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Special Teams never comes cheap for the Raiders

March 5th, 2011 No comments

Special_Teams3The Oakland Raiders place a premium on their special teams. And it shows with past contracts to many of their specialists and kickers.

Here’s a look back at some of Oakland’s deals with past special team contributors:

Sebastian Janikowski

Selected in the 1st round in 2000 and then given a four-year, $16 million contract with $9 million in guarantees in 2010. He was also the league’s highest paid kicker in 2005 when Oakland extended his contract five years, worth $10.5 million.

Shane Lechler

“This contract is the greatest ever given to a punter in the history of the National Football League,” said senior executive John Herrera after the Raiders inked Lechler for four years, $16 million, with $9 million guaranteed.

Isaiah Ekejiuba

In 2009, Oakland made Ekejiuba the highest paid coverage specialist with a 3-year deal worth $5.4 million and a $1.25 million signing bonus.

Jon Condo

Reportedly given a 2nd round tender. In March of 2010, Condo signed a restricted free agent tender worth $1.684 million.

Desmond Howard

Oakland snagged their second straight Super Bowl MVP in 1997, with a four-year, $6 million contract, that included a $2 million signing bonus. Howard salvaged a fading career by becoming a terrifying kickoff returner with the Green Bay Packers prior to landing with the Raiders.

Darrien Gordon

In 1999, after releasing Howard, the Silver & Black signed Gordon, who at the time had an NFL best 13.2-yard punt return average. The contract was worth $9.2 million over three-seasons.

Adam Treu

The Raiders released the long snapper in 2007 after he earned more than $1.2 million in salary during the 2006 season.

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Contact Author: Victor Cotto – SB Report Columnist

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15-years of Free Agency for the Raiders – Part 4

February 15th, 2010 No comments

Danny Clark targeting LaDainian Tomlinson

Danny Clark targeting LaDainian Tomlinson during the 2004 season

Danny Clark, LB

In March of 2004, the Oakland Raiders lost Eric Barton via free agency and a week earlier they had released Bill Romanowski, leaving them with major gaps at linebacker. They quickly filled one of those voids signing Danny Clark away from the Jacksonville Jaguars with a two-year $3 million contract. Known as ‘Hammerhead’ to teammates, Clark finally was able to play every down in Silver & Black and he started all 16-games in 2004, leading the club with 129-tackles. “I appreciate where I am. I bleed silver and black now,” said Clark in 2005.

Verdict: A solid player on bad defenses, Clark always played with a good motor and gave the Raiders good value with that signing. He was released prior to the 2006 season after Oakland decided to go with their younger crop of linebackers.

Ray Buchanan, DB/S

The Raiders added Buchanan in April of 2004 with a five-year $12 million contract. The ostentatious defensive back was 32-years old when the Falcons released him due to his declining coverage skills, but the Raiders used him all over the secondary during his one-year stint. “I give them a lot of flexibility because I can play safety, but if they need me, I can go out on the edge and play corner, too, Buchanan stated upon his arrival. “They can use me in the slot to cover. My hands are not tied.”

Verdict: His lone season in Silver & Black was disastrous. Buchanan did not have anything left in the tank and his career was over after the 2004 campaign.

Desmond Howard, WR/ST

The year subsequent to signing Larry Brown after his MVP performance in a Super Bowl, the Raiders inked Desmond Howard to a four year contract worth $6 million after the Green Bay Packer became the first special teams player ever to win MVP honors in the big game. Howard’s 10-returns for 244-yards and a score in Super Bowl XXXI led him to Oakland. “This is totally amazing,” Howard said when he arrived. “To sign a contract and become an Oakland Raider, it’s an emotional roller-coaster … because I’m leaving a team I helped to win a world championship and a lot of close friends.” Then Raider coach Joe Bugel stated, “We’ve added yet another explosive, impact player to our football team.” In his first year in Oakland, he led the league with 61 kickoff returns, ending with 1,318 yards, but no scores. In 1998, he scored twice on punts, but his impact was never significant enough to justify the money he received.

Verdict: Howard was useless on offense. He never lived up to the hype he established as a collegiate and the Raiders continued to collect players with trophies rather than productive talents that impact the ball club in a positive way.

Kerry Collins, QB

In May of 2004, Collins signed a three-year $12 million deal. “I’m looking forward to playing in front of the Raider Nation,” Collins stated in a statement. The Giants released the former first rounder after drafting Eli Manning and Oakland picked him up as insurance after Rich Gannon and Marques Tuiasosopo ended their season on injured reserve in 2003. “Kerry is a highly productive performer who will add to what is already a talented position,” said coach Norv Turner. Collins took over as a full-time starter after Gannon sustained a neck injury early in 2004. He tallied a 7-21 record as a Raider, passing for 7,254 yards with 41 touchdowns and 32 interceptions.

Kerry Collins running

Verdict: Collins had some streaky stretches with the Raiders, piling up passing yards with receivers Jerry Porter and Ronald Curry and leading Oakland to one of their most memorable victories the last 7-seasons during a snow storm at Denver on a nationally televised game. A cap casualty, Collins was not viewed as a long-term solution for the struggling Raiders.

Stay tuned for upcoming installments, looking back at the Raiders history during the free-agency period. Part-five coming soon…

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