Have Raiders upgraded from any ‘worst of the worst’ starters from 2022?

Several Raiders starters were named ‘worst of the worst’ by Football Outsiders. Have they upgraded at those spots?

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We knew the Raiders were bad last season. How bad? Well, four starters named ‘worst of the worst’ bad.

Back in February, Football Outsiders put together their list of the worst at every position group in the NFL and the Raiders were quite well represented on that list.

In case you’re wondering, Derek Carr got a brief mention for playing so poorly he was benched to prepare for moving on from him. A few other QB’s were mentioned in passing (so to speak), but it was Russell Wilson who was the worst of the worst at the position.

The Raiders actually did move on from Derek Carr, cutting him and signing former 49ers QB Jimmy Garoppolo. Whether he’s an upgrade remains to be seen.

Even aside from Carr, the Raiders had four players who stood out as being *the* worst of the worst of their respective position group. Think of it as the anti-All Pro squad.

That begs the question as to whether or not the Raiders have either moved on or upgraded from any of those starters. Well, let’s take a look.

Alex Bars was named the worst double-digit starting interior lineman in the NFL, noting he had an astounding 38 blown blocks last season.

“He really shouldn’t be a starter; he lacks the quickness and the timing you would like from an every-game starter. But lacking other options, the Raiders gave him 14 starts and, well, there were moments where he was just completely blown off the field. While he generally improved over the course of the year, he still hadn’t reached competent starter levels by the end; Chris Jones blew him away to the tune of eight pressures and a pair of sacks in Week 18. You can live with Bars as a spot starter or a bench guy, but he was the worst lineman to start double-digit games in 2022.”

Bars was re-signed this offseason, but the team has to be hoping that one of the other linemen as competition at right guard can outplay him to take the job. Competitors include recent signing Greg Van Roten, former Broncos practice squad signee Netane Muti and undrafted rookie McClendon Curtis.

Moving across the line, the Raiders have plenty more issues. Namely with their top free agent signings of last offseason. Two made the list too as a “big free-agent signing, little production.” First up was DT Bilal Nichols who signed a two-year, $11 million deal and was a complete non-factor last season.

“Nichols was brought in to Las Vegas to provide some semblance of an interior pass rush, which never materialized—just 1.5 sacks and 18 hurries on the year. That might be OK if Nichols was solid against the run, but Nichols didn’t provide much of an impact there either, routinely getting pushed around or creating a seam and a running lane. Honestly, the best way to word Nichols’ impact on the 2022 season is “non-existent”; not exactly what Las Vegas was hoping for from their second-biggest free agent acquisition of the year. Hey, how did that biggest acquisition work out again?”

That biggest acquisition was Chandler Jones who signed a three-year, $17 million deal and for much of the season was basically invisible.

“One three-sack game against the Chargers in December saved Jones’ year from being a complete bust, but 4.5 sacks is still the lowest sack total for Jones in a year he played more than five games, and his 15 quarterback hits are the fewest since he left New England in 2015. Jones had a pressure rate of just 10.3%, which was 92nd out of 270 players with at least 100 pass-rushers, per SIS charting. There were some potential warning signs from 2021 in Arizona, in retrospect—his hurry rate had fallen dramatically, and his pressure rate had dipped too, even if the sacks were still there—but for Jones not even to hit five sacks? For Jones to have 12 games where he didn’t reach the quarterback once? Almost unthinkable. . . He has $16 million in guaranteed money next season, so the Raiders are stuck hoping that the 33-year-old can figure out a way to make things work next year.”

Yeah, the Raiders are stuck with Jones for this season. Best case scenario is rookie top pick Tyree Wilson can rotate in and keep Jones fresh, hopefully getting the most out of him.

As for Nichols, the Raiders are seemingly hoping for the emergence of one of the DT’s they have drafted the past two years. The highest drafted being Byron Young who was selected at pick 70 in the third round this year. The other is Matthew Butler who was selected in the fifth round of the 2021 draft.

The wild card here could be former Chargers first round pick Jerry Tillery who was claimed off waivers midway through last season, but didn’t do much outside of the one game against his former team.

And finally, there’s the safety spot where Tre’von Moehrig made an appearance. After a decent rookie season in 2021, Moehrig fell off a cliff in his second season.

“Moehrig looked lost in the Raiders’ secondary, over-thinking and reacting late. Moehrig allowed a 137.5 passer rating in coverage and was possibly just asked to do too much. He was going to be the centerpiece of Patrick Graham’s secondary; instead, he constantly found himself out of position or just making the wrong decision.”

It would be surprising if the Raiders were to give up on Moehrig after a down season. The Jim Thorpe Award winner was the team’s pick at 43rd overall in the 2020 draft. Granted that was the previous coaching staff, but you’d have to think they will give him at least part of this season to see if he can step up.

The team added Marcus Epps to start at the strong safety spot. They also signed Jaquan Johnson, drafted Christopher Smith II in the fifth round, and have 2022 undrafted safety Isaiah Pola-Mao who showed some potential as a rookie last season.

So, the answer is they have not moved on from any of these starters. They brought in competition at each position, but no clear upgrades. So, in each case they’re either they’re hoping for someone else to step up or for that player to improve.

Raiders free up cap space with Chandler Jones contract restructure

Raiders restructure Chandler Jones contract to free up over $5 million in cap room

Just hours after the Raiders added pass rusher Tyree Wilson to the defense with their pick at seven overall, they made a move to clear cap space by restructuring the contract of the guy with whom Wilson could split time this season.

Chandler Jones has restructured his deal to free up over $5 million in cap space for the Raiders, according to ESPN’s Field Yates.

This is money they could need to sign their draft class as well as any free agents they still wish to add this offseason.

As it stood, they were just shy of having enough money to sign their draft class with their available cap space coming into it. It was about a million dollars they needed to find, which is pretty easy in terms of restructures. Now they have that and more.

Wilson will be competing for playing time this season and it would be the 33-year-old Jones who sees less snaps if the rookie is ahead of schedule.

Jakobi Meyers joining the Raiders made NFL fans joke an all-time blunder was too convenient

Well, Meyers did lateral to a future teammate, didn’t he?

Jakobi Meyers might be joining the Las Vegas Patriots (Raiders) to help the underrated Jimmy Garoppolo turn them around, but it wasn’t long ago he got caught in a stressful situation.

Back in December, the Patriots and Meyers were trying to make something out of nothing on last-second backyard football play. Meyers would find himself in the middle of a scrum, and he inexplicably tossed the ball backward. (The game was tied!)

Not only did the Raiders’ Chandler pick the lateral off, he disrespectfully stiff-armed Mac Jones on the way to scoring one of the most stunning game-winning touchdowns in NFL history. The play was so bad on Meyers’ part that we legitimately wonder if it isn’t one of the most boneheaded football decisions we’ve ever seen.

With Meyers now unrelatedly in Las Vegas, NFL fans joked that perhaps his lateral to give the Raiders a win was a bit of an “inside job” before free agency. (Of course, it wasn’t, obviously.)

What condition the position is in: Assessing Raiders level of need at EDGE ahead of free agency

Assessing Raiders level of need at EDGE as free agency approaches

We take a look at edge rusher for the Raiders ahead of free agency to give it a condition of either Strong, Stable, Unstable, Serious, or Critical.

Starters: Maxx Crosby, Chandler Jones

Depth: Malcolm Koonce
Free agents: Clelin Ferrell, Tashawn Bower, Jordan Jenkins, Isaac Rochell

Crosby was elite all season. One of the the best defenders in the league. He topped the NFL in tackles for loss. That’s not just at his position. His 22 tackles for loss was best at any position. He also topped all edge rushers in run stops and was second in the league in QB hits (35) behind only Defensive Player of the Year Nick Bosa. Crosby had 12.5 sacks.

Jones took some time to find his way, but late in the season was playing well, finishing with 15 QB hits and 4.5 sacks. We’ll see if the 33-year-old can keep up that level of play from the start of next season.

Koonce is the only depth returning and he hasn’t been great when he’s been given a chance to step up.

Condition: Stable

Why: One elite starter, another formerly elite starter who still seems to have something left in the tank. Depth is a concern and is needed with Jones entering his twilight years.

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Week 17 snap counts vs 49ers: Raiders struggle to find pass rush without Chandler Jones

Raiders struggle to find pass rush vs 49ers without Chandler Jones

For all the grief Chandler Jones got much of this season for his lack of sacks, it was pretty clear the alternative was much worse. Sunday we got a taste of what that looks like and it wasn’t pretty.

Jones was placed on injured reserve last week and Clelin Ferrell came in to replace him, playing nearly every snap (97%). Despite his extended game time, the former fourth overall pick failed to do much to impact the game in terms of pressure on the quarterback, putting up just one QB hit and no sacks.

The lack of pressure from the left side seemed to reverberate across the line. even Maxx Crosby seemed neutralized and the Raiders got no QB hits from the interior line whatsoever.

The closest the Raiders came to getting a sack came on a blitz by newly signed Harvey Langi, who saw 45 defensive snaps (67%) because of the injuries to Denzel Perryman and Divine Deablo. Langi looked like he had Brock Purdy dead to rights, but then whiffed on the sack. I doubt Perryman misses that opportunity.

Offense Spec Tms
Player Pos Num Pct Num Pct
Dylan Parham G 70 100% 6 18%
Kolton Miller T 70 100% 6 18%
Jermaine Eluemunor G 70 100% 6 18%
Alex Bars G 70 100% 0 0%
Jarrett Stidham QB 70 100% 0 0%
Andre James C 70 100% 0 0%
Davante Adams WR 62 89% 0 0%
Mack Hollins WR 60 86% 1 3%
Foster Moreau TE 55 79% 16 48%
Josh Jacobs RB 47 67% 0 0%
Darren Waller TE 40 57% 0 0%
Hunter Renfrow WR 32 46% 2 6%
Jakob Johnson FB 19 27% 10 30%
Brandon Bolden RB 15 21% 19 58%
Ameer Abdullah RB 9 13% 19 58%
Thayer Munford T 6 9% 6 18%
Keelan Cole WR 4 6% 0 0%
Jesper Horsted TE 1 1% 17 52%
Defense Spec Tms
Player Pos Num Pct Num Pct
Luke Masterson LB 67 100% 10 30%
Duron Harmon SS 67 100% 8 24%
Trevon Moehrig FS 67 100% 0 0%
Nate Hobbs CB 66 99% 3 9%
Amik Robertson CB 66 99% 0 0%
Clelin Ferrell DE 65 97% 8 24%
Maxx Crosby DE 65 97% 8 24%
Bilal Nichols DT 56 84% 8 24%
Harvey Langi LB 45 67% 10 30%
Andrew Billings DT 43 64% 0 0%
Roderic Teamer SS 28 42% 17 52%
Kyle Peko DT 27 40% 14 42%
Tyler Hall CB 26 39% 0 0%
Jerry Tillery DT 21 31% 8 24%
Malcolm Koonce DE 9 13% 25 76%
Neil Farrell DT 9 13% 0 0%
Isaiah Pola-Mao FS 4 6% 18 55%
Darien Butler LB 2 3% 5 15%
Isaac Rochell DE 2 3% 0 0%
Curtis Bolton LB 1 1% 26 79%
Sidney Jones CB 1 1% 0 0%
Special Teams Spec Tms
Player Pos Num Pct Num Pct
Matthias Farley FS 0 0% 27 82%
Brittain Brown RB 0 0% 15 45%
Daniel Carlson K 0 0% 13 39%
AJ Cole III P 0 0% 8 24%
Trent Sieg LS 0 0% 8 24%
Jackson Barton T 0 0% 6 18%
Hroniss Grasu C 0 0% 6 18%
Sam Webb CB 0 0% 4 1

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Raiders send Chandler Jones, Denzel Perryman to injured reserve, ending their season

Chandler Jones, Denzel Perryman are officially out for the rest of the season.

Last Saturday in Pittsburgh the Raiders lost two of their top defenders. Chandler Jones left the game early in the third quarter and early in the fourth quarter Denzel Perryman was lost as well. Both injuries looked very serious and had the players quickly ruled OUT for the remainder of the game.

Any even somewhat serious injuries at this time of year would come with the possibility of it ending their season. Any trip to injured reserve would have them out for the remainder of the regular season.

Today the Raiders announced they have placed both Jones and Perryman to IR. With two games left, that means the Raiders will be without both players the rest of the way.

Jones had begun playing his best football of the season the past few weeks, including making the fumble recovery return for the game-winning touchdown two weeks ago against the Patriots.

Perryman leaves as the Raiders’ leading tackler. He led the team in tackles last season as well, heading to the Pro Bowl in his first season in Las Vegas.

With two tough games ahead and the team all but officially out of playoff contention, they are mostly playing for pride at this point anyway. Jones and Perryman can officially look ahead to being ready for next season.

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Week 16 snap counts: Raiders went final 10 minutes without 2 Pro Bowl defenders vs Steelers

Raiders were without two Pro Bowl defenders for final 10 minutes vs Steelers

There is 60 minutes in an NFL game. And for 50 of those minutes Saturday, the Raiders defense held the Steelers to three points.

Unfortunately, for the final 50 of those 60 minutes, the Raiders *scored* only three points.

In times like these, the Raiders need to be at full strength on defense. For those final ten minutes, they were down two crucial parts of their defense. Two Pro Bowl players, as a matter of fact.

They lost DE Chandler Jones early in the third quarter and he did not return. Then early in the fourth quarter, they would lose LB Denzel Perryman as well.

Jones had been playing his best football of late for the Raiders, including making the game-winning fumble recovery for a touchdown the previous game against the Patriots. While Perryman is the quarterback of the Raiders’ defense and their leading tackler.

Thus after keeping the Steelers offense from getting in the end zone all game, the Raiders defense finally broke down in the final minute to give up a score. And with the Raiders offense unable to get in the end zone after their opening drive, that score was enough for the Steelers to pull out the 13-10 win.

Offense Spec Tms
Player Pos Num Pct Num Pct
Dylan Parham G 53 100% 2 9%
Jermaine Eluemunor G 53 100% 2 9%
Kolton Miller T 53 100% 2 9%
Alex Bars G 53 100% 0 0%
Andre James C 53 100% 0 0%
Derek Carr QB 53 100% 0 0%
Davante Adams WR 51 96% 0 0%
Mack Hollins WR 50 94% 2 9%
Josh Jacobs RB 43 81% 0 0%
Foster Moreau TE 36 68% 6 27%
Hunter Renfrow WR 25 47% 3 14%
Darren Waller TE 21 40% 0 0%
Jakob Johnson FB 13 25% 9 41%
Keelan Cole WR 12 23% 0 0%
Ameer Abdullah RB 10 19% 14 64%
Brandon Bolden RB 2 4% 15 68%
Thayer Munford T 2 4% 2 9%
Defense Spec Tms
Player Pos Num Pct Num Pct
Maxx Crosby DE 68 100% 6 27%
Duron Harmon SS 68 100% 5 23%
Trevon Moehrig FS 68 100% 0 0%
Amik Robertson CB 66 97% 0 0%
Nate Hobbs CB 65 96% 3 14%
Luke Masterson LB 57 84% 11 50%
Clelin Ferrell DE 49 72% 8 36%
Denzel Perryman LB 49 72% 0 0%
Bilal Nichols DT 48 71% 6 27%
Tyler Hall CB 38 56% 0 0%
Andrew Billings DT 38 56% 0 0%
Chandler Jones DE 29 43% 0 0%
Jerry Tillery DT 19 28% 5 23%
Roderic Teamer SS 17 25% 11 50%
Kyle Peko DT 15 22% 7 32%
Neil Farrell DT 14 21% 0 0%
Malcolm Koonce DE 13 19% 15 68%
Darien Butler LB 12 18% 19 86%
Sam Webb CB 10 15% 1 5%
Isaiah Pola-Mao FS 3 4% 13 59%
Sidney Jones CB 2 3% 0 0%
Special Teams Spec Tms
Player Pos Num Pct Num Pct
Matthias Farley FS 0 0% 20 91%
Curtis Bolton LB 0 0% 14 64%
Jesper Horsted TE 0 0% 11 50%
Trent Sieg LS 0 0% 7 32%
AJ Cole III P 0 0% 7 32%
Brittain Brown RB 0 0% 7 32%
Daniel Carlson K 0 0% 5 23%
Sebastian Gutierrez T 0 0% 2 9%
Hroniss Grasu C 0 0% 2 9

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Ex-Patriots Julian Edelman, Vince Wilfork ripped Mac Jones’ ‘pissy’ antics and poor leadership

Patriots legends are NOT happy with the young QB.

Amidst a disappointing sophomore NFL campaign, the New England Patriots’ Mac Jones has been somewhat of a lightning rod of criticism this year. He’s yelled at his coaches. He’s slid toward defenders, heel up, likely trying to hurt them. He’s even made, what some believe, a poor effort to tackle Chandler Jones in one of the most embarrassing plays in pro football history. At this rate, it’s no wonder his own teammates appear to want Jones replaced.

You can count ex-Patriot and three-time Super Bowl champion Julian Edelman among those who haven’t appreciated how Jones has conducted himself this season.

In an episode of Inside the NFL, Edelman and former NFL WR Brandon Marshall debated what Mac Jones should’ve done on the “Fail Lateral.” Where Marshall defended Jones because tackling is not a part of his usual job as a quarterback, Edelman used it as an opportunity to rip Jones’ effort and what he perceives has been an overall lack of professionalism:

Phew. I guess it’s safe to say members of the Patriots’ Golden Era aren’t fans of the current New England young quarterback, are they?

Here’s another ex-Patriot and two-time Super Bowl champion Vince Wilfork, harshly criticizing Jones’ antics:

It is admittedly a lot to ask Jones to tackle a man who has roughly 50 pounds on him. That said, the game was literally on the line during the play. Normal rules go out the window in that situation. And when you’re 13-of-31 for 112 yards while also seemingly throwing tantrums every week, you don’t get exactly get the benefit of the doubt. The microscope gets even bigger when that sort of behavior appears to be a pattern.

The controversy around Jones only seems to expand by the week. The more that successful, Super Bowl-winning Patriots continue to speak up about him, it appears that the apparent mess will only grow.

Ballers & Busters for Raiders Week 15 vs Patriots

The good and the bad for the Raiders from a crazy rollercoaster of a game vs the Patriots

You rarely see a team shoot themselves in the foot and snatch defeat from the jaws of victory as much as the Patriots did in Las Vegas on Sunday. And even with all the self-mutilation they did in this game, they still managed to make a comeback from 14 points down to lead the Raiders 24-17 with under two minutes left in the game.

That blowing double-digit leads thing is the Raiders’ MO this season. And it was only because of the final utterly inexplicably boneheaded decision to try a double lateral at the end of the game that the Raiders were able to win this one in regulation.

Ballers

DE Chandler Jones

Jones was the recipient of the ‘Right place at the right time’ award on that final play. He had missed the initial tackle on Rhamondre Stevenson that led to a big run which, for a moment, looked like he could go the distance. Everyone expected that last play to be stopped and the two teams to go to OT. But Stevenson lateraled it to Jacoby Meyers at the last instant.

That lateral wasn’t the big mistake. That came when Meyers decided to try and lateral it AGAIN, this time attempting to throw it way back to the entirely not athletic Mac Jones. Well, the lateral was complete to Jones, all right. It was just the wrong Jones. Then Chandler planted Mac with a stiff arm and took it back for the game-winning touchdown. Never seen anything like it.

Jones also had a pressure resulting in an incompletion two plays before that and made a run stop at the line on the previous possession leading to a crucial three-and-out. Earlier in the quarter, he hit Mac Jones from behind on third down to force the Pats to settle for a long field goal. All in all, a strong finish for Chandler.

CB Tyler Hall

He played 43 snaps (66%) and the only catch he gave up, he stopped in its tracks for four yards. He also had a big pass breakup on a deep pass to stop the Patriots’ first drive of the third quarter.

DE Malcolm Koonce

It’s not the number of snaps you have, but rather what you do with them. With 27 seconds left in the second quarter, Koonce came in on the punt team and streaked in to block the punt and give the Raiders the ball at the New England 20-yard-line. What looked like two teams that were headed for the locker room with the Raiders leading 10-3, would end up a scoring opportunity on which the Raiders were able to capitalize.

QB Derek Carr, WR Mack Hollins

The first touchdown drive for the Raiders came early in the second quarter. On the drive, Carr completed a 19-yard pass to Keelan Cole on third and nine and finished off the drive with a perfect pass over the middle for a 25-yard connection with Darren Waller.

After the punt block, Hollins made the first catch for 11 yards. He then drew an illegal contact penalty on the next play. Then in first and goal from the five-yard-line, Carr put the ball into a tight window, at Hollins’s knee level and he made the grab for the touchdown to give the Raiders a 17-3 lead at the half.

A Carr pick-six saw the Raiders lead cut to 17-10. Then they were unable to get back on track on the next drive. But Hollins would do his part to tilt the field. AJ Cole launched a 47-yard punt to the goal line where Hollins was waiting to down it at the two-yard line.

Ultimately the Raiders’ lead would disappear, giving way to a 24-17 Patriots lead with under three minutes remaining.

Carr would look to Hollins again. The first pass was overthrown and the Raiders went three-and-out. However, had Darren Waller not been in the wrong area and tried to catch the pass intended for Adams, that looked like it would have been a long touchdown catch and run.

Carr and Hollins got another shot with two minutes left in the game. Carr overthrew Hollins again on third down. But, the next play, on their last possible chance, Carr hit Hollins on a comeback route for 12 yards. They thought the play was so nice, they did it twice to the same result.

A few plays later, Carr found Keelan Cole for a 30-yard touchdown. It didn’t look like Cole actually got both feel inbounds, but Carr’s pass was where it needed to be and the officials saw no definitive evidence to overturn it so the score was tied at 24-24.

Honorable Mention

RB Josh Jacobs — He had ten touches for 61 yards on the Raiders’ first two scoring drives and finished with 93 yards on 22 carries (4.2 yards per carry).

3 standout stars in Patriots’ gut-wrenching loss to Raiders

Who stood out the most for the Patriots against the Raiders?

As the clock struck zero, New England Patriots fans expected to head to overtime when one of the most shocking plays in NFL history occurred.

Running back Rhamondre Stevenson tossed a lateral to receiver Jakobi Meyers, who then attempted to do the same to quarterback Mac Jones, before Raiders defensive end Chandler Jones picked off the backwards pass and scored the game-winning touchdown.

Even though it was a disappointing loss, there are still some positives to draw from a few stars that offered a glimmer of hope, mostly by doing everything they could to at least keep the Patriots in the game.