raiders.

A couple of other newly added Raiders got their numbers. Linebacker Darron Lee, who wore number 58 while trying out during minicamp, keeps that number. Cornerback De’Vante Bausby will wear number 41 which was worn by TJ Morrison who was cut to make room for Bausby on the roster.

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Raiders add former first-round pick LB Darron Lee

When you have a former NFL Draft guru as your GM, it’s expected that you might see a few former highly thought of prospects given a chance to return to their former glory. Today the Raiders officially added linebacker Darron Lee, making him the …

When you have a former NFL Draft guru as your GM, it’s expected that you might see a few former highly thought of prospects given a chance to return to their former glory. Today the Raiders officially added linebacker Darron Lee, making him the latest example of that.

Mike Mayock had Lee as his third best LB prospect in the 2016 draft. Lee would be drafted by the Jets with the 20th overall pick. His career did not turn out as expected and by the 2020 season, Lee was trying to find his way onto an NFL roster, spending the entire season on the Bills’ practice squad.

Lee spent the first three seasons of his career in New York. His time there ended in 2018 when he was suspended four games for violating the league’s substance abuse policy.

He was given a second chance in 2019 with the Chiefs, but started just two games and seeing most of his time on special teams.

Along with Lee, the Raiders added veteran journeyman CB De’Vante Bausby. To make room on the roster they waived CB TJ Morrison.

Raiders Yannick Ngakoue says he and Maxx Crosby will be ‘best duo’ pass rushers in NFL

Raiders Yannick Ngakoue says he and Maxx Crosby will be ‘best duo’ pass rushers in NFL

It’s hype season. And after just two days on the job in Las Vegas, Yannick Ngakoue sees great things from him and his bookend edge rusher Maxx Crosby.

“I think that Maxx and myself are the best duo that is going to come hit the scene. I’m already putting that out there,” Ngakoue said of Crosby.

“Maxx is a hard worker, he’s a guy that’s putting in the work. Literally, I’m lifting weights right now and Maxx is in there doing things to get better. It’s the dedication and the commitment and I can play all day with a guy like that.”

That’s a bold statement to be certain. It’s not impossible, but it would probably require both players have career years. Crosby’s best season was his rookie year in 2019 when he put up ten sacks. Ngakoue’s best season came in 2017 when he put up 12 sacks and went to the Pro Bowl.

New defensive coordinator Gus Bradley talks a lot about rotating guys into the game along the defensive line to keep them fresh. But it’s clear the bulk of the pass rush is expected to come from Ngakoue and Crosby.

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Two new Raiders set to hit practice field for first time this week

Two new Raiders set to hit practice field for first time this week

Welcome to mandatory minicamp week. OTAs are behind us, and therefore the voluntary portion of offseason practices is, as well. Tuesday, the offseason schedule will kick up a notch, and the entire 90-man offseason roster is expected to be in attendance.

Among them are newly added defensive linemen Yannick Ngakoue and Quinton Jefferson. The two were signed this offseason as free agents and opted to work out on their own during OTAs. This means when they hit the field this week, it will be the first time they’ve practiced with their new teammates.

Ngakoue teased his arrival last week, saying “See y’all soon.” He arrived in Las Vegas this weekend and even posted a pic on his Instagram account of his locker at the team’s Henderson facility.

Though there have been no public displays from Jefferson on his arrival in Las Vegas, he too is expected to take the field this week for the first time to practice with his new teammates.

The three-day minicamp is typically structured to mimic training camp practices in many ways. It’s the last practice the team will have before they take a nearly six-week break before reporting to training camp on July 27.

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Raiders cut troubled S Kemah Siverand

Raiders cut troubled S Kemah Siverand

For the second time in a week, the Raiders have cut one of their young safeties. They waived Rashaan Gaulden last week and now have parted ways with Kemah Siverand. Though Siverand’s departure comes a few months after he initially put his roster spot in danger.

Back in late February Siverand was arrested on charges of street racing and evading police. The former undrafted free agent was already on his second chance after he had been cut by the Seahawks prior to the 2020 seasons for sneaking a girl into the team hotel in the middle of a pandemic.

Whenever these kinds of incidents occur, the team has to decide whether the player’s on-field talent outweighs his off-field issues. Clearly, the Raiders initially gave Siverand the chance to prove he was worth holding onto. But with OTA’s coming to a close today, they no longer felt that way and cut him loose.

His roster spot is taken with the addition of veteran cornerback Blidi Wreh-Wilson.

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RB Kenyan Drake sees role as ‘pick your poison’ receiver out of backfield in Raiders offense

RB Kenyan Drake sees role as ‘pick your poison’ receiver out of backfield in Raiders offense

A major offseason storyline in 2020 for the Raiders was getting Josh Jacobs more involved as a receiver out of the backfield. The result was a marginal improvement. He jumped from 20 to 33 catches and from 166 yards to 238. Meanwhile, Jalen Richard saw his catches drop through the floor to a career-low 19 catches for 138 yards.

This offseason Gruden decided instead of trying to get the receiving numbers out of the backfield from the players he already has, he just brought in someone else.

That someone else is former Cardinals and Dolphins running back Kenyan Drake.

Though Drake had just 137 receiving yards on 25 catches, that was not typical for him. In his three previous seasons, he averaged 45 catches for over 353 yards. That area of his game is what the Raiders are clearly trying to capitalize on as a complementary back to Josh Jacobs.

“Just trying to create mismatches,” Drake said Wednesday of what he brings as a receiver. “When you have a back as myself, or really any of our backs, you line up out wide and you have a linebacker or safety that goes out there, it gives you obviously a cover indicator, and with that we just want to take advantage of the mismatches that we feel like we have in the backfield on defenders when they match up man-to-man with us.”

While he is technically a running back, and has averaged over 737 rushing yards the past four seasons, the former track star tends to do his best work in space and being versatile and splitting out wide on some plays allows him to open things up and show off his speed.

“I’ve always been a pretty versatile athlete in general,” Drake continued. “In high school, I played running back and receiver. I came out as an athlete. I used to play a lot of receiver at Bama in specific personnel packages. I haven’t really, since I’ve been in the league, been utilized specifically as a receiver, but there were two years back-to-back where I caught 50-plus balls, 1,000 yards in three straight seasons, so it’s just about being a playmaker when a play needs to be made in space, whether that’s me getting the ball out of the backfield, catching the ball, running the ball.

Drake’s addition by the Raiders was criticized quite a bit this offseason. Not because he isn’t a good player, but because he is seen as a luxury pick-up on a team that needed to focus on the defense.

Regardless of where the Raiders should have focused, adding Drake does give the Raiders another big weapon on an offense that is starting to build up a collection of weapons. Having a multitude of options is especially important in the red zone and goal-to-go situations.

“Just being another playmaker, another weapon,” Drake added. “When you have a multitude of guys to cover on the field it stretches the defense real thin, so you got a guy like Darren Waller, who’s obviously a red zone threat. Henry Ruggs III, Hunter Renfrow. We have a lot of guys, especially everybody in this room that can create mismatches and come out the backfield. It’s almost like a pick-your-poison type of situation.”

As Drake points out, when he comes out of the backfield to line up at receiver, defenses can’t just put a cornerback on him. Or if they do, that usually means they take a corner off of one of the wideouts.

“I just want to be indispensable,” Drake said. “…whenever I get the ball in my hands, I like to make plays, or without the ball, in general, I like to just be an impact on the field where teams will have to really worry about where is 23 on the field, how can we neutralize him and stop him from being the game breaker. And that’s when everybody else starts to eat because when you try to focus on one person, we got weapons all over the field and that just brings more success to the offense in general.”

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CB Casey Hayward lining up solely on outside for Raiders

With the Raiders releasing slot cornerback Lamarcus Joyner this offseason, one of the major questions has been who will replace his duties there. Some have inquired if perhaps veteran Casey Hayward, who the team signed in early May, would take that …

With the Raiders releasing slot cornerback Lamarcus Joyner this offseason, one of the major questions has been who will replace his duties there. Some have inquired if perhaps veteran Casey Hayward, who the team signed in early May, would take that job. Hayward seems to have laid that to rest today.

“I’ve just been outside,” Hayward said of his time with Raiders so far. “I don’t really know too much about inside. I haven’t played inside in a while.”

Hayward went on to say that if the team asked him to do it, he would. But they have not asked him to do that.

The tenth year veteran was brought in presumably to battle for the starter opposite Trayvon Mullen. That battle would be with 2020 rookie starter Damon Arnette. Unless, of course, the team moves Arnette inside. Which looks to be far more likely at this point than Hayward making that move.

Other possibilities to play the slot include Amik Robertson, Nevin Lawson, and rookie Nate Hobbs.

Undrafted DT Darius Stills already impressing new Raiders teammates ‘something to him’

A lot of people thought Darius Stills would be drafted this year. Including Stills himself. And when he didn’t, the standout defensive tackle out of West Virginia landed squarely on several lists of the top undrafted free agents. He chose to sign …

A lot of people thought Darius Stills would be drafted this year. Including Stills himself. And when he didn’t, the standout defensive tackle out of West Virginia landed squarely on several lists of the top undrafted free agents.

He chose to sign with the Raiders. And with the buzz surrounding him, I reached out to speak with him to try and get to the bottom of things.

What he told me was about how he’d been “slept on” at every level now. Mostly due to his size (6-0, 282). And he outplayed expectations each time.

This week Football Outsiders named Stills the most notable undrafted defender the Raiders signed this offseason.

West Virginia defensive tackle Darius Stills has some untapped athleticism. Stills’ short-shuttle, three-cone drill, 40-yard dash, broad jump, and vertical jump at the WVU pro day all come in above the 75th percentile among defensive tackle prospects since 1999.

Tuesday the rubber met the road, with Stills taking the field with his new veteran teammates for the first time for the start of OTA’s. And already Stills is turning heads. Including that of former Raiders top pick Clelin Ferrell.

“I don’t really evaluate guys until we put the pads on, but a guy who I like a lot is Darius Stills, an undrafted rookie from West Virginia,” said Ferrell after the second OTA practice. “Real, real good dude but he got a lot of twitch. He played three-technique. He got a lot of twitch. You can just tell in the movements when we on drills and stuff like that. He got a little something to him, so I like his game a little bit.”

Stills will have a chance to make this Raiders roster. While coaches say there are open competitions at positions when there really isn’t, there figures to be as close to an open competition as you can get at the DT spot for the Raiders.

With holdovers Maurice Hurst and David Irving both cut this offseason, there are entirely new faces at the 3-tech spot. None of whom have a lock on a roster spot, let alone a starting job. The rest of the group consists of Solomon Thomas, Quinton Jefferson, and Matt Dickerson. Darius Philon and Johnathan Hankins figure to compete/rotate at the other defensive tackle spot.

Addition of CB Casey Hayward already paying dividends for Raiders

The latest big free-agent acquisition by the Raiders is the first to show his worth with the team. Former Chargers’ cornerback Casey Hayward was signed by the team earlier this month, nearly two months after the start of free agency in March. But …

The latest big free-agent acquisition by the Raiders is the first to show his worth with the team. Former Chargers’ cornerback Casey Hayward was signed by the team earlier this month, nearly two months after the start of free agency in March. But he’s ahead of the curve from his new teammates.

Why? Well, because he and Raiders new DC Gus Bradley have been together the past four years in LA. So, while the rest of the Raiders defenders are just now learning their new defensive playbook, Hayward knows it back to front.

The 10th year corner’s familiarity with the playbook and veteran presence is already proving quite valuable to his defensive teammates, especially those who share a secondary with him.

Third-year safety Johnathan Abram said of all the new faces in the secondary this year, he is most impressed with Hayward.

“Getting a chance to know him, be around him, he’s a guy who’s been in the system, going on six years. Just seeing the amount of things he saw. The starts that he got in this system. He pretty much knows it all,” Abram said of Hayward following Wednesday’s practice. “He goes out there, he talks every single play, in and out of the play. It’s just amazing to see. It’s very helpful for guys like me and other guys trying to learn this system. He’s been a tremendous help and I’m very glad he’s going to be a part of this team.”

Bringing in players who are familiar with a new coach’s scheme and vision is crucial. Paul Guenther did it several times when he first started coaching the Raiders defense, signing the likes of Reggie Nelson and Vontaze Burfict. Even DL coach Rod Marinelli brought with him several former Dallas defenders.

These players make the coach’s job easier. He doesn’t have to micromanage because he has a player in the group to fill in the gaps and show his teammates firsthand what their coach expects of them.

It also helps that Hayward is a good player. He isn’t a Jason Witten signing. He isn’t here to be a coach on the field. He’s here to compete for a starting job. And as it stands now he has a very good chance of winning that job opposite Trayvon Mullen.

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NFL rolling out new three-phase roster cutdown

NFL rolling out new three-phase roster cutdown

Remember for years the NFL roster cutdown went in two phases? It went from 90 players to 75 players to 53 players. That rule changed a few years back, putting the roster cutdown on one day. That meant the team went from 90 players to 53 in one fell swoop; a massive cutdown of 37 players.

Today the NFL announced they are not only going back to multiple cutdown days, but they’re expanding it to not just two, but THREE cutdown days.

The team will have 90 players throughout camp, with a cutdown to 85 players on August 17. which is just after the Raiders’ first preseason game.

Those 85 players where be cut down to 80 players by August 24, just after the Raiders’ second preseason game.

Then, finally, the roster will get its final, and by far largest, trim of 27 players to get down to 53 on August 31, just after the Raiders’ third and final preseason game.

That means the following day, on September 1st, the practice squads can be formed, and waiver claims can happen, with 12 days until the season opener on September 13.

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