Ballers for Raiders Preseason Week 2 vs Cowboys

Ballers for Raiders Preseason Week 2 vs Cowboys

There wasn’t much to cheer about in the Raiders second preseason matchup of 2024. But there were some bright spots here and there. And since these games don’t count, it’s easier to celebrate the small victories.

Ballers

WR Tre Tucker

This game was the Tre Tucker show. He had another long ball in this game, just as he did in the preseason opener. This one went for 48 yards and set up the Raiders’ first score. He might have had one on the first drive of the game had Minshew seen him break open. He would finish the game with three catches for 66 yards.

Tucker also did work in the return game, running a punt back 42 yards to put the Raiders at the Dallas 28 and setting up their second score of the game.

WR DJ Turner

The man who was to be Tucker’s primary competition at slot receiver has the Raiders thinking of ways to get both players on the field.

The Raiders had one touchdown drive in the game. It was their lone third down drive. And it was all Turner. He caught a short dump pass and turned it into 12 yards to put the Raiders in scoring range. Then on fourth and two, he made the catch for a seven-yard gain. A few plays later, on third and five, Turner made an outstanding grab, reaching around the outstretched arm of a defender to pull it in and put the Raiders in first and goal at the eight.

CB Jack Jones

Jones pass breakups ended the Cowboys’ first two drives. He also tied for the team lead with six tackles.

DE Elerson Smith

Smith blew up a run for a loss to end the Cowboys’ first possession of the third quarter. Then on the Cowboys’ final drive, he forced a holding penalty and on the next play got a pressure leading to an incompletion.

Continue to the Busters…

Raiders first teamers can’t get anything going, fall to Cowboys 27-12

Whatever excitement that may have been created by the Raiders in their first preseason game last week was not there for an encore performance in Week two. The Raiders fielded nearly all of their healthy starters on both sides of the ball. The only …

Whatever excitement that may have been created by the Raiders in their first preseason game last week was not there for an encore performance in Week two.

The Raiders fielded nearly all of their healthy starters on both sides of the ball. The only players absent unexpetedly were wide receiver Davante Adams and tight end Brock Bowers.

Meanwhile the Cowboys fielded all reserves from the start. And yet the Raiders couldn’t find the end zone in the first half and never led in the game.

Gardner Minshew got the start this time at quarterback and played well into the second quarter before giving way to Aidan O’Connell who played well into the second half.

Over five drives with Minshew at the helm, the Raiders offense managed just one field goal. That score came on a stalled drive after a 48-yard connection with WR Tre Tucker on a deep ball. It was the second week in a row Minshew and Tucker connected on a deep ball. Last week it was a 44 yard bomb

The other drives yielded two punts and two failed fourth down conversion attempts for turnovers on downs.

A huge punt return by Tucker (there’s that man again) in the second quarter would put the Raiders in field goal range and Daniel Carlson put the Raiders up 6-3.

With Trey Lance in at QB for the Cowboys, going against mostly first team defenders for the Raiders — only the starting defensive line had been pulled — the Cowboys marched down the field for the touchdown to take a 10-6 lead. And a Brandon Aubrey 66-yard field goal in the final seconds gave the Cowboys a 13-6 lead at the half.

The third quarter was a rollercoaster for Aidan O’Connell. He drove the Raiders for their first touchdown of the game on a short pass for Harrison Bryant to bring it to a one-point game. The Raiders went for two and O’Connell threw from a backpedal to no one and the score remained a 13-12 Dallas lead.

The Cowboys didn’t respond, so the Raiders had.a chance to take the lead. Instead, O’Connell was intercepted and it was returned for a touchdown to make it a 20-12 Cowboys lead early in the fourth quarter.

That would be O’Connell’s last play in the game as he was replaced at QB by Carter Bradley.

Unlike the preseason opener, Bradley was actually allowed to put the ball in the air. And he completed his first six passes . But consecutive incompletions and the Raiders had to punt.

Once again, the Cowboys marched down the field, again led by Trey Lance, going 98 yards on 13 plays and with Lance finishing it off with keeper for the touchdown. That was the final score of 27-12.

Gardner Minshew gets start for Raiders, can’t find end zone vs Cowboys backups

Gardner Minshew got five drives vs Cowboys backups and couldn’t punch it in.

Just as head coach Antonio Pierce said would happen, Gardner Minshew got the start for the Raiders Saturday night. Aidan O’Connell had gotten the start for the preseason opener in Minnesota and Minshew came in for the second quarter. So, they switched out this time and Minshew took the field first.

Minshew played well into the second quarter, which had him play five drives. And despite the Cowboys not fielding any of their starters, the Raiders offense didn’t put it in the end zone in that time.

The first drive, he made it to midfield and the Raiders opted to go for it on fourth and three. Minshews short pass was nearly picked off to turn it over on downs.

The Cowboys took the short field and drove into field goal range to take a 3-0 lead.

Minshew would answer with a 48-yard deep shot to Tre Tucker, but couldn’t finish it off with a touchdown, settling for a game tying field goal.

From there it was two drives that ended in a punt and another drive that ended with a turnover on downs.

Minshew had a very good game in the preseason opener, scoring on each of four drives, including two for touchdowns. This was not a great encore.

Davante Adams OUT vs Cowboys in Preseason Week 2

Davante Adams OUT vs Cowboys in Preseason Week 2

Last week Davante Adams said, if it were up to him, he wouldn’t play in the preseason. His head coach responded by saying “If you’re healthy, you’ll play.”

But in the end, Adams preference won out apparently. As Adams didn’t dress for tonight’s preseason game against the Cowboys.

Adams had missed the first preseason game in Minnesota because he was back in Las Vegas awaiting the birth of his son. When the team returned to Las Vegas, Davante rejoined the team this week.

He was asked about whether he will play in the second preseason game and  spoke honestly that it wasn’t what he’d prefer. Adding that the last time he played in the preseason was the 2017.

But Antonio Pierce is a former player and he’s old school. He had all the healthy starters in the opener last week, and that’s what he wanted to do this week as well. And in that, Davante would be included. But apparently something changed between now and then.

Raiders vs Cowboys: How to watch, listen, stream Week 2 of Preseason

Raiders vs Cowboys Preseason Week 2: How to watch

This week the Raiders and Cowboys move into Week two of the preseason. For those who are interested in watching, here’s how to go about doing that:

Who: Dallas Cowboys at Las Vegas Raiders

What: Preseason Week 2

Where: Allegiant Stadium, Las Vegas NV

Date: Saturday, August 17

Time: 7pm Pacific (9pm CT, 10pm ET)

Watch: NFL Network, FOX 5 Las Vegas, CBS Dallas (watch free with Fubo)

Stream: Raiders.com, FuboTV (try it free)

Raiders TV broadcast team: Jason Horowitz, Matt Millen, Rich Gannon

Cowboys TV broadcast team: Bill Jones, Isaiah Stanback, Kyle Youmans

Radio: Click here for full list of stations

Radio broadcast team: JT The Brick, Lincoln Kennedy, Eric Allen

Cowboys coverage: Cowboys Wire

Coverage:

Raiders updated depth chart heading into Week 2 of preseason

Antonio Pierce talks about whether starters will play vs Cowboys

DJ Glaze to step up at RT with Thayer Munford injuring both hands

Raiders 53-man roster prediction after preseason opener

Raider bring back QB Nathan Peterman

Ballers & Busters for Raiders Week 12 vs Cowboys

Ballers & Busters for Raiders Week 12 vs Cowboys

It was a happy, albeit very long, Thanksgiving for the Raiders. In a game that took nearly four hours in real-time, the Raiders would go blow-for-blow with the Cowboys and come out on top in the end with a 36-33 overtime win.

Ballers

WR DeSean Jackson

There were no questions whatsoever that the difference in this Raiders offense from their three-game losing streak was the presence of Jackson. This offense showed just how toothless it was without a deep threat since Henry Ruggs III was released.

Jackson is 12 years Ruggs’s senior, but the savvy veteran still has the speed to get open and separate from defenders. He put that on display early in this one, getting behind a defender, making the catch, and cruising 56 yards for a touchdown to give the Raiders a 7-0 lead.

Just his presence was clearly opening things up for others and the Raiders offense was resurrected. With the Raiders in scoring position already late in the second quarter, Jackson forced a pass interference in the end zone that put them in first and goal from the one and they scored on the next play to give them a 14-6 lead.

Another pass interference from Jackson’s man set the Raiders up for a field goal late in the third quarter and they took a 27-19 lead. The next two Raiders scoring drives began with Jackson catches of 16 and 29 yards respectively to give the Raiders a 33-30 lead late. It’s no coincidence the game Jackson sees his snaps basically triple, the Raiders score a season-high 36 points.

K Daniel Carlson

Five field goals — a career-high. A 56-yard field goal to give the Raiders a late lead — a career-high. Game-winner in overtime — BALLER. Turkey leg. Goodnight.

DT Johnathan Hankins

Hankins is a big man. He likes to eat. It was Thanksgiving. And he was feasting. Four different times in this game, Big Hank made the big play on the drive.

We start with the Cowboys’ third drive. On the first play, Hankins stuffs a run for two yards. That helped lead to a three-and-out. Next drive he was held on a run. Three plays late, the drive was over.

The first Dallas drive of the third quarter featured Hankins batting a ball down at the line. The drive would stall a few plays later. In the final possession of the third quarter, Hankins stuffed a run for one yard and it led to another three-and-out.

The overtime period began with the Cowboys on offense at their own seven-yard-line. On the second play, Hankins ran down a screen — yes all 340 pounds of him — to make the stop at four yards. It led to a three-and-out and a punt from their own end zone. The Raiders would then drive for the game-winner.

RB Josh Jacobs

Jacobs put up a season-high 87 yards rushing and had 112 yards from scrimmage. He also scored a touchdown from one yard out late in the second quarter to give the Raiders a 14-6 lead.

The next Raiders drive saw him break a tackle on a screen pass and go for 17 yards. He added a nine-yard run from the 20 and a three-yard run to put the Raiders in third and goal from the three, but the Raiders couldn’t get the TD and settled for a chip shot field goal.

Early in the third, Jacobs would help the Raiders get back into goal-to-go with consecutive six-yard runs. This time Mariota came in and faked the handoff to Jacobs and took it in for the touchdown and a 24-13 lead.

In the overtime period, Jacobs started the Raiders’ drive with an eight-yard catch off a swing pass, followed by an 18-yard run that put the Raiders in Dallas territory at the 49. They would go on to win it on a short field goal.

WR Hunter Renfrow, QB Derek Carr

Carr was slinging it again and Renfrow was his favorite target. So much so that the shifty slot receiver set career marks in catches (8) and yards (134). He also had career-long catches TWICE in this game.

The day started with Carr throwing a surgical pass over the defender to Desean Jackson for a 56-yard touchdown. The next two scoring drives would feature completions on third and long to Bryan Edwards (12 yards) and Zay Jones (12 yards).

Early in the third quarter, Carr connected with Renfrow for 31 yards — a new career-long catch for Renfrow. It would put the Raiders at the Dallas 44. Two plays later Carr went back to Renfrow for 14 yards. That drive would end in a touchdown.

The Cowboys would answer with a 100-yard kick return for a touchdown by Tony Pollard. Carr was inspired by Pollard’s wheels and on the ensuing drive, he broke off a season-best 22-yard run on third and 11. That drive would lead to a field goal and a 27-19 lead.

Carr found Jackson again for 16 yards to begin the next drive. Then Renfrow broke open deep and made another career-long catch of 54 yards to the Dallas 15. They would settle for a field goal and a 30-22 lead.

No doubt the Raiders and Derek Carr benefited greatly from a few pass interference penalties in this game. But even with the yards on those penalties, Carr still completed 24 passes for 373 yards and a touchdown.

S Johnathan Abram, DE Yannick Ngakoue

The Cowboys opened the game with a three-and-out with Ngakoue making the run stop on second down and Abram making the tackle on a one-yard catch on third and four.

After a Dallas scoring drive, they went three-and-out again. On third and 13, Abram had coverage on an incompletion.

With the Raiders holding a 17-6 lead late in the second quarter, Ngakoue got around Tyron Smith to put a hit on Dak Prescott to force an incompletion. Two plays later, they would attempt a 59-yard field goal and miss it, giving the Raiders good field position.

With a chance to take a lead early in the third quarter, the Raiders defense stiffened up just in time. On third and ten, Abram made the stop on a seven-yard screen to force a punt.

Later in the quarter, the Cowboys would score on a 100-yard kick return. They opted to go for two and Abram burst past his blocker to blow up the play and keep the score at 24-19. That would turn out to be a crucial stop.

Early in the fourth quarter, it appeared for a moment that Abram had given up a touchdown. But Ngakoue was held on the play and the Cowboys were marched back to third and 13 and would settle for a field goal. The next Dallas possession ended with and three-and-out and Ngakoue sacking Prescott on third and five.

Just as Abram stopped the two-point conversion attempt earlier, he surrendered one on a catch late in the fourth that tied up the game at 30-30. But you can’t fault him too much because had he not made the first stop, that would have been an extra-point attempt for the lead.

Abram would put up two tackles on the Cowboys’ final drive of regulation and the first tackle of overtime to finish with a team-leading ten combined tackles.

Ngakoue would add his team-leading eighth sack of the season and lead the team in this game with two QB hits and a tackle for loss.

P AJ Cole

Four of his five punts were stopped inside the 20. He finished with a net of 45.4 yards per punt.

LG John Simpson

He made the block to clear the way for Josh Jacobs to score untouched from one yard out. The next drive he blocked for Kenyan Drake on a four-yard run that put the Raiders in first and goal. Simpson’s biggest play came on the next drive when he recovered Derek Carr’s fumble off the strip-sack.

[lawrence-newsletter]

Raiders Week 12 snap counts vs Cowboys: Desean Jackson makes presence felt

Raiders Week 12 snap counts vs Cowboys: Desean Jackson makes presence felt

It took a few weeks, but Desean Jackson showed on Sunday that he’s finding his way in the Raiders offense. And his presence showed how important the offense needed him.

The veteran receiver had seen a combined 25 snaps in his first two games with the team and put up just one catch for 38 yards and fumbled that catch. Sunday in Dallas, he saw a season-high 42 snaps (48%). He hadn’t put up that many snaps in a game even through seven games with the Rams this season.

With those snaps, he caught three passes for 102 yards and a touchdown. He also drew two pass interference penalties that both led to points for the Raiders.

If it wasn’t already clear in the Raiders’ three-game losing streak how much this offense was missing a deep threat, Jackson’s emergence Sunday should shine a bright spotlight on that fact.

It should also tell you that Jackson has still got the goods to be that guy.

OFFENSE Spec Tms
Player Pos Num Pct Num Pct
Brandon Parker T 87 100% 8 19%
Alex Leatherwood T 87 100% 8 19%
John Simpson G 87 100% 8 19%
Kolton Miller T 87 100% 8 19%
Andre James C 87 100% 0 0%
Derek Carr QB 86 99% 0 0%
Foster Moreau TE 77 89% 27 64%
Hunter Renfrow WR 64 74% 8 19%
Bryan Edwards WR 63 72% 1 2%
Zay Jones WR 60 69% 11 26%
Josh Jacobs RB 57 66% 1 2%
DeSean Jackson WR 42 48% 0 0%
Darren Waller TE 21 24% 0 0%
Kenyan Drake RB 16 18% 1 2%
Daniel Helm TE 14 16% 19 45%
Jalen Richard RB 14 16% 11 26%
Sutton Smith FB 6 7% 15 36%
Marcus Mariota QB 2 2% 0 0%
DEFENSE Spec Tms
Player Pos Num Pct Num Pct
Trevon Moehrig FS 74 100% 23 55%
Johnathan Abram SS 74 100% 12 29%
Casey Hayward CB 74 100% 2 5%
Denzel Perryman LB 71 96% 0 0%
Maxx Crosby DE 66 89% 6 14%
Nate Hobbs CB 59 80% 16 38%
Yannick Ngakoue DE 58 78% 0 0%
Cory Littleton LB 53 72% 16 38%
Quinton Jefferson DT 53 72% 6 14%
Brandon Facyson CB 52 70% 13 31%
Solomon Thomas DT 42 57% 6 14%
Johnathan Hankins NT 38 51% 6 14%
Dallin Leavitt FS 22 30% 33 79%
Desmond Trufant CB 22 30% 3 7%
Clelin Ferrell DE 17 23% 15 36%
K.J. Wright LB 15 20% 0 0%
Damion Square NT 13 18% 0 0%
Carl Nassib DE 8 11% 2 5%
Amik Robertson CB 3 4% 8 19%
SPECIAL TEAMS Spec Tms
Player Pos Num Pct Num Pct
Marquel Lee LB 0 0% 33 79%
Divine Deablo LB 0 0% 27 64%
Patrick Onwuasor LB 0 0% 20 48%
Dillon Stoner WR 0 0% 17 40%
Daniel Carlson K 0 0% 17 40%
Trent Sieg LS 0 0% 13 31%
AJ Cole III P 0 0% 13 31%
Roderic Teamer CB 0 0% 11 26%
Nick Martin C 0 0% 8 19%
Jermaine Eluemunor G 0 0% 8 19%

Raiders K Daniel Carlson kicks game-winner in career-game days after bout with food poisoning

Raiders K Daniel Carlson kicks game-winner in career-game days after bout with food poisoning

Four times Daniel Carlson lined up to attempt the game-winning the game for the Raiders in overtime over the Cowboys. Penalties by both teams kept having him retry it. The fourth time he finally got it away and drilled it to give the Raiders the 36-33 victory.

It’s appropriate that it took four tries for it to count because it took perfection on four previous tries in regulation to get the Raiders in that position in the first place.

The last of those four field goals came from 56 yards out to give the Raiders a 33-30 lead with just under two minutes left. It was also the longest field goal of Carlson’s career. And it was huge because it meant the Cowboys were driving for a field goal to tie it up rather than to win it in regulation.

Carlson’s clutch long field goal late in the game, gave way to his clutch game-winner in overtime. And it gave him a career-high five made field goals.

That kind of day had his teammates feeling pretty confident in their kicker’s abiltities.

“When I seen him talk to AJ [Cole], he looked at AJ and they shook their head like this I said ‘oh yeah, that’s going in’,” said RB Josh Jacobs, who referred to Carlson as “Sniper.”

Pretty awesome especially considering just a few days ago Carlson was sick with food poisoning.

“I had like a little food poisoning on Monday, but besides that I was doing pretty good all week,” said Carlson.

“I told them I’ll find a way to play if I need to. Find some adult diapers or whatever. Get a trash bag on the sideline or whatever.”

Luckily for Carlson it didn’t come to any of that. And lucky for the Raiders that he was at his best because even a missed extra point — as Cowboys’ kicker Greg Zierlein had — and it would have been Dallas players eating turkey legs on the sideline after the game instead of Carlson.

“Just hitting the ball pretty good and feeling pretty confident,” Carlson added. “One kick at a time. Wherever the team’s able to set me up, I got to go out there and perform my job and the whole unit all day did a great job, so they helped me out.”

Raiders lose TE Darren Waller to knee injury

Raiders lose TE Darren Waller to knee injury

There are a lot of injuries where the Raiders can confidently say ‘Next man up’. Darren Waller is not one of them. But that’s the situation they’re in for the second of half against the Cowboys.

Waller left early in the second quarter with a knee injury and didn’t return. When the team took the field after the half, he was no longer suited up and officially ruled OUT.

The Pro Bowl tight end is the Raiders’ best player and leading receiver. He’s coming off a game season-best game last week against the Chiefs in which he caught seven passes for 116 yards.

He injured himself on his second catch of the game and the team clearly missed him on their next trip to the red zone where they would settle for a field goal after a missed connection with reserve tight end Daniel Helm.

Even with the missed opportunity, the Raiders held the 17-13 lead entering the third quarter. Though it could be difficult to hold or extend that lead without their top player.

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[lawrence-newsletter]

Watch: Raiders open with touchdown on deep strike from Derek Carr to Desean Jackson

Watch: Raiders open with touchdown on deep strike from Derek Carr to Desean Jackson

Hot start on Thanksgiving for the Raiders. After the defense stopped the Cowboys on their opening drive for a three-and-out, the offense scored a touchdown in three plays.

A three-yard run by Josh Jacobs was followed by a 12-yard catch and run by Darren Waller. Then from their own 44-yard-line, Derek Carr threw a dime for for Desean Jackson and Jackson made the catch, eluded a defender and was gone, 56 yards, for the score.

The Raiders jumped out to a 7-0 lead with just under 12 minutes left in the first quarter.

That strike is a great sign for an offense that has struggled to score over the past three weeks, let alone get in the end zone.

It was also a great sign for Desean Jackson who had yet to make a big play in his first two games with the team. He was signed to be the team’s deep threat, which is to say to make plays just like this one.