Oakland Raiders 2010 Season Preview
Football Betting Lines
08/26/2010 -
(Sportsbook Betting Lines) - If the Oakland Raiders still have the gall to refer to
their organization as the "Team of the Decades," they had better clarify which
decades they mean exactly.
In the first three of the 10 years comprising the just-passed decade, the
Silver and Black were a playoff group and even appeared in a Super Bowl. In
the next seven, with apologies to the Detroit Lions, the Raiders were the
"Joke of the Decade."
The first team in NFL history to lose 11 or more games for seven consecutive
seasons, Oakland is a miserable 29-83 (.259) since 2003.
They've had five different coaches over that stretch, a number of doomed
quarterback experiments, and at least one low-level assistant nursing a broken
jaw.
Once-revered team owner Al Davis is 81, and having increasing trouble
distancing himself from the perception that he's lost his grip on what it
takes to build a successful NFL team in our post-millennium world.
Yet Davis and Raiders fans both have hope that the dark age for this
organization will end in 2010, and that the seven-year itch will be scratched
with some consistent winning.
"We thought that the decade of the 2000s would be ours, but boy we slipped,"
Davis told Sirius NFL Radio earlier this month. "We slumped. And now we come
into the year 2010 and I really liken this team a great deal to the team of
1980 in which the great Jim Plunkett pulled us out of the doldrums, took us to
the Super Bowl as a wild card and we had so many great players who eventually
made their way into the Hall of Fame."
Much of Davis' enthusiasm has to do with the team's latest QB reclamation
project, ex-Redskins starter Jason Campbell, who will help the team turn the
page from the bleak three-season tenure of former No. 1 overall pick JaMarcus
Russell. Though Campbell is only 20-32 as an NFL starter and never lived up to
his first-round billing either, the owner is making him the symbol of the
franchise's attempt to rise from the ashes.
"I really predict great things for him," Davis told Sirius, adding that he
sees Campbell as "a football player like I saw Jim Plunkett. He has
everything. He was 13-0 in college at Auburn. He can throw up the field, he
can run, he's big, he's smart."
Of course, Campbell won't be able to move this team up the AFC West ladder
himself. The Raiders have other potential trouble areas, from a thin offensive
line to a nondescript receiving corps to a defensive front seven that must
improve its long-standing rank as one of the worst run-stopping teams in the
NFL.
Still, Davis isn't alone in thinking the Raiders - who beat the playoff-bound
Bengals and won at Pittsburgh and Denver over the second half of last year -
are as close to being relevant as they've been in some time.
"I think we have our stamp on this team," said Davis. "It's our personnel,
it's our picks, it's our want to be great once again, to join the ranks of the
elite and get back that number-one rating in terms of wins and losses since
we've come into the league. "
Below we take a capsule look at the 2010 edition of the Oakland Raiders, with
a personnel evaluation and prognosis included therein:
2009 RECORD: 5-11 (3rd, AFC West)
LAST PLAYOFF APPEARANCE: 2002, lost to Tampa Bay, 48-21, in Super Bowl
COACH (RECORD): Tom Cable (9-19 in two seasons with Raiders, 9-19 overall)
OFFENSIVE COORDINATOR: Cable
DEFENSIVE COORDINATOR: John Marshall
OFFENSIVE STAR: Jason Campbell, QB (3618 passing yards, 20 TD, 15 INT with
Washington)
DEFENSIVE STAR: Nnamdi Asomugha, CB (34 tackles, 1 INT)
OFFENSIVE TEAM RANKS: 21st rushing, 29th passing, 31st scoring
DEFENSIVE TEAM RANKS: 29th rushing, 7th passing, 23rd scoring
KEY ADDITIONS: QB Jason Campbell (from Redskins), QB Kyle Boller (from Rams),
RB Rock Cartwright (from Redskins), RB Michael Bennett (from Chargers), TE
John Owens (from Seahawks), T Bruce Campbell (4th Round, Maryland), OL Daniel
Loper (from Lions), OL Jared Veldheer (3rd Round, Hillsdale (Mich.)), DT John
Henderson (from Jaguars), DE Quentin Groves (from Jaguars), DL Lamarr Houston
(2nd Round, Texas), DL Chris Cooper (free agent), LB Kamerion Wimbley (from
Browns), LB Rolando McClain (1st Round, Alabama)
KEY DEPARTURES: QB JaMarcus Russell (released), QB J.P. Losman (to Seahawks),
RB Justin Fargas (to Broncos), RB Gary Russell (not tendered), WR Javon Walker
(to Vikings), T Cornell Green (to Bills), LB Kirk Morrison (to Jaguars), LB
Jon Alston (to Buccaneers), DE Greg Ellis (released), DT Gerard Warren (to
Patriots)
QB: While Campbell must look like Johnny Unitas to Raiders fans when compared
with Russell, fans would be wise to temper their enthusiasm about him just a
bit. Though he has high-end physical skills and is twice the leader that
Russell was, the former first-rounder was oft-criticized in Washington for his
aversion to taking chances down the field. Given Davis' preference for a
vertical, big-strike offense, that's an allergy that Campbell is going to want
cured. The rest of the depth chart is interesting, as Bruce Gradkowski (1007
passing yards, 6 TD, 3 INT) seemed to be in line for the No. 2 job after
playing well late in 2009, but ex-Raven and Ram Kyle Boller (899 passing
yards, 3 TD, 6 INT with the Rams) inserted himself into the mix with a strong
preseason coupled with Gradkowski's injury struggles. It seems unlikely that
the team would keep two veteran QBs as backups, but stranger things have
happened around this franchise. Ex-Redskin Colt Brennan seems like a long shot
to stick at this point.
RB: While Campbell is going to be under great scrutiny, it will also be worth
keeping an eye on a running back group that has underachieved in recent years.
Darren McFadden (357 rushing yards, 1 TD, 21 receptions) has yet to live up to
his top-five billing amid myriad injuries, and the former Arkansas star has
been bypassed on the depth chart by the bigger and more durable Michael Bush
(589 rushing yards, 3 TD, 17 receptions). The Raiders will look for
contributions from both players, but Bush is likely to be the first man in.
Oakland brought in another former Redskin, Rock Cartwright (228 rushing yards,
27 receptions, 1 TD with Washington), mainly to handle kickoff returns. His
presence on the roster makes journeyman Michael Bennett's (65 rushing yards
with the Chargers) status tenuous. At fullback, Luke Lawton (7 receptions) has
been a generally reliable player over the past couple of seasons, but will be
unavailable until Week 3 due to a steroid suspension and was hampered by
concussions in the preseason. Those situations could open the door for second-
year man Marcel Reece (2 receptions) to serve in the role.
WR/TE: The makeup of the Raiders' receiving corps has long been a chicken-or-
egg argument. Were Oakland's wideouts unproductive because they lacked talent
and/or skill, or did they struggle due to the lack of a capable quarterback to
get them the ball? Clearly, the Silver and Black are banking on the latter,
because there are few new faces here. All eyes will be on former first-rounder
Darrius Heyward-Bey (9 receptions, 1 TD), who had a terrible rookie season and
was outplayed by guys like Louis Murphy (34 receptions, 4 TD) and Chaz
Schilens (29 receptions, 2 TD). Murphy and Schilens are still in the mix,
though Schilens had knee surgery during the preseason and might not be ready
for Week 1. That will afford an opportunity to someone like Todd Watkins (8
receptions), Johnnie Lee Higgins (19 receptions), or speedy rookie fourth-
rounder Jacoby Ford (Clemson). The team's most reliable target, tight end Zach
Miller (66 receptions, 3 TD), will again be in the lineup, and Brandon Myers
(4 receptions) and Tony Stewart (10 receptions) again appear set to back him.
OL: Whatever strides the Raiders might make at quarterback and/or wide
receiver will be rendered moot if this group can't protect Campbell and make
holes for the running backs. The bad news is that there's not an elite-level
lineman on this group, the good is that 80 percent of the line is expected to
remain intact. On the left side, tackle Mario Henderson is adequate and guard
Robert Gallery - who missed 10 games last year with a back problem - has
become a reliable piece when healthy. Henderson and right guard Cooper
Carlisle were the only Oakland o-lineman to start every game a year ago. The
trouble spots are at center, where neither Samson Satele nor Chris Morris is
any great shakes. Though Satele will probably be the guy on opening day,
there's a chance the team could try third-round project Jared Veldheer there.
Then there's right tackle, where prodigal son Langston Walker is not really a
long-term answer. The team would probably like to see Bruce Campbell
(Maryland), a fourth-round pick who some thought would go much earlier, emerge
as a viable candidate at the position.
DL: Though his presence didn't translate to a win increase, Richard Seymour
(47 tackles, 4 sacks) gave the Oakland defense an immediate blast of
credibility when the Patriots shockingly dealt him to the Bay Area on the eve
of the 2009 season. The group around Seymour, who plays inside in Oakland's
base 4-3 look, has been enhanced as well. Second-round draft pick Lamarr
Houston (Texas) has the versatility to play inside or outside, and ex-Jaguars
tackle John Henderson (36 tackles, 3 sacks with Jacksonville) has Pro Bowl
citations on his resume'. Big-money tackle Tommy Kelly (54 tackles, 1 sack) is
still hanging around as well, and ends Matt Shaughnessy (29 tackles, 4 sacks)
and Jay Richardson (23 tackles, 3 sacks) are decent edge rushers who each
appeared in all 16 games a year ago.
LB: Raiders fans should be highly encouraged at how the Raiders upgraded the
linebacking corps in the offseason. From a pass-rushing standpoint, Oakland
dealt for Kamerion Wimbley (68 tackles, 6.5 sacks with Cleveland), who along
with Trevor Scott (38 tackles, 7 sacks) should be able to make up for the
production that departed when the team failed to re-sign Greg Ellis. On the
inside, first-round pick Rolando McClain (Alabama) is a major upgrade over
Kirk Morrison, who is now with the Jaguars. McClain's size alone gives Oakland
more of a dimension in the run-stopping game. The Raiders have decent depth at
LB as well, as Thomas Howard (79 tackles, 2 sacks) and Ricky Brown (30
tackles) both have starting experience and Quentin Groves (28 tackles, 1 INT
with the Jaguars) is an occasionally active pass-rusher.
DB: Give a lot of credit to the Raiders secondary, which has done a nice job
over the past few seasons with very little in the way of consistent help from
the front seven. With a better group playing in front of them, the secondary
might finally be recognized as one of the best in the league. At corner,
Nnamdi Asomugha is acknowledged as elite, and Chris Johnson (67 tackles, 3
INT) has converted himself from a marginal NFL player to an above-average NFL
corner. Stanford Routt (28 tackles, 1 sack) is still in the mix at CB as well,
and seventh-round pick Stevie Brown (Michigan) has opened some eyes with a
good camp. At strong safety, Tyvon Branch (119 tackles, 1 sack) was a 16-game
starter and isn't going anywhere. The unending competition between Michael
Huff (55 tackles, 3 INT) and Hiram Eugene (33 tackles, 1 INT) at free safety
might not subside anytime soon. Both players have their moments, but neither
has been consistent. Many pundits laughed when the Raiders reached for safety
Mike Mitchell (13 tackles, 1.5 sacks) in the second round last year, but
Mitchell was on the field for all 16 games in 2010 and actually looks to be
developing into a decent player.
SPECIAL TEAMS: As usual, the Raiders have very little to worry about in the
kicking game. Punter Shane Lechler made his third straight Pro Bowl (and fifth
overall) after posting the second-best single-season punting average (51.1
avg.) in NFL history, while kicker Sebastian Janikowski (26-29 FG) was a Pro
Bowl snub. Cartwright (22.3 kickoff return avg. with Washington), who has 222
kickoff returns since breaking into the league in 2002, was brought in to
handle those duties in Oakland. Higgins (5.2 punt return avg.) is just two
years removed from a three-touchdown year as punt returner, and will get the
first crack there this year. Rookie Jacoby Ford has a chance to be in the mix
as well. Jon Condo, who played in the Pro Bowl last year, begins his third
year as the Raiders' long-snapper.
PROGNOSIS: Though many Raiders fans are as optimistic as the team's owner
about the prospects for a renaissance this year, the jettisoning of JaMarcus
Russell was hardly a cure-all. Campbell is a better quarterback but is
unproven in his own right, and playing with a new supporting cast, to include
a highly suspect offensive line, is not necessarily going to allow him to
deliver on his promise. Things figure to be better defensively, and if that
group can keep the Raiders in some games, and Campbell and the offense develop
some early chemistry and have good luck with injuries, there's a chance this
team can enter December with something to play for. That might not sound like
a return to glory, but after the past seven years, it has to be worth
something.
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LINCOLN, Neb. -- Nebraska running back Marlon Lucky was hospitalized Monday for undisclosed reasons after Lincoln police responded to a call at his residence.
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A nursing supervisor at the hospital said all questions about Lucky were being referred to the athletic department. The athletic department said there would be no further comment from the department or Lucky's family.
A Lincoln Police spokesman said officers responded to a call at Lucky's residence 11:30 p.m. Sunday. The spokesman said he didn't know Lucky's condition at the time he was taken to the hospital.
Lucky, from North Hollywood, Calif., started six games last season as a sophomore and was the team's second-leading rusher, with 728 yards and six touchdowns. He also caught 32 passes for 383 yards. He averaged 19.1 yards on eight kickoff returns.
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