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

Assessing Raiders level of need at linebacker with free agency approaching

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

Returning starters: Divine Deablo

Depth: Luke Masterson, Darien Butler, Harvey Langi, Curtis Bolton
Free agents: Denzel Perryman, Jayon Brown, Micah Kiser

Deablo earned the starting job entering his second NFL season. After eight start, he was lost for the remainder of the season.

Perryman headed to the Pro Bowl after the 2021 season. He followed that up with 84 combined tackles last season while missing five games and seeing less than 70% of the snaps in five other games.

Undrafted rookie Masterson stepped in for Perryman to make seven starts. He showed some flashes and it may be a risky proposition to expect him to step into a starting job full time.

Condition: Serious

Why: Losing Perryman would be significant. If they don’t re-sign him, they will have to be in the market for his replacement.

[mm-video type=playlist id=01eqby7y715wxzbczy player_id=01eqbvhghtkmz2182d image=]

Raiders send LB Jayon Brown to injured reserve, sign 2 to practice squad

Jayon Brown’s season is over as he heads to IR. Raiders also add two to the practice squad

With Divine Deablo sent to injured reserve last month, Jayon Brown had seen four starts for the Raiders. That was until he suffered a hand injury in the win over the Chargers and missed last Thursday’s game against the Rams.

Today the Raiders shut down Brown for the season, sending him to injured reserve. This is the third season in a row for Brown that he’s been sent to IR as the Titans placed him on IR in each of the past two seasons.

Brown’s place on the roster was filled by the addition of G Netane Muti from the Broncos practice squad.

They had a couple spots available on the practice squad in part from signing Hroniss Grasu to the active roster.

Brown to IR and Grasu to the active roster meant linebacker and center were in need of bodies, so the team added LB Kana’i Mauga and C/G Willie Wright to the practice squad.

Mauga is an undrafted rookie out of USC. He originally signed with the Broncos in 2022 and has spent time on their practice squad.

Wright has spent time on the practice squads for the Browns (2019) and Falcons (2020) during his career and spent last offseason with the Titans. He went undrafted out of Tulsa in 2019.

[mm-video type=playlist id=01eqby7y715wxzbczy player_id=01eqbvhghtkmz2182d image=]

Raiders, Rams final Week 14 injury report: DT Aaron Donald OUT, CB Rock Ya-Sin OUT

The Rams will be without DT Aaron Donald while the Raiders will be without CB Rock Ya-Sin Thursday Night.

The final injury report is out and both the Raiders and Rams have significant missing players.

The most significant, of course, is Aaron Donald for the Rams who will miss the game with an ankle injuiry. Others OUT for the Rams include linebacker Travin Howard (hip) and Terrell Lewis (back) as well as DB David Long (groin).

The Raiders will be without starting cornerback Rock Ya-Sin who suffered a knee injury in last Sunday’s win over the Chargers. They will also be without starting DT Andrew Billings for a second straight week, LB Jayon Brown (hand) and TE Jesper Horsted (concussion).

Questionable for the Raiders are CB Tyler Hall (back) and RB Josh Jacobs (quad/calf).

Questionable for the Rams are CB Troy Hill (groin), WR Lance McCutcheon (shoulder), QB John Wolford (neck), and WR Brandon Powell (illness).

[mm-video type=playlist id=01eqby7y715wxzbczy player_id=01eqbvhghtkmz2182d image=]

Ballers & Busters for Raiders Week 11 vs Broncos

Ballers & Busters for Raiders Week 11 vs Broncos

It was a nail-biter for these two teams trying to fight their way out of the ranks of the worst teams in the NFL. It was also a field goal festival as neither team does well in putting the ball in the end zone.

The game went back and forth all game with regulation ending with a 16-16 tie. Then the Raiders got the ball first and ended it in three plays.

Ballers

ED Maxx Crosby

It was the offense that won the game in overtime. But it was Crosby who got this game to OT in the first place. As the game went on, it was clear Russell Wilson was downright terrified of Crosby every time he got near him. And you can’t blame him, honestly.

With the Broncos up 10-7 approaching halftime, they lined up in third and one from inside the five-yard-line. Melvin Gordon took the handoff and looked like he would pick it up, but Crosby punched the ball out. The Broncos recovered, thinking they could at least get a field goal out of it. Crosby had other plans. He blocked the field goal try and in two plays turned a long Broncos drive into zero points.

He then ended three consecutive Broncos drives in the third quarter with two sacks and a pressure to force an incompletion. He would end another Broncos drive in the fourth quarter and they settled for a field goal to take a 16-13 lead. Holding them to three turned out to be the answer as the Raiders tied it up at the end and won it in OT.

WR Davante Adams

It was Adams’s savvy route running that sealed the Broncos’ fate. He had noted the way Patrick Surtain was covering him and made it look like he was running an over route only to run a corner route. Surtain sold out for the over, leaving Adams wide open for an *easy* 35-yard walk-off touchdown.

Adams scored both the Raiders’ touchdowns in the game. The first one came in the second quarter from 31 yards out. This after making a 23-yard catch to start out the drive. In total, he had seven catches for 141 yards and two touchdowns.

One of his more heads-up plays wasn’t a catch at all. Early in the fourth quarter with the Raiders down 13-10, Carr stared him down, causing the pass to be batted at the line and Adams turned defender to slap the ball down to keep it from being intercepted. That allowed for Daniel Carlson to come out and hit a 57-yard field goal to tie it.

LB Denzel Perryman

Perryman was definitely back. His presence is noticeable on this defense and he was feeling good too.

The defense started to pick things up in the second half. It started with Perryman shooting into the backfield to make a tackle for loss, helping lead to a three-and-out. He also led out the fourth quarter with a tackle for loss which led to another three-and-out.

Perryman finished tied for the team lead with five solo tackles, two for a loss and two QB hits.

RB Josh Jacobs

Jacobs was just churning out first downs in this game. He had three in the drive late in the first quarter to put them in scoring range, including a 14-yard run. He had two more on their touchdown drive in the second quarter.

Jacobs started out their second scoring drive with a 15-yard run. Then he had three consecutive runs for a total of 18 yards to set up their third score. And he made a 43-yard catch to set up their game-tying field goal at the end of regulation.

Jacobs finished with 109 yards on the ground and 160 yards from scrimmage.

G Dylan Parham

Somebody had to block for all those Jacobs runs. And often times that man was Parham. The rookie left guard was a rare bright spot on this shoddy Raiders offensive line. And he did his work without his lefthand man, Kolton Miller in the lineup.

Parham cleared the way on two good runs by Jacobs on their first drive into scoring range and the second went for a first down. And his block on a five-yard Jacobs run in the fourth quarter set up the long field goal to tie it at 13-13.

K Daniel Carlson

Rather unexpected that Carlson is named a Baller in the game that had his first missed field goal in over a year. But after missing from 46 yards out, Carlson went on to make from 52 yards out, a career-high 57-yarder, and the game-tying field goal from 25 yards away at the end of regulation.

He may have had a 56-yard field goal as well, but for some reason, Josh McDaniels opted to punt it instead. It was a strange decision to say the least, especially considering Carlson nailed the 57-yarder in the thin Denver air.

Honorable Mention

S Roderick Teamer — Looked better than Johnathan Abram did on his best day. Had some nice coverage and solid tackles and filled in well for Duron Harmon when he left with cramps.

LT Jermaine Eluemunor — Filled in admirably for the injured Kolton Miller. He wasn’t stellar, but wasn’t a glaring liability either, which is saying a lot considering the difficulty of the position.

Raiders snap counts vs Colts: LB Jayon Brown goes from inactive for a month to playing every snap

You know it’s bad when Jayon Brown goes from inactive for a month to playing every snap

You know it’s bad at linebacker when the guy who was relegated to inactive every week for the past month ends up starting and playing every snap.

That’s what happened with the Raiders Sunday with Jayon Brown. The veteran linebacker was relegated to the inactive list for the previous four games, but due to the injuries to Divine Deablo and Denzel Perryman along with the sudden retirement of Blake Gonzalez, he was forced into service.

Along with Brown’s jump in snaps, so too did as couple of undrafted rookies. Fourth on the team in snaps was CB Sam Webb who missed just two defensive snaps in the game. LB Luke Masterson also saw his snaps go up, seeing 47 defensive snaps (72%)

Offense Spec Tms
Player Pos Num Pct Num Pct
Dylan Parham G 70 100% 2 9%
Alex Bars G 70 100% 2 9%
Kolton Miller T 70 100% 2 9%
Jermaine Eluemunor G 70 100% 2 9%
Andre James C 70 100% 0 0%
Derek Carr QB 70 100% 0 0%
Mack Hollins WR 67 96% 3 13%
Foster Moreau TE 67 96% 1 4%
Davante Adams WR 65 93% 0 0%
Josh Jacobs RB 55 79% 0 0%
Keelan Cole WR 48 69% 3 13%
Jakob Johnson FB 20 29% 10 43%
Ameer Abdullah RB 15 21% 14 61%
Thayer Munford T 5 7% 2 9%
Jesper Horsted TE 4 6% 13 57%
DJ Turner WR 2 3% 6 26%
Zamir White RB 2 3% 5 22%
Defense Spec Tms
Player Pos Num Pct Num Pct
Jayon Brown LB 65 100% 1 4%
Rock Ya-Sin CB 65 100% 0 0%
Trevon Moehrig FS 65 100% 0 0%
Sam Webb CB 63 97% 7 30%
Maxx Crosby DE 63 97% 5 22%
Duron Harmon SS 58 89% 4 17%
Bilal Nichols DT 56 86% 5 22%
Luke Masterson LB 47 72% 13 57%
Chandler Jones DE 46 71% 0 0%
Andrew Billings DT 40 62% 0 0%
Amik Robertson CB 33 51% 0 0%
Kendal Vickers DT 29 45% 4 17%
Kyle Peko DT 28 43% 4 17%
Tashawn Bower DE 19 29% 7 30%
Sidney Jones CB 15 23% 0 0%
Anthony Averett CB 9 14% 0 0%
Darien Butler LB 7 11% 20 87%
Roderic Teamer SS 5 8% 11 48%
Malcolm Koonce DE 3 5% 1 4%
Special Teams Spec Tms
Player Pos Num Pct Num Pct
Matthias Farley FS 0 0% 21 91%
Isaiah Pola-Mao FS 0 0% 18 78%
Brandon Bolden RB 0 0% 17 74%
Curtis Bolton LB 0 0% 16 70%
Brittain Brown RB 0 0% 9 39%
Trent Sieg LS 0 0% 7 30%
AJ Cole III P 0 0% 7 30%
Daniel Carlson K 0 0% 6 26%
John Simpson G 0 0% 2 9%
Lester Cotton G 0 0% 2 9%
Jacob Hollister TE 0 0% 1 4

[mm-video type=playlist id=01eqby7y715wxzbczy player_id=none image=https://raiderswire.usatoday.com/wp-content/plugins/mm-video/images/playlist-icon.png]

Raiders, Chiefs final Week 5 injury report: WR Hunter Renfrow returns

After missing 2 two weeks with a concussion, Hunter Renfrow is a go for Monday Night vs the Chiefs

There was a good deal of good news on the Raiders injury report this week. Namely those who were removed from it come the final designations.

Most notable is the return of Hunter Renfrow. The Pro Bowl slot receiver had missed the past two games with a concussion. He was a full participant in practice this week for the first time since week two and was removed from the injury report today.

Renfrow wasn’t the only starter for the Raiders to return from injury this week. Rock Ya-Sin — who missed the game against the Broncos with a knee injury — was also given a clean bill of health. As was Denzel Perryman who left the Broncos game before halftime with a concussion.

A surprise addition to the injury report this week was linebacker Jayon Brown, who missed the last two practices with a hamstring injury and has been ruled OUT.

Brown’s injury prompted the Raiders to sign Blake Martinez just days after having added him to the practice squad.

TE Foster Moreau was a limited participant in practice Saturday after missing the past two practices and the Broncos game with a knee injury.

The Chiefs will be without kicker Harrison Butker with an ankle injury.

5 things to know about Titans-Raiders Week 3 matchup

Five things to know about the Titans-Raiders Week 3 matchup.

The Tennessee Titans and Las Vegas Raiders will meet in Week 3 in a battle between a pair of 0-2 teams that desperately need a win.

The Titans’ start has been ugly. First, they lost to one of the worst teams in the NFL the last five years, the New York Giants, in Week 1, and then they were crushed by the Buffalo Bills in Week 2, 41-7.

Las Vegas’ start has been almost as ugly. After dropping their Week 1 contest versus the Los Angeles Chargers, the Raiders coughed up a 20-0 halftime lead and lost in overtime to the Arizona Cardinals, 29-23.

While things are looking bleak for both teams as far as making the playoffs is concerned after an 0-2 start, there is still hope. However, that slim hope gets even slimmer for the team that falls to 0-3 after this game.

Let’s take a look at that and more ahead of Titans-Raiders on Sunday.

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.

Jayon Brown says goodbye to Titans after signing with Raiders

Jayon Brown bid farewell to the Titans on Thursday night after inking a deal with the Raiders.

After five seasons in Nashville, Jayon Brown’s time with the Tennessee Titans is officially over after he signed with the Las Vegas Raiders on Thursday.

Shortly after the move was announced, Brown, a former fifth-round pick of the Titans, took to Instagram to say goodbye to the only team he has ever known.

Thank you for an amazing 5 years,” Brown wrote. “This experience has been a dream come true. Appreciate my teammates, all the support throughout the years helping me grow as a player and a man. Nashville will always be a home and has been so dope to live & play in. Thank you for the great memories!”

https://www.instagram.com/p/CbgSvHpPBxV/?utm_source=ig_web_copy_link

Brown flashed as one of the better coverage linebackers in the NFL during his time in Nashville and finished second and third on the team in tackles in 2018 and 2019, respectively, while also representing the franchise well.

However, his final two years with the Titans were plagued by injury and he, along with Rashaan Evans, ended up losing their starting jobs in 2021 with the emergences of David Long and Zach Cunningham.

The Long Beach, California native will now be playing closer to home and has a good opportunity to grab a starting job in Las Vegas. The Raiders are one of Tennessee’s home opponents in 2022, so it won’t be long before Brown returns to his old stomping grounds.

[lawrence-related id=86007,86000,85990]

[listicle id=85888]

Titans’ David Long reflects on 2021 season, how he can improve

“It felt good,” Long said about still having his starting job when he returned from injury this past season.

Linebacker David Long Jr. has quietly become one of the unsung heroes on the Tennessee Titans’ defense since being drafted in the sixth round of the 2019 NFL draft.

Coming out of West Virginia, Long possessed a unique skillset, despite being undersized at the linebacker position.

Long, at 5-foot-11, led all Mountaineers with 108 combined tackles, including a staggering 19.5 tackles for loss, during the 2018 season.

Long’s innate ability to get into the backfield has carried over into the NFL, and he has been a significant factor in why the Titans’ run defense went from 19th overall in 2020 to second-best in the league this past season.

He played in 14 games as a rookie, but Long was primarily limited to a special teams role.

In 2020, Long began to seize a starting role in the final six games of the campaign (including playoffs) when filling in for an injured Jayon Brown.

Long once again secured a starting role in 2021, but the Cincinnati, Ohio native missed six games during the middle of the year with a hamstring injury.

During that time, the Titans claimed Zach Cunningham off waivers to bolster their linebacker corps, and with Brown, Cunningham and Rashaan Evans all healthy late in the season, the Titans had four players for two starting spots when Long was healthy enough to return.

However, it spoke volumes about how the organization views Long when head coach Mike Vrabel put the blossoming linebacker right back into his starting role for the final two regular-season games.

“It felt good,” Long said, per Jim Wyatt of Titans Online. “There’s a lot of hard work that goes on behind the scenes, that I, that we, put so much heart into. So, it was good to see it pay off, me getting the spot (back) and me taking advantage of the time I was out there, capitalizing on it. And I plan to continue to do that.”

While stopping the run has always been a strength in his game, Long made strides this season in pass coverage.

He kept quarterbacks to a 70.7 completion percentage and a 61.0 QB rating on balls thrown in his direction, which was a far cry from his sophomore campaign when he permitted a completion rate of 85.3 percent and a QB rating of 110.5.

Thanks to his strong play and improvements across the board, Long has more than proven that he can be an every-down linebacker.

“I have learned a lot since I’ve been here,” Long said . “I just want to continue to get better and continue to stay on time of my health. But there is no limit for me. I think I can be any type of player that I want to be, as far as how great I can be.

“So now it is about fixing the fundamentals, and whatever it might be, to be better, and to stay on the field.”

With Long, Cunningham and 2021 third-round pick Monty Rice under contract for 2022, the Titans are set at the position and can afford to let Brown and Evans walk in free agency.

[lawrence-related id=83813,83818,83753]

[listicle id=83764]