Raiders place LB Divine Deablo on injured reserve, sign veteran CB Sidney Jones

Divine Deablo heads to IR as Raiders sign former 2nd round CB Sidney Jones

As reported Sunday night, the Raiders have signed veteran Sidney Jones. A former round two pick out of Washington in 2017 by the Philadelphia Eagles, Jones has played six seasons in the NFL, appearing in 50 games with 25 starts.

Jones appeared in 16 games last season with 11 starts for the Seattle Seahawks, but was cut after three games this season with no starts.

The 6-0, 181-pounder has four career interceptions along with 29 pass breakups. His best overall numbers came last season with the Seahawks.

The 26-year-old cornerback joins the Raiders due to a roster spot opened up by second-year linebacker Divine Deablo heading to injured reserve.

Deablo is the team’s leading tackler. He injured his forearm on the second play of Sunday’s game against the Jaguars and was carted off the field. He will miss at least four games.

Blake Martinez played nearly the entire game for the Raiders in place of Deablo alongside Denzel Perryman.

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Raiders Week 9 snap counts vs Jaguars: Leading tackler LB Divine Deablo lost on 2nd play

Raiders lost leading tackler Divine Deablo on 2nd play vs Jags which saw Blake Martinez get more snaps than the rest of his season combined.

This Raiders defense has been struggling all season long. Losing their leading tackler didn’t help matters Sunday.

Linebacker Divine Deablo injured his forearm on the second play of the game and was carted off the field, not to return. The second-year linebacker leads the team by a wide margin with 74 combined tackles (38 solo). The next most is Maxx Crosby with 47 combined tackles (33 solo).

In Deablo’s absence, Blake Martinez saw his snap count jump up considerably. In fact, he led the linebacker corps in snaps.

Martinez just signed with the Raiders prior to week five and had seen 42 snaps in his first three games. He saw 63 snaps in this game alone.

Meanwhile the Raiders blew a 17-0 lead to lose 27-20.

To be clear there is no straight line that I am drawing between Deablo being lost or Martinez coming in and the Raiders blowing a big lead. The Raiders had blown two 17-point leads this season already *with* Deablo in the lineup. But certainly losing him didn’t help matters.

Offense Spec Tms
Player Pos Num Pct Num Pct
Alex Bars G 59 100% 4 15%
Dylan Parham G 59 100% 4 15%
Kolton Miller T 59 100% 4 15%
Andre James C 59 100% 1 4%
Derek Carr QB 59 100% 0 0%
Foster Moreau TE 57 97% 4 15%
Davante Adams WR 56 95% 0 0%
Mack Hollins WR 50 85% 4 15%
Jermaine Eluemunor G 48 81% 3 11%
Hunter Renfrow WR 44 75% 3 11%
Josh Jacobs RB 41 69% 0 0%
Ameer Abdullah RB 14 24% 14 52%
Thayer Munford T 14 24% 4 15%
Jakob Johnson FB 13 22% 9 33%
Keelan Cole WR 9 15% 0 0%
Brandon Bolden RB 4 7% 17 63%
Jesper Horsted TE 3 5% 12 44%
Zamir White RB 1 2% 5 19%
Defense Spec Tms
Player Pos Num Pct Num Pct
Duron Harmon SS 69 100% 6 22%
Rock Ya-Sin CB 69 100% 0 0%
Maxx Crosby DE 67 97% 6 22%
Trevon Moehrig FS 65 94% 0 0%
Blake Martinez LB 63 91% 5 19%
Bilal Nichols DT 54 78% 6 22%
Chandler Jones DE 53 77% 0 0%
Denzel Perryman LB 52 75% 0 0%
Anthony Averett CB 50 72% 0 0%
Andrew Billings DT 38 55% 6 22%
Clelin Ferrell DE 34 49% 9 33%
Johnathan Abram SS 32 46% 14 52%
Neil Farrell DT 27 39% 6 22%
Matthew Butler DT 21 30% 0 0%
Amik Robertson CB 21 30% 0 0%
Sam Webb CB 15 22% 8 30%
Nickell Robey-Coleman CB 14 20% 0 0%
Luke Masterson LB 11 16% 23 85%
Malcolm Koonce DE 2 3% 17 63%
Divine Deablo LB 2 3% 0 0%
Special Teams Spec Tms
Player Pos Num Pct Num Pct
Darien Butler LB 0 0% 23 85%
Matthias Farley FS 0 0% 23 85%
Roderic Teamer SS 0 0% 19 70%
Daniel Carlson K 0 0% 9 33%
AJ Cole III P 0 0% 8 30%
Trent Sieg LS 0 0% 8 30%
DJ Turner WR 0 0% 5 19%
Lester Cotton G 0 0% 4 15%
John Simpson G 0 0% 4 1

Raiders, Jaguars final Week 9 injury report: TE Darren Waller Questionable with hamstring

Raiders TE Darren Waller Questionable vs Jaguars with hamstring

It was another week of Darren Waller limited in practice all week with a lingering hamstring injury. Last week he was limited all week and ended up missing his second straight game. So, his status is once again up in the air.

Head coach Josh McDaniels is still very much uncertain about his tight end’s status.

“I do not know about Darren yet,” said McDaniels prior to Friday’s practice.

“He’s working extremely hard to try to get back as soon as he can. I know that, and nobody wants to play quicker than Darren does.”

Also Questionable for the Raiders is LB Divine Deablo (back/wrist), and DT Neil Farrell (knee).

Despite Mack Hollins being limited all week with a heel injury, he was removed from the injury report, so he will play.

WR Jamal Agnew is the only players on the Jaguars injury report. He is Questionable with a knee injury.

Raiders, Jaguars Week 9 Thursday injury report: Davante Adams returns Full from illness

Injury report: Davante Adams returned Full from illness today. Darren Waller still limited.

Whatever illness Davante Adams had, it must’ve been pretty bad. Certainly enough to have him limited all last week and into this week. He also didn’t seem altogether himself in the game in New Orleans, finishing with one catch for three yards.

Today, for the first time in over a week, Adams was a full participant in practice, signaling he is finally back to feeling better and should be good to go against the Jaguars.

Also returning to practice was Divine Deablo who had missed Wednesday’s practice with back and wrist injuries.

The only other change was CB Sam Webb upgraded to full with his hamstring and back injuries.

DT Neil Farrell, WR Mack Hollins, and TE Darren Waller were all still limited with their injuries.

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Raiders, Jaguars Wednesday Week 9 injury report: LB Divine Deablo misses practice

Raiders leading tackler LB Divine Deablo missed practice today with back/wrist injuries

Today the Raiders took the field in Florida where they prepare to face the Jacksonville Jaguars Sunday. They stayed over after their game in New Orleans last Sunday in the hopes of acclimating to the time change and notd having to fly back and forth.

Not taking the field with them Wednesday was their leading tackler, Divine Deablo, who is dealing with back and wrist injuries.

 

Receivers Davante Adams, Mack Hollins, and Darren Waller were all limited just as they were last week.

Waller missed Sunday’s game as he was still dealing with a hamstring injury.

Adams was fighting through an illness last week, causing him to miss two practices, but played in the game, putting up just one catch for three yards.

Hollins played with his heel injury, but it was clearly causing him considerable pain in the game.

DT Neil Farrell Jr and CB Sam Webb were also limited.

The Jaguars had just WR Jamal Agnew limited on their injury report.

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Ballers & Busters for Raiders Week 8 vs Saints

Plenty of blame to go around for the Raiders terrible performance in New Orleans Sunday

If you’re reading this, I admire your perseverance. It isn’t easy to relive games like this if you’re a fan. But it can be cathartic. And sometimes you just go searching for answers. I hope I can provide some for you from this completely lopsided 24-0 game.

Ballers

None

This should come as no surprise in a game such as this that there were no standout exceptions to all the terribleness. I came out of the live viewing expecting this and the more in-depth look confirmed that. Pretty much just bad top to bottom.

And, no, there aren’t even any Honorable Mentions.

Busters

HC Josh McDaniels, DC Patrick Graham

The offense went nowhere and the defense couldn’t seem to stop anything. It was 24-0 and really it wasn’t even that close. The Saints missed a chipshot field goal and spent most of the second half just running the clock.

The Raiders were down 7-0 heading into the second quarter. The first play of the quarter was third and one. And instead of going to Josh Jacobs, McDaniels tried to get cute and gave it to Davante Adams on a sweep. It was blown up for a loss.

Now fourth and two at their own 28, the Raiders lined up in punt formation. And McDaniels tried to get even cuter with a fake. The direct snap to reserve safety Matthias Farley was stopped for a loss and the Saints took over already in scoring range. They added a field goal to make those two bad calls by McDaniels worth three points and a 10-0 deficit.

After a Carr interception gave the Saints the ball in Raiders territory again, Graham’s defense quickly made it 17-0 when Alvin Kamara was left wide open over the middle for a 16-yard touchdown catch and run.

That was Kamara’s second TD of the game, but not his last. In fact, his third TD, he was also wide open over the middle, this time going 36 yards for the score. Graham’s defense wasn’t accounting for Kamara just as it was completely failing to contain Taysom Hill who got good yards time and time again on designed runs.

This team never got off the plane. How they could be this unprepared is mind-boggling. An earlier start due to the Eastern Time Zone doesn’t explain this level of ineptitude. Not sure anything does.

QB Derek Carr

Not one snap in New Orleans territory. Not one. His fewest yards ever thrown in a game (101) with at least ten completions or 15 attempts. His third-worst passer rating (50.3) of his career. His third fewest yards per attempt (3.88) of his career. His fourth-fewest completions (15) in a game in which he threw more than 25 passes (26).

The first drive ended with him throwing too high for a wide-open Mack Hollins. Second drive with him throwing short of Davante Adams. Fourth with him getting picked off.

The first drive of the third quarter ended with him getting sacked twice — the second time because he held onto the ball too long — and then giving up with a dump on third and 23. His next — and final — drive ended with him throwing a three-yard bubble screen to Davante Adams on second and 27. Then, of course, another give-up dump to call it a night.

CB Rock Ya-Sin, CB Anthony Averett

When Taysom Hill wasn’t running wild, Andy Dalton was picking apart the secondary. Andy. Dalton. And Ya-Sin and Averett were making it look easy.

The first TD drive featured Averett giving up a 30-yard catch. It was Averett again who gave up an eight-yard catch that put them at the 11-yard line and they scored on the next play.

Late in the first half, the Saints drove into scoring range with Ya-Sin giving up a 14-yard catch on third-and-nine and Averett giving up a 10-yard catch on third-and-four. They escaped it being a scoring drive because of a missed chip shot field goal.

They wouldn’t escape it to start the third quarter with Ya-Sin being called for pass interference on third-and-nine and the Saints going on to score their third touchdown.

The two of them would give up third-down conversion catches on the final Saints drive to allow them to bleed the clock down.

T Kolton Miller, G Alex Bars, TE Foster Moreau

Blocking was a real problem for the Raiders. No one was great. These three were especially bad.

It wasn’t a happy homecoming for LSU alum Moreau. He was getting pushed all over the place trying to block. The first play had him blocked into the gap to cause a run stuff. The second play he gave up a pressure that led to a tackle for loss and ultimately a three-and-out to begin the game.

The second drive saw Bars miss his block to give up a run stuff for a three-yard loss. The drive ended with Miller giving up a pressure that forced Carr to step up and throw on the run and the pass fell short and incomplete. Miller would end the next drive when he did a face plant on his block that got Davante Adams nailed for a loss on the sweep.

Moreau would give up another run stuff on the next possession, then Carr was picked off on third-and-two.

After falling down 24-0, Bars gave up a sack on Carr and he was sacked again on the next play while trying to make up the yards lost on the first one.

Carr’s final drive began with Miller being flagged for a false start. Then after Moreau made a first down catch, he gave up another hit on Carr that led to another tackle for loss. And Miller gave up a hit on Carr on the next play to set up third and 13. So much for all that settling in they were doing.

LB Denzel Perryman, LB Divine Deablo

It’s times like this that you realize just looking at tackle numbers doesn’t tell the whole story. If it did, it would look as if Deablo had a great game. After all, he did put up 14 tackles. But many of those tackles were downfield after the damage had been done. The same goes for Perryman and his eight tackles.

For proof of this, you need only look at the game Alvin Kamara had. Seven of his nine catches came with either Deablo or Perryman in coverage. Against Deablo he had four catches on four targets for 38 yards and a TD. Against Perryman he had three catches on three targets for 47 yards and a TD.

I don’t think much more needs to be said.

DE Chandler Jones, DT Bilal Nichols, DT Andrew Billings

Nearly the entire defensive line. Maxx Crosby did enough to stay off the list. The others did not.

Jones was routinely losing containment on the edge and watching Taysom Hill run by him for first downs and chunk plays. He let Hill get by him for good yards on each of the Saints’ three touchdown drives. And after an early pressure on Andy Dalton, he didn’t breathe on him the rest of the game.

Neither Jones nor Nichols nor Billings had a single tackle until after the Saints had taken their 24-0 lead in the third quarter. And none had a single stat other than that. Just utterly ineffective.

Just so you know they were actually on the field, the first TD of the game was set up by Nichols giving up a five-yard keeper on first and goal from the eight. And then Kamara scored from three yards out right through Billings’s position,

WR Davante Adams

I don’t blame him for much of what he’s going through. But he did have a drop, couldn’t seem to get open consistently, even when lined up against a rookie corner, and at one point was even flagged for an illegal shift. He was targeted five times with one catch on a bubble screen. In total, he touched the ball twice for a net of two yards.

Raiders, Saints Week 8 Wednesday injury report: Davante Adams, 3 others missing with illness

Davante Adams was one of four Raiders players to miss practice today with an illness.

It appears an illness has spread around the Raiders team this week. Four players missed practice Wednesday with illness, including WR Davante Adams.

The other three who were missing were S Johnathan Abram, DE Clelin Ferrell, and DE Tashawn Bower.

Illness usually doesn’t end up being something that keeps a player out of the game, especially this early in the week, but it’s something worth monitoring.

Only S Divine Deablo (back/ankle) was missing from practice due to injury.

Darren Waller was back at practice today just as Josh McDaniels said he would be. He was limited as he rehabs from his hamstring injury that had him OUT last Sunday against the Texans.

Others who were limited were QB Derek Carr (back), RB Josh Jacobs (foot), WR Hunter Renfrow (hip), WR DJ Turner (hamstring), and LB Jayon Brown (hamstring).

Missing for the Saints was WR Michael Thomas (foot), WR Jarvis Landry (ankle), TE Adam Trautman (ankle), and CB Marshon Lattimore (abdomen).

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Ballers & Busters for Raiders Week 5 vs Chiefs

Raiders made a game of it with the Chiefs. But fell short in the end again. So let’s look at the game’s Ballers & Busters

Monday Night was a much closer game in the end than most thought it would be. The Raiders jumped to a 17-0 lead and twice were within one point late. But in the end, that one point deficit was where it would stay and the Raiders would fall to 1-4 on the season.

Ballers

RB Josh Jacobs

Once again, Jacobs was running with a mission against a Chiefs Run D that was best in the league coming into the game. Jacobs made mincemeat of that top ranked run D.

His mission was never more evident than early in the second quarter when he followed up a 13-yard run with a 21-yard run that ended with him plowing through the safety. Jacobs had already scored the Raiders’ previous TD from one yards out and those two runs set up the Raiders’ third score to go up 17-0.

Late in the third quarter, Jacobs followed up another 13-yard run — he created himself with a broken tackle — with a 37-yard run. The Raiders had long since lost the lead and the field goal off that run brought them back within one at 24-23.

Jacobs’s second TD of the game brought the Raiders back to being down one late at 30-29 before the failed two-point conversion. That’s where it remained on their final drive which started with a couple Jacobs eight-yard runs; the second of which gave him a new career-high for a single game, breaking his previous mark (144) he set last week vs the Broncos.

His last run went for five yards on third-and-one, setting his new career-high at 154 yards. Unfortunately, the Raiders went away from him on their next third-and-one and fourth-and-one and the game was over on consecutive incompletions.

DE Maxx Crosby

Every play Crosby made was a big one. It started with a wicked inside spin move to get the sack to end the Chiefs’ first drive. The next drive he made a run stop for no gain and it ended with a missed field goal.

The second quarter featured Crosby’s second sack of the game. That one moved him into a tie for the league lead in sacks (6). Though it wasn’t enough to keep the Chiefs from scoring their first touchdown of the game.

After the Chiefs had completed the comeback to go up 24-23, the Chiefs were back on offense looking to extend their lead. That drive started with Crosby making a run stop for a loss. The Chiefs would still get the touchdown, but on the two-point conversion attempt, the Condor would get pressure on Mahomes and get his long arms up to bat down his pass attempt.

DE Chandler Jones

For the first time this season, Crosby had some help from the other side. Jones didn’t manage to get his first sack as a Raider, but he put plenty of pressure on Mahomes from his side of the line and made some run stops as well.

Jones helped set up Crosby’s first sack with a run stop on first down and pressure resulting in an incompletion on second down. He then broke up a screen pass on the next drive and two plays later the Chiefs would miss a field goal attempt.

The third possession went three-and-out and it was all Jones. Starting with a run stop at the line and ending with a hit on Mahomes to force an incompletion.

Those efforts helped the Raiders build their 17-0 lead to start the game.

T Kolton Miller

Miller didn’t give up any sacks or hits on Derek Carr and as far as I can tell, he didn’t give up any run stuffs either. In addition, he had blocks on several Josh Jacobs runs including his first touchdown run and a 21-yard run in the second quarter that set up the Raiders’ third score.

FB Jakob Johnson

Doing a fine bit of lead blocking for Jacobs was his fullback, including leading the way for Jacobs’s 37-yard run in the third quarter.

WR Davante Adams

Derek Carr went bombs away to Adams several times in this game. The first one went for a 58-yard touchdown. The next two were underthrown and Adams came back for them, forcing a pass interference. The second of them happened in the end zone, setting up their second touchdown.

The next long ball was easily the best pass and catch between Carr and Adams since they became Raiders teammates. Adams got behind two Chiefs defenders and Carr placed it perfectly in his hands in-stride for a 48-yard touchdown.

It was the last two passes to Adams that ended the game. The first would likely have set up the potential game-winning field goal, but Adams didn’t finish the catch before stepping out of bounds. The final pass, Adams and Hunter Renfrow ran into each other. The pass was way long, but it wouldn’t have mattered considering Adams and Renfrow were on the ground. It was a terrible way to end an otherwise great day for Adams who had three catches for 124 yards and two touchdowns.

LB Divine Deablo

Deablo finished with a team leading ten tackles. On the last two Chiefs drives alone, Deablo had three run stuffs, one for a loss. His last tackle helped lead to the Raiders stopping the Chiefs on their final drive and keeping them from just running clock to give the Raiders offense one more shot.

Ballers & Busters for Raiders Week 2 vs Cardinals

Raiders week 2 Ballers & Busters in loss to Cardinals

Hoo boy. It’s safe to say any ideas I had for how this week’s Ballers & Busters would go changed wildly between the end of the first half of this game to the day. That’s because the Raiders made the wrong kind of history, blowing a 20-point lead to lose to the Cardinals in overtime 29-23.

And it wasn’t just a 20-point lead, it was a 20-0 shutout at the half. Completely lopsided in favor of the Raiders. And all that dominance was flipped on its head in the second half.

For that reason, we’re going to start this week’s edition with the Busters, saving the list of those who deserve some credit for the end.

Busters

WR Hunter Renfrow

With the score tied 23-23 in overtime, the Raiders made a stop and were driving to try and escape with a victory. Renfrow ended all that and the game with consecutive fumbles, the second one recovered by the defense and returned for the game-winning touchdown.

In case you need a refresher, that’s both games this season that ended with two fumbles. Last week it was Derek Carr fumbling twice, this week it’s his usually sure-handed receiver who did it. Double woof.

QB Derek Carr, HC Josh McDaniels

In a second half in which the Raiders’ offense was stagnant and the entire team was watching their commanding lead slip away, the ball was not being thrown to their best receiver. How in the world does that happen?

Adams saw exactly one pass in the second half. Carr attempted to throw to Adams twice on their drive in overtime. The first one was short and incomplete. The second was off-target deep and nearly intercepted.

In a game where the Raiders may have needed just one big play in the second half to hold on, they didn’t throw for their big play receiver. McDaniels and Carr were instead too often content with dumps and check-downs without a single completion that traveled more than nine yards through the air.

LB Jayon Brown, LB Divine Deablo

The Raiders missed their middle linebacker in this one. Without Denzel Perryman, Brown and Deablo played nearly every snap and were picked apart, especially in the second half.

On the Cardinals’ first scoring drive, Deablo gave up a catch and missed the tackle while Brown was way out of position on a 29-yard pass play. The second-longest play of the game. On the next play, Brown was blocked onto his back to allow a 13-yard tight end screen. Two plays later, Deablo allowed an eight-yard read-option pitch.

The longest play of the day went for 30 yards on a pitch to open the fourth quarter and, again, Brown was blocked on the play. Then on the next drive, he was mowed over by the running back to give up the touchdown run from one yard out.

The game-tying drive saw Brown give up a 10-yard catch, he and Deablo caught flat-footed on an 11-yard catch. Deablo in particular was brutal on that drive. He was out of position on a nine-yard run, then give up the edge on fourth down to allow Kyler Murray to scramble for the first down, gave up a six-yard catch, and a ten-yard catch that put the Cardinals in first down at the 12-yard-line.

RT Jermaine Eluemunor, RT Thayer Munford, RG Lester Cotton Sr, C Dylan Parham

The entire right side of the Raiders’ offensive line struggled in this game. Their problems didn’t start in the second half, they were evident from the start. For instance, on the second play of the game, Eluemunor gave up the sack. Cotton could’ve helped him out, but didn’t. On the same drive Eluemunor gave up a tackle for a six-yard loss on a blown-up screen play. Parham and Cotton gave up a run stuff for no gain on that drive as well.

In the second possession, as soon as the Raiders got into the red zone, Parham was flagged for holding and Eluemunor gave up a hit on Carr on third down, forcing them to settle for a field goal.

Eluemunor left with an injury in favor of the rookie Munford. On his first play, he was flagged for holding. A few plays later on the same drive, he gave up a run stuff for no gain and on the next play was flagged for illegal formation.

This was all in the first half. And despite all these issues, the Raiders were somehow still up 20-0.

Eluemunor came back in in the third quarter. We know because on first and goal from the seven, he gave up the run stuff for no gain. Two plays later, Cotton gave up a hit on Carr, leading to an incompletion and the Raiders settled for another field goal to go up 23-7.

The Raiders would get a total of eight plays in the fourth quarter. In part because Parham gave up a hit on Carr to lead out a three-and-out, and gave up a tackle for a loss of four on a run on the other possession.

Those quick possessions gave the Cardinals plenty of time to drive for two touchdowns with successful two-point conversions to tie it up and send the game to overtime.

DE Chandler Jones

Through two games, Jones has been a non-factor. He’s been seemingly downright non-existent at times. And this was against his former team, so he had plenty of motivation.

I spotted him a couple of times in this game. When he missed the tackle on first and goal from the ten to give up a five-yard run. That ultimately led to the Cardinals’ first touchdown. That was one.

A couple of other times came on the final drive of the game when he didn’t keep containment to allow Murray to scramble for a five-yard first down. Or when he whiffed on that sack on fourth down that Murray kept alive long enough to garner a holding penalty in the secondary. That put them in first and goal.

Jones played 78 snaps (90%). He finished with three tackles and the only play he made was getting second pressure after Maxx Crosby which led to an intentional grounding penalty.

Raiders Week 15 snap counts vs Browns: Cory Littleton barely sees field in favor of Divine Deablo

Cory Littleton saw his fewest snaps since joining the #Raiders two years ago. They opted for rookie Divine Deablo instead.

Cory Littleton has been a starter at linebacker for the Raiders the past two seasons. He has started in every game in which he’s appeared…until Monday.

For the first time since Littleton signed a free-agent contract with the Raiders in the 2020 offseason, he didn’t start. Not only did he not get the start, but he also played just five snaps.

Meanwhile, rookie Divine Deablo started his second game alongside veteran KJ Wright who played every snap with Denzel Perryman again out with an ankle injury.

It’s possible the Raiders were just using this combination for this game expecting a run-heavy attack and Littleton is a weakside linebacker. But it’s also an indication the Raiders are liking what they see from Deablo and are getting him snaps with big plans for him.

Also worth noting is Malcolm Koonce didn’t play a single snap in the game. Another sign the Raiders were focusing on stopping the run as Clelin Ferrell and Carl Nassib are better options in that area.

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