What condition the position is in: Assessing Raiders level of need at IOL ahead of NFL Draft

Assessing Raiders level of need along the interior offensive line ahead of the Draft

We take a look at the interior offensive line for the Raiders as the draft approaches to give it a condition of either Strong, Stable, Unstable, Serious, or Critical.

Current projected starters: Dylan Parham, Andre James, Alex Bars

Depth: Netane Muti, Hroniss Grasu, Vitaly Gurman, Jordan Meredith

Parham was drafted to ultimately take over at center. But at this point, the team feels like the best thing might be for him to stay at left guard with Andre James at center. 

Once they stopped moving Parham all over the line, he settled in and had a decent second half of his rookie season. James was his usual underwhelming presence, but you can’t fix everything all at once. 

Bars was downright bad and must be replaced. They brought him back for some reason, but if he’s anything more than a utility backup, the Raiders offensive line is in trouble.

Condition: Critical

Since they neglected to sign anyone in free agency, drafting a starter at right guard is an absolute must. No position on the offense is more in need of an upgrade than that.

What condition the position is in: Assessing Raiders level of need at OT ahead of NFL Draft

Assessing Raiders level of need at OT ahead of the Draft

We take a look at the offensive tackle position for the Raiders as the draft approaches to give it a condition of either Strong, Stable, Unstable, Serious, or Critical.

Current projected starters: Kolton Miller, Jermaine Eluemunor

Depth: Thayer Munford, Brandon Parker, Jackson Barton, Sebastian Gutierrez, Justin Murray

Miller is one of the more solid left tackles in the NFL. That’s a big hole to have filled to be certain. After that there is some uncertainty.

Eluemunor played well over the second half of last season and could be a serviceable right tackle. They re-signed him this offseason, which means he will get a chance to compete for the starting job as well as perhaps move back inside to guard.

Munford was the team’s pick in the seventh round last year and he could also compete for the job at right tackle. 

Condition: Unstable

The Raiders could once again go into the offseason with a competition at right tackle. Or they could make a statement by selecting one high in the draft and thus solidifying both tackle spots for either Jimmy Garoppolo or a rookie QB. Though they can’t take tackle and QB high in this draft, so it will depend on how the draft shakes out.

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What condition the position is in: Assessing Raiders level of need at TE ahead of NFL Draft

Assessing Raiders level of need at TE ahead of the Draft

We take a look at the tight end position for the Raiders as the draft approaches to give it a condition of either Strong, Stable, Unstable, Serious, or Critical.

Current projected starter: Austin Hooper

Depth: OJ Howard, Jesper Horsted, Cole Fotheringham

Tight end has been one of the strongest positions on the Raiders the past few seasons. And within a 24-hour period this offseason, all of that changed. 

They traded away Pro Bowl tight end and franchise all-time single-season reception record holder Darren Waller and let Foster Moreau hit free agency.

They replaced Waller and Moreau with Austin Hooper and OJ Howard.

Once upon a time, Hooper made a couple Pro Bowls. But he hasn’t broken 450 yards receiving in a season in three years. Howard is much farther away, having not broken even 150 yards in the past three years.

Condition: Serious

Hooper and Howard don’t really look like the answer at tight end, but rather placeholders. Sure, they can both contribute, but day two pick at tight end would go a long way to bolstering this unit.

What condition the position is in: Assessing Raiders level of need at WR ahead of NFL Draft

Assessing Raiders level of need at WR ahead of the Draft

We take a look at the wide receiver position for the Raiders as the draft approaches to give it a condition of either Strong, Stable, Unstable, Serious, or Critical.

Starters: Davante Adams, Hunter Renfrow, Jakobi Meyers

Depth: Phillip Dorsett, DeAndre Carter, Keelan Cole, Cam Sims, DJ Turner, Chris Lacy, Tyler Johnson, Isaiah Zuber

DaVante Adams is arguably the league’s top wide receiver. Even is Derek Carr’s worst season since he was a rookie, Adams put up tremendous numbers and was named an All Pro for the third straight year.

Adams is joined on the outside by former Patriots wide receiver Jakobi Meyers. The former undrafted free agent out of NC State has been a full time starter in New England the past three seasons, averaging over 800 yards receiving and put up a career-high six touchdowns in 2022. This after going without a touchdown for his first two NFL seasons.

Though Meyers played a good amount in the slot in New England, that’s where Renfrow makes his money as one of the league’s better slot receivers. Though Renfrow had a down year in part due to injury, he is just a year removed from a 103-catch season that had him in the Pro Bowl.

Condition: Strong

When you have Adams and Renfrow on the lineup, you’re well on your way. Replacing Mack Hollins with Jakobi Meyers may or may not be an upgrade, but it’s not a downgrade either. If they can utilize the speed of Dorsett and Carter to take the top off the defense, they may have really something in this group.

What condition the position is in: Assessing Raiders level of need at RB ahead of NFL Draft

Assessing Raiders level of need at RB ahead of the Draft

We take a look at the running back position for the Raiders as the draft approaches to give it a condition of either Strong, Stable, Unstable, Serious, or Critical.

Current projected starters: Josh Jacobs, Jakob Johnson (FB)

Depth: Zamir White, Ameer Abdullah, Brittain Brown, Brandon Bolden, Austin Walter, Sincere McCormick

All of their running backs that were headed for free agents were either kept off the market or re-signed. That includes Josh Jacobs who was slapped with the franchise tag. The 2022 rushing title holder will be back, whether on the one-year tag or on a new long term deal (if one can be reached). 

The law office of Jacobs and Jakob will return as well with Johnson clearing paths for Josh once again this season. Even Ameer Abdullah is back despite being misused and barely used all of last season.

Also in the mix will be veteran Brandon Bolden and 2022 drafted rookies Zamir White and Brittain Brown.

Condition: Strong

What was unstable a month ago due to the status of Jacobs is kept intact as the league’s top rushing attack from last season. With a mix of veteran and young depth behind Jacobs.

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What condition the position is in: Assessing Raiders level of need at QB ahead of NFL Draft

Assessing Raiders level of need at QB ahead of the Draft

We take a look at the quarterback position for the Raiders as the draft approaches to give it a condition of either Strong, Stable, Unstable, Serious, or Critical.

Current projected starter: Jimmy Garoppolo

Depth: Brian Hoyer, Chase Garbers

Garoppolo steps in as the Raiders’ top free agent addition of the offseason after releasing Derek Carr. The 31-year-old reunited with Josh McDaniels who was his offensive coordinator for all his first three seasons in the NFL with the New England Patriots.

Speaking of former Patriots QBs who McDaniels coached, Brian Hoyer joins the team on a two-year deal. The 37-year-old journeyman spent his first three NFL seasons in New England with McDaniels as his OC another three seasons in 2018, 2020-21. He basically replaces another former McDaniels QB in Jarrett Stidham who started the final two games of last season for the Raiders and left in free agency.

Condition: Serious

Why: Even with Garoppolo in house, it doesn’t eliminate the need at the position for a long term answer. It may not even eliminate the need in the short term. Garoppolo has his flaws as a passer, not the least of which being his health, having missed 18 games over the past three seasons. He is mostly an insurance plan in case the Raiders aren’t able to get a QB they want in this draft or if that QB needs extra time to develop.

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Raiders top 5 NFL draft needs of 2022

Free agency is in the rear view, here are Raiders updated top 5 draft needs

We’re over the hump for the busiest part of the NFL offseason. The eye of the storm, if you will. Where we are the same amount of time since the start of free agency as we are from the NFL draft.

That means most of the big free agents have been signed by each team—at least the ones whose addition could change their draft plans.

The Raiders were very busy, signing over 20 free agents and adding a couple of others in trades. The vast majority of their additions were not surefire starters, which gives them some insurance in case they don’t fill a need in the draft while offering them some flexibility in the hopes they could resist reaching.

Keep in mind, that the team’s most significant addition – Davante Adams – caused them to be without their top two picks, making their first pick in this draft number 86 in the third round. And they currently have just four picks total, so they won’t be addressing all their needs. In fact, they’d be lucky to be able to truly address a couple of them.

That being said, here are their top five roster needs as we sit here today.

Tackle

Projected starters: Kolton Miller, Denzelle Good

Who is going to play right tackle? I have Good penciled in because he moved over to right tackle in 2020 for a few games and was serviceable. No other tackle on the roster has done that. But he is a guard by trade so that’s where he belongs. Even if Alex Leatherwood somehow manages to win the job back, banking on that without some competition and depth for the job is unwise.

Defensive interior

Projected starters: Johnathan Hankins, Bilal Nichols

When you let nearly all of your defensive interior walk in free agency and your best addition is Bilal Nichols, more competition and depth is needed. Hankins’ return helps a great deal as he is a proven starting nose tackle. After that, it’s big question marks. Drafting someone to compete for a spot in the rotation immediately is needed.

Wide receiver

Projected starters: Davante Adams, Hunter Renfrow, Demarcus Robinson

They added Davante Adams, giving them a true number one. And they have good depth with free-agent additions like Demarcus Robinson and Mack Hollins. But the one element still missing is a speedy deep threat. 

Cornerback

Projected starters: Trayvon Mullen, Nate Hobbs, Rock Ya-Sin

There’s a reason why even after the additions they made this offseason that the rumors were still flying of interest in Stephon Gilmore. And even with three possible starters and some added depth, more talent is needed to ensure they have at least five roster-worthy cornerbacks come the season.

Center

Projected starter: Andre James

Andre James is a replacement-level player who is the team’s starting center. He may prove to be worthy of that job. But he should also have to win the job against stout competition. And right now, they don’t have that. Not to mention, if they find a good center in the draft, odds are he can probably play guard too if needed. That kind of depth is essential.

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Davante Adams was big addition but Raiders receiving corps still missing crucial dynamic

Raiders receiving corps was upgraded significantly with addition of Davante Adams. But a key element is still missing.

When doing some research recently, I noticed something about how outsiders view the status of each of the Raiders’ positions. That is the the wide receiver position is all set. One can assume that the trade to acquire Davante Adams had many people cross wide receiver off and dust their hands.

The problem with that simplistic take, is it ignores the fact that the Raiders weren’t just one wide receiver short last season. They were two wide receivers short.

Adams gives them a caliber of receiver they have not had in a great long while. Perhaps not since the likes of Tim Brown and Jerry Rice lined up on each side. Pair him with Hunter Renfrow, and you’ve got something special brewing.

The problem here is offenses deploy three receivers these days. Adams is an X receiver. Renfrow is a slot receiver. What’s missing is a Z. Or, in simpler terms; speed.

They’re missing what Henry Ruggs III was starting to bring to the offense early last season before the tragic incidents that led to his release. They’re missing someone whose speed as a downfield threat must be respected and who can take the proverbial top off the defense.

The team added Demarcus Robinson this offseason, but he’s basically a possession receiver. He isn’t striking fear into any defenses.

There’s also Bryan Edwards, but he too is a big-body X-type receiver, who makes his hay as a red zone, jump-ball specialist.

Can they get by with a starting trio of Adams, Robinson, and Renfrow? Probably. Especially when you factor in tight end Darren Waller as a receiving threat. But there’s a reason the different roles exist in an offense. And it’s important to have someone to fill each of those roles.

That doesn’t mean everyone has to be a superstar. It just means in order to open up the playbook, take pressure off of Adams, and avoid constant double teams on him, defenses have to fear someone else hurting them even worse, respect that, and thus fully account for them.

Those kinds of guys don’t grow on trees, there’s no question about that. There’s also no question the Raiders receiving corps is head-and-shoulders stronger than it was at the end of last season. But let’s pump the breaks on this belief that all boxes are checked in the Raiders’ wide receiver corps. Especially when that one unchecked box is a pretty important one.

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2020 NFL Draft: Las Vegas Raiders team preview

Draft Wire’s Gavino Borquez delivers everything Oakland Raiders fans need to know heading into the 2020 NFL Draft.

Everything Oakland Raiders fans need to know heading into the 2020 NFL Draft.

VITALS

Head Coach: Jon Gruden

General Manager: Mike Mayock

2019 record: 7-9

2020 DRAFT PICKS

1 (12)

1 (19)

3 (80)

3 (81)

3 (91)

4 (121)

5 (159)

TEAM NEEDS

Wide receiver

The Raiders added Nelson Agholor to the mix via free agency, and they have Tyrell Williams and Hunter Renfrow as solid complementary options, but they need a dynamic centerpiece at the position.

Cornerback

After finishing No. 25 in passing yards allowed last season, the Raiders were aggressive in trying to lure in Byron Jones and Chris Harris Jr. to help fix their woes, but they fell short. Eli Apple was signed, but it’s unlikely that he fills the No. 2 role.

Safety

The marriage between Karl Joseph and the Raiders came to an end despite his high level of play. Oakland needs to add a player that will start opposite of Johnathan Abram.

TOP TARGETS

Jerry Jeudy | WR | Alabama

CeeDee Lamb | WR | Oklahoma

Trevon Diggs | CB | Alabama

Jaylon Johnson | CB | Utah

Xavier McKinney | S | Alabama

Ashtyn Davis | S | California

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