Archive

Archive for November, 2009

Locker Room Videos: Post-Game after defeating the Bengals

November 27th, 2009 No comments

OAKLAND — Here are exclusive videos of some Oakland Raiders talking after their home victory over the Cincinnati Bengals:

Wide Receiver Chaz Schilens
video management, video solution, video streaming

Running Back Michael Bush:
video management, video solution, video streaming

Cornerback Nnamdi Asomugha:
video management, video solution, video streaming

Chad Ochocinco went from sore loser to being out-right bitter:
video management, video solution, video streaming

Share

Game Grades: Dallas Cowboys 24 – Oakland Raiders 7

November 27th, 2009 No comments

QUARTERBACK: C-

Bruce Gradkowski ended the game 18-of-35 for 200 yards one touchdown and no interceptions. Many times, he had to get rid of the football under the gun, which affected his accuracy. On back-to-back plays to open the game – on 2nd and 6 and 3rd and 6 – he was not able to set up his feet or release the ball cleanly to keep the drive alive. A few times, Oakland attempted to stretch the field and Gradkowski stated after the game, “There were plays there to be made downfield and I didn’t make them.”

His elusiveness helped the Raiders on their scoring drive and in total; Gradkowski’s feet helped him tally 30-yards rushing. Oakland’s passer misfired on plays that could have been converted which would have moved the chains.

RUNNING BACKS & FULLBACKS: B

Justin Fargas’ first half was superb. He ran hard and gained big chunks, compiling most of his team leading 63-yards rushing. Darren McFadden finished the game with 6 carries for 23 yards, but he was mostly used as a receiver, getting split out wide in one-to-one match-ups with the Cowboys’ cornerbacks. On 2nd and 5 on the Raiders’ first drive, he hauled in a quick slant for 16-yards. McFadden had 4 catches for 43-yards.

WIDE RECEIVERS & TIGHT ENDS: D

Zach Miller recorded 5 grabs for 73-yards in the dual between two of the top tight ends in the NFL. Miller on national television demonstrated he ranks right up there with Jason Witten (5 rec. 107 yards) and was one of the few bright spots for the Oakland offense. Chaz Schilens outstretched on a 3rd and 4 on the game’s third drive but could not haul in a make able reception. On the Raiders next possession, he ran a sloppy slant that the defender broke up on a 3rd and 4. Schilens ended with 2 receptions for 32-yards. Darrius Heyward-Bey finally hauled iin his first professional touchdown. “I tried to help the cause with that play,” Heyward-Bey commented, “but when you lose, it’s all that matters. You want to win at the end.” The rookie had a nice block on McFadden’s best run of the game – a sweep for 12-yards.

OFFENSIVE LINE: D

Right tackle Cornell Green left the game for a few plays with an injury and was replaced by Langston Walker. He eventually went back into the game. Cooper Carlisle’s holding penalty thwarted any movement on Oakland’s second drive. The front looked good early in opening holes for their rushers, but did very little at times to keep Gradkowski’s pocket clean or his passing lanes paved. They allowed three sacks.

DEFENSIVE LINE: F

Dallas ran up 195 rushing yards against this defense. It all headed downhill after Tashard Choice’s 66-yard run to open their third drive in the 1st quarter. To the defenses credit, they did hold the Cowboys to a field goal on that drive. But on the very next Dallas possession, Felix Jones erupted on a 46-yard scamper for a score. “What is Rule No. 1 in Pop Warner?” nose tackle Gerard Warren pose to reporters after the game. “Stop the run.”

LINEBACKERS: C

Trevor Scott had a stellar game at weak side linebacker. Due to injuries on this unit, Oakland mixed it up placing the defensive end in coverage situations and giving him the opportunity to use his instincts in space. Scott could’ve had an interception on a 3rd and 9 in which Tony Romo carelessly tossed the football away,  on a 2nd and 13, he dissected a screen and closed in on the pass catcher for a 4-yard loss and he ended with two-sacks when he pass rushed. “A few days ago they said they wanted me to start at (Will) this game so I was like, `all right, let’s run with it,’ ” Scott was quoted. “If it’s an opportunity to get on the field, so be it. Some guys don’t feel comfortable in a two-point stance, so if they stick with it, great.”  Sam Williams was beat a few times by Witten.

SECONDARY: F

Miles Austin torched this unit for 7 receptions, 145 yards and 1 touchdown. Nnamdi Asomugha was the victim a few times on man-to-man coverage. Michael Huff started the game nicely on a 3rd and 24, breaking up a pass intended for Roy Williams and then on the next Cowboy possession on 2nd and 9, jarring a pass out of Austin’s grasp with a solid hit. Romo had a field day with his 18 completions for 309 yards. Tyvon Branch had a beat on a deflected ball that could’ve been an interception for a touchdown, but Trevor Scott gave chase as well and both took each other out on the play.

SPECIAL TEAMS: B

The anemic return units continued with their struggles. Gary Russell did very little to add some pop to the kickoff returns as Oakland looked for a change of pace after trying Jonathan Holland in that spot for a few games. Shane Lechler punted nine-times for a 54.8 average. His season average is now 51.9 – keeping him ahead of Sammy Baugh’s single season record.

COACHING: D

On defense, it was nice to see the Raiders pressure from the linebacker spot and John Marshall mixing up the formations and disguising the coverages. But many times, the attacks along the line of scrimmage led to big plays due to the Raiders being out of position.  Not too much praise though can be given especially after Dallas racked up 494 total yards of offense. Tom Cable has altered his game plan and feels more confident with Gradkowski at the helm of the offense. The Raiders are mixing up more passing a play, but at times, that has taken away from their bread and butter – running the football.

GAME NOTES

  • Jon Alston was placed on injured reserve, ending his season, after suffering two concussions in four weeks. Rookie Slade Norris was activated in his place after spending the majority of the season on the practice squad.
  • CB John Bowie, forever linked as the player selected with a 4th round pick acquired from the Patriots in the Randy Moss trade, was waived this week. His final stats with the Raiders – 2 tackles.
  • Greg Ellis did not finish the contest due to swelling in his knee. “I don’t know what happened. I just know swelling, a lot of pressure, going down my leg, going down my knee down my shin and my calf. I don’t know if I did something during the game,’’ Ellis stated. “It started off swelling some but that’s to be expected coming off the scope but when we started playing, it was just killing me.”

Contact AuthorVictor Cotto – SB Report Columnist

Share

Countdown to Paydirt: Oakland Raiders vs. Dallas Cowboys

November 25th, 2009 No comments
Linebacker Thomas Howard points to his showdown versus the Cowboys

Linebacker Thomas Howard points to his showdown versus the Cowboys

On Thanksgiving Day, the Oakland Raiders (3-7) will face the Dallas Cowboys (7-3). It’s the first time the Silver & Black play on this national holiday since 1970. Oakland is 3-2 on Thanksgiving, have a 6-3 lead in the regular season series versus the Cowboys and have a three game winning streak against Dallas.

OAKLAND RAIDERS

On Offense:

For less than a week, Bruce Gradkowski has a team and fan-base convinced that he is deserving of the starting quarterback job in Oakland. This second start will determine how well he plays when the spotlight is on and when the football world has their eyes focused on this traditional afternoon of pigskin.

Oakland rarely has prospered after wins since 2003, especially on offense where they become latent and produce very little in blowout losses. This season, opponents have outscored the Silver & Black 61-3 a week after they come off victories.

But Gradkowski is making those around him more comfortable, giving them confidence with his vigor and a win while under center on Sunday. It helps that Robert Gallery is now healthy, Chaz Schilens is back on the field and Darren McFadden’s presence has to be accounted by opponents.

What to Expect:

Dallas is one of the better run-stuffing units in the league, allowing 100.6 yards per game (7th in the NFL). The Raiders didn’t really move the chains on the strength of their ground game versus Cincinnati, so Tom Cable may feel more confident in opening up the playbook and letting Gradkowski shoulder some of the burden that JaMarcus Russell could not with a more complex pass game. McFadden should get some looks in the ‘Wildhog’ formation to loosen up the Dallas defense.

On Defense:

Greg Ellis will face his old teammates after spending 11 seasons in Dallas. “You can’t play on one team forever,” commented Ellis, who leads the Raiders with 5-sacks. “You enjoy the years you were there. I told Jerry I wish we had won the big one while I was there. We didn’t, and he felt like it was time to make a decision.”

Greg Ellis hopes to tally a sack against his former teammates on Thanksgiving

Greg Ellis hopes to tally a sack against his former teammates on Thanksgiving

Oakland’s defense stifled the Bengals last week, and during their wins this season, it’s been the pressure applied by the front four, which has made life difficult for opposing offensive linemen, and the quarterback they are trying to protect.

The Raiders need to stay away from allowing big yardage on the ground, allowing big plays when defending the pass and tackling better around the line of scrimmage.

What to Expect:

The Cowboys are the 8th ranked rushing team in the league. Oakland is the 30th ranked rush defense in the NFL, but at times they made big plays behind the line of scrimmage against the Bengals and when the defense is at its best, they limit the long chain moving drives that has haunted them in their losses. Defensive coordinator John Marshall stated on the difficulties trying to get the run defense back to a respectable level, “Well it appears that way so far with the results. I’m really shocked, as a matter of fact. I’m surprised. We just keep working at it. There’s reasons why, which I won’t go into right now, but we just got to keep working at it.”

DALLAS COWBOYS

On Offense:

The status of Pro-Bowl tight end Jason Witten may not be known until game-time. “I won’t say it’s severe, but it’s something that worries us about him being able to play this week,” commented Cowboys head coach Wade Phillips on Tuesday.

Dallas’ offense has struggled in their last two games, scoring 14 points combined, averaging 69.5 yards on the ground while coughing up the football five times. Witten’s sprained left foot will not help, especially after they loss right tackle Marc Colombo a few weeks back with injuries to his leg and ankle.

What to Expect:

Dallas has allowed six-sacks in their last two games. Oakland can bring the heat off the edges and along the interior of the trenches. So the Cowboys have to get their running game going against a team that many times allows big chunks of yards in the ground. Tony Romo’s elusiveness and ability to throw on the run could help, especially if he is able to buy time to find his targets on broken plays down the field. And against CB Chris Johnson, Dallas may be able to re-route their receivers or big plays.

On Defense:

This unit is being asked to win games at this point due to a struggling offense who is getting beat up. “I think that is the heart and soul of the team right now, that defense,” receiver Patrick Crayton was quoted on Sunday. “The way they are keeping us around in games, it’s amazing. It has been a true blessing for our offense.”

DeMarcus Ware is one player Oakland’s protection packages have to key on as he has tallied 7-sacks in 2009 and 60.5 so far in his 5-year career.

Terrence Newman is playing very good football and this week, he shrugged off the scuttlebutt about his sideline happening with secondary coach Dave Campo.

“I’m kicking Don out,” Newman stated, joking that the scuffle will be hyped and promoted by his owner. “We’re going to have Jerry promoting it. We might have to move this whole thing to Cowboys Stadium. That’s it! Pacquiao-Mayweather at Cowboys Stadium. Yeah. It’ll be Pacquiao-Mayweather and it’ll be Campo-Newman. We’re going to make it happen. I’m telling you.”

What to Expect:

Dallas has to apply pressure on Gradkowski and force him into mistakes. Oakland’s targets aren’t consistent threats, so Dallas’ front seven can take chances with blitzes and varying attacks. If Oakland becomes too one-dimensional on offense and can’t mix in a few runs, the young talent around Gradkowski may not be able to make enough plays to keep them in the game.

GAME NOTES

  • Richard Seymour is expected to play on Thursday after sustaining a lower back injury against the Bengals. Linebacker Jon Alston on the other hand looks to be dinged after his second concussion this season. Special teams ace Isaiah Ekejiuba will not play either, so the Oakland linebacker unit is very thin right now.
  • Darrius Heyward-Bey broke the 100-yard barrier this past Sunday with his seventh catch of the season. The rookie first rounder now stands at 103-yards receiving.
  • If Witten can’t play, fans will miss seeing two of the better tight ends in the league. Zach Miller has 34-receptions for 495 yards and 2 scores. Witten has compiled 54-grabs for 481 yards and 1 touchdown.
  • Phillips is just 1-6 in his career against the Silver & Black, including 0-5 while with the Broncos (1993-94) and 1-1 while with the Bills (1998-2000).
  • Shane Lechler commented on the low-hanging scoreboard in Dallas, “If that guy in Tennessee can hit it, I can hit it.” He continued, “I’m not going to go for it. If it’s there, it’s there.”
Zach Miller got in the end zone for a second time last weekend against the Bengals

Zach Miller got in the end zone for a second time last weekend against the Bengals

KEY MATCH-UPS

Gradkowski’s targets vs. the Dallas pass coverage & pass rush

Gradkowski needs time to pass and his targets to finally make plays for their passer. I don’t expect Oakland’s ground game to run for 120+ yards, so they’ll need another big effort from Schilens, Miller and another player in their aerial attack.

Tom Cable vs. Wade Phillips

It’s time for Cable to open up the playbook and let it loose. He has all his weapons on offense healthy and on the road on national television, Oakland should make a statement with creative and exciting play calling.

PREDICTION

Cowboys 17 – Raiders 16

TV & RADIO

The game will be televised on CBS with Jim Nantz providing play-by-play and former NFL player Phil Simms handling color analysis. The game will air in the Bay Area on KPIX Channel 5 and in Sacramento on KOVR Channel 13. The game will air on Raiders Radio originating on KSFO 560 AM, the Silver and Black’s Flagship for the multi-state Radio Network. Greg Papa and former Raiders player, assistant and head coach Tom Flores will man the booth for the 12th straight year. The radio pregame show and postgame show will feature Raider Legends George Atkinson and David Humm along with KSFO’s Rich Walcoff. (Broadcast information cited from the official Oakland Raiders web site)

GAME INFO

Thursday, November 26, 2009, 4:15 p.m. ET | Cowboys Stadium, TX

Road Team: Oakland Raiders (3-7) Home: 2-4 Road: 1-3

Home Team: Dallas Cowboys (7-3) Home: 4-1 Road: 3-2

Line: Raiders are a 13.5 point underdog

Contact AuthorVictor Cotto – SB Report Columnist

Share

ConGRADtulations: QB deserves rest of ’09; More Raider news

November 23rd, 2009 No comments

OffenseBruce Gradkowski’s performance on Sunday just earned him a shot at proving his case to why he should be leading the Oakland Raiders, and not JaMarcus Russell.

Realistically, we all know that the money and years invested on the LSU product will weigh heavily on their decision for the future. We all know that Al Davis – who has the final say on any and all decisions – will let his feelings be known about who should be under center. And that will be an uphill battle for Gradkowski. But for one weekend, he did what is asked of every quarterback in this league – and that’s to win.

Moreover, he led with passion, feistiness, playing within himself, evading key mistakes and performing when it mattered most. His numbers were not eye popping. But the outcome and how the team played while he was in the huddle and at the helm spoke volumes.

Sure, the back-up quarterback is generally a fan-base’s solution to everything. And we’ve seen many second stringers come into games, have short stints as a starter, play well enough to tease and then fizzle out quickly when they get propelled to the forefront.

In this case, what Gradkowski did and what was seen against the Cincinnati Bengals is an indictment on what Russell has not done or been able to accomplish.

Unlike Russell, Gradkowski has altered this offense in his first week of practice and debut as a starter into a confident group. Something a highly touted passer picked number one overall should do, don’t you think?

Last week, Zach Miller stated, “He’s obviously a pretty smart guy, reads things well, throws a real good ball. He’s a pro quarterback, so they’re all good. We feel like we’ll be able to throw it around better now.”

No, Oakland’s best offensive player was not talking about the prospective gun slinging big-armed passer they got in the draft.

The Raiders toughest talent on offense stated, “A love for the game that he shows in the way he plays, the way he calls plays. The way he works on details of plays with players, in between. He’s just uh, I think that’s the main thing I’m seeing with him. It’s just, he’s a get-after-it type of guy.”

Justin Fargas was not talking about the guy given a lot of money after he held out for all of his first camp and pre-season and that has been critiqued for his lack of passion for the game since.

Darren McFadden continued with the valuation of Gradkowski commenting, “He goes through all his reads. He’s been making the right decisions”

Russell has made a lot of bad decisions on and off the field; whether reading a defense, or not yearning or immersing himself into his craft; like a quarterback who was chosen to be the savior of an organization should.

And for those reasons, Gradkowski should finish 2009 as the starter in Oakland. If he bombs and does not perform well, Russell will get back in there – its not realistic to think at this point that the Silver & Black will part ways with the 24-year old. And even if he ends the campaign on a roll, all that will do is raise questions on who should be leading this team, while challenging Russell to elevate his game and give Oakland a nice quarterback controversy in 2010.

And boy, is this organization used to their share of controversy.

MURPHY PRAISING HIS QB

Louis_Murphy_pregame

Rookie Louis Murphy hauled in the tying touchdown late in the 4th quarter. After the game he stated about his quarterback: “It was a great approach. This week, he was full of energy,” Murphy said. “He commanded the huddle, and he was punctual, and he was ready for the Bengals . . . he said that we’re gonna continue to try to just move the ball and try to get first downs. Nothing too big, just move the chains. So that’s what we did.”

BRANCH PRAISED BY CABLE

Tom Cable praised starting SS Tyvon Branch on Monday when asked if the second year pro had one of his finest games yesterday, stating, “I don’t think there’s any question.”

He got a game ball after tallying 12-tackles, one-sack, a pass defended and a forced fumble.

NOTES

Yankees hurler CC Sabathia visited the Black Hole during Sunday's game vs. the Bengals

Yankees hurler CC Sabathia visited the Black Hole during Sunday's game vs. the Bengals

  • New York Yankees ace CC Sabathia – a long time Raider fan – was in attendance on Sunday.
  • Linebacker Ricky Brown was placed on injured reserve, ending his season. The starting linebacker suffered an ankle injury earlier in the campaign. Oakland added LB David Nixon to the active roster.
Share

Game Grades: Oakland Raiders 20 – Cincinnati Bengals 17

November 22nd, 2009 No comments

Louis_Murphy1QUARTERBACK: B

Bruce Gradkowski is now 4-9 in his career while starting and 1-0 at the helm of the Silver & Black. His decisiveness, inspiring play and ability to diversify the offense with his accuracy helped the Raider offense churn out yardage when they needed it most and it got them their first second half touchdown in seven games. His nine-yard touchdown pass to Zach Miller ended a personal three-year drought (11/19/2006) and was his first scoring pass in 116 attempts. He led Oakland in a way JaMarcus Russell hasn’t. Gradkowski managed the game well with his feet, evading sacks and getting rid of the ball quickly when all his options were covered and pressure was coming. On the game tying drive, his quick release on a blitz was able to gain 19-yards on 2nd and 4. Then on 4th and 10, he hit an open Chaz Schilens to give the Raiders life. The 29-yard toss to his rookie target was one of the most clutch plays this season.

RUNNING BACKS & FULLBACKS: C –

After a solid performance last week, Michael Bush could have been a goat today with his fumble in the 3rd quarter. That turnover led to a 25-yard Shayne Graham field goal, which extended the Bengals lead to 17-10. He did average 6.8 yards per carry on his 4 attempts. Darren McFadden played a physical contest, finishing a few of his six carries with blows to the attempting tackler. He had 9 touches for 25-yards, many of them on earlier downs that helped Gradkowski into manageable down and distances in key drives. Justin Fargas led the team with 8 carries for 32-yards. Oakland did not need a powerful ground game today, something you couldn’t say if Russell was under center. Luke Lawton helped with 3 grabs for 14 yards.

WIDE RECEIVERS & TIGHT ENDS: B –

Louis Murphy’s lone catch of the game was a 29-yard strike that tied the game with 33 seconds remaining in the game. He worked the cornerback well and was able to adjust to make the reception and bolt into the end zone. Zach Miller had another solid effort with 5 receptions for 65-yards and a score. His back-to-back catches; on 2nd and 4 for 19-yards and on 1st and 10 for 9-yards in the game tying drive helped move the chains. In his second game this campaign, Chaz Schilens hauled in a stellar 25-yard pass to start a drive, jumping to snag the football with a cornerback draped on him and a 16-yard catch on 4th and 10 with the game on the line. Darrius Heyward-Bey dropped a potential first-down on a 3rd and 4 in the 2nd quarter, but snagged a 7-yard pass on a 3rd and 3. In the 3rd quarter, the speedy rookie did draw a 19-yard pass interference flag on Leon Hall.

OFFENSIVE LINE: B

This group played well at times, others they got mixed up in trying to block the varying Bengal blitzes. Gradkowski’s mobility and instant decision making kept Cincinnati from tallying a sack. Robert Gallery mauled the interior of the defensive line during Bush’s 10-yard gain on 3rd and 2 in the 3rd quarter. Most of the Bengals pressure was up the gut of the trenches and surprisingly, starting right tackle Cornell Green played a mistake free game. Samson Satele and Gradkowski had a mix-up during an exchange that was recovered by Domato Peko. Gradkowski’s interception to open a drive in the 4th quarter was facilitated by the pressure the Bengals applied. The passer floated a pass into the hands of Jonathan Joseph as Oakland attempted for a quick strike to Murphy.

DEFENSIVE LINE: B –

The run defense allowed way too many yards (177). But many times, the front-four was able to pressure Carson Palmer. Cincinnati has protected their passer all year very well, allowing a mere 14-sacks in 2009, but Oakland was able to compile three sacks. Greg Ellis had a huge sack late in the 4th quarter on a 3rd and 12. Desmond Bryant added energy to the defensive line and played well in place of Richard Seymour, who left in the opening quarter with a lower back injury. Jay Richardson played with a good motor.

LINEBACKERS: A

Probably the best game the linebackers played all season. Thomas Howard was very active, firing through the line of scrimmage on many stops and covering tailback Brian Leonard on a deep pattern to force an incompletion. Kirk Morrison had his best game of the year with 4-tackles – two behind the line of scrimmage. Sam Williams was in on a turnover that Desmond Bryant facilitated.

SECONDARY: B

Stanford_Routt2

This was a Jekyll and Hide game for this unit. Tyvon Branch tallied 12-tackles. He was routinely making stops around the line of scrimmage and in the backfield. On a 3rd and 6 in the 2nd quarter, Branch blitzed, sacked Palmer and forced a fumble when Cincinnati was at the OAK 27-yard line. He did get burned on an Andre Caldwell 17-yard reception in the 1st quarter, but he dove in the end-zone to break up a potential score on a 2nd and goal in the 3rd quarter – a key play as Graham missed a 37-yarder five plays later. The safety out of UCONN also saved a touchdown as the last line of defense on Bernard Scott’s 23-yard reception on 2nd and 22 in the 1st quarter. Chris Johnson was torched deep by Laveranues Coles for 40-yards, he whiffed when trying to tackle Scott that resulted in a 61-yard run, but he had a nice tackle behind the line of scrimmage and broke up a pass intended for Chad Ochocinco on a drive that the Bengals went three-and-out in the final quarter. Stanford Routt was infracted for roughing the passer on a 3rd and goal. The dumb penalty gave Cincinnati a new set of downs, but Routt redeemed himself three plays later on 3rd and goal with an 18-yard sack of Palmer that hurt Graham when he missed his field goal on the ensuing play. Nnamdi Asomugha closed the game with an interception, but on a few occasions, Ochocinco got the best of him. His blitz broke containment on Scott’s long run. Mike Mitchell played sparingly and had a couple of run stuffing tackles.

SPECIAL TEAMS: A

Rookie tight end Brandon Myers had the play of the game; stripping Caldwell on the game’s final kickoff with seconds remaining and recovering the loose ball at the Bengals 17-yard line. A few plays later, Sebastian Janikowski nailed his second field goal of the game from 37-yards out with 15 seconds remaining, giving Oakland the late victory. He missed from 57-yards wide right after Cincinnati called a time-out to freeze him and missed wide left officially as time expired in the first half. Shane Lechler boomed a 66-yard punt and averaged 50.5 per kick this afternoon. Jonathan Holland continues to be hesitant during kickoff returns and a non-threat. Coming into the game, the Oakland special teams had the fewest number of penalties called on the in the NFL (4).

COACHING: B

The play calling was significantly different with Gradkowski at quarterback. Oakland tossed the ball 34-times and the offense was pass happy on many drives. Tom Cable’s club looked impressive out of the gate in the 2nd half, putting together a 10-play drive and cutting the Bengals lead to 14-10 after intermission. The blitzing defense was a similar attack they installed against the Eagles, and it kept the often-stationary Palmer moving in the pocket. The team played motivated even after falling behind and they came from behind in front of an empty building. It was disturbing to see the Bengals shoot themselves in the foot consistently, but with the upper hand regardless at times. In the opening drive, Cincy had 3 flags and converted on two long down and distances and after they took a 14-0 lead, they led Oakland 217-to-14 in total yards, had tallied 15 first downs as oppose to the Raiders one, and had a time of possession lead of 19:48 to 3:00. But Oakland forced turnovers and pressured the over confident Bengals, who came into the contest undefeated on the road and looking to put away their division after the Steelers were upset by the Chiefs earlier in the day.

GAME NOTES

  • Ochocinco was flagged twice for false starts, playing anxiously in trying to get an edge by releasing early off the line against Oakland’s top-flight cornerback. He finished the game with 4-receptions for 67-yards.
  • Gradkowski induced am encroachment penalty with his cadence in the first quarter. In total, the Bengals compiled 8-penalties for 59-yards. The Raiders’ passer facilitated another offside infraction later in the game, but the penalty was declined due to a McFadden 9-yard gain. Gradkowski finished 17 for 34 for 183 yards with an INT and two touchdowns.
  • Rookie Bernard Scott ran for a season-high 119 yards in place of the injured Cedric Benson. Former Chief Larry Johnson had two carries for 5 yards in his first game as a Bengal.

Contact AuthorVictor Cotto – SB Report Columnist

Share

Ochocinco’s Bark Worse Than His Bite: Raiders Tame the Bengals 20-17

November 22nd, 2009 No comments

Sebastion_Janikowski9OAKLAND, CA — Oakland showed that it was not going to allow the Bengals to run on them from the outset. With the Bengals going on offense first, the Raiders looked stout against the Bengals’ run attack. Even Raiders cornerback Nnamdi Asomugha got in on the action with a 5-yard loss of a tackle. But that would be the only thing the Raiders could stop on the opening drive. Cincinnati would gash the Raiders for 23-yards, 32-yards, and 21-yards. Cincy QB Carson Palmer would punctuate the drive with a 1-yard dive to put is team up 7-0.

Oakland would get it’s shot at playing offense, but after a couple of modest runs and an incomplete pass, they were forced to punt the ball away. The Raiders would catch a break when Carson Palmer was sacked and fumbled by safety Tyvon Branch. The ball was initially scooped up by Raider LB Kirk Morrison, but he too was stripped while carrying the ball carelessly. Thankfully, Raider CB Chris Johnson shoved a would-be recovering Bengal out of the way to allow a fellow Raider recover it instead. Oakland QB Bruce Gradkowski would fumble the snap (more like a botched snap by the center, but the QB gets the credit for the fumble). The Bengals would recover the ball.

In the fist Cincinnati drive, they beat the Raiders defense with the pass. This next drive, the Bengals would beat the Raiders’ defense on the ground with a series of 15, 11, 10, 9, and 6 yard runs culminating in a 1-yard rushing touchdown by QB Carson Palmer to extend their lead to 14-0.

Oakland showed some resilience with Gradkowski under center; managing a drive of his own. WR Chad Schilens kicked off the drive with a 25-yard reception. That play would be followed up by a combination of smart running by Darren McFadden for 9-yards and Justin Fargas for 12-yards. Gradkowski would then find an open Zach Miller in the endzone for a touchdown to bring Oakland to within 7-points with the score of 14-7.

After Oakland forced the Bengals to punt on their following offensive drive, Gradkowski would put his team into field goal range, but not without TE Zach Miller being the beneficiary of a 19-yard pass from Gradkowski. Unfortunately, Jano missed he field goal (wide left). The moment prior to the attempt, Bengals coach Marvin Lewis called a time out to ice Jano. Jano had kicked it anyway and the ball was wide right. And that’s how the half would come to an end; with a score of 14-7.

In the third quarter, Oakland would receive the ball first and would see Janikowski successfully kick a 52-yard field goal following a balanced attack of runs and passes. Even WR Darrius Heyward-Bey got in on the reception party with a 7-yard catch. Jano’s field goal made the game 14-10.

The Bengals mustered a drive of their own to get their kicker into field goal range since they could not get into the endzone, but to the Raiders delight, their kicker missed a chip-shot of a 37-yard attempt to keep the Raiders hanging around.

The Raiders would give the ball right back however, after Raider running back Michael Bush fumbled the all and Cincy ran the ball back 38-yards to the Raiders’ 13-yard line. The Raider defense flexed it’s muscle by keeping the Bengals from scoring a touchdown. This time, Cincy kicker Shayne Graham would not miss from 25-yards out as the Bengals got a tad bit of breathing room with a 17-10 lead with 3:29 left in the third quarter.

The two teams defenses would trade offensive stops; playing the game of field position by forcing each other to punt up until 2:12 to go in the 4th quarter.

Justin_Fargas19

The veteran savvy of QB Gradkowski would rise to the occasion as he lead his offense 80-yards in a classic two-minute drill; a pass to McFadden for 6 yards, Miller for 19 yards, Miller again for 9 yards, a 1-yard run from McFadden, Schilens for 16 yards, and then finally…a great 29-yard pass and leg-churning run after the catch to WR Louis Murphy who willed himself into the endzone with a lone defender trying desperately to keep him out for the 17-17 tie (with the subsequent PAT).

On the subsequent kick off with 33 seconds left on the game clock, Raiders special teams would hit the Bengals returner and cause a fumble. Oakland quickly jumped on the ball to recover it on the Bengals’ 17-yard line.

The Raiders, now in the driver’s seat with the ball on the Bengals’ 17 yard line and with 19 seconds left on the game clock. Cincy would use all of it’s remaining timeouts to stop the clock each time the Raiders would take down the ball. Sebastian Janikowski would kick the 33-yard game winning field goal with 15 seconds left on the clock for a score of 20-17 Raiders.

After a minimal kick off return, Bengals’ QB Carson Palmer would throw a Hail Mary, but to only have it intercepted by CB Nnamdi Asomugha to end the game, keeping their home game dominance over the Cincinnati Bengals.

*It should also be noted that Chad Ochocinco was rendered relatively inefective. 4-for-67 yards. Earlier in the week, Ochocinco was quoted as saying to Contra Costa Times Writer Jerry McDonald, “Oh, man, I’m just coming to give the Black Hole the best show they’ve ever seen. I’m not sure if they’ve really had much to look forward to this year but, man, we’re coming to town. It will for damned sure be a circus.” Ocho DID give the Black Hole the best show they’ve seen…at least since the Eagles game, by losing to the Raiders and shutting down Chad…and his mouth. Then on his Twitter page, he tweeted a post saying, “I’m scoring touchdowns for my man Ryan Hall’s fantasy team this weekend.” Gee…that worked out well for him.

Share

Countdown to Paydirt: Cincinnati Bengals vs. Oakland Raiders

November 20th, 2009 No comments

Bruce_GradkowskiWith a new quarterback at the helm, the Oakland Raiders (2-7) will take on the first place Cincinnati Bengals on Sunday. The Bengals have surprised the league with a 5-0 record within their division and last week, they swept the Pittsburgh Steelers for the season. The contest will be the 26th between the two clubs, with the Silver & Black holding a 17-8 advantage. In their last meeting in 2006, the Bengals beat the Raiders at Cincinnati. Last time they met in Oakland, the Raiders won 23-20 in 2003.

OAKLAND RAIDERS

On Offense:

Bruce Gradkowski takes over for the beleaguered JaMarcus Russell. Oakland made the move this week after Tom Cable stated that the team needed to go in a different direction, which he felt could give the team a better chance to win. But don’t expect Oakland to alter their play calling much per the new passer under center.

“There might be a couple tweaks here and there, but we’re just going to run the offense, do what we do and try to make some plays,” Gradkowski said yesterday. “We have a lot of weapons. We just have to stay on course, keep doing what we’re doing, keep working hard and things will fall into place.”

One of those weapons, receiver Chaz Schilens, had 3-catches for 27-yards in his 2009 debut against the Chiefs. Darren McFadden came back from his injury last weekend and the Raiders implemented their version of the ‘Wildcat’ – named the Wildhog – on back-to-back plays on Sunday.

What to Expect:

The Raiders ran for 182 yards last week. And that support on the ground is what Cable would like for Gradkowski. If the Raiders can have success with their trio at running back, their new quarterback will be able to use his legs in play action, bootleg and add a different dimension to the Oakland offense. Cable has stated that they’ll run the same plays that Russell had to his disposal. But will Gradkowski’s confidence and decisiveness in the pocket increase the offenses’ output? We’ll see on Sunday…

On Defense:

Matt Shaughnessy started last week in place of Greg Ellis at defensive end and shined with one-sack and solid play versus the run. Cable stated this week, “Played outstanding he has, I have said this before, but every week he just gets better and better and better. Defended the run extremely well, one sack and a couple other hurries, the guy just gets better he is coached really well. His coached has raised his level and he comes
 to work every day and he is learning from Richard [Seymour] and Greg [Ellis] those guys have been good in terms of teaching him and he is a good football player.”

The Bengals 11th ranked rushing attack could have a familiar face on Sunday. With leading rusher Cedric Benson (205 car. 859 yds. 6 TD) likely out with a hip injury, former Chief Larry Johnson could see his first action as a member of the Bengals.

What to Expect:

Whether its Johnson or Bernard Scott, the Raiders will have to key on the rush attack. Carson Palmer is in his prime, and with targets like Chad Ochocinco, Andre Caldwell, Laveranues Coles and Brian Leonard, the linebackers and defensive backfield could be kept very busy. Oakland’s 23rd ranked defense will have its surprising moments on Sunday. Palmer is not very elusive, but he makes quick decisions. He’s only been sacked 14 times in 2009, but if the Raiders can apply pressure with their defensive front, they’ll be able to stay close and not allow Palmer to pick them apart.

CINCINNATI BENGALS

Asomugha breaking up a pass intended for Ochocinco

Asomugha breaking up a pass intended for Ochocinco

On Offense:

During Ochocinco’s conference call earlier in the week, the boisterous target hyped his visit to Oakland stating, “Oh, man, I’m just coming to give the Black Hole the best show they’ve ever seen. I’m not sure if they’ve really had much to look forward to this year but, man, we’re coming to town. It will for damned sure be a circus.”

As for his match-up against Nnamdi Asomugha, one the elite cornerbacks in the league:

Everyone says he’s the best defensive back in the NFL, so I just go along and I agree with everybody else and then I will permit to go out there Sunday and have my fun, like I usually do every week. So, it’s no different. He’s an awesome, awesome defensive back. I watch him on film. I’ve dissected every single technique that he does. Every single one. So, he’s really awesome and he’s one of the few cornerbacks, where any defensive coordinator, I don’t care what team he played on, he makes a defense that much easier when you can leave somebody like that on an island by yourself and you can actually lock down one side.

What to Expect:

The Bengals will try to exploit the Raiders 29th ranked rush defense (155.6 yds. allowed). And if they can run it consistently, keeping the rest of the defense un-balanced will not be difficult, especially with Chris Johnson’s struggles allowing big plays playing opposite Asomugha.

On Defense:

This side of the ball has been the biggest reason why the Bengals are challenging for a top spot in the AFC playoffs. They are allowing a measly 83.4 yards per game on the ground (2nd in the NFL). And last week, they stifled the Steelers with four-sacks and 10-passes defended, while clamping down on 10-straight 3rd down stops to end the game.

Palmer had lofty comments last weekend about the defense, stating, “The way our defense played and just teed off on [Pittsburgh] all day and dominated the line of scrimmage and dominated the backfield, dominated downfield in coverage. It was a team win, but you can’t say enough about our defense. They’re playing like they are the best defense in the league and they believe that.”

What to Expect:

Linebackers Dhani Jones, Keith Rivers and rookie Rey Maualuga will spearhead a unit that will be primed to stop the three-headed monster at running for the Raiders. The key though will be whether or not the front of Robert Geathers, Domata Peko, Tank Johnson and Jonathan Fanene can pressure Gradkowski into mistakes.

GAME NOTES

  • Michael Bush leads the Raiders in rushing with 77 carries for 350 yards. Last week, his 60-yard run set-up Oakland’s first score on the game’s opening drive.
  • Gradkowski is making his 13th career start.
  • When asked about Russell, Ochocinco commented, “Man JaMarcus is extremely good. You have to remember a quarterback can only be as good as his supporting cast. Case closed. Always. It will always be that way. Always. You put a Tom Brady or a Peyton Manning, you take them out of their supporting casts, you take them out of the elements they’re in now, and you put them in JaMarcus’ situation do you think it would be that much better. I’m just asking. Realistically.”

Chad_Johnson

KEY MATCH-UPS

Which CB tandem prevails? Asomugha/Johnson vs. Hall/Joseph

Leon Hall and Jonathan Joseph have played well enough to gain consideration as one of the best tandems in the league. Oakland thinks their man-to-man covering tandem is just as good. With Palmer at the helm and facing a team that allows big yards on the ground; the Bengals will be able to mix the run and pass enough to get big chunks with their aerial attack.

The Gradkowski Effect

Can his mobility and decisiveness add another dimension to the Raider offense? Will his accuracy change the complexity of the passing attack? If the answer on Sunday is yes to both, we wont see Russell for the rest of the season.

PREDICTION

Bengals 27 – Raiders 22

TV & RADIO

The game will be televised on CBS with Kevin Harlan providing play-by-play and former NFL player Solomon Wilcots handling color analysis. If sold out per NFL blackout rules, the game will air in the Bay Area on KPIX Channel 5 and in Sacramento on KOVR Channel 13. The game will air on Raiders Radio originating on KSFO 560 AM, the Silver and Black’s Flagship for the multi-state Radio Network. Greg Papa and former Raiders player, assistant and head coach Tom Flores will man the booth for the 12th straight year. The radio pregame show and postgame show will feature Raider Legends George Atkinson and David Humm along with KSFO’s Rich Walcoff. (Broadcast information cited from the Official Oakland Raiders web site)

GAME INFO

Sunday, November 22, 2009, 1:15 p.m. PT | Oakland Alameda County Coliseum, CA

Road Team: Cincinnati Bengals (7-2) Home: 3-2 Road: 4-0

Home Team: Oakland Raiders (2-7) Home: 1-4 Road: 1-3

Point spread: Bengals favored -9.5

Contact AuthorVictor Cotto – SB Report Columnist

Share

Raiders late benching Russell; QB future is bleak

November 18th, 2009 No comments

JaMarcus_DejectedWhen the Oakland Raiders face the Cincinnati Bengals on Sunday, their starting quarterback will be Bruce Gradkowski, not JaMarcus Russell.

Tom Cable stated today, “Just felt like he would give us the best chance to win, and we need to get to playing better offensively and win football games.”

Wow, it took Cable and the Raiders this long to come to that decision?

Russell has led the Silver & Black to a 2-7 record and has been one of the worst starting quarterbacks in the league in 2009. He has displayed difficulties all year hitting his targets, showing poor pocket presence and leaving opponents salivating at his inability to scan the field. “Obviously, he’s been struggling a little bit. He’s turned the ball over more than any quarterback in the league,” Chiefs Safety Mike Brown said last week. “That’s something that we talked about. And usually he only looks at one side of the field. He doesn’t read the whole field.”

And he hasn’t been able to pilot the team either. Russell’s leadership is in question, along with his work ethic and accountability. After his first benching during a thrashing versus the New York Jets, the former first overall selection stated, “I’ve never been in that situation. It was kind of shocking to me at first.”

And he continued, shedding any responsibilities regarding his ineptness, “I don’t think it’s me personally, I really don’t.”

Two losses and futile performances later, along with another yanking by the coach and Russell declared, “Things were going OK.”

The time to sit him has passed. It’s the right move, but it needed to be done earlier.

Russell has been overwhelmed. And at this point of his career, he does not grasp the enormity of his presence nor the degree of importance his growth is to this organization.

He is 7-19 as a starter for the Silver & Black. But more importantly than the wins or losses – he has not gotten better. There is no tangible evidence in his play that leads you to think that he is the franchise passer this organization needed when they selected him.

The physical tools that make your jaw drop in a sterile environment or a practice facility on a pro-day are not translating onto the football field. What is needed out of a quarterback when they are taken that high; the ability to make teammates better, leadership, accountability and a fire to excel and achieve greatness are all lacking in Russell.

The wake-up call that was needed earlier may have been postponed because of the owner.

Al Davis has proclaimed that Russell is his man. And that conviction is probably still there. Because of that certainty, the owner has probably kept the head coach from doing this earlier.

A move that would have kept the Raiders afloat, or at least more competitive in a weak AFC West instead of being cellar dwellers once again.

As Cable proclaimed today, “It was an easy decision because I feel the responsibility for this football team to give them the best chance to succeed.”

That reservation and not believing that Russell can lead this team at this point can be damaging to the immature passer.

Now the question will be how will Russell come out of this situation?

When asked if he still sees the LSU product as the future of this club, Cable stated, “That’s my hope. This is in no way giving up on the guy. This is just trying to jump start this team and really break it down and make a decision based on what gives us the best chance to win.”

Cable probably hopes himself he can be in the future plans of this organization, especially after the off the field issues he has had in 2009. But with what we’ve seen of Russell so far and how he’s confronted adversity since he arrived to Oakland, this benching leads me to believe that this is just the beginning of the end.

“No at the end of the day it’s what we do on game days that matter and that’s all I based it on,” stated Cable.

What matters also is how a quarterback approaches his craft. And Russell leads you to believe that he is not from the Peyton Manning school of immersing yourself completely into your job.

JaMarcus_Russell_dejected_2

That is why he is in this predicament along with his inaccuracy, poor footwork, lack of leadership and failure to show progress, improvement or any bit of maturity in his game.

This benching, sitting him the rest of the season over a underdog and keeping him on the sidelines is a time out; a chance for him to exhale and recover from the mess that has been the start of his career.

The years and money remaining on his deal will keep him in Silver & Black for a few more seasons. And the stubborn owner will try to make it work with his prized passer. So he’ll get many opportunities to turn his career around.

But some things just can’t be fixed. And all the traits Russell has displayed make up the blueprint for a bust.

With this rabid fan-base ready to label him the next Ryan Leaf and sick of the losing, next time he steps onto the field, he’ll feel the pressure all over again.

And if that is next season, will Oakland pull the trigger earlier to salvage a season or let their quarterback struggle and drag the team back into the depths of the league?

If it is next year we see Russell again, that version better be completely revamped, because this one has no future in the NFL.

Share

Rookie watch: Heyward-Bey struggles, Shaughnessy plays well

November 16th, 2009 No comments

Darrius_Heyward-Bey_fails_INTYesterday; one reception for 22-yards. For the season six catches for 96-yards. Oh, lets not forget his two-carries for 19-yards. Darrius Heyward-Bey has been in over his head in his rookie campaign.

The controversial seventh overall pick in April’s draft has done very little as a member of the Silver & Black. His route running has been critiqued; Heyward-Bey’s one virtue – his speed – has been a non-factor. Fellow rookie Louis Murphy has fared better, but until yesterday’s loss at the hands of the Kansas City Chiefs, Heyward-Bey has not been in the mix or been looked at to make plays when it counted most.

And when he had a shot to give the Oakland Raider fan base some glimmer of hope – he failed.

Heyward-Bey had a ball sail out of his hands and into the mitts of a Kansas City defender, sealing the Chiefs seventh straight victory in Oakland.

Oakland will stick to their guns that the product out of Maryland was who they wanted in the draft. They claimed to like his abilities as a pass catcher, but at this point there is no reason to believe that the one man calling the shots selected him based on one thing only – speed.

Far more polished targets such as Michael Crabtree (18 rec. for 215 yds.) and Jeremy Maclin (31 rec. 413 yds. 4 TD) were selected three and twelve picks later respectively. Percy Harvin (31 rec. 422 3 TD) went at the 22nd slot to Minnesota. And Hakeem Nicks (23 rec. 407 yds. 4 TD) and Kenny Britt (22 rec. 351 yds.) were taken back-to-back at the end of the first round. But none has struggled or has been as dormant as DHB.

“I know Darrius works every day catching the ball,” said Chaz Schilens. “I’m out there with him. I don’t know what to say other than at game time, you’ve just got to make the play.

“That’s all there is to it.”

The rookie had an opportunity to do what Oakland drafted him for in the second quarter. And on one of the few times JaMarcus Russell was able to hit his target accurately, DHB let a 50-yard bomb near the goal line go right through his arms.

It’s too early to say he’s a bust. Yet its hard to bypass the fact that: a) Oakland could have taken far better targets at their slot in the draft, or b) could’ve had him a lot lower, paid less money and not be as scrutinized for it if someone was willing to move to their spot.

Shaunessey_Sack

Matt Shaughnessy started in place of the mending Greg Ellis at defensive end. He recorded a sack and had 4 tackles (including one behind the line of scrimmage). The rookie was one of the bright spots during a 1st quarter in which Oakland beat up the Chiefs offensive line and held their rushers to -4 yards and a measly 57-yards at the half. Oakland’s run defense was swarming at times and ended the contest allowing 112 yards on the ground. Their one blip was Jamaal Charles 44-yard touchdown scamper (KC first TD on the ground in 2009).

NOTES FROM SUNDAY

  • Chris Johnson tallied his third interception of the season.
  • Robert Gallery came back from his injury and started at LG. He had a costly penalty in the 2nd quarter when Russell connected with Murphy for a 52-yard gain. The play was negated due to a tripping infraction. “It was one of those things, I’m not going to let the quarterback get hit,’’ Gallery stated after the game. “I can’t put myself in that situation. It is what it is. It cost us pretty big, so it’s a hard one to swallow.’
  • Sebastian Janikowski’s streak is over. The hefty kicker connected from 50-yards, but missed a 45-yarder in the 3rd quarter. The 20-consecutive converted field goals were the longest streak of his career.
Share

JaMarcus Russell: start of 2nd half, entering the ‘bust-zone’

November 16th, 2009 No comments

JaMarcus_Russell14This is the time in JaMarcus Russell’s career where you should see the young quarterback getting better, not worse. And the team he’s leading should be turning the corner and not looking like the mess they have been in prior seasons.

Russell had a sampling of NFL life in 2007, but since the start of the 2008 campaign, he has been given the keys to the car. And at this point, he’s carelessly driven the Oakland Raiders’ offense into the ground and has been pulled over for reckless driving.

Head coach Tom Cable pulled the erratic passer yesterday in the third quarter of their 16-10 loss against the Kansas City Chiefs. It wasn’t because the opponent was overwhelming him. And it wasn’t because the team was completely demoralized as it was when he yanked Russell the first time in the season during the trouncing at the hands of the New York Jets.

It was because the team as a whole has been held back by Russell’s lack of growth. And losses are piling up again, with the quarterback being a factor for all the wrong reasons in many of those defeats.

Yes his targets victimized him with key drops yesterday. And other times, a play or here could have been gained without other player’s miscues. But Russell is the key and has always been the major part of the equation that would either revitalize the Raider organization, or sink them to lower depths.

So far, Russell’s lack of accuracy has prevented this team from sustaining drives or making key plays. His lack of leadership is troubling on and off the field, especially when he’s taking up a huge chunk of their salary cap, is at a position where a strong voice can influence a club and is at the most vital spot of any organization.

Russell does not get the enormity of his presence on this team. He does not realize that his poor play has an influence on this team’s direction. At times, he seems unconcerned and blasé regarding his performances.

“Things were going OK,” Russell said on Sunday.

Just OK? Ok, lets say things were going just OK — OK is not acceptable. Not what a first overall pick should strive for.

He lacks a burn to win games. Russell’s bad outings and losses don’t induce noxious reactions like other passers that yearn to get to a high level of greatness.

And the constant excuses of him not being ‘Superman’ and looking at the team as a whole during some of his worst stretches are just excuses masquerading the real issue.

Russell is entering the bust zone. And yesterday’s start of the team’s second half couldn’t have been any worse; losing at home a seventh straight time to a far worse Kansas City team.

Fans have booed him at home for weeks. The support isn’t there for a guy who already had the burden of lifting this team to newer heights, was the first player taken in his draft and that had a mammoth contract to live up to.

JaMarcus_Dejected

With no signs of Russell’s fuse being lit.

This could be the beginning of the end for Russell.

Not all quarterbacks mature at the same rate. And many do struggle to find their niche.

“Some guys take longer than others,” Cable said. “He’ll get there at some point. He’s a talented guy. There’s no question about that.”

But when will his talent translate to improvement and ultimately, what a quarterback that high is drafted for – wins.

No one is dismissing the fact that this organization has not provided the most sterile environment for him to develop in, or the best talent for him to depend on.

And Russell has seen his share of weirdness in his short time in Oakland.

But this quarterback just doesn’t seem to get it. He lacks all the traits needed to achieve excellence.

Oakland may have to stick with him through the end because of the monetary investment made and the fact that he was such a high draft pick with immense potential. And the decision to finally end this charade may be a year or two away.

And if Russell continues at this rate or doesn’t change his way of going about his job, there will be more misery in Oakland.

Share
Fancy some NFL betting?