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LANE RUMORED TO BE LIVID ABOUT ROSTER MOVES (1 Viewer)

PFT's Lane Kiffin rumors just don't add up

By Anthony Carroll on September 3, 2007 12:24 AM

Rumors surrounding the Oakland Raiders are always controversial, touchy areas.

Gossip from Adam Schefter, for example, the Bronco-loving "rumor monger," is usually spot on. Think Art Shell being fired. On the other hand, from Nancy Gay, the San Francisco (...49ers) Chronicle writer, the gossip is particularly harsh, but frequently wrong. Think Warren Sapp being cut.

This time, though, ProFootballTalk.com -- or PFT for short -- has taken a stab at taking a stab at the Raiders.

The online website, boasting the slogan "The best pro football scoop on the Internet," has reported that first-year head coach Lane Kiffin is irate over the team's recently announced roster cuts.

Keep in mind, the site's slogan is not: "The most correct pro football scoop on the Internet."

The first paragraph of the 200-word report reads: "A source with knowledge of the situation tells us that Raiders coach Lane Kiffin is fuming about the final round of roster cuts in Oakland. Though we don't know of any specific moves about which Kiffin is particularly upset, we're told that the bulk of the moves is evidence that owner Al Davis still has a significant amount of influence over the football operation."

In all, 20 players were cut from Oakland's roster on Saturday, ranging from rookies to veterans, from starters to backups.

Among the debatable cuts are third-round defensive end Quentin Moses, rookie safety Eric Frampton, second-year offensive lineman Kevin Boothe as well as veterans Donovin Darius and Zack Crockett.

It shouldn't come as much of a surprise that the team let go of some high-end rookies. Just two weeks ago, the 32-year-old coach made clear that any player on the roster was fair game, including all rookies.

"Understand that no one is on scholarship here," Kiffin said. "It comes from the college mentality that once you have a scholarship it can't be taken away for football reasons, it's different in the NFL and you've got to earn it."

Based on the team's four preseason outings, neither Moses nor Frampton "earned it."

Moses, with just four tackles and sack, was greatly outperformed by fifth-round rookie DE Jay Richardson, who registered 11 tackles and a sack. As luck would have it, Richardson made the team. Meanwhile, Frampton, with just four tackles, was outshined by 26-year-old safety Hiram Eugene, who recorded six tackles, an interception and a defensive TD. Again, Kiffin found a spot for Eugene on the final roster.

As for second-year guard Kevin Boothe, who started 14 games in 2006, Kiffin already defended that release, saying the 315-pounder wasn't a "system fit."

Now to the vets.

Strong safety Donovin Darius, who was signed in mid-July, simply couldn't find time to get healthy. Unsurprisingly, Kiffin has a big problem with players who can't, well, play.

As for fullback Zack Crockett, who has spent his last eight seasons in Oakland, he was simply forced out by younger talent. The 34-year-old was cut in favor of a better lead blocker in Justin Griffith and fresher legs in sixth-round rookie Oren O'Neal. Last offseason, Crockett was on the brink of being cut under the leadership of Shell, but he managed to extend his Raider career by a season.

Beneath each roster move, then, is a reasonable, almost obvious explanation.

That's no fun to report, though. Speculating the imminent firing of Kiffin, who is yet to coach an NFL regular-season game, is much more intriguing.

"In our view," the PFT blurb continues, "the mere fact that he didn't shrug in response to moves dictated from above tell us that Lane is his own man. It might get him fired from his current job, but it could help him land his next job."

Of course, let's not forget the clinching proof demonstrating that Al Davis in fact did not have the final say in Saturday's cuts.

Alvis Whitted is no longer an Oakland Raider.

<_<

 
– Quentin Moses, the NFL's highest-drafted player to not make a team, was predictably claimed off waivers by the Arizona Cardinals. The same Moses who Kiffin on two separate occasions referred to as "unblockable" during training camp press briefings.

Defensive Rob Ryan, admittedly prone to hyperbole, said of Moses during camp, "Quentin Moses is a superstar and we stole him in the third round."

Instead, Moses was essentially beaten out by Jay Richardson, taken in the fifth round out of Ohio State.

"It surprised me, to be honest with you," Richardson said. "But that’s what we felt was best for us, I suppose. Quentin is fine. He’ll be fine wherever he goes. Quentin will make a bunch of plays in this league."

One player said waiving Moses was a surprise because of his status in the draft, but not necessarily because of his performance. Moses was regarded by some teammates as weak against the run, with his pass rush skills diminishing as camp progressed.

Rather than conceding Moses was a mistake in draft judgement, the Raiders' spin is that cutting him validates their promise that performance counts.

"There were some hard ones and it wasn't that a guy wasn't doing everything we asked," Kiffin said. "We wish great luck to Quentin and we think he'll be a good player in this league. But at the end of looking at it all of it we had other people that could help us more. I think it shows everything that we're about here, and how competitive the field is, that a player as good as Quentin couldn't make the roster.

"Also it shows that we're not worried about where a guy was drafted or how much a guy was paid in free agency. We took the best 53 players for us."

If Kiffin was "livid" about the Raiders' roster moves as suggested by Profootballtalk.com Sunday, he had calmed down considerably by the time he met with the media.

"It was really a smooth process," Kiffin said. "In the end, you get different people's opinion and then you come out of the room on the same page. Our staff is extremely excited about it. We had our 53 in the team room this morning. It's a great feeling because we couldn't be more excited about the 53 in our room."

Could it have possibly been that smooth?

Probably not.

Assistant coaches have their favorites and lobby for them passionately. Al Davis believes in vigorous debate and in having coaches make a case for the players they want. If it gets a little heated, Davis doesn't believe that's necessarily a bad thing.

We'll probably never know what went on when the final roster was being assembled, but it appears Kiffin had more than his share of input.

Davis doesn't like to admit mistakes on draft picks. The Raiders cut a third-rounder (Moses) and a fifth-rounder (Frampton).

Two speedy wide receivers considered to be on "Al" scholarships, Alvis Whitted and Carlos Francis, were let go.

Boothe was a sixth-round find last year in a Davis-run draft but was cut because he didn't fit the blocking system.

Safety Donovin Darius is the sort of lower-the-boom safety Davis has long coveted, but was missing practices with nagging injuries.

Whether these were the right calls or not only time will tell. But it doesn't have the earmarks of a Davis steamroller.

:mellow:

 
KNBR is reporting that Kiffin and Ryan went at it in the parking lot yesterday. Kiffin was pinching Ryan and Ryan was, reportedly, pulling Kiffin's hair.

:unsure:

 
I heard on the radio during the week that there would be some suprise cuts, but they would be made in order to make the team better. I loved Crockett's smash mouth style but Griffith is an upgrade so why not say good bye to him? Kiffin also said that the players he planned on cutting were given extra game time during the last 2 games to show case their skills to other teams so that they might get picked up somewhere else.

I for one am excited for this season as a Raider fan, gb no more 7 step drops and a 1960 style offense.

 
KNBR is reporting that Kiffin and Ryan went at it in the parking lot yesterday. Kiffin was pinching Ryan and Ryan was, reportedly, pulling Kiffin's hair. :lmao:
This is totally unrelated. It seems Ryan "jinxed" Kiffin, and he subsequently could not speak until some stated his name.
 

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