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2011 Oakland Raiders In-Season Thread (1 Viewer)

Nice divisional road win against our hated enemy. It wasn't pretty, but it's a work in progress. We looked like a bully out there, and Hue Jackson looks like a special coach.

:thumbup:

On to Buffalo. Take care of business there and return home for those 2 crucial home openers.

 
I am cautiously optimistic about Heyward-Bey. But Oakland had better lose all those penalties if we have any hope of being good this year
Two of the normal 3 things that kill us are still worries... 3rd down conversions and penalties. The third is makeing tackles and we actually did A pretty good job there. McClain only had one tackle but the Broncos didnt run inside with any success. DHB is still using his body to catch the ball and its part of the reason he didnt make an effort to keep his feet inbounds on the long pass where he had beaten his man. He is getting open and I think he caught everything that him in the numbers. If he can someday learn to reach for the ball and catch it with his hands, the bashing will stop.Veldheer got a beat a few times as expected. I think we had about 5 false starts including 2 in a row by Heyer. Wisniewski and Barnes were also guilty.Giordano looked good in coverage. We should probably keep him even after Mitchell returns. This game shows why the new kickoff rule is stupid. Why even have the kickoffs? Not even worth watching. Might as well take an even longer commercial break instead of kicking off. That said, Janikowski is the league's best kicker. His immaturity after he was drafted nearly cost him a career but now look at him.
 
A few observations from last night:

The front 7 is really, really good.

I was pleasantly surprised with the blitzing in the first half.

Reece is a matchup problem for other teams and could be used more.

McFadden pretty much a non-factor in the passing game and that needs to change.

DHB is just not polished at all still and probably never will be.

After all the hype Denarius Moore not involved at all.

Overall pleased with last night great to finally start a season out with a W.

 
Penalties are still a big problem. The Raiders looked like the much better team last night. They should've won by a lot more based on the talent on the field.

But props to Hue Jax for getting the win in a game that many past Raider coaches would've lost, including Tom Cable. The pass call to DHB at the end of the fourth quarter was a terrific call both in terms of in-game timing, but also as a real confidence booster for his not-so-confident QB and WR. That is the type of play that forges men and teams.

 
'ICON211 said:
A few observations from last night:The front 7 is really, really good.I was pleasantly surprised with the blitzing in the first half.Reece is a matchup problem for other teams and could be used more.McFadden pretty much a non-factor in the passing game and that needs to change.DHB is just not polished at all still and probably never will be.After all the hype Denarius Moore not involved at all.Overall pleased with last night great to finally start a season out with a W.
• Agreed about the defensive front, Chuck Bresnahan was doing a good job of rotating them in and keeping them fresh. They hounded and flustered Matt Cassel all night. This is one of the best DL’s in the entire NFL. The Bronco O-Line looked tired and beaten as the game went on.• I too was pleasantly surprised by the effective blitzing. In the first half, the 4 man crew was regularly getting pressure on Cassel, and the mixed in blitzing led to a number of throwaways. But was a little concerned with the 2nd half when the intensity seemed to wane.• Reece is a matchup nightmare for other teams. And he surprised in that he actually did ok blocking. We need to give him about 5 touches a game.• That McFadden had only one catch had everything to do with the specific gameplan. I don’t expect that McFadden will see just one catch per game going forward.• DHB did catch everything he got his hands on. That one catch out of bounds was underthrown and he still made a good catch. He still catches with his body, instead of his hands, but he made 4 big catches and the last one, where he put on a move in the open field to get the first down was a huge play. No, I don’t think DHB deserves to start, but he’s doing better than I gave him credit for. • Denarius Moore definitely needs to be involved more. He only had that end around run that got called back on a penalty. They have to target Moore to take advantage of his playmaking ability. Also, they need to activate Hagan, cut Miller and give punt return duties to Moore. Miller does nothing for this team even in on special teams.• I am pleased as punch to get off on the right foot. It seemed that every year, the week one transcript included a lot, “we made some mistakes, but we’ll learn from them and move on” type comments. And while we did make some mistakes (way too many penalties), it’s nice to learn from them with the benefit of the ledger filled in the “W” column.
 
I'm not concerned with DHB's ability to catch. I'm concerned with his ability to get open. There were few plays shown yesterday where it was clear DHB did not have the ability to get separation if the route required more then one move. To have him as anything other then a WR3 on the field is hurting the Raiders offence and options.

Moore may get pushed into a bigger role if Ford's hamstring injury proves to be a long lasting injury.

I loved what I say from McFadden yesterday. Based on how he was running, I wouldn't have guessed that he missed any time during the preseason. He just needs to stop running into his own team!

 
Moore looked like the guy in most of the time in 3WR sets. Its not preseason or training camp anymore though. Time to play with the real competition. The Donkeys were blitzing hard on third downs. There was a pass to Moore where Moore should have read the blitz and ran short to help his QB. Nobody was near the throw because Moore was running downfield. Moore was involved, he just has a long way to go. You have to be patient with rookie receivers. The pass protection and QB play are also still works in progress.

McFadden not lineing up wide as much as in the past is a good thing. He was in the backfield more. He was the bellcow until late in the game. Bush gave him an occassional breather, was in on some red zone action, and cleaned up late in the game. Reece was very involved as a receiver. McFadden will have his games where he's involved there but let's not confuse that with a winning formula.

 
Ford hurt his hamstring? Not good, already had Dez injure his quad. Ford wasn't all that impressive in gm 1 but is clearly involved in the offense and has the goods. Can't be mad at that. Hope he's all right, took him over Starks in a start up dynasty.

 
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I thought DHB looked vastly improved. He's still not there yet, not even close, but there is room for optimism here.

 
Its nice to finally start the season off with a win, but still way too many penalties and mental mistakes. Its got to be the most frustrating thing as a Raider fan. Its a new year, new coaches, lots of new players, and still they are very undisciplined. It seems its like this every year, no matter who the coaches and players are, I hope Hue can turn that around in a hurry. Thankfully, they played a more sloppy, less-disciplined team than themselves, they won't be able to get away with playing like that against the better teams.

Some of my observations: Obviously McFadden is the centerpiece of the offense, and judging from game one, it looks like the offense is revolving around McFadden, Ford and Reece. They really tried to get Ford involved early, I didn't realize he got injured which explains why they went away from that as the game went on. Michael Bush seemed a little sluggish to me, he did break off a couple decent runs late. It will be interesting to see when Boss comes back if Hue will get the TEs more involved in the offense. But overall the biggest bright spot was the offense as whole was clutch in the end and was able to get the key 1st downs at the end of the game to get the win. How many times in recent years past have we seen the Raiders let games slip away by getting 3 and outs at the end of games and then defense letting teams drive down the field to score the go ahead TD or FG? Didn't happen last night, and I think that was a huge moral boost and confidence builder for Campbell and the offense, hopefully they can build on that.

 
Short week.

Second game in a row on the road.

Playing a Bills team that obsolutely destroyed the Chiefs at Arrowhead week 1.

Play the Jets and Patriots the following 2 weeks.

This is one of those winnable games that looks easier than it is. Oakland needs to suck it up this week, go into Buffalo, and manhandle the Bills. This looks like an important game right now. Build on the momentum from week 1 and reduce the penalties. We should win.

 
'UnknownCoach said:
This is one of those winnable games that looks easier than it is. Oakland needs to suck it up this week, go into Buffalo, and manhandle the Bills. This looks like an important game right now. Build on the momentum from week 1 and reduce the penalties. We should win.
:thumbup: Very much down with this line of thinking.

 
• DHB did catch everything he got his hands on. That one catch out of bounds was underthrown and he still made a good catch. He still catches with his body, instead of his hands, but he made 4 big catches and the last one, where he put on a move in the open field to get the first down was a huge play. No, I don’t think DHB deserves to start, but he’s doing better than I gave him credit for.
That play along the sidelines is actually Exhibit A on why DHB will never be a good pro WR. OK, it's actually Exhibit Z37 - but the point stands.Instead of going up to get the ball with his hands and coming down with an awareness of the field, like good WRs do, he waited til the ball got to him and caught it with his body. In the process he brought the defender back into the play and lost track of where his feet were. That's a play that a starting WR has to make. He made it look pretty hard, but it really wasn't.The fact that he's starting is a major strike against the team's fortunes IMO. Margins are pretty thin in the NFL and you need to get your best players on the field.
 
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• DHB did catch everything he got his hands on. That one catch out of bounds was underthrown and he still made a good catch. He still catches with his body, instead of his hands, but he made 4 big catches and the last one, where he put on a move in the open field to get the first down was a huge play. No, I don’t think DHB deserves to start, but he’s doing better than I gave him credit for.
That play along the sidelines is actually Exhibit A on why DHB will never be a good pro WR. OK, it's actually Exhibit Z37 - but the point stands.Instead of going up to get the ball with his hands and coming down with an awareness of the field, like good WRs do, he waited til the ball got to him and caught it with his body. In the process he brought the defender back into the play and lost track of where his feet were. That's a play that a starting WR has to make. He made it look pretty hard, but it really wasn't.The fact that he's starting is a major strike against the team's fortunes IMO. Margins are pretty thin in the NFL and you need to get your best players on the field.
You may be right, DHB may never be a good NFL WR. I guess I have a wait-and-see approach (Do I have any other choice?) On that long sideline play, if it was Denarius Moore, I feel confidnent he'd have adjusted, caught it at it's high point and reeled it in. Even Derek Hagan was making those kind of grabs all preseason long. But the starting positions are determined by Al Davis, and it's frustrating to see the better man on the bench. Having said all that, DHB has the speed to get separation that those other two don't have, although it's a marginal difference. But DHB still needs a perfectly thrown ball to make the catch, and it's as much Jason Campbell's fault in throwing inaccurate passes. Hopefully NFL caliber wideouts Moore and Hagan are on the field more going forward. Like you said, margins are pretty thin in the NFL not to field your best players and playmakers.
 
I know Hagan got a lot of camp hype but I dont think he's a solution. New Orleans is looking like the worst pass defense team in the league. They were playing off the Oakland receivers during that preseason game Hagan went off. I'm not saying Hagan didnt earn his roster spot, but all this talk that he should be starting needs to stop. Too much is comeing from the same reporter who hyped Schilens into a player who way too many fantasy owners not only drafted, but actually expected to be a good fantasy player. The same guy hyped up Moore this offseason putting him on many fantasy owners redraft lists. He can talk all day about how Hagan, Schilens, and Moore should be in the pro bowl, it doesnt put them any closer to being there. In the real world, Hagan is a game day inactive, a career backup, and a guy who has to give everything he has to try to stick on an NFL roster. Hagan is a hard worker but he shouldnt be starting.

 
TE Boss returns after missing 23 days with knee injuryBy Steve CorkranWednesday, September 14th, 2011 at 10:45 am in Oakland Raiders.Starting tight end Kevin Boss is at practice today for the first time since he suffered a left knee injury.Boss got hurt against the 49ers on Aug. 20 in an exhibition game. He has spent the past three weeks or so rehabilitating.The news isn’t so good for free safety Michael Huff and wide receiver Jacoby Ford. Both players who got hurt against the Denver Broncos on Monday night aren’t practicing today.We won’t know about their availability for Sunday’s game against the Buffalo Bills until we get a chance to speak with coach Hue Jackson in about 90 minutes.Defensive tackle Richard Seymour, receiver Louis Murphy and backup safety Mike Mitchell also aren’t practicing today. Seymour is the only one of those three likely to play Sunday.Jackson apparently is serious about rectifying the penalties issue. He has three officials working practice, which is rare for a team to do during the season.The Raiders committed 15 penalties for 131 yards against the Broncos. Both are far and away the most in the league.
Great news getting Boss back in practice! Meyers was a plodder catching the ball against Denver, and really has no burst. A healthy Boss gives upgraded blocking and becomes a key cog. Especially if Ford misses time.It's a concern not having Huff because Fitzpatrick likes to spread the offense and the ball around with the back shoulder fades. It's going to be challenge to the backfield if the DL can't generate the pass rush they got in Denver. I think that is going to be the difference for the Raiders, as KC's D-line was exposed as soft, and the Raiders are anything but.The Raiders come into the game with the #1 rush D and #2 rush O. If we keep that ranking after Sunday, we will have beaten the Bills.
 
I know Hagan got a lot of camp hype but I dont think he's a solution. New Orleans is looking like the worst pass defense team in the league. They were playing off the Oakland receivers during that preseason game Hagan went off. I'm not saying Hagan didnt earn his roster spot, but all this talk that he should be starting needs to stop. Too much is comeing from the same reporter who hyped Schilens into a player who way too many fantasy owners not only drafted, but actually expected to be a good fantasy player. The same guy hyped up Moore this offseason putting him on many fantasy owners redraft lists. He can talk all day about how Hagan, Schilens, and Moore should be in the pro bowl, it doesnt put them any closer to being there. In the real world, Hagan is a game day inactive, a career backup, and a guy who has to give everything he has to try to stick on an NFL roster. Hagan is a hard worker but he shouldnt be starting.
I disagree. Hagan is a very hard worker. Learned the playbook inside and out during training camp, works very hard and runs good routes. He actually played good at the end of last year for the Giants when Steve Smith and Nicks went down with injuries. Some WR's take time to get to a certain level. Look at Brandon Lloyd he played on how many teams before he reached his full potential. Why can't the same be said for Hagan. Don't dismiss him just because he played for couple of teams before coming to Oakland. Some players just need a little time and an oppurtunity to show what they are capable of.
 
It felt really good to get the Opening Day monkey off our back, but I am not seeing the same optimism others are regarding the Buffalo game.

Raiders have a terrible, terrible record on East Coast early games. And those stats, after a Monday night road game, probably aren't better. Winning two road games in a row is tough for any team, let alone an average team that likes to committ stupid penalties.

People must've been more impressed with the Denver win than I as. I can understand false starts, the crowd was real noisy when the Raiders were on offense, and it affected things. But the dumb personal fouls? The cornerbacks lining up offside? Not so much.

On paper, Raiders are much better than Denver, and Denver has no running game, at all. Orton threw the ball 46 times, and we barely win? The way that game was heading, we would have lost, if Orton doesn't drop that ball with o one around, and DMC breaks that run. Denver had all the momentum.

Going to Buffalo, against a team that I think is underrated, and a QB that may be coming into his own, is dangerous.

 
No doubt that Buffalo is dangerous. They are a dangerous team through the air. They have a legit QB in Fitz and a stud WR in S. Jones. Freddie Jackson is a good hardnosed runner, but nothing spectacular like a DMC.

We can't commit 15 penatlies and win. But Hue added 3 refs at practice today, so he's taking measures to clean it up. He's also got the guys on EST schedule so I don't think the time zone lag will be a big deal. Not having Mitchell and Huff will be a concern with that high octane passing game. Giordano came up big, and hopefully he can fill in if Huffy can't go.

I don't think that Buffalo's run game is anything that can't be contained. Better than Denver's, but not by much. The penalties made that Monday Night Game much closer than it should have been. We committed 6 penalties that gave them first downs. That's 24 extra downs. We just can't continue to do that against a better team like Buffalo.

The D-Line is creating a push and Houston and Shaughnessy are collapsing the edges consistently. Our run game cannot be stopped. The O-line is opening holes to pick and choose from and DMC is a beast. Bush just comes in and delivers the knockout punch.

I also don't care much about the Raiders east coast record. That's not relevant. Were those Raider teams coached by Hue Jackson? No. The coaching staff is prepared, reading and reacting, and updating in-game adjustments as needed.

I don't mean to disrespect the Bills. It will be a good game, and a real test for our defense. But I think we win this Sunday. I really do. Not just playing the homer card.

 
I know Hagan got a lot of camp hype but I dont think he's a solution. New Orleans is looking like the worst pass defense team in the league. They were playing off the Oakland receivers during that preseason game Hagan went off. I'm not saying Hagan didnt earn his roster spot, but all this talk that he should be starting needs to stop. Too much is comeing from the same reporter who hyped Schilens into a player who way too many fantasy owners not only drafted, but actually expected to be a good fantasy player. The same guy hyped up Moore this offseason putting him on many fantasy owners redraft lists. He can talk all day about how Hagan, Schilens, and Moore should be in the pro bowl, it doesnt put them any closer to being there. In the real world, Hagan is a game day inactive, a career backup, and a guy who has to give everything he has to try to stick on an NFL roster. Hagan is a hard worker but he shouldnt be starting.
I disagree. Hagan is a very hard worker. Learned the playbook inside and out during training camp, works very hard and runs good routes. He actually played good at the end of last year for the Giants when Steve Smith and Nicks went down with injuries. Some WR's take time to get to a certain level. Look at Brandon Lloyd he played on how many teams before he reached his full potential. Why can't the same be said for Hagan. Don't dismiss him just because he played for couple of teams before coming to Oakland. Some players just need a little time and an oppurtunity to show what they are capable of.
:goodposting: Hagan is 26, coming into his prime. He's a committed pro who doesn't have non-football hobbies. Maybe he wasn't in the week #1 gameplan because of the calf issue. Maybe he will be in this week's game plan, if Ford is out. If he's called on, I have no doubt in his ability to go up and make the clutch catch.
 
I too like Hagan and think his opportunity may still come to shine, just hard to know whether he was inactive b/c of his calf strain or b/c he is considered to be the lowest rated back up by the coaches. If the latter, then it may be a while for this guy. Ford is hurt though, so maybe I eat those words as soon as this weekend?

I will be very impressed with Hue Jax if we are 2-0 on Sunday. Bills will be very tough to beat at their house on a short week. No way the Raiders win if they play as undisciplined as against the Broncos.

 
Trench Warfare

Oakland flies out to Buffalo this Thursday and faces a shortened week to prepare. We'll do our best to help them along...

The verdict still out on Buffalo's run defense.

Even after a week one win over the League’s best rushing team it’s still unclear where last year’s worst run defense stands.

That’s why this weekend, last year’s second ranked rushing attack should test them.

The Bills blow out win over Kansas City precluded last year’s rushing champions, the Chiefs, from answering the question of Buffalo's run D dilemma.

With a turnover on the opening kickoff and subsequent touchdown, things spiraled out of control immediately for KC and they never recovered.

Circumstance dictated the Chiefs abandon their vaunted run game early.

RB Jamaal Charles was 3rd in the League with 1,476 yards last season. Against Buffalo, Charles was limited to only 10 carries for 56 yards including a 22 yd scamper.

That’s 5.6 yards per carry.

It’s not definitive, but it bodes well for Oakland RB Darren McFadden, who currently leads the NFL after week one with 150 yards on 22 carries.

Buffalo’s revamped Defense

Oakland punched holes in Denver's D when it counted, but this year’s 3rd overall draft pick Marcell Dareus is another kind of animal. Buffalo's 6-3, 340 lb DT is freakishly agile and exceptionally violent. He'll be a handful for C Samson Satele and rookie LG Stephan Wisniewski.

Undersized but gritty 11 year vet Cooper Carlisle has the savvy to get the job done at RG but if left unattended could be sitting in QB Jason Campbell's lap.

The Bills added Dareus, LBs Nick Barnett, Shawne Merriman and Kirk Morrison in hopes of improving its 32nd ranked run defense. Merriman is a long in the tooth former Charger; and Morrison a former Raider known for bad audibles, over running gaps and giving up big plays.

Buffalo Secondary:

At the 3rd level Buffalo's Safeties stepped up big at Arrowhead. Starters George Wilson and Jairus Byrd, along with sub-package hybrid safety/linebacker Bryan Scott were active on Sunday and look like they'll figure heavily against the run. The 6-1, 220 lb Scott in particular made an impression with 8 tackles and a sack. Tackling drills this off season looked like they were paying off against KC, but Oakland will be another matter.

Buffalo may have dodged the first true test of its revamped run D against KC but in week two the Raiders will look to bring the thunder.

Raider D-Questionable or Contender?

On the opposite side of the ball the Raider D will try to stop the Bills ground game which churned up 163 yards and helped their offense control the ball for 37 minutes. Aged RB Fred Jackson posted 112 of those and speedy CJ Spiller contributed as well. The Bills much maligned O line shoved a demoralized KC D around pretty good, but Death Row with Seymour and Co. should be a different story.

Again Oakland faces an inexperienced O line. In his 7th yr, only former Raider/Bronco castoff Eric Pears has more than 3 years under his belt. At left Tackle now, Pears will face off against DE Matt Shaughnessy.

Should Oakland stop the run, Bills QB Ryan Fitzpatrick will try to emulate his 208 yd 4 TD performance against a KC D without Pro Bowl caliber Sophomore Safety Eric Berry who suffered an MCL tear in the 1st quarter. This allowed unknown 6-7, 263 lb TE Scott Chandler to collect a career high 5 catches including 2 TDs.

Oakland looks like it may be without starting FS Michael Huff who suffered a strained groin against Denver. No word on the return of S Mike Mitchell who's out with an undeclared meniscus tear. He's had surgery but Oakland refuses to give a return date.

Our guess?

Not in time for Buffalo.

S Matt Giordano made noise with a good game with a pick and a fumble recovery but Oakland’s last line looks thin. Hiram Eugene is on IR, Stevie Brown was dropped by us and then Carolina.

Oakland looks like they will be forced to lean on their rookies and reserves. That means more time for Jerome Boyd and rookies DeMarcus Van Dyke and Chimdi Chekwa.

The Bills QB Fitzpatrick is a guy who can make things happen but after watching the win over KC, Oakland’s D and varied blitzes look like they could make things very uncomfortable for him.

The Raiders shouldn't expect a cakewalk in Buffalo but if they want to build a bully they'll, have to enforce their will on the Bills in the trenches.
 
I too liked all I read about Hagan and Moore in the preseason. Was surprised Hagan was inactive after all thatcoach speak "the best guys will be out there". Just coach speak I guess. I love ford and schillens when healthy has looked great. But DHB has never done it for me. I guess this is his make or break year. It was nice to see him convert third downs and break tackles but I didn't see anything that wowed me. Those other receivers make wow type plays (at least schillens, Murphy, ford, and Moore) and DHB does not.

 
It was nice to see him convert third downs and break tackles but I didn't see anything that wowed me.
Me either. Nice to see him catch the ones that he was supposed to make, but not a big deal. I am pessimistic about his chances to ever become a viable starter, and it bothers me how much PT he gets, I feel like the team is better with any other WR except Miller on the field. I do root for him, not his fault we took him too high. Should have ignored WR altogether and taken BJ Raji. I really liked the play calls, aside from the lack of passes to DMC. I almost wonder if DMC has a number of touches he is supposed to get, and they'd rather have him run the ball. But really, no excuse for him to not get one screen pass a game. I felt like the offense never got into a rhythm, and there was a few reasons for that. The crowd noise in Denver was impressive, the new stadium, like most new ones, goes straight up, rather than out, and the noise is contained in there. Lots of early penalties leads to plays that you can't use, because instead of 2nd and 6 or 7, it's 2nd and 15. But I liked the misdirection, the mixing it up of DMC inside and out, and the plays we ran for Reece. I liked that there wasn't a lot of deep drops, think Denver had one sack. A lot of substitutions, a lot of moving around, which really can set up the O later on when it notices a defensive shift it likes to create a matchup. The execution was just for crap. Sloppy game on both sides of the ball. Didn't like the lack of pass rush from the outside. Houston is more of a bull rusher, and I felt like Shaugnessy didn't do much early. I dunno, Shaugnessy hasn't done a ton to knock my socks off. I feel like he has had some nice plays here and there, and he's all effort, but based on what we have read about him the last two years, I feel like other people are more impressed by him than I have been. Worried about Huff's injury, saw him sitting on the trainers table on the sideline, then he was not on the sideline that I could see. Listed as day-to-day, but we need his speed deep, or as a nickel corner. Orton may not have been able to exploit a Giordano deep, but Fitz and Stevie Johnson can. There's a reason Giordano was out there, he's not a long term answer. I dunno, I felt like the offense wasn't clicking, but I was willing to chalk it up to 'one of those days', and the penalties hurt. i expected more from the defense. No running game, and Orton had too many plays with too long to throw. Maybe that was my imagination, I know we had some sacks, but dang, he dropped back 50 times, we SHOULD have a few.
 
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Giordano is faster than Huff. A few years ago he was considered the fastest player in the entire NFL. He wasnt a FA because of a lack of speed. He isnt that effective against the run but his pass coverage so far since he's been here has looked good. Where Huff will be missed more is in the nickel and dime coverage. Now Van Dyke is likely going to assume the nickel corner. Branch (with Boyd and/or Chekwa playing safety), Chekwa, or Porter will be on the fourth receiver.

If Ford is out, I'd wager Schilens starts and Moore continues his role in 3 WR sets. Hagan would also be active this week if Murphy and Ford are both out. With Jason Campbell not in sync yet with the deep ball, there shouldnt be much if any dropoff. What we lose in speed we gain in both size and experience.

I think Fitzgerald is subject to making mistakes under pressure. There is no excuse for not getting pressure this week. I expect at least two turnovers. We do have to watch for Fitzgerald scrambling and we also have to stop the running game and screen plays. Our defense can handle that if our offense does their part by protecting the ball and sustaining drives.

Should be another close game. Maybe we need a 64 yard field goal this time. We can do that too.

 
Giordano is faster than Huff. A few years ago he was considered the fastest player in the entire NFL. He wasnt a FA because of a lack of speed. He isnt that effective against the run but his pass coverage so far since he's been here has looked good.
Fastest white guy maybe ( :excited: ) . Ran a 4.48 at his pro day. nice, but not fastest anything.
 
Giordano is faster than Huff. A few years ago he was considered the fastest player in the entire NFL. He wasnt a FA because of a lack of speed. He isnt that effective against the run but his pass coverage so far since he's been here has looked good.
Fastest white guy maybe ( :excited: ) . Ran a 4.48 at his pro day. nice, but not fastest anything.
Giordano, a two-year starter at the University of California-Berkeley, was timed at 4.52 and 4.58 seconds in the 40-yard dash at his on-campus Pro Day in 2005. But he sustained a torn pectoral muscle that day, something he said hampered his speed. Im not very proud of the time that they have for me as my 40, said Giordano, who added of his Pro Day injury, I still ran, and I think thats why my time was so slow. I believe Im faster than my 40 time says. I think I can hang with most of the guys in the NFL.
The debate about Giordano being the NFL's fastest player is actually in pads and not in a 40 yard dash. It came from him outrunning Hester and other top players on the field. Would be interesting to know his real 40 time but it doesnt matter... we arent loseing any speed by starting Giordano.
 
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Penalties are still a big problem.
It is amazing to me how one football team, despite having different coaches and different players, can have the same problem year after year after year. Seems like we've been saying "We really have to cut down on the penalties" since 1977. Seriously, is it the uniforms or what?
 
Penalties are still a big problem.
It is amazing to me how one football team, despite having different coaches and different players, can have the same problem year after year after year. Seems like we've been saying "We really have to cut down on the penalties" since 1977. Seriously, is it the uniforms or what?
We all know if it was Rich Gannon who "tucked" the ball and the Patriots swatted it out of his hand it would have been a fumble. Most of the penalties is the players, but the uniforms do cause some of them. I thought the one call on Chris Johnson was a bad call and that the Donkey's deserved to have as many personal fouls as we did. I forget who it was on but there was a personal foul on a Raider for simply pushing away a Bronco who was in his face. When you have pushing on every play by both teams why do we get called for that?
 
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Penalties are still a big problem.
It is amazing to me how one football team, despite having different coaches and different players, can have the same problem year after year after year. Seems like we've been saying "We really have to cut down on the penalties" since 1977. Seriously, is it the uniforms or what?
We all know if it was Rich Gannon who "tucked" the ball and the Patriots swatted it out of his hand it would have been a fumble. Most of the penalties is the players, but the uniforms do cause some of them. I thought the one call on Chris Johnson was a bad call and that the Donkey's deserved to have as many personal fouls as we did. I forget who it was on but there was a personal foul on a Raider for simply pushing away a Bronco who was in his face. When you have pushing on every play by both teams why do we get called for that?
I agree, I was asking myself the same thing during the Broncos game. They were doing just as much shoving, pushing, and hitting as the Raiders but they weren't getting the personal penalty calls.
 
Penalties are still a big problem.
It is amazing to me how one football team, despite having different coaches and different players, can have the same problem year after year after year. Seems like we've been saying "We really have to cut down on the penalties" since 1977. Seriously, is it the uniforms or what?
We all know if it was Rich Gannon who "tucked" the ball and the Patriots swatted it out of his hand it would have been a fumble. Most of the penalties is the players, but the uniforms do cause some of them. I thought the one call on Chris Johnson was a bad call and that the Donkey's deserved to have as many personal fouls as we did. I forget who it was on but there was a personal foul on a Raider for simply pushing away a Bronco who was in his face. When you have pushing on every play by both teams why do we get called for that?
I agree, I was asking myself the same thing during the Broncos game. They were doing just as much shoving, pushing, and hitting as the Raiders but they weren't getting the personal penalty calls.
I was away from the play, but the defensive PI calls are where I feel we always get hosed.
 
http://www.insidebayarea.com/crime-courts/ci_18887750

Jackson is the latest in a long line of Raiders coaches who preaches about the need to reduce penalties.

The word isn't getting through just yet. The Raiders took a commanding lead in penalties and yards penalized for their effort against the Broncos.

The Raiders are four penalties ahead of the next-most-penalized teams and 29 yards ahead of the runner-up 49ers.

"When we get really good, we're not going to talk about penalties in this room," Jackson said. "That's not going to be the issue. ... I've got to get the curse stopped. Just like we broke the Monday night curse, I've got to get this one turned the other way, and that's going to take time."

Last season, the Raiders committed 148 penalties for 1,276 yards, by far the most in both categories. They are on pace for 240 for 2,096 yards.

By comparison, the New York Jets played the entire game against the Dallas Cowboys without committing a penalty.

imo Some fans expect the Raiders to go all out: "Just Win BAby" "If you aint cheatin, you aint tryin" Thats Mantra w moxy if you ask me. IF the Jets lost their last game, is no penaltys any kind of solice? I believe Hue should maintain focus on getting the plays right, and getting everything out of his players. A different coach may go to the extreme of benching a player for a bad foul (right now that could be easily confused w poor performance for instance) not to mention that it limits full focus on getting a job done.

Hue has a track record for putting solid WR's on the field, Ive read that there is changes for plays/players. DHB specifically is expected to be reacting to balls, more so then anticipating the catch (not so much deep routes) This could really pay off because 1)maybe more catches 2)he has the speed to get to a block on a run 3)Def may over react when he does take a deep route.

Im not really expecting the Raiders to fix something that is'nt broke. The running game was established, and solid. Im expecting another strong performance in Buf, but looking forward to the Jets game at home (bad things happen when a team's focus is stopping the run) I question the Cowboys secondary, but they come up w 4 sacks. Im gonna stop now, before someone starts thinkin like I did last Season. But really Coach should be on TV responding to penalty's like Mora about playoffs :no:

 
I can. not. wait. until Pryor is eligible. You just KNOW Hue already has a special package of plays up his sleeve just for the kid.

Line him up wide... end-around handoff giving Pryor a run/pass option. If the WR is open, let it fly. If not, tuck it and go! :football:

 
S Huff, WR Ford and DT Seymour miss second straight practice

By Steve CorkranThursday, September 15th, 2011 at 10:42 am in Oakland Raiders.Wide receiver Jacoby Ford, defensive tackle Richard Seymour and free safety Michael Huff are among those who aren’t practicing today.That doesn’t rule out any of the three from playing against the Buffalo Bills on Sunday. However, it does make them less likely, given they haven’t practiced at all this week.Huff is nursing a groin injury that he suffered against the Denver Broncos on Monday night. Ford strained a hamstring and Seymour hurt his ribs in the same game.Seymour had two of Oakland’s five sacks against the Broncos, so the Raiders would be hard-pressed to replace him from a production standpoint. If he can’t play, it means more playing time for Desmond Bryant and John Henderson.Nick Miller ran several plays opposite Darrius Heyward-Bey at wide receiver with the first-team offense this morning. The smart money says, Chaz Schilens and Heyward-Bey start, with Denarius Moore and Miller receiving added playing time if Ford can’t play Sunday.On the bright side for the Raiders, running back Darren McFadden (shoulder), quarterback Jason Campbell (foot), defensive end Jarvis Moss (foot) and cornerback Joe Porter (concussion) are at practice and looking fine.Three new officials are presiding over practice, at coach Hue Jackson’s request. Jackson said the officials who worked Wednesday’s practice weren’t there to collect dust.“I told them, ‘Throw a flag, throw it. Don’t hesitate,” Jackson said. “And they didn’t. They were very aggressive, and we only had a few, so that was a good thing. We won the battle (Wednesday). We only had about … three or four. It wasn’t 15, I promise you that.”
http://www.ibabuzz.com/oaklandraiders/2011/09/15/s-huff-wr-ford-and-dt-seymour-miss-second-straight-practice/?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+iba_raiders+%28Inside+The+Oakland+Raiders%29&utm_content=Google+Reader
 
'Raider Nation said:
I can. not. wait. until Pryor is eligible. You just KNOW Hue already has a special package of plays up his sleeve just for the kid.Line him up wide... end-around handoff giving Pryor a run/pass option. If the WR is open, let it fly. If not, tuck it and go! :football:
I dont expect anything from him this season. He had only a few days of practice with the team so far and this is a kid who has a lot of work to do before he's ready to contribute on game day. If he wins the appeal, we might see him active late in the season. If he loses it, we might not see him at all this year.
 
'Raider Nation said:
I can. not. wait. until Pryor is eligible. You just KNOW Hue already has a special package of plays up his sleeve just for the kid.

Line him up wide... end-around handoff giving Pryor a run/pass option. If the WR is open, let it fly. If not, tuck it and go! :football:
I dont expect anything from him this season. He had only a few days of practice with the team so far and this is a kid who has a lot of work to do before he's ready to contribute on game day. If he wins the appeal, we might see him active late in the season. If he loses it, we might not see him at all this year.
Regarding the bolded: Eh, maybe, maybe not. Nothing says he needs to know the whole playbook to come in and run the option with DMC, or have a short yardage rollout package of plays.The question to me is, is he worth having as one of the active players on gameday? It's a risk, to leave an O-lineman or DB off the active roster.

 
'Raider Nation said:
I can. not. wait. until Pryor is eligible. You just KNOW Hue already has a special package of plays up his sleeve just for the kid.

Line him up wide... end-around handoff giving Pryor a run/pass option. If the WR is open, let it fly. If not, tuck it and go! :football:
I dont expect anything from him this season. He had only a few days of practice with the team so far and this is a kid who has a lot of work to do before he's ready to contribute on game day. If he wins the appeal, we might see him active late in the season. If he loses it, we might not see him at all this year.
Regarding the bolded: Eh, maybe, maybe not. Nothing says he needs to know the whole playbook to come in and run the option with DMC, or have a short yardage rollout package of plays.The question to me is, is he worth having as one of the active players on gameday? It's a risk, to leave an O-lineman or DB off the active roster.
I think he's a healthy scratch all year long as long as we're still in the playoff hunt. We have no spots on the roster for OTJ training. If we fall out of contention, then I could see Pryor as a game day active, but he needs a whole season plus some to get acclimated to the playbook.
 
Stevie Johnson playing today, DHB and Boss are out.

No Murphy, Ford, or DHB. Might be nice for Chaz and Moore to make a play this week. We have to keep the D a little honest for DMC and Bush to have any room. Denver just collapsed down on the run all last week.

 
Stevie Johnson playing today, DHB and Boss are out.No Murphy, Ford, or DHB. Might be nice for Chaz and Moore to make a play this week. We have to keep the D a little honest for DMC and Bush to have any room. Denver just collapsed down on the run all last week.
I'm looking forward to seeing what Hagan can do with this opportunity.
 
Stevie Johnson playing today, DHB and Boss are out.

No Murphy, Ford, or DHB. Might be nice for Chaz and Moore to make a play this week. We have to keep the D a little honest for DMC and Bush to have any room. Denver just collapsed down on the run all last week.
Weird, rotoworld says DHB is active.
Darrius Heyward-Bey - WR - Raiders

Darrius Heyward-Bey is inactive for Week 2 with a knee injury.

Kevin Boss (knee) is also surprisingly inactive, as is Jacoby Ford (hamstring). Louis Murphy (sports hernia) is also out. Denarius Moore and Chaz Schilens are expected to start at wide receiver. The Raiders' other inactives are S Mike Mitchell, TE David Ausberry, and OT Stephon Heyer.
 
Stevie Johnson playing today, DHB and Boss are out.No Murphy, Ford, or DHB. Might be nice for Chaz and Moore to make a play this week. We have to keep the D a little honest for DMC and Bush to have any room. Denver just collapsed down on the run all last week.
I'm looking forward to seeing what Hagan can do with this opportunity.
I am hoping for more passes to DMC, personally. This game, to me, comes down to less penalties, and controlling the Bills passing game. I want to see more pressure from the front four. I am more concerned about the early East Coast start and the short week, but the Bills offense ain't no joke. Need to start fast.
 
Stevie Johnson playing today, DHB and Boss are out.No Murphy, Ford, or DHB. Might be nice for Chaz and Moore to make a play this week. We have to keep the D a little honest for DMC and Bush to have any room. Denver just collapsed down on the run all last week.
I'm looking forward to seeing what Hagan can do with this opportunity.
I am hoping for more passes to DMC, personally. This game, to me, comes down to less penalties, and controlling the Bills passing game. I want to see more pressure from the front four. I am more concerned about the early East Coast start and the short week, but the Bills offense ain't no joke. Need to start fast.
I'm sure that will end up being the case - more RB involvement throughout the game. Lots of McFadden, Bush, and Reece. I just want a WR to emerge as a true possession receiver, so that DHB can be moved back in the line-up, and I think Hagan is the Raiders best shot at that.
 
^^^ That wasn't directed at you, mass. It's all you heard from the haters all week.
Haha. Hey, I didn't like being a negative Nancy. Hated being pessimistic, and I am LOVING seeing nice, long, drives. The team looks so much better than last week. A lot more crisp. :thumbup: I think it's almost about time people realize this is not a terrible O-line. Somehow survived the loss of Gallery, it seems.
 

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