‘Our team is gonna need us’: Raiders relying on 2nd year players to step up

‘Our team is gonna need us’: Raiders relying on 2nd year players to step up

Last season the Raiders didn’t get much from their rookie class. That won’t be acceptable from that class as they head into year two.

In some ways it starts with seventh overall pick Tyree Wilson, who was considered a raw high ceiling type of prospect whose development was slowed by an injury last offseason.

Luckily the Raiders had Malcolm Koonce emerge the latter half of last season, giving them two quality edge rushers along with Maxx Crosby. But if Tyree could get up to speed this season and start showing his immense potential, the team could have a dangerous rotation that would be hard to stop.

Wilson understands the importance of him and his draft classmates taking the leap this season.

“We’re not rookies any more,” said Wilson. “We had a little [leeway] last year, but this year people are counting on us, the whole team is counting on us, so we have to come up to the plate and be role players on the team.”

Thus far, there has been little indication Wilson has taken that leap. He has always had all the physical ability to be special, but lacked the technique to go with it.  This offseason he attended the sack summit hosted by teammate Maxx Crosby along with several other former All Pro edge rushers. He also, of course, has the benefit of seeing Crosby every day. He is also fully healthy with a full offseason of practices.

Next would be 35th overall pick, TE Michael Mayer. 

No player chosen by the Raiders last season was expected to more of an immediate impact than him. And yet, that too didn’t materialize. 

Even with the team making Brock Bowers their selection at 13 overall in this year’s draft, Mayer is expected to have a good sized role as the tight ends on this team will take on multiple duties.

“Our team’s gonna need us,” said Mayer. “That’s why this organization drafted us last year. To play ball, to do it to the best of our ability to help this team win games. . .  We learned a lot last year, we all did. And now it’s time to come back and refocus, re-energize ourselves and get ready to play ball for a new year. Year two is obviously a big jump. And I think we’re all going to take big jumps.”

Mayer added that he’s had to work hard on his in-line blocking because it’s not something he has had to do up to this point. That illustrates one of the added duties for the tight ends as the team could conceivably feature two tight ends on the field a majority of the snaps. Perhaps with one on the line and another either in the backfield or in the slot.

The third round last year had the Raiders take both DT Byron Young and WR Tre Tucker.

Young barely saw the field last season. He was active for just six games, seeing a combined 99 snaps and recording just four tackles. This year, he is seen as the next man up at the nose tackle spot. In fact, twice this camp, John Jenkins didn’t practice and it was Young who got reps with the first team defense alongside Christian Wilkins.

Tucker struggled mightily the first part of last season with his hands. He came in touted for his great speed. That’s great, but speed is only a factor after the ball is in your hands.

He showed progress late in the season and his teammates have been raving about how much better he looks catching the ball this offseason. The thing is, it hasn’t shown up in camp. For all of his speed, he has not shown the ability to get open and separate. He is often blanketed in coverage, whether it’s on short or deep routes.

Unlike the three players drafted ahead of him, there is no other player who he is trying to beat out or with whom he will rotate. The Raiders had signed Michael Gallup this offseason, but injury forced his retirement just ahead of camp. 

“It’s always going to be a competition,” said Tucker. “It’s my job to lose, you know. I’m going to take that approach, and whoever we bring in, and whoever we get, I’m just going to keep my head down and keep working.”

As the presumptive starting slot receiver on this team, Tucker needs to get open and beat corners to the ball. And we haven’t seen, really, any of that in camp, so that obviously needs to change.

One of the corners who has had some sticky coverage on Tucker is draft classmate Jakorian Bennett. Up until recently Bennett had been in a competition with veteran Brandon Facyson for the starting outside cornerback spot opposite Jack Jones. 

Facyson has been missing from camp the past few days, leaving the first team duties to Bennett solely.

This is what happened last year as well, when Facyson was injured and lost for the season, and Bennett was asked to start right away. It proved to be too much to ask of the rookie and his struggles had him pulled after four starts. He feels like he’s in a much better place now than he was then and took some lessons from it.

“Just trust my journey,” said Bennett. “Just be where my feet are and don’t compare myself to anybody else. Because my journey’s my journey. I’m gonna go through things that people probably haven’t been through and so I’m just going to continue to learn from those things and just keep stacking days.”

Through the offseason practices and camp, Bennett has looked very good. He’s picked off quite a few balls. In fact, I believe, if I had been keeping stats, he has had the most interceptions among the Raiders cornerbacks in offseason practices.

Fellow cornerback Nate Hobbs, on several instances, has rebuffed the notion that Bennett ever lacked in confidence.

“He’s a great player,” Hobbs said of Bennett. “Young, but he has a drive that you don’t see in people today. Great player, great man also. I feel like he’s going to be very pivotal for us.”

And then, of course, there’s Aidan O’Connell.

The fourth round rookie was thrust into a starting role amid the turmoil the Raiders had last season. He has been battling with newcomer Gardner Minshew this offseason. As recent as a few days ago, head coach Antonio Pierce was still waiting for either of them to distinguish themselves as the team’s starter.

“I’d like to see…somebody to take it and say ‘I’m the guy, AP,” Pierce said of the QB competition. “And make it clear, and evident and we’ll make that decision at that point.”

Through much of the offseason, O’Connell has taken the bulk of the first team reps, though, in the team’s most recent camp practice, Minshew earned equal first team reps. It’s possible that Minshew is pulling ahead in that race by virtue of his ability to run the offense. 

O’Connell, on the other hand, has arm strength Minshew simply does not possess. The occasional well placed deep ball reminds us of that. The coaches would need to see it more than just occasionally for him to make the statement that he is the guy. But as of now, he’s still in the mix, which is more than most can expect from a player taken at 135 overall. 

If this class steps up to the plate as the team hopes, there could be as many as four starters and two valuable ‘next man up’ rotation players. That would be significant to say the least.

Raiders training camp Day 5 report: Offense fails to step up first day in pads

It may have been a change of play style for the Raiders camp, but who controlled things remained the same. The defense continued to dominate. I asked Antonio Pierce prior to practice who he expects will benefit the most from pads going on, and he …

It may have been a change of play style for the Raiders camp, but who controlled things remained the same. The defense continued to dominate.

I asked Antonio Pierce prior to practice who he expects will benefit the most from pads going on, and he said the offense without question. And he brought in a special guest last night to try and get them pumped up for it.

“If I had to predict today, I think the offensive line is going to get after it,” said Pierce. “Richie Incognito talked to the team last night. It was pretty intense. Whatever you think he said, he said.”

The offensive line certainly came out with intensity. In the early going, Andrus Peat pancake blocked Tyree Wilson to the turf. And midway through practice Thayer Munford injured his hand on a play, only to get it wrapped up and return to the field a bit later.

As far as how the rest of the offense performed, it was…not great.

The talk the offense had been doing prior to today was that of ‘just wait until pads go on.’ Well pads were on and thus far they have not backed up their words.

No question the Raiders have a very good defense. It shows for sure. But the issues with the offense go well beyond the quality of defense they’re facing.

Mostly it continues to be the quarterback play that plagues the offensive play for the Raiders in camp. The passes are just not getting to the receivers consistently.

I could count on one hand how many solid completions there were on the day. O’Connell had one good connection on a deep corner route to Jakobi Meyers.

Other than that it was a whole lotta bad for the offense.

The defense was flying around, swarming, and jawing all day long.

The closest Davante Adams came to making a play was a pass that looked like it might get there, but he had his jersey tugged on, drawing a pass interference call. And Tre Tucker simply could not get open.

Play after play, Tucker had a defender on his hip. Sometimes it was Jakorian Bennett, sometimes it was Nate Hobbs, and once it was Jack Jones. But it didn’t matter. The result was the same. Incomplete.

It wasn’t until the final drive of the day that the offense got anything going at all. It was Gardner Minshew running the offense. Kristian Fulton had a leaping grab over the middle, then DJ Turner caught one on a cross, and finally Minshew found Alex Bachman on an out to put the team at the 18 for a field goal. It was a relative positive in a day without much before that.

For the defense’s part, they were fired up and stopping everything, including the ground game. Adam Butler had a couple stops and he was sure to let the offense know on each of them, barking at them and running into the backfield to taunt them. Christian Wilkins did some dancing and talking as well.

The one thing you didn’t see much of were turnovers. There were two fumbled handoffs, one between O’Connell and Zamir White and the other between Anthony Brown and Brittain Brown. Jack Jones nearly had a pick on an ugly O’Connell pass after he was basically sacked by Maxx Crosby.

Tre Tucker: Raiders starting slot receiver is ‘my job to lose’

Tre Tucker: Raiders starting slot receiver is ‘my job to lose’

Tre Tucker’s time could be now.The 2023 third round pick came in as a slot receiver as a rookie on a team that already had a Pro Bowl slot receiver in Hunter Renfrow. Then they cut Renfrow and signed veteran Michael Gallup to compete at the spot. And the day before camp began, Gallup retired. Leaving the job in Tucker’s hands.

“It’s always going to be a competition,” said Tucker. “It’s my job to lose, you know. I’m going to take that approach, and whoever we bring in, and whoever we get, I’m just going to keep my head down and keep working.”

That approach has shown up on the field this offseason, even though he had a couple drops on Day two of camp. His teammates see the difference in him as well.

“So much better,” fellow receiver Jakobi Meyers said of Tucker. “I don’t think anybody worked harder this offseason. He had goals that he really focused on and he went and accomplished them. He catches the ball so much better.”

It’s saying a lot that Jakobi sees such a difference in Tucker from last season considering he had already been showing strides late in his rookie year. Particularly with his tracking, hands, and body control.

Along with continuing to work on his catching ability while putting on some strength. He came into the league as a speed guy, but has clearly taken big strides in his development. And it’s paying off as he has carved out a spot in this Las Vegas offense.

Drops continue to plague Raiders WR Tre Tucker during training camp

Drops continue to plague Raiders WR Tre Tucker during training camp

The Raiders feel really good about their starting wide receivers. Davante Adams and Jakobi Meyers are one of the league’s top duos, and they complement each other very well. The No. 3 job is Tre Tucker’s, but he is one of the biggest wildcards of the entire offense.

Tucker had a solid rookie season, racking up over 300 receiving yards on just 34 targets. But drops were an issue for him all season as he could have had a much bigger year. Unfortunately, that issue hasn’t been solved yet early in camp.

In a recent article by Vic Tafur of The Athletic, he wrote about Tucker’s performance during Thursday practice and the numerous drop issues that he had. Here is a snippet of his thoughts on the second-year receiver from Cincinnati:

Tucker’s two drops came on a would-be touchdown during a seven-on-seven red zone period and a would-be first down during an 11-on-11 red zone drill.

He impressed his coaches and teammates with his electric speed, improved physique and sharpened route running, but holding onto the ball — and making sure he gets his feet inbounds on catches toward the sidelines and back of the end zone — gave him issues as a rookie.

A couple of practice drops aren’t anything to overreact to, but he’ll need to improve there to make a Year 2 leap.

Tucker has game-breaking speed and his ability to stretch the field is something no other player on the roster can do. But if the drop issues continue, he’ll have a hard time seeing the field in Year 2.

We are only a few days into camp, so there is nothing to stress about yet. But it is frustrating that Tucker hasn’t been able to fix this issue yet.

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Raiders 2024 camp position battle: Return specialist

New special teams rules makes for a very interesting battle for Raiders return specialists.

Kick returns this season are going to be a whole new experience. One that may require a whole new breed of return specialists. Punt returns should stay relatively the same. But there could still be a battle for who gets that job this season.

The new kickoff rules are such that neither team moves until the ball lands. So, there will be no running start for the coverage team. That means the previous ideas of what a kick returner will look like have changed.

It becomes a new job with a new set of skills that should be more akin to that of a running back than a speedy wide receiver or cornerback as was previously most common. Though some receivers could also thrive in this role. There are a lot of unknowns and therefore a position truly up for grabs.

For that reason, I can’t do a simple player vs player here.

A topic of discussion when the team drafted Dylan Laube in the sixth round of April’s draft was that perhaps his skillset would translate perfectly to the new kick return duties. We shall see.

Second year receiver Tre Tucker would figure to be the favorite for the punt returner job. Others who fielded punts in minicamp included Tyreik McAllister, Ameer Abdullah, Tulu Griffin, DJ Turner, and Nate Hobbs.

My take:

I must say, I don’t have one. Mainly because I don’t think the Raiders have one just yet. The rule is so new that there is a lot still to figure out. Each team’s special teams coordinator will have their own ideas of how to best attack the new rule. Who they like handling those duties will change as their plans change.

In the meantime, special teams may actually be something worth watching in camp and preseason this year. The hope being that there are fewer touchbacks and therefore kick returns become a bigger part of the game than they were before.

Raiders WR Tre Tucker named surprise standout from OTAs

Raiders WR Tre Tucker named surprise standout from OTAs

For the Raiders to take the next step in their rebuild, they are going to need a few young players to take big steps forward. Tyree Wilson, Michael Mayer, and Aidan O’Connell are three players who are expected to perform better in Year 2. But there could be another breakout player from the 2023 draft class.

In a recent article by ESPN’s 32 beat writers, they each named one player who was a surprise standout during the respective team’s OTAs. For the Raiders, that player was none other than second-year receiver Tre Tucker.

Here is what Paul Gutierrez had to say about the former Cincinnati star during the offseason practices:

Tucker, a 5-foot-9, 185-pound speedster drafted in the third round last year, looked like a different player after catching 19 passes for 331 yards and two TDs as a rookie. “Don’t look at the size, don’t mention that,” Raiders coach Antonio Pierce said of Tucker, in competition to be Las Vegas’ No. 3 WR, behind Davante Adams and Jakobi Meyers.

“Watch him play. He’s the biggest guy out there. He had a hell of an offseason. … Everything that we talked about working on, he took that to another level. And you could see the look in his eye of a confident player, of a guy that’s just going to constantly get better. He’s pushing.”

Tucker has something that no other player on offense does for the Raiders; blazing speed. Davante Adams and Jakobi Meyers are two excellent receivers, but no one would mistake them for burners. That is why Tucker is such an important part of their offense.

If Tucker can take a step forward in Year 2, the Raiders will have plenty of weapons to surround whoever wins the quarterback battle. And his speed could make the offense even more dangerous. Keep an eye on Tucker throughout training camp practices as he tries to earn snaps with the first-team offense.

5 positions for Raiders that will have new starters in 2024

5 positions for Raiders that will have new starters in 2024

Every new season brings change. Some change is not yet known. While some we know already. For instance, there will be new starters at several positions for the Raiders this season. These are the positions we know will change hands.

Raiders WR Tre Tucker making big strides, is ‘different dude’ heading into year two

Raiders WR Tre Tucker is ‘different dude’ with high expectations heading into year two

There are a handful of Raiders players who will hold the hopes of breaking out this season. I recently noted the five most likely candidates to do that in 2024. One of those potential breakout players is second-year wide receiver Tre Tucker.

He was the Raiders pick at 100 overall in the third round of the draft. Coming out of Cincinnati, he was known for his speed above all else. And early on it looked like he may not be much more than that. 

Tucker failed to log a catch until Week six. And over much of the season, he had issues with drops. He just didn’t look natural or comfortable catching the ball.

Then come Week 15, things seemed to turn around for him. Almost seemingly like flipping a switch. Over the final four games of the season, he looked like a different player. He would catch 11 passes on 15 targets for 170 yards and two touchdowns.

“He’s so mature for a young player, and he showed that last year. He never really hit a rookie wall,” said receivers coach Edgar Bennett. “That’s something that was impressive with him, just his attitude, his work ethic, and his approach. I mean, he takes it seriously as though he wants to be the best, and you see it every time he comes into the building. That’s his preparation. He stayed in a routine, which was obviously helpful for a rookie player last year, but he continues to show improvements.”

Finishing like that put some hopes on him that he could keep that momentum going into his second season. On the final day of minicamp, head coach Antonio Pierce singled out Tucker as having a tremendous offseason.

“One guy that obviously stood out this offseason; Tre Tucker,” said Pierce. “Different dude. Looks different, acts different, runs different, catches the ball different. Don’t look at the size. Don’t mention that. Watch him play. He’s the biggest guy out there. Had a hell of an offseason. Came back right after the offseason program and the Super Bowl, got in here and started working. Was here every day. Blazing, we know about the speed, but everything we talked about working on, he took that to another level. You can see the look in his eye of a confident player. Of a guy that wants to constantly get better.”

While it can be difficult to see from the sideline due to the struggles at quarterback and the early stages of the installation of the new offense, Tucker has been running with the first team, lining up both inside and outside while also fielding punts.

He is looking like the third option at receiver after Davante Adams and Jakobi Meyers. They’ve noticed the strides Tucker has made to share the load at the receiver spot.

“My boy Tre, he’s catching the ball better,” Meyers said Tuesday. “He’s always been fast, so he might be a little bit slower. Don’t tell him I said that. He’s really playing good football right now. I’m proud of him, just the person he is off the field too. He shows up every day and do his work.”

Tucker was drafted as the heir apparent at the slot receiver spot. That plan was jumpstarted with the team cutting Hunter Renfrow this offseason. Possibly in part because they felt confident Tucker was ready to step up. From the sounds of it, Tucker is exceeding their hopes for him. It will be something to watch for when the players return for training camp come July 23.

What Condition the Position is in: Assessing Raiders level of need at WR ahead of free agency

What Condition Raiders Position is in: wide receiver

With free agency under a month away, it’s time to check in on the Raiders’ wide receiver position to give it a condition of either Strong, Stable, Unstable, Serious, or Critical.

Starters: Davante Adams, Jakobi Meyers, Hunter Renfrow
Depth: Tre Tucker, DJ Turner, Kristian Wilkerson
Free Agents: DeAndre Carter

Adams had a down year with the Raiders due in large part to the QB situation. But keep in mind a down year for Adams is still better than the best year for most receivers. Meyers enjoyed a career year while Adams was dragging coverage away from him. Renfrow had his second poor season in Josh McDaniels’s offense that forgot he existed. Tucker flashed late in his rookie season and could be one to watch.

Condition: Strong

Adams is still one of the best in the game and getting a QB with an arm and pocket presence will bear that out. Meyers proved he is a worthy number two starter. The prevailing thinking is that the team will be moving on from Renfrow, opting for the cap money it would save. His departure would only drop the condition to Stable, mainly because the team likes the speedy Tucker to step up in that case, so they’d still be ok.

Raiders wide receiver corps ranked slowest in NFL

Times they are-a-changin: Raiders wide receiver corps ranked slowest in NFL

Never in my life did I expect to see a stat like this for the Raiders. The slowest wide receiver corps in the league?? Al Davis is spinning in his grave.

Many of you are probably wondering why Tre Tucker’s speed wouldn’t raise this number a bit. Well, first of all, as the chart suggests, it’s weighted for routes run. And Tucker was not a big part of the Raiders offense this season.

With routes run as the filter here, and since I don’t have the raw routes run numbers, I will go by targets, let’s list the Raiders receivers by targets and their 40 times.

Davante Adams 4.56, 963 snaps, 175 targets
Jakobi Meyers 4.63, 903 snaps, 106 targets
Hunter Renfrow 4.59, 363 snaps, 37 targets
Tre Tucker 4.4 334 snaps, 34 targets
DeAndre Carter 4.44, 102 snaps, 7 targets

So, yeah, Tucker has a decent 40 time of 4.4 flat. Though, it’s no Jacoby Ford (4.28) or Darrius Heyward-Bey (4.3). Not many are.

But more importantly, Tucker saw just a third of the snaps this season with Adams and Meyers getting the vest majority of the snaps and targets and their 40 times are not special.

Not that any of this is a big deal, really. Adams in certainly a deep threat with plenty of ability to get separation. Tucker did see his snaps and targets go up over the final few games of the season, twice setting new career-highs in catches and yards in those games.

Mostly it’s just pretty stunning to see the Raiders of all teams last on this list as classically, that has not been the case.