Wow, a bunch of guys here talking as if they are so disgusted with this team they are ready to jump ship. Won't blame you as we're all going through the same despondence. "How much longer can we/should we endure?" I share that seemingly never-evending frustration, but I'm a Raider, ride or die. If that's not you, completely understand.
I can't believe we're still miring in the Mack debate 6 weeks in. Good evidence out there and in this very thread on how keeping Mack hamstrung the team financially, and that while it sucks, it's an understandable approach for a team in the NFL in this day and age. But if we want to still pick scabs off just-barely-fresh wounds, I'm game:
(Fair warning, classic STC wall of text/paragraphs of rant coming)
I guess I was naive thinking that the team and Mack would work something out to ensure he got paid what he deserved, and managed the cap to do so -- shedding guys like Lynch, Martin, and Penn next year to give us the space to carry both Carr and Mack. Maybe have some realistic expectations/flexibility by those two to shift their deals to help make it happen. We saw Penn do it, and we even saw Carr do it.
While I'm not sure if that was possible (I'm less cap savvy than many in here), I do know that I did not see Mack or his camp express any flexibility -- it was completely the opposite, actually. Pay him a record-setting deal (and more than Donald), period -- that was the refrain from Mack's agent.I totally get Mack's position on this, he's worth it, careers are short, make your money while you can.
I definitely think some of the blame may be on the Raiders -- no one knows for sure, but I wonder if they clearly floated more flexible options like that out there that got Mack his break-the-bank/market-settig deal, but paid out at a cadence that allowed the team to keep both Carr and Mack.
But let's not lay the blame solely on the Raiders -- or Gruden -- for not keeping Mack. Negotiation is a two-way street, and where we saw other top-positional guys on the team be willing to shift their deals for the benefit of the team, we didn't see that from Mack.
Let's also not be naive about the nature of the NFL -- it's stated myriad times earlier, but a talented QB -- not even an elite one -- is more valuable to a team and in today's pass-happy NFL. Look at where mediocre game managers like Alex Smith and Flacco are ranked in terms of highest players and highest QBs in the NFL. Between a young talented franchise QB and the best d-player -- at his position or overall -- it's no choice for today's NFL teams, they are banking the QB.
Let's also not be naive about Gruden -- any coach will come in and start building a team of "his guys." Gruden has a vision for his system, and like any new offensive system, it often takes more than a year to get the system installed and the right players in place. I'd prefer a coach who builds his own long term offensive vision and identity but with a near-term vision by installing an initial system that fits to the personnel he has, rather than the other way around.
That's not Gruden. And he wasn't brought in to do things based on the old way. And Gruden is clearly and obviously a QB guy (that shouldn't have surprised anyone), and I think he clearly like what he has in Carr in terms of skill and match to his system. Was a no-brainer choice from Gruden's perspective either.
We are absolutely in Year 1 of a rebuild (again), and Gruden needs to be held accountable for turning things around quickly. But for those who might feel like it was wrong to bring him in, that he sucks and never was good -- who else would you have preferred? Yet another mediocre retread like Hue or Del Rio? Been there done that. At least Gruden brings some juice and excitement, and while he has a long way to go to show it, I don't think we've seen the tip of the iceberg of what he can do until this team and Carr adjusts to another new -- a much more complex and dynamic -- system.
I do think Carr is one of a few QBs who has the mind and motivation -- and most of the skills -- to make this work. But even a bright leader like Carr doesn't turn water to wine in the first quarter of a season under a complex system like Gruden's. I do have faith he can do it, but like you wish we can see it earlier, and wish Carr was more consistent.
But until this team settles in, and until Gruden gets the right guys in place -- I think our last draft was a huge step in the right direction and looks like it could pay off as these players gel and develop -- we're gonna see a lot of cr@p go down on the gridiron.
As a Raider fan and Cooper owner in FF, I was thinking this same thing last night. Cooper is going to be great next season on a different team. I don't care where he goes, he will be in a better environment and flourish. There is no fire in the players in Oakland and Cooper wears those emotions on his sleeve more than anyone. Gruden has already lost the team and this season may get really ugly.
That would suck, but it's not out of the realm of possibility. I would like to see Cooper happy and flourishing, he's a great player with loads of heart. But I wouldn't be surprised to see him go if, to my points above, he doesn't fit what Gruden is trying to do. Cooper needs to develop himself, and owns getting some fire in his belly on the field to challenge and fight for every ball, and consider it his ball and no one else's. I question whether he's that guy, actually, but would rather keep him than not. But if it doesn't happen, I won't be surprised.
We'll see whether this gamble will pay off in about 1.5-2 years. If it doesn't, that sets us back even further. But we would have been there anyway had we not brought in Gruden and tried to fundamentally change this team.