Oakland Raiders’ Season Ending Awards

Rookie Louis Murphy was one of the few bright spots on offense in 2009
Best Offensive Player:
Zach Miller, Tight End – 66 rec. 805 yards 3 TD
It amazes me how on a horrendous offense, Miller continues to improve on his numbers on a yearly basis. Raiders don’t have many scary targets on offense. And Miller is not as dynamic as other tight ends around the league, but he sure is productive and a solid blocker.
Best Defensive Player:
Nnamdi Asomugha, Cornerback
Among the best defenders in the NFL. Asomugha is a complete defensive back and a better citizen.
Best Special Team Player:
Shane Lechler, Punter
The Pro Bowl talent ended with a 51.1 average, short of Sammy Baugh’s 51.4 record set in 1940. But he did break the net average mark with 43.9, topping the 41.2 he set last season.
Best Coach:
Lionel Washington, Defensive Backs
Tyvon Branch matured into a solid starter, Michael Huff had his best season as a pro, rookie Mike Mitchell gave the backfield a jolt and Asomugha is among the best. Washington did a solid job with this group.
Least Valuable Offensive Player:
Darrius Heyward-Bey, Wide Receiver
Nine receptions for 124-yards and one score. Two carries for 19-yards. This from the seventh overall pick in the NFL draft with $23.5 million in guarantees coming to him.
Least Valuable Defensive Player:

Chris Johnson, Cornerback
It’s hard to constantly be the target of opponents, especially with Asomugha on the other side. But Johnson gave up too many big plays and was a weak spot in a secondary that was solid to very good at times.
Most Improved Player:
Tyvon Branch, Strong Safety
He was a tackling machine around the line of scrimmage and developed into one of the upcoming SS in the conference.
Least Improved Player:

JaMarcus Russell, Quarterback
The stats were horrendous, his development was non-existent and when you get benched in favor of Bruce Gradkowski and Charlie Frye, you know things are bad. He went from being the first overall pick and possible savior to public enemy number one.
Best Rookie (Offense):
Louis Murphy, Wide Receiver – 34 rec. 521 yards 4 TD
He was fiery, injected life to a dead unit at times and was a gamer. Sure he had his drops, mental lapses and was sometimes the victim of bad calls from officials, but the 4th round pick has legitimate potential to be a starting caliber receiver at this level.
Best Rookie (Defense):

Matt Shaughnessy, Defensive Lineman
He compiled four-sacks and played well in the interior when tabbed in the second half of the season with more reps.
Player Missed the Most due to Injury:
Robert Gallery, Left Guard
He missed six regular season games with a broken leg before returning to the line-up, but then he injured his lower back in December and Oakland shut him down for the season. By far the best offensive lineman they have.
Most entertaining player when entering the field:
Sebastian Janikowski, Kicker

He enjoyed his best season as a pro. He was 26-of-29, with his only misses coming from long distance.
Deserving of more carries award:
Michael Bush, Running Back

He ended the campaign with a team leading 589 yards rushing. Bush averaged 4.8 a carry and had the best two rushing performances by a raider this season (119 vs. KC and 133 vs. DEN).
Hardest Worker Award:
Justin Fargas, Running Back
Probably the least talented of the trio of rushers but no one runs harder or with more intensity.
The ‘I want out…’ Award:
Javon Walker, Wide Receiver
He signed a six-year $55 million deal with $16 million in guarantees in March of 2008. Since, he has been one of the biggest free-agent busts in league history. Walker has been inactive all season and left in the organizations doghouse.
Best Victories:
- Week 13 – Raiders 27 – Steelers 24: A 21-point barrage in the 4th quarter led by Bruce Gradkowski’s 308-yards passing and 3 touchdowns. The 35-point final quarter was exciting and full of big plays, including two Murphy touchdowns: one for 75-yards and the closing score from 11-yards out.
- Week 15 – Raiders 20 – Broncos 19: Charlie Frye started, J.P Losman got a snap but JaMarcus Russell was the one who put a road block on Denver’s effort to make the playoffs with his game winning touchdown pass at Invesco Field. Michael Bush had 133 yards and a touchdown on 18-carries.
- Week 11 – Raiders 20 – Bengals 17: The Bruce ‘Almighty’ Gradkowski stint started with a win. Oakland scored 13 second half points in a frantic finish. “As a team, we’re not really known for fighting back, and we came back,” rookie Louis Murphy said.
Worst Losses:
- Week 7 – Jets 38 – Raiders 0: New York came in reeling; losing three in a row, missing Kris Jenkins after his injury a week earlier, a struggling rookie passer, a coach beleaguered by the media that had to travel to the west coast. Oakland allowed 316 rushing yards, led by rookie Shonn Greene, this after beating the Eagles a week earlier in the midst of back-to-back home games.
- Week 3 – Broncos 23 – Raiders 3: Denver went 3-0 with a road victory in the Black Hole. Oakland was held to 137 yards of offense, and at the time, it was only the third time since 1993 that they had offensive outputs of less than 200-yards in ensuing weeks. Russell had only one passing yard in the second half and thus began the weekly booing’s in Oakland.
- Week 14 – Redskins 34 – Raiders 13: Russell came in for an injured Gradkowski and sucked the life out of the offense. An offense that tallied nearly 200-yards of offense against the Redskins went to hibernation when Russell took over.
Best Moments of the Season:

- Zach Miller’s 86-yard touchdown romp versus the Philadelphia Eagles that was aided by two stellar blocks by rookie Louis Murphy.
- Bruce Gradkowski’s 29-yard game tying touchdown pass to Murphy with 33 seconds left versus the Cincinnati Bengals. On the ensuing kickoff, Brandon Myers forced a fumble which set-up Janikowski for a game winning 33-yard field goal. “He caused the fumble,” linebacker Sam Williams said. “That was unbelievable.”
- Louis Murphy’s 11-yard touchdown catch with nine seconds left at Pittsburgh.
- JaMarcus Russell’s 10-yard touchdown pass to Chaz Schilens with 35 seconds remaining to beat the Broncos at Denver, “They’re all special, but this one’s pretty high,” said Russell.
- Janikowski nailing a 61-yard field goal in cold Cleveland.
Worst Moments of the Season:

- Darrius Heyward-Bey’s bobbled pass deep in Kansas City territory that fell into the hands of a Chiefs defender. That turnover sealed the victory for the visiting rivals as Oakland drove late in the contest.
- Russell being pulled after going 6-for-11 for 61 yards with 2 interceptions and a lost fumble against the Jets.
- Johnnie Lee Higgins and Louis Murphy bumping into each other as they came off the line of scrimmage, and taking themselves out of the play against the Chargers.
- Russell entering the game against the Redskins after Gradkowski was injured and then getting sacked six of the eight times Washington tallied sacks. “We had heard that Russell’s just had a tough time, and you could tell when he stepped on the field and the crowd started booing,” Washington defensive end Andre Carter said.
- All of the Tom Cable off the field distractions.
- Hiram Eugene getting pushed aside by Willis McGahee during his 77-yard scamper in the season finale.
Unit that was lackluster:
Punt and Kickoff returns
Whether it was Gary Russell, Jonathan Holland, Justin Miller briefly or Louis Rankin, the return units were non-threats to opponents. Even Johnnie Lee Higgins, who made a name for himself as an explosive punt returner in 2008 was quiet in 2009.
Hey look, I’m a starter award:
Michael Huff, Safety
Turned himself into a reliable player in the secondary after years of the Raiders waiting on this first round talent to turn the corner.
Hey look, I should not be a starter:
Cornell Green, Right Tackle
The penalty machine was at it again this season. Green may be the best option for the Raiders at right tackle, which demonstrates the need for them to upgrade that side of the offensive line.
Best Off-season Move:

Greg Ellis, Defensive End
Tied with Trevor Scott for the team lead with sacks (7).
‘We are waiting…,’ Award:
Darren McFadden, Running Back – 104 car. 357 yards 1 TD, 21 rec. 245 yards
Is it the lack of creativity on this offense? Do the Raiders need a better mind running the offense? Are the quarterback issues impacting him? Regardless of the excuses, McFadden has not been the explosive talent they had hoped for and certainly not the multi-dimensional weapon he can potentially be. Plus, he had 4 fumbles this season (3 lost) while missing four games due to injury.
Best Quote(s):
- “I don’t think we could have beaten an Oakland high school team today,” said Richard Seymour after the 38-0 loss to the Jets. Ironically, he stated earlier that week that Oakland would make the playoffs.
- “If you really want to look at it, you can go 8-0 and you might end up 10-6,” stated Chris Johnson. “There’s a possible way you can actually do it.”
Contact Author: Victor Cotto – SB Report Columnist