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Wednesday open thread

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Source: https://www.silverandblackpride.com/general/108545/wednesday-open-thread
 
Despite Las Vegas Raiders’ loss, Eric Stokes has shutdown performance against Cleveland Browns

Eric Stokes


While there isn’t much room for optimism when it comes to the 2-9 Las Vegas Raiders, especially after the Week 12 24-10 loss to the Cleveland Browns, cornerback Eric Stokes has been one of the few bright spots on the Raiders’ roster.

According to Pro Football Focus, Stokes has surrendered just 203 yards in coverage this season, which is tied for 11th among all cornerbacks with at least 240 coverage snaps. On Sunday, the Browns targeted him twice and both passes fell for incompletions, marking the third game that the free-agent signing gave up zero yards this season. That resulted in his highest PFF coverage grade of the campaign (74.4).

Since the Raiders’ goal for the rest of this season should be figuring out which players should be part of the team’s future plans, let’s check out the tape of the 26-year-old (turns 27 in March) impending free agent’s performance against Cleveland.

Eric Stokes' PFF numbers caught my eye (0 catches on 2 targets, 74.4 cov grade), so I dove into the tape for a deeper look

Good job staying on top of the route on 3 & long, but Jeudy clearly wasn't expecting the ball #Raiders pic.twitter.com/KZDfQzQBw7

— Matt Holder (@MHolder95) November 24, 2025

We’ll start by looking at both times Stokes was targeted, and there’s a common theme in the two of them.

It’s third and 16 where the Raiders show a two-high coverage or Cover 4 pre-snap before rolling Cover 3 post-snap. Given the down and distance, Stokes is playing off coverage and does a good job of staying on top of wide receiver Jerry Jeudy, who is running a go route. As a result, Jeudy doesn’t think he’s going to get the ball and gives up on the play by jogging at the top of the route.

However, quarterback Shedeur Sanders throws it to Jeudy anyway, and the pass falls well short of the intended target. So, while Stokes does a good job of cutting off Jeudy’s route, this is really more about the veteran corner taking advantage of the situation and a rookie quarterback forcing the ball down the field.

2nd target, fire zone on 3rd & forever, similar rep where the QB and WR aren't on the same page, and this should be a pick pic.twitter.com/SnPCizPlQf

— Matt Holder (@MHolder95) November 24, 2025

Here, it’s a similar situation where Cleveland is behind the sticks in third and forever, while Las Vegas has its cornerbacks in off coverage for a three-deep zone. Granted, the defense’s play call is slightly different since they’re running a five-man pressure with the fire zone call to help speed up Sanders’ internal clock.

Meanwhile, the cornerback and wide receiver play is almost the same as the last one, where Stokes stays on top of the vertical route and the receiver pulls up, likely expecting a back-shoulder throw. However, Sanders tries to throw over the top of the defender, putting the ball in a position where Stokes could and should come away with an interception, but the pass falls right between his hands.

Good rep from Stokes on this one

Cover 3, opens his hips and uses his hands to take away the out and up from Jeudy, and Sanders checks it down pic.twitter.com/PV8nULQDT9

— Matt Holder (@MHolder95) November 24, 2025

While he doesn’t get thrown at, this was Stokes’ best rep of the game.

It’s third and long and the Raiders are in Cover 3 again, while the Browns are worried about the blitz and run max protection with the right tight end and running back staying in to pass protection, and the other tight end chip releases on the check down. That leaves Stokes on an island against an out-and-up route from Jeudy.

Sanders is looking to take advantage of the one-on-one opportunity in the boundary of the formation, but the corner does a good job of defending the double-move by opening his hips and using his hands to stay in phase against the receiver. That helps get the quarterback to check the ball down, allowing the defense to get off the field and force a punt.

Cover 3 again, but Stokes plays closer to the LOS on 1st & 10, and does a good job of not getting beat over the top while sitting on the curl route pic.twitter.com/HgXCjkrsp3

— Matt Holder (@MHolder95) November 24, 2025

It’s Cover 3 once again, but this was one of the few times that Cleveland threw the ball on first and 10, so Stokes plays a lot closer to the line of scrimmage. He does a good job of bailing post-snap and staying on top of Jeudy to avoid getting beaten over the top. But what makes this rep impressive from the defensive back is that he sinks his hips and is in a perfect position to defend the curl when Jeudy snaps off the route.

That, combined with getting some help from Devin White, takes the deep curl route away from Sanders and forces the quarterback into the checkdown for an incompletion.

Reps like these scare me about Stokes, tho.

Sim pressure that turns into quarters, and he gets beat on the dig route, Sanders just bails out of the pocket before he can get to the backside read. pic.twitter.com/l6kxrOChRg

— Matt Holder (@MHolder95) November 24, 2025

Reps like this one are where I get weary of giving Stokes a contract extension, though.

Las Vegas runs a simulated pressure out of a double-A-gap look, where the two linebackers are walked up on the line of scrimmage to force the offensive line to account for them in the pass protection call. However, the backers drop into coverage as the defense runs quarters post-snap.

With Jeudy motioning to the other side of the formation and the other slot receiver on the wide side of the field chip blocking Maxx Crosby, the field safety (Lonnie Johnson Jr.) opens his hips to the passing strength. That leaves Stokes one-on-one and essentially turns it into a man coverage rep for him. The corner gets beaten by the dig route pretty badly; Sanders just bails out of the pocket before he can get to the backside of the read.

This happened a couple of times on Sunday, where Stokes lost the rep and just didn’t get targeted. Also, this clip is an example of why the numbers mentioned above might be slightly misleading when it comes to his performance this year. On the other side of the field, Kyu Blu Kelly trips over himself, leaving Jeudy wide open for what should have been an explosive play had the quarterback and wide receiver been on the same page.

Don’t get me wrong, Stokes is playing better than expected this season. But it’s hard to deny that he’s benefiting from playing on the other side of poor cornerback play, leading to fewer targets. That’s something to keep in mind as the offseason approaches.

Source: https://www.silverandblackpride.com...eland-browns-score-eric-stokes-film-breakdown
 
Geno Smith, Tre Tucker need to find connection

Tre Tucker


Here is a look at how the Las Vegas Raiders’ 2024 draft class fared in a 24-10 home loss to the Cleveland Browns in Week 12 and what it means looking ahead to Sunday’s road game at the Los Angeles Chargers:

Tyree Wilson:

The No. 7 overall draft pick played just 33 percent of the snaps (he averages 43 percent) and he had one tackle. He did have a few decent pressures. Overall, Wilson didn’t make a big impact as usual.

Michael Mayer:

He only played 13 snaps before leaving with an ankle injury. The second-round pick had one catch for 14 yards on one target. His health will be monitored moving forward.

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Tre Tucker:

The speedy third-round pick played 95 percent of the game. He was targeted on 10 of Geno Smith’s 44 passes. Yet, Tucker had just three catches for 28 yards. Smith missed a wide-open Tucker twice on deep passes and Tucker also missed some plays. Moving forward under interim offensive coordinator Greg Olson Smith and Tucker need to find some consistency.

Aidan O’Connell:

The reserve quarterback was on the 53-man roster for the first time after recovering from a preseason wrist injury. He was the emergency quarterback behind Smith and Kenny Pickett against the Browns. He will have a chance to bypass Pickett as the backup if he performs well in practices.

Source: https://www.silverandblackpride.com.../115830/raiders-offense-geno-smith-tre-tucker
 
Darien Porter, Quentin Johnston big perimeter battle in Las Vegas Raiders-Los Angeles Chargers key matchups

Darien Porter


The Las Vegas Raiders can play spoiler in Week 13. The Los Angeles Chargers head into the game in a tight race for an AFC Wild Card spot, currently tied with the Jacksonville Jaguars and Buffalo Bills, while leading the Houston Texans, Pittsburgh Steelers/Baltimore Ravens, and Houston Texans by just one game.

However, we’ll continue to focus on the Raiders’ young players for this week’s key matchups, despite Pete Carroll making that increasingly difficult…

Darien Porter vs. Quentin Johnston


As alluded to in the statement above, one of the recent frustrations with Carroll is that he continues to give Kyu Blu Kelly playing time over Porter. But, to the coach’s credit, the rookie has seen the field more often over the last month, recording three starts and 147 defensive snaps in Las Vegas’ last four games, per Pro Football Focus.

Porter has put up good numbers when called upon, drawing 11 targets and allowing six catches for 74 yards on the year, with five of those grabs and 65 yards coming in one game against the Jaguars, per PFF. Granted, the rookie has had a few lapses where he gets beaten and either doesn’t get thrown at or is bailed out by an errant pass.

However, Kelly has been far from a shutdown corner, to say the least, so there’s still no reason why the third-round pick shouldn’t get the lion’s share of the reps on Sunday.

Meanwhile, Johnston has become a significant factor in Los Angeles’ offense this season. He’s the offense’s fourth-leading receiver with 502 yards, but quarterback Justin Herbert has been spreading the ball around. Johnston is only 142 yards behind the team’s top wideout, Ladd McConkey.

Also, the third-year pro has been the Chargers’ top deep threat this season, leading the team with seven catches, 205 yards and three touchdowns on passes 20 or more yards past the line of scrimmage, per PFF. Additionally, he’s second to Keenan Allen in contested targets (15 to 20) and contested catches (eight to 10) while owning the higher success rate (53.3 percent to 50 percent).

Considering those numbers and the fact that Johnston is 6-foot-3, that sets up for a very intriguing matchup on the perimeter with the 6-foot-3 corner who has 4.3 speed.

Jeremy Chinn vs. Oronde Gadsden II

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Including Chinn is stretching the definition of “young players” since he turns 28 at the end of February. But the Raiders are in a situation where they should be evaluating who can be part of the organization’s long-term plan, and he’s only on a two-year contract.

Especially if the club leans into the rebuild this offseason, Chinn could be on the chopping block since his deal carries just $6.25 million of dead cap space if he’s cut and $2 million if traded, while saving about $3.4 million and $7.6 million of cap space in those respective scenarios, per Over The Cap. In other words, the veteran still has something to prove over the next six weeks.

This Sunday could go a long way towards building the free-agent addition’s case, seeing as Gadsden has emerged as a legitimate threat in Los Angeles.

The rookie tight end was a healthy scratch during the first two weeks of the season, but has been a fixture in the offense in the nine games since then, ranking third on the team with 37 catches and 507 yards. He’s had at least 40 yards six times and turned heads with a seven-catch, 164-yard, one-touchdown performance in Week 7 against the Indianapolis Colts.

Meanwhile, Chinn has posted good numbers in coverage this season, surrendering just 177 receiving yards to earn a 71.1 coverage grade from PFF. Also, he’s only given up more than 40 yards when targeted in just two games, setting up for a matchup of who gives in first between the rookie and the six-year veteran.

Thomas Booker IV vs. Mekhi Becton


The Raiders need someone to step up at defensive tackle, and the coaching staff has given Booker plenty of opportunities to prove himself. He’s played in all 11 games, starting nine of them, and has recorded 362 total snaps on the year.

However, the 26-year-old hasn’t taken advantage of the reps, posting just 14 pressures (six since Week 3), while only logging seven ‘defensive stops’ against the run and a 45.8 PFF run defense grade. For context, those figures rank tied for 55th, tied for 87th and tied for 111th, respectively, among qualifying defensive tackles (80 pass rush snaps, 54 run defense snaps) this season.

It’s time for Booker to produce or make way for someone else to step into his role moving forward, and a similar statement could be said about the Chargers’ right guard.

Becton revived his career by sliding inside and winning a Super Bowl with the Philadelphia Eagles last season, leading to a two-year, $20 million contract from Los Angeles in the offseason. But the Chargers haven’t gotten what they bargained for, as he ranks 86th out of 89 qualifying guards (minimum 167 snaps) with a 40.5 overall PFF grade in 2025. The former Eagle also owns marks in the 40s as both a run blocker (41.4) and pass protector (47.9).

According to Over The Cap, the Chargers could move on from Becton this spring and only take on $2.5 million of dead cap while saving $10 million. In other words, the loser of this matchup could find themselves looking for a job in the spring.

Source: https://www.silverandblackpride.com...s-key-matchups-darien-porter-quentin-johnston
 
Greg Olson’s ascension to offensive coordinator comes at good time for Las Vegas Raiders

Greg Olson’s history as a play caller suggest a heavy workload for Las Vegas Raiders rookie running back Ashton Jeanty (2).


Jesse Minter’s Los Angeles Chargers defense has been quite the stingy group allowing just 238 points this season — good for 10th best in the NFL. The defensive coordinator has the Bolts ranked fifth in terms of yards allowed (3,147) which is helping buoy the NFL’s 20th-ranked scoring offense to a 7-4 overall record.

The 2-9 Las Vegas Raiders waltz into SoFi Stadium for this Sunday’s AFC West matchup with the Chargers boasting the 31st-ranked scoring offense and 23rd-ranked defense in terms of points allowed.

It’s not the most enticing Week 13 matchup on the NFL’s slate, however and oddly enough, this tilt marks a good time for Greg Olson’s ascension to interim offensive coordinator for the Silver & Black.

While the Chargers defense may be a Boa constrictor in terms of generally suffocating opposing offenses, Minter’s group has a middling run defense ranking 16th in yards allowed (1,252) and 28th in touchdowns given up (14 total). Los Angeles limped into the bye week after a 35-6 shellacking at the hands of the Jacksonville Jaguars in Week 11. It was a clash that saw the Jaguars trample the Chargers for 192 rushing yards.

The Bolts being susceptible to a ground and pound offense is a fortuitous thing for Olson. In his seven seasons being involved with the Raiders offense (2013-14; 2019-2021; 2025) the Silver & Black had a penchant to run the ball and in a trio of seasons (2013, 2019, 2020) the Raiders were ranked 12th, 13th, and 14th in yards gained.

Greg Olson will take over as offensive playcaller, HC Pete Carroll announced today.

Read more ➡️ https://t.co/1fGTCaLXnU pic.twitter.com/lzSp90oqmL

— Las Vegas Raiders (@Raiders) November 24, 2025

It’s only natural to scoff at how much Olson can turn around the 31st-ranked scoring offense that was previously helmed by ex-offensive coordinator Chip Kelly. Las Vegas ranks 31st in rushing yards (874) and 30th in rushing touchdowns (four).

“Too far gone” is an apt response.

The Raiders’ offensive line is in shambles due to both injury and ineffectiveness which has dampened rookie running back Ashton Jeanty’s own effectiveness, alongside tight end Brock Bowers. Quarterback Geno Smith has been under siege frequently and has held onto the ball too long. And the opposition has basically played the role of Wreck It Ralph and gone after both Smith and Jeanty with wreck less abandon.

“We got the guys we got, and so we’re going to continue to have our guys battle to show what they can do and have their play time and what they earn during the week,” Raiders head coach Pete Carroll said when asked if there will be a change in offensive line usage with Olson dialing up plays. “But more so, it’s trying to get everybody connected with, really, the approach and the philosophy that really I’ve stood for for a long time. And so, we gave our guys a lot of leeway because of with the respect we have for the coaches, but it just hasn’t quite gotten right, and I think we can do better.”

Olson’s straight-forwardness on running the ball, using play action, and throwing to tight ends is good news for both Jeanty and Bowers. And by extension, Smith. Carroll added the familiarity between he and Olson runs deep with the head coach noting: “He knows me inside and out”.

And for a Raiders team that requires much-needed balance to the offensive game plan, Olson is the type that can attempt that, if not deliver.

Ashton Jeanty truck stick

hope he is afforded the second and third levels more often next season 🤞 pic.twitter.com/cbAzuUJFOd

— Josh Norris (@JoshNorris) November 24, 2025

Jeanty’s usage through the 11 games so far has been erratic. It’s been a mix of “heavy usage” (19 carries Week 1, 21 in Week 4, 23 in Week 6) and “light usage” (six carries in Week 11 and Week 7). That’s resulted in 166 totes for 604 yards (3.6 yards per carry average) and four touchdowns rushing. The sixth overall pick became a more ample receiving target the last two weeks with 16 total targets and his receiving numbers read: 37 receptions for 221 yards and four touchdowns.

With six games remaining on slate, giving Jeanty a more consistent and heavy workload is vital for not only return on investment, but to get an evidenced-based checklist on offseason needs (already a long laundry list). The Chargers’ defense limited opponents to less than 100 yards rushing five times through 11 games while getting ran over for 100 yards or more six times on the year.

For reference, the Bolts stymied the Raiders’ ground game to 68 yards on the two team’s Week 2 matchup. Jeanty had 11 carries for 43 yards that game. But that shouldn’t dissuade Olson from getting Jeanty carries this Sunday.

Then there’s Bowers.

Playing in eight games this year, the phenomenal second-year tight end has 45 receptions for 510 yards and three touchdowns. He’s “only” broken the 100-yard receiving mark twice this season (same as his rookie season) being limited to under 40 yards receiving thrice on the year (identical to his 2024 campaign). Bowers’ most productive game was a 12-catch, 127-yard receiving, three-touchdown outing in the 30-29 overtime loss to the Jacksonville Jaguars in Week 9.

Fortunately for the Raiders young tight end, Olson’s penchant to provide that particular position group volume bodes well.

Greg Olson OC history:

– Bucs 2009 – 2011: Kellen Winslow
– Raiders 2019-2021: Darren Waller

Olson wants to run the ball & feed his TE1. On a per game basis his TE1 has averaged:

– 5 receptions
– 8 targets
– 60 receiving yards

This is a Brock Bowers post. 📈 https://t.co/pCiJASXpQK

— Fantasy Syndicate (@Syndicate_FF) November 24, 2025

All that said, all the creativity and putting players in best possible position to succeed that arrived with Kelly never happened and he was dismissed after 11 games.

So while Olson brings a reputation on run emphasis, play-action, balance, ball security and explosive plays, Raider reality is often jarring.

Expect Minter and his Chargers defense to play angry as the team is still in the thick of a postseason race. L.A. is currently in second place looking up at the 9-2 Denver Broncos and the 6-5 Kansas City Chiefs nipping at the heels in third. And losing ground with a home loss to the Silver & Black would zap the Chargers.

Quotes of Note:​

“I’d love to see us be really clean with what we’re doing. Again, utilize our guys. Want to see just the tempo of everything to be were it’s supposed to be, and hopefully we can protect the quarterback so he has chance, and we’ll do that in a variety of ways. But I’d just like to see us cleaner, operate with an urgency that gives us a chance.”

—Las Vegas Raiders head coach Pete Carroll on what he’d like to see from the offense under interim offensive coordinator Greg Olson.

“Yeah, there are a lot of different things. We’ve done things by bringing more in. We’ve done things by spreading them out and getting into some empty formations, but obviously it hasn’t worked. When you look at it, we’re always constantly trying to get the best five out there in terms of the offensive line, and they’re competing every day here on the practice field. Any of those, the backup linemen, they’re always getting work against Maxx and our number one defense, so we’re constantly evaluating the personnel, one, so we’re trying to make sure we get the right personnel on the field, but also using different systems of running back, tight ends, chips, max protections, trying to find the different ways to help out the front and certainly the timing of the patterns. Everyone’s involved in it, really, when you look at it. I mean, getting the ball out on time, receivers running the right routes, crisp routes, timing routes, running backs involved in protection or in the route combinations. I mean, we’re all a part of it, and we’ve all got to get better.”

—Las Vegas Raiders interim offensive coordinator Greg Olson on what can be done to help the offensive line protect better.

Source: https://www.silverandblackpride.com...ator-comes-at-good-time-for-las-vegas-raiders
 
Mailbag: Is John Spytek general manager in name only?

John Spytek


The Las Vegas Raiders’ 2025 season is winding down with just six games left to play, including the Week 13 matchup against the Los Angeles Chargers. That being said, this week’s mailbag is a more evergreen look at the state of the Raiders. Also, it will be a little abbreviated this week with the holiday. On that note, Happy Thanksgiving, everyone!

Q: Is Spytek the GM in name only? Do he and Pete even talk anymore? Will he, can he, tell Pete what he wants done, like playing the younger players, replacing Geno with AOC and replacing his son with Joe Philbin as head O line coach? Who’s in charge?!?

A: I completely understand where this question is coming from, seeing as I’m also part of the crew that has grown frustrated with Pete Carroll not playing the rookies enough. But the recent report/leak about Spytek and Carroll not being on the same page about who should be on the field leads me to believe that Spytek is in control of who the team drafts and adds to the roster. In my opinion, what we’re seeing has more to do with him and Carroll not being on the same page rather than the general manager having no power.

I also wouldn’t be surprised if part of Spytek’s frustration is that he brought in guys like Geno Smith, Stone Forsthye and Tyler Lockett to throw Carroll a bone by giving the head coach a few players he’s familiar with, but Carroll doesn’t seem willing to return the favor by giving the rookies more playing time.

To me, there’s a lot of friction in the building between Tom Brady’s guys, Spytek being one of them, and the coaching staff. The Athletic’s Dianna Russini reported that Brady pushed for Chip Kelly to be the offensive coordinator, and his frustrations with this season “go beyond the offense”. Then, NFL Network’s Tom Pelissero goes on The Rich Eisen Show and says Kelly was struggling to get the play calls in and, basically, was horrible at the basic fundamentals of his job.

The fact that all these leaks are coming out over the last few weeks tells me there’s a lot of finger-pointing going on in Las Vegas right now, and it’s a situation where the front office and coaching staff are at odds. That can come with the territory of being 2-9, as both sides are going to try to wipe their hands clean of the mess that is the 2025 Raiders.

So, as I’m sure most of you are expecting, don’t be surprised if more pink slips are coming over the next couple of months. It’s just a matter of who or what side Mark Davis is going to pick.

Q: If I were Mark Davis, I’d kick Geno Smith off the team after he flipped off Mark’s fans. I don’t think Al would have put up with it. I’d at least tell Pete to sit him out for a game.

A: I hear ya, that was completely unprofessional and unacceptable by Geno. Fans have a right to be pissed off with how terrible this season has gone, and even if something was said that crossed the line, he’s the professional in that situation where he needs to be the bigger person. I wouldn’t expect Carroll to bench Smith, but he or Davis should at least fine or punish the quarterback in some fashion.

Q: I wanted your opinion on something that has always bothered me, out of all the mistakes Mark Davis has made, was not keeping Rich Bisaccia the biggest one? I remember the feeling of optimism, even after the Raiders lost that playoff game, that a few tweaks and additions next year and the Raiders would really be back and then it was over.

A: I don’t think it’s the biggest mistake Davis has made, but I’d be willing to bet he wouldn’t make the same decision if he could do it over.

I’m not trying to say that Bisaccia would have been the franchise’s savior, but it’s always bothered me how Mark handled that situation. He told everyone the team needed to make the playoffs for Bisaccia to keep the job, then the Raiders won four games in a row to finish the season and earn a Wild Card spot, but the interim head coach still wasn’t retained. That’s the owner moving the goal posts and not sticking to his word.

I think that played a big factor in Antonio Pierce getting retained as head coach, which ended up being a mistake. Players vouched for Bisaccia, but Davis didn’t listen and hired Josh McDaniels instead, another big mistake. Then, the same situation happened with Pierce, and Davis was kind of backed into a corner where he’d be going against the locker room for a second time in three years by hiring someone else in the offseason.

Here we are four years later, on head coach No. 3 since then and, potentially, No. 4 if Carroll gets canned in the offseason with no postseason appearances to show for it.

TVRaider
Where are we on Tyree Wilson? Realize he has not lived up to his draft status, but he’s now getting more snaps than Koonce.
Do you think the Raiders pick up his 5th year option?

A: No, I don’t think they pick up Wilson’s fifth-year option. He is getting more playing time than Malcom Koonce, but Wilson still only played 17 out of 51 snaps last week, and 29 out of 67 against the Cowboys. For context, the fifth-year option for Wilson is currently projected to be $13.6 million, per Over The Cap.

I’d have a hard time believing Spytek takes on an eight-figure cap hit for a player who plays less than 50 percent of the team’s snaps, especially since the 2023 first-round pick was drafted by a previous regime. I think Wilson either plays out the original four-year rookie contract or gets traded in the offseason.

Q: Lamar doesn’t look like himself in the slightest post-injury. Doesn’t run, can’t hit his targets, what is wrong with him? I’m sick of seeing this little baby smacking the ball on the ground every time he gets sacked or scrambles for 1 yard. Make a play and figure it out, bub.

A: Sir, this is a Raiders blog. LOL!



That’ll do it for this week’s mailbag. Thank you all for submitting questions and, as your weekly reminder, if you’d like to have your questions answered in a future column, tweet them at me, @MHolder95, email them to [email protected] or look for our weekly call for questions on the site. The latter will continue to publish on Thursdays.

Source: https://www.silverandblackpride.com/nfl-draft/115980/las-vegas-raiders-mailbag-john-spytek
 
Raider Nation’s confidence stays stagnant heading in to Week 13

gettyimages-2248110310.jpg


The Las Vegas Raiders are heading in a new direction on Sunday with the firing of Chip Kelly. The offense has struggled all season and hasn’t scored more than 16 points in the last three games. The performance against the Browns was the final straw for Kelly.

With Greg Olson now calling the plays, there could be changes overall to the Raiders’ offensive line. Hopefully, we will start to see the younger players get shine and make an impact as well. Pete Carroll is looking for wins, but at 2-9, it is time to evaluate what you have in this draft class.

In this Week’s SB Nation Reacts, we ask what your confidence is in the team’s direction. Fans of the Raiders didn’t have much change from Week 12 to 13. Confidence went up from 6% to 7% heading into the matchup against their divisional rival

LasVegas_1_112625.png

If the Raiders can build off their new offense and produce, it could catch the Chargers off guard. Obviously, Raider Nation doesn’t have much confidence that this could happen. It is up to the Raiders’ players to rebuild trust with their fanbase.

Source: https://www.silverandblackpride.com...nfidence-stays-stagnant-heading-in-to-week-13
 
Disciplined defense vital for Las Vegas Raiders against Los Angeles Chargers

The Jacksonville Jaguars defense battered Los Angeles Chargers quarterback Justin Herbert, bottom, two weeks ago.


Containment continues to be a sore spot for the Las Vegas Raiders defense.

And getting torched by rookie quarterback Shedeur Sanders in 24-10 Week 12 home loss was just another example of exactly that. Breaking contain, evading a pass rusher, and extending a play resulted in the Cleveland Browns neophyte gunslinger dropping a 52-yard dime against the Silver & Black last Sunday.

It was a first-quarter play that saw Raiders defensive coordinator Patrick Graham dial up pressure and defensive end Tyree Wilson broke through untouched, only for Sanders to sprint right and heave the ball to streaking wide receiver Isaiah Bond before both pass rusher Maxx Crosby and linebacker Devin White could get to him.

52 YARDS LET'S GO#CLEvsLV on CBS and NFL+ pic.twitter.com/om72vAYgCL

— Cleveland Browns (@Browns) November 23, 2025

Giving that kind of explosive play up to a rookie quarterback is one thing. Extending the play to Bond and then a 39-yard pass to wideout Jerry Jeudy were the two downfield explosive plays from Sanders. The other was a screen pass that fellow rookie Dylan Sampson housed from 66-yards out when the fleet-footed running back sliced through the Raiders defense like a hot knife through butter in the fourth quarter.

Up next for Las Vegas: Containing familiar nemesis Justin Herbert. The Los Angeles Chargers quarterback who has a penchant for explosive plays (passes over 20 yards).

Herbert and the Bolts’ most recent outing was not flattering — at all.

The team limped into a much-needed bye week off a lopsided 35-6 defeat at the hands of the Jacksonville Jaguars. It was a game that saw Herbert go 10 of 18 for a paltry 81 yards with no touchdowns, one interception, while getting sacked twice.

Unofficial Pressure % from @PFF

Trevor Lawrence (#Jaguars)
– Pressured on 25% of Dropbacks

Justin Herbert + Trey Lance (#Chargers)
– Pressured on 39.1% of Dropbacks
pic.twitter.com/XVuJ6fFAHq

— Daniel Griffis (@DanDGriffis) November 16, 2025

Coming of a hiatus, expect the Chargers to bring electricity to SoFi Stadium today when they host the Raiders. And Graham is all too aware of what his defense needs to do. As evidenced by Las Vegas’ 20-9 loss to Los Angeles back in Week 2 in Allegiant Stadium.

“Got to eliminate the big plays, the explosives. Got to do a good job of corralling the quarterback. They got a good, solid run game, but they passed the ball a little bit more than expected,” Graham said recounting the previous matchup. “But, I mean, every team that’s played them has said that after their seven wins. The quarterback is really good. We got to do a good job of disguising and just got to do a better job of getting off the field on third down. I think they were 4-for-10.”

“We didn’t force enough third downs, so that’s on me,” Graham added.

A disciplined effort is vital for Graham’s defense is going to be vital against Herbert and Greg Roman’s Chargers offense. Keeping contain and not letting Herbert evade pressure by moving the pocket and dropping dimes is easier said than done. But it must happen.

Because the damage Herbert can do with his arms and legs is exponentially more detrimental than what Sanders can post as a rookie.

Of course, complementary football for Pete Carroll’s Raiders football team is critical, too. We’ll see if a sudden change at offensive coordinator — Greg Olson in for Chip Kelly — brings critical balance to the Raiders offense and sustained drives that end in points — be it field goals or end zone visits — can help the Silver & Black quell the Bolts.

“Getting the ball out on time…timing routes…running back involved in the protection. We’re all apart of it and we’ve all gotta get better.”

Raiders interim OC Greg Olson talks about how the protection can improve on offense heading into Sunday’s matchup against the Chargers.… pic.twitter.com/o5k9i2zxXY

— Vegas Sports Today (@VegasSportsTD) November 27, 2025

Quotes of Note:​

“I’m big on this. In terms of leadership, Maxx Crosby is the leader of the defense. Maxx is never going to quit. Coaches and players, we all follow that lead to a degree. So, again, I know people think that’s what they’re going to do, but I mean, nobody would do that. Nobody I’ve ever coached would do that. Do we make mistakes? Yes. Do we have bad plays? Yes. But nobody’s going to do that. And again, I can’t speak for other places or other teams and stuff like that, but nobody’s going to do that. So, I mean, it’s expected of them to do their job, and that’s what we have to do. I mean, there’s only 17 opportunities you get. There’s 365 days, 366 on a leap year, where you get a chance. Most of those days you’re a professional football player and on Sunday’s, you get to play football, so got to make the most of it.”

—Las Vegas Raiders defensive coordinator Patrick Graham when asked about the defense continuing to answer the call and keep the team in the game.

“Yeah, I think it’s important in any system, and certainly coming from Seattle, probably nobody ran it better than the Seahawks during their 10-year run there with Marshawn Lynch, who we had a chance to have here in Vegas and Oakland. So, I’ve always believed in that as well. I think when you look across the league, the successful teams are the teams that run the ball when they want to run it, not just to run it to maintain balance, but we’ve got to get in the mindset of when we want to run the football, we’ll run the football, no matter what the situation or who we’re playing. So, it just helps you. A lot of people talk about balance, and certainly we’re looking for balance in the fourth quarter, but we just got to get better at that part of what we’re doing.”

—Las Vegas Raiders interim offensive coordinator Greg Olson when asked how important it is to run the ball over the course of the team’s remaining games.

Head-to-Head:​


Sunday’s clash marks the 133rd meeting between the Raiders and Chargers. The Silver & Black leads the overall series 69-61-2 (68-61-2 in regular season action; 1-0 in postseason play). However, it’s the Bolts that ride a three-game win streak heading into the Week 13 tilt. L.A. dropped Las Vegas 20-9 in Week 2 thanks in large part to a trio of Geno Smith interceptions. The Raiders’ last win in the series was the 63-21 Thursday night football walloping that resulted in Brandon Stately being dismissed as head coach back in 2023.

Source: https://www.silverandblackpride.com...as-vegas-raiders-against-los-angeles-chargers
 
Los Angeles Chargers ground and pound Las Vegas Raiders for season sweep

Kimani Vidal, Elandon Roberts


Justin Herbert only needed one hand to complete the season sweep over the Las Vegas Raiders, as the Los Angeles Chargers dominated the running game in Week 13.

Herbert suffered an injury to his non-throwing hand during the first drive of the game, but that didn’t matter much as the Chargers rushed 43 times for 192 yards (4.5 ypc) and two touchdowns as a team. Also, Los Angeles had plenty of success on third downs, converting their first six attempts and finishing with 12 conversions on 17 attempts.

Those two factors—the running game and moving the chains on third downs—were two of the biggest differences in the 31-14 game. The Raiders’ offensive line, once again, couldn’t give Ashton Jeanty much breathing room, as the team ran the ball 18 times for just 31 yards and 1.7 yards per carry. Also, Las Vegas was just 2-8 on third downs, allowing Los Angeles to win the time of possession battle by 11:36.

That led to loss No. 10 and the Silver and Black officially being eliminated from the playoffs before December. As one can expect, the internet continues to have its fun at the bottom-feeding club’s expense.

Elimination also means that the NFL’s second-longest playoff win drought will extend for another year.

#Raiders are eliminated from playoff contention with the loss.

They hold the 2nd-longest active drought in the NFL without a playoff win, their last coming in the 2002 AFC Championship vs the Titans.

The only team with a longer active drought without a playoff win is the…

— Ryan McFadden (@ryanmcfadden_) December 1, 2025

Kimani Vidal shredded Las Vegas all afternoon.

Kimani Vidal today vs the Raiders:
25 carries
127 yards
5.1 per attempt
1 touchdown
FIVE YARDS AFTER CONTACT PER ATTEMPT AND NINE FORCED MISSED TACKLES!!! pic.twitter.com/0UR4h3XFNr

— Steven Haglund (@StevenIHaglund) December 1, 2025

I think a lot of these sacks are on Geno Smith, but another example of how bad this offensive line is.

Smith has been sacked 25 times in the last four games.

— Ryan McFadden (@ryanmcfadden_) December 1, 2025
sclark4
I know the line sucks but Geno has no pocket awareness at all.

This post below sums up the 2025 Raiders pretty well: they struggle to do simple things like have a clean center-quarterback exchange under center, but Brock Bowers is a stud and makes an elite play.

Describe the current state of the Las Vegas Raiders offense in 2 pictures. pic.twitter.com/7CNzJ6HOSm

— ERaider25 (@eraider25) December 1, 2025

I mean, this catch is just ridiculous.

You have to watch the replay to truly appreciate this Brock Bowers TD catch. pic.twitter.com/11k2YQZsFq https://t.co/bncePzXSNx

— Ari Meirov (@MySportsUpdate) November 30, 2025

And now, we deal with the trolling from the Chargers’ social media team.

pic.twitter.com/2RmOUbiO6p

— Los Angeles Chargers (@chargers) December 1, 2025

This could be an interesting development, Pete Carroll isn’t leading off the post-game pressers today…

Change of order today in @Raiders postgame availability. Geno Smith came to the podium before Pete Carroll

Still waiting on Pete

— Vincent Bonsignore (@VinnyBonsignore) December 1, 2025
I don't see how the #Raiders run it back with Pete Carroll.
Likely another factory reset.
But then again, Mark Davis isn't the most intelligent owner in the league. #SmartenUp #RaiderNation

— Ray Aspuria (@AsukalAspuria) December 1, 2025
NightRaider
On the bright side, we ONLY need a few pieces to be good. Like a QB, an Oline, a WR, a defense, and a DC and OC
PrizeBull34
Was gonna list all these reasons this franchise is dog shit, but I saw there’s only a 10,000 character limit.

For those curious, Herbert broke his left hand and will have surgery on Monday.

#Chargers QB Justin Herbert has a break in his left hand and will have surgery tomorrow, coach Jim Harbaugh said.

Harbaugh wasn’t sure if Herbert will miss time. pic.twitter.com/PFsBiRQKVO

— Ian Rapoport (@RapSheet) December 1, 2025

No victory plunge this week, our guy James just gets trolled by his granddaughter.

My Saturdays vs my Sundays… at least we have Bowers and Crosby to watch. Granddaughter still throwing shade… #raiders pic.twitter.com/GU6qVncRXi

— James Ramey (@ABNRanger87) November 30, 2025

Outlook for the rest of the season to keep your sanity:

Cap Jack
It’s better when you treat this as a comedy movie and the Raiders are the joke

Source: https://www.silverandblackpride.com...-los-angeles-chargers-score-internet-reaction
 
New offensive coordinator, same terrible Las Vegas Raiders’ running game

Brennan Carroll


The calendar just turned to December and the Las Vegas Raiders have already been mathematically eliminated from the playoffs after their Week 13 loss to the Los Angeles Chargers. It was another game where the Raiders were hardly competitive, a common theme throughout this season, as it feels like the team is just going through the motions and trying to get to the offseason at this point.

With that in mind, let’s get to this week’s winners and losers.

LOSER: Brennan Carroll


Pete Carroll made the decision to fire offensive coordinator Chip Kelly last week, which is hard to argue with. However, Las Vegas’ offense looked about the same, scoring just 14 points and being held under 20 for the seventh time this season. The offense’s biggest issue remains the lack of a running game, as the team had 18 carries for 31 yards (1.7 ypc), and Ashton Jeanty continues to have no breathing room with 15 carries for 31 yards (2.1 ypc).

With Kelly out of the picture, the offensive line and run game struggles fall squarely on Brennan’s shoulders, seeing as those are his two primary responsibilities. The Raiders have regressed in the trenches to the point where if Pete refuses to fire his son in the offseason, that should be more reason for Mark Davis to move on from the head coach.

WINNER: Brock Bowers


One silver lining from the Silver and Black’s 10th loss is that Bowers is clearly still a stud. He only received four targets but caught all of them for 63 yards and two touchdowns, including an incredible one-handed grab on a back-shoulder throw for six points. The tight end accounted for nearly 40 percent of the team’s receiving yards and has matched his touchdown total from last season.

Granted, Las Vegas still hasn’t won a game when its best offensive player over the last two years scores…

You have to watch the replay to truly appreciate this Brock Bowers TD catch. pic.twitter.com/11k2YQZsFq https://t.co/bncePzXSNx

— Ari Meirov (@MySportsUpdate) November 30, 2025

LOSER: Dylan Parham​


What isn’t mentioned while discussing Carroll above is that the Raiders also gave up five sacks on Sunday. The line’s biggest culprit was Parham, who accounted for three of them, according to Pro Football Focus. What’s most frustrating with the four-year veteran is that he continues to struggle picking stunts, an issue that has plagued him throughout his career. At this point, it’s hard to imagine that the impending free agent will get re-signed in the offseason.

WINNER: Jeremy Chinn


Chinn stood out on the box score, racking up a team-high 17 total tackles, and the advanced stats are equally impressive. He led all safeties in Week 13 (pre-Monday Night Football) with six defensive stops and finished with the third-highest PFF defensive grade (87.0) at the position. Defending the run is where the six-year pro stood out the most, ranking first at his position with a 90.9 mark and four stops in that phase of the game.

LOSER: Lonnie Johnson Jr.


Las Vegas missed 20 total tackles against the Chargers, per PFF, so that’s clearly a team-wide issue. But Johnson was one of the biggest problems, with three misses while only participating in 36 out of 67 total snaps. He’s played in just four games this season and has recorded six missed tackles over the last three weeks. Obviously, that’s not what the team was hoping for when the veteran safety was activated off injured reserve.

WINNER: Caleb Rogers


Raider Nation finally got what it’s been asking for over the last several weeks, as Rogers hit the field for the first time during the regular season. He did give up a pressure and earned a below-average pass-blocking grade from PFF (51.7), but the rookie did have a decent showing in the running game with a 68.7 mark in that department.

The problem is that the coaching staff is still keeping the training wheels on him, as Atonio Mafi received the majority of the reps at right guard, taking 31 of 48 snaps. Even so, it was good for Rogers to get some experience and have something to build on moving forward.

LOSER: Devin White


Don’t let the box score fool you. While White did have the second-most tackles on the team with 11, he also had a team-high four misses and gave up 30 yards and a touchdown in coverage to earn the defensive lowest grade with an ugly 28.0 mark, per PFF. It’s a lack of consistency that’s been the free-agent addition’s biggest issue this year, as he currently owns the second-most missed tackles (19) and is in the bottom 15 for receiving yards allowed (381) among linebackers.

Source: https://www.silverandblackpride.com...-raiders-los-angeles-chargers-brennan-carroll
 
Maxx Crosby continues streak of dominance in loss to Chargers

gettyimages-2247483161.jpg


The Raiders fell to 2-10 after a 31-14 loss to the Chargers on Sunday where not only did they look outmatched on offense, but consistently struggled on defense as well. A few lone bright spots for the Raiders came with superstar tight end Brock Bowers along with standout pass rusher Maxx Crosby. Crosby started the season slow recording a career low in pass rush win rate along with lows in his sack rate and pressure rate. After a rough few weeks, Crosby seems to be back to form following the bye week with three TFL vs the Jaguars, two vs the Cowboys, and five last week vs the Browns before another four this week vs the Chargers. Additionally, Crosby has registered 4 sacks since the bye week matching his total before which included 2 vs the Chargers.


In other “advanced” metrics, Crosby has seen his run stop win rate over the last five games rise from 36.8% to 44% which now leads the NFL at EDGE. Crosby also has posted 37 run stop wins in his last five games giving him 93 on the season which is more then 35 than the next closest edge rusher (Rams Jared Verse). As a pass rusher, Crosby saw his win rate rise from 13.1% before the bye week to 17.8% currently including three straight games with a win rate over 18%. Despite the Raiders struggles as a defense and in their pass rush situations, Crosby has seen his pressure rate rise as well recording over 22 pressures since the bye week with 7 vs the Cowboys and Chargers. He’s been a dominant run defender his whole career, though this season the Raiders seem to be getting the best of Crosby in the run game where he’s on pace to have a career high in run stops, TFL’s, run defense win rate, and wins. With 5 games remaining on the schedule, the Raiders pass rusher has logged 8 sacks, 59 tackles, 23 TFL’s, 19 QB Hits, 6 PBU, 49 pressures, 44 stops, and 2 FF putting him just in line with his 2021-2023 dominance before an injury in 2024 outside of his total pressure numbers. With just one more TFL Crosby will break his own franchise record of 23 and he’s on pace to break 30 TFL for just the 3rd time ever in NFL history.

Source: https://www.silverandblackpride.com...inues-streak-of-dominance-in-loss-to-chargers
 
Does Tom Brady share some blame for Raiders’ awful season?

Tom Brady


There was an expectation that Tom Brady would help elevate the Las Vegas Raiders with his presence as a minority owner of the team.

Yet, just more than a year into him becoming a member of the franchise that hasn’t happened.

It’s not totally clear exactly what Brady’s roll with the team exactly is. Some have should he has a strong presence, while other have suggested its more of a consultant role. it’s probably somewhere in the middle.

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From my vantage point, it seems like Brady has a bigger roll in the offseason than during the season. He has been a part of the hiring process of the head coach, general manager and some assistant coaches and well as the quarterback position. But in the season, when Brady concentrates on his broadcasting job at Fox, he serves more of a long-distance sounding board.

The Athletic reported last week that Brady is ‘frustrated” with the team’s performance this season and he played a big roll in bringing Chip Kelly to the team as offensive coordinator. Kelly was fired last week.

Brady tried to sway Ben Johnson and Matthew Stafford to Las Vegas last year and was unable to land neither. He did playa role in the hiring of Pete Carroll, John Spytek and Geno Smith. He also reportedly didn’t want to pursue quarterback Sam Darnold, who is having a much better season than Smith for the Seattle Seahawks, who traded Smith to the Raiders and pursued Darnold.

So, you you think Brady deserves any of the blame for this season or do you think is in the clear in the mess?

Source: https://www.silverandblackpride.com...scussion/116363/raiders-tom-brady-2025-season
 
Las Vegas Raiders promote rookie defensive back

Greedy Vance


The Las Vegas Raiders made some roster moves Tuesday as they promoted rookie cornerback Greedy Vance to the 53-man roster

Las Vegas released linebacker Jamin Davis to make room for Vance. They also cut kicker Greg Joseph from the practice squad.

Vance is an undrafted free agent from USC. He was elevated from the practice squad twice this season. A team can do that with a player three times in a season. So, clearly, the Raiders feel Vance is worth more playing time.

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He played 13 defensive snaps against the Jacksonville Jaguars in Week 9 and he played seven defensive snaps Sunday against the Los Angeles Chargers.

Davis, a former first-round pick of the Washington Commanders, was recently promoted from the practice squad. He played in just one game, in Week 11 against the Dallas Cowboys and he played 13 snaps. He was a healthy scratch in the past two games.

Davis could go back to the Raiders’ practice squad if he clears waivers Wednesday, which is likely. The Raiders signed Joseph as insurance for a struggling Daniel Carlson.

If Carlson struggles down the stretch, the Raiders could still look to replace him.

Source: https://www.silverandblackpride.com...raiders-greedy-vance-53-man-roster-cornerback
 
Las Vegas Raiders must address pass rush

2174205954.jpg


The Las Vegas Raiders currently rank 26th in sacks at just 19 on the season, with 6 of those coming from Maxx Crosby alone. Crosby is being doubled at a career high, and he’s seen his win rate see an increase over the last five weeks after initially struggling early on.

Crosby is still seeing lows in his pressure rate and win rate but with the high rate of double teams it could be an indication, though Crosby still has provided exceptional paly over that time. Outside of Crosby the Raiders are lacking, Tyree Wilson ranks 2nd with 19 pressures and an 8.5% win rate. Wilson isn’t living up to the expectation of a 7th overall selection in 2022 but he’s grown his role into a good third pass rusher, the issue for the Raiders is that Wilson is being asked to be the next guy across from Crosby a role that just won’t work for him that well. The Raiders re-signed Malcolm Koonce to a 1 year, $11 million contract and a year off his ACL tear it’s not been the best season that Koonce would expect with just 17 pressures, a sack, and a 13% win rate. While Koonce has done well as a pass rusher he still does look off due to the torn ACL. Despite this, the Raiders should look into retaining Koonce for the 2026 season to give time following the ACL injury rebound that usually occurs.

A look at double team rate for edge rushers (incl. chips) and how they do when being able to rush 1v1.

The chart would look so much better if two guys wouldn't break the scale. pic.twitter.com/DUSVKwQtK2

— Timo Riske (@PFF_Moo) November 20, 2025

The Raiders edge rushers haven’t been great, Koonce isn’t living up to his contract nor expectations and has seen his snap counts start to decline with Tyree Wilson and Charles Snowden, who’s logged 6 pressures, a sack, 2 hits, and 17% win rate in just 48 pass rush attempts increase their playtime. The Raiders are getting little push from the interior defensive line at times as well. Jonah Laulu has been the most notable of them with 17 pressures and 5 sacks but he’s only sporting a 5% win rate this season and is ideally a rotational defensive tackle going forward. Adam Butler has been double teamed on 58% of his pass rush attempts this season and he’s logged just 16 pressures and a 7% win rate with 1.5 sacks which are all career low rates for him. Next to Butler, the third defensive tackle the Raiders have is Thomas Booker who has done a good job generating sacks for others with 6 created sacks this season, which is 4th among all defensive tackles in the NFL. On his own, Booker has done well with 13 pressures and a 7.2% win rate. The 25 year old is an RFA after this season and should be back to try and anchor as a third defensive tackle going forward.

The Raiders haven’t seen a ton from rookie JJ Pegues and Tonka Hemingway on the interior, though both of them have not seen a ton of snaps either combining for just 55 on the season. The Raiders have seen massive regression from their defensive line, at the same time the unit is running stunts on 58% of their pass rush snaps, which is an increase of over 18% from last season. Defensive line coach Rob Leonard has never ran stunts as frequently as they are this season, which could be a reason for the lack of production along with simply the Raiders lacking talent on the defensive line. Las Vegas must address their pass rush this season, the coverage unit hasn’t been great by any means especially at the 2nd level and safeties which can cause less time for the Raiders defensive line to get to the quarterback. Despite this, Las Vegas should either look to spend in free agency on a dominant pass rusher next to Crosby or invest premium capital into the position as well. Free agent’s David Ojabo, Odafe Oweh, Travis Jones, and Jaelan Phillips all have connection with DL coach Rob Leonard and Phillips has seen a ton of success initially in his career under Leonard, something the Raiders could try to draw to Vegas if they are open to paying another pass rusher north of 15 million a season.

I’m disappointed at how much I undersold my excitement for Jaelan Phillips joining the Eagles. That’s against their guy right there too. pic.twitter.com/xWSJv6cEzK

— C4 (@PAPAxC4) November 18, 2025

Source: https://www.silverandblackpride.com...5517/las-vegas-raiders-must-address-pass-rush
 
Las Vegas Raiders injury update: Michael Mayer still out, Geno Smith limited

Michael Mayer


The Las Vegas Raiders began the practice week in earnest Wednesday and some key pieces of the offense were not participating when media was allowed to view a portion of the workout.

Reportedly, tight end Michael Mayer remained out. He didn’t play in Week 13 at the Los Angeles Chargers. Also, rookie wide receiver Dont’e Thornton did not practice because of a concussion. He left Sunday’s game late because he was being evaluated for a concussion.

If Mayer can’t play, Ian Thomas and Carter Runyon will backup star tight end Brock Bowers again. Both Tyler Lockett and rookie Jack Bech will likely play more as part of the rotation at wide receiver if Thornton can’t play Sunday against the Denver Broncos.

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Also, receiver/special teamer Alex Bachman reportedly had a cast on his left arm Wednesday and wasn’t practicing. He was out with a thumb injury.

Guard Dylan Parham (back) was out, adding to injury questions on the offensive line.

Quarterback Geno Smith was limited by a foot injury as was defensive end Maxx Crosby (knee). Center/guard Jordan Meredith (ankle) was limited.

Standout left tackle Kolton Miller, who has bene out since Week 4 with an ankle injury, has not started practicing yet. Coach Pete Carroll is still hopeful Miller can return this season.

Source: https://www.silverandblackpride.com...las-vegas-raiders-injury-update-michael-mayer
 
Chip Kelly-Pete Carroll aftermath a bad look that needs to end

Chip Kelly, Pete Carroll


There is no doubt, the 11-game tenure of Chip Kelly as the Las Vegas Raiders’ offensive coordinator was ugly.

Despite the hiring of Kelly being considered a coup and the fact that he was the highest paid offensive coordinator in the league at $6 million, his short stint in las Vegas was completely ineffective and his firing was understandable.

But things got even uglier in the days after he was fired, hours after another pathetic performance by his unit against the Cleveland Browns on November 23.

First, there were a report that Kelly botched his own calls and at times, called plays that weren’t in the game plan.

Then, as a rebuttal, there was a report that stated Kelly wasn’t allowed to call his own offense and that it looked more like the Seattle Seahawks’ offense head coach Pete Carroll used in 2023.

Clearly, there was a major disconnect between Kelly and Carroll and their two camps were trying to get their side of the story out.

Honestly, looking at both sides of the story, it’s believable that Carroll didn’t allow Kelly to do what he wanted to do. And it would also be a reason why he botched the plays and called other plays — because he was forced to run an offense he wasn’t familiar with.

Also, the Raiders’ offense didn‘t show much improvement under interim offensive coordinator Greg Olson in the first game after Kelly’s firing ,a 31-14 defeat at the Los Angeles Chargers. So, it’s difficult to pin all of the Raiders’ issues on Kelly.

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Whatever the case, these stories are unbecoming of everyone involved.

Also, they are not going any favors to Carroll, who also fired special-teams coach Tom McMahon in November. In fact, if Carroll returns as the Raiders’ coach in 2026, it could affect interest in the full-time offensive coordinator job. What top candidate would want to go to a team where there could be a chance he was forced to run an offense that wasn’t his?

The whole Kelly-Carroll situation was unfortunate and the nonsense has to end now because it’s not helping anyone.

Source: https://www.silverandblackpride.com/las-vegas-raiders-news/116337/raiders-chip-kelly-pete-carroll
 
Maxx Crosby misses practice ahead of Las Vegas Raiders’ Week 14 matchup against Denver Broncos

Maxx Crosby


The Las Vegas Raiders released Thursday’s injury report ahead of the Week 14 matchup with the Denver Broncos, listing defensive end Maxx Crosby as a non-participant in practice due to a knee injury. Crosby was included on Wednesday’s report with the same ailment; however, he was limited during the Raiders’ first practice of the week.

#Raiders injury report:

– Geno Smith was a full participant after being limited on Wednesday.

– Mayer and Thornton are trending towards not playing vs. Denver. pic.twitter.com/LH9YiBRMk6

— Ryan McFadden (@ryanmcfadden_) December 4, 2025

It’s unclear if he suffered a setback or if this is the team taking precautionary measures by giving him more time to rest/heal, but it would be a big blow to Las Vegas’ defense if its star pass-rusher can’t play on Sunday. The four-time Pro Bowler leads the team with eight sacks, while defensive tackle Jonah Laulu is second with just four. Defensive ends Malcolm Koonce and Tyree Wilson are third and fourth with three and two sacks, respectively.

Meanwhile, the Raiders were also without wide receivers Alex Bachman (thumb) and Dont’e Thornton Jr. (concussion), tight end Michael Mayer (ankle), and linebacker Jamal Adams (knee). Thornton exited last week’s game in Los Angeles early, while Mayer missed it entirely. ESPN’s Ryan McFadden posted on X/Twitter that Mayer and Thornton are trending toward not playing against the Broncos.

The team did get some good news on Thursday, though. Starting left guard Dylan Parham (back) was upgraded to a limited participant after missing Wednesday’s practice. Also, guard/center Jordan Meredith (ankle) has been on the field this week after sitting out against the Chargers last Sunday, though Meredith has been limited over the last two days. Additionally, quarterback Geno Smith (foot) was upgraded from limited to a full participant.

Source: https://www.silverandblackpride.com...ders-denver-broncos-injury-report-maxx-crosby
 
Maxx Crosby is expected to play Sunday against Denver Broncos

Maxx Crosby


There was some concern among Las Vegas Raiders fans the past two days when star defensive end Maxx Crosby missed practice Thursday and Friday because of a knee issue that made him limited Wednesday.

Yet, Las Vegas coach Pete Carroll ended any worry Friday afternoon when he said he fully expects Crosby to play Sunday against the Denver Broncos at Allegiant Stadium. Kickoff is at 1:05 p.m. PT.

For the record, Crosby is listed as questionable on the injury report. Carroll said the team has been trying to maximize rest time for their star pass-rusher is having another outstanding season. Crosby has eight sacks and 23 tackles for loss (including nine in the past two games) this season. So, his presence will be needed Sunday as the Raiders, who have lost six straight games, hope to halt Denver’s nine-game winning streak.

Meanwhile, tight end Michael Mayer and rookie wide receiver Dont’e Thornton have been ruled out. Mayer has an ankle injury that he suffered in Week 12 and caused him to miss the game against the Los Angeles Chargers. Thornton suffered a concussion at the Chargers. This will be Mayer’s fourth missed game this season. He earlier missed two games with a concussion. Carroll said he is hopeful Mayer can play at the the Philadelphia Eagles on December 14.

Ian Thomas and Carter Runyon will backup star tight end Brock Bowers again. Both Tyler Lockett and rookie Jack Bech will likely play more as part of the rotation at wide receiver with Thornton out against Denver. Carroll pointed out that Bech, a second-round pick, should get a lot more playing time this week. His play time has been somewhat sporadic this season.

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Also, receiver/special teamer Alex Bachman is out with a thumb injury that has required a cast on his left arm.

In addition to Crosby, four other Raiders are listed as questionable to play Sunday. They are linebacker Jamal Adams (knee), center/guard Jordan Meredith (ankle), guard Dylan Parham (back) and safety/nickel Jeremy Chinn (back).

Chinn may be the most questionable based on the fact that he did not practice Friday after not being listed earlier in the week.

Source: https://www.silverandblackpride.com...xpected-to-play-sunday-against-denver-broncos
 
Covered or not, Las Vegas Raiders offense must flow through Brock Bowers

Las Vegas Raiders tight end Brock Bowers (89).


The NFL is a copy cat league.

As such, interim offensive coordinator Greg Olson would be wise to exploit the apparent weakness the Denver Broncos having stopping tight ends and use Brock Bowers — the Las Vegas Raiders beast weapon on offense — to the fullest extent this Sunday.

Covered or not, the Silver & Black’s offense must flow through Bowers. The second-year tight end leads the team in targets (68), receptions (49), receiving yards (573) and is tied for the with five touchdowns. Only rookie running back Ashton Jeanty has more production (635 yards rushing, four touchdowns; 251 yards receiving, four touchdowns).

For Bowers, the Week 14 home date with the Broncos can prove quite advantageous. In back-to-back games, Denver’s defense (ranked 4th and 5th best in points allowed (218) and yards (3,437), respectively, had difficulty containing the Travis Kelce in Week 11 and Zach Ertz this past Sunday night.

By The Numbers
Tight Ends Productions Against Denver Broncos

(last 2 games)

  • Week 13: Washington Commanders, Zach Ertz, 10 receptions, 106 yards (long of 21)
  • Week 11: Kansas City Chiefs, Travis Kelce, 9 receptions, 91 yards, 1 touchdown (long of 21)

Now, this isn’t to say the Broncos defense didn’t rise to the occasion when matched up against Ertz. The play above highlights a great pass break up by linebacker Alex Singleton on a 3rd-and-21 situation the Commanders faced.

Yet, watching a 35-year-old tight end get open and almost come down with a big first down play against your stout defense is a disconcerting thing for Denver. Ertz also couldn’t come down with a potential touchdown reception, too. Ertz’s 10 catches for 106 yards is the Stanford product’s highest production this season and the 6-foot-5 and 250-pound 13-year veteran has 49 receptions for 493 yards and four touchdowns in 2025.

And that was coming off a bye week.

In Week 11, the 36-year-old Kelce dropped 91 yards and one touchdown (fourth quarter to allow Kansas City to take a 19-16 lead) in Denver’s 22-19 victory. That game marked the Cincinnati product’s second-highest output of the year (six catches for 99 yards and a touchdown against the Commanders the high mark).

Being susceptible to aging tight ends is something that should stand out on film for Olson. And he should test the Broncos’ ability to matchup with Bowers thoroughly this Sunday.

You have to watch the replay to truly appreciate this Brock Bowers TD catch. pic.twitter.com/11k2YQZsFq https://t.co/bncePzXSNx

— Ari Meirov (@MySportsUpdate) November 30, 2025

The Raiders’ 31-14 loss to the Chargers this past Sunday showed that when he’s open or covered, the 22-year-old tight end keeps making plays. Bowers hauled in all four of his targets for 63 yards (long of 27) including a highlight-reel one-handed touchdown grab.

A double-digit target afternoon for Bowers against the incoming Broncos must be in order. Especially considering in that 10-7 defeat to Denver at Mile High, the tight end finished with a paltry three targets and one catch for 31 yards.

“There’s is a few variables in there, and some of the way they played him. And we’re always looking for him —— always,” Raiders head coach Pete Carroll said when asked about Bowers’ low target counts and if quarterback Geno Smith being under duress affects that. “We love the way he plays and the plays that he can make. So, it’s never like we’re holding off to throw to somebody else. That’s not the way this works.

“But some of it was pressure, and some of it was things that (the Chargers) did. They really committed hard, and it worked out for them better than for us. We would like him to get close to 10 targets a game, and somewhere in there and more. We’ll take whatever we can get with him. He was easily looked at with the thought of targeting in maybe a dozen times in the game. So, it just didn’t work out.”

Las Vegas moves Bowers all over the field in a variety of alignments in formations. We’ve seen him at inline tight end, split out and even in the slot or in the perimeter where a traditional wide receiver lines up. That ability should help Olson and Bowers test the various parts of Denver’s defense and find favorable matchups.

Nobody was near Brock Bowers in the end zone 🎯

LVvsLAC on CBS/Paramount+https://t.co/HkKw7uXVnt pic.twitter.com/HaFp4Fkd9G

— NFL (@NFL) November 30, 2025

Protection up front has been hit and miss for Las Vegas, without a doubt. But when given time, Smith has a tendency to hold on to the ball too long instead of finding an outlet and absorbing drive hampering sacks. Thus, going quick to Bowers can help alleviate that and open up intermediate and deeper passes for a Raiders offense lacking explosive plays (a pass that gains 20 or more yards; a rush that gains 10 or more yards).

“I mean, that’s the situation. I try my best to go out there and make it happen no matter who’s out there,” Smith said when asked how challenging it’s been working behind an offensive line that has different parts come in and out due to injury and poor play. “Obviously, we lost Kolton (Miller) early in the year, that’s a big part of our offensive line, but I thought guys have stepped up and done their best to make it work. The coaches, they control a lot of that stuff, but for me, I’ve got to lead the troops, lead the guys that are on the field. Obviously, with O-line, you want that continuity. You want guys to be able to play alongside each other for a long time, but that hasn’t been the case, and so there’s no crying about it. You got to go out there and make it happen.”

Quote of Note​

“No, it’s up to the competition at the spots and who they’re trying to kind of remove from the playtime or gain some playtime on. It just depends on what’s happening, and not everybody — it’s not a wholesale idea. It’s an opportunity to compete to find your way on the field, and we want to be wide open to it, which we are, and then they have got to earn it. And so, that’s basically what it is. If some guys come along faster than others or other guys maybe play better at their spots because they feel the pressure of it, which is kind of the whole idea.”

—Las Vegas Raiders head coach Pete Carroll when asked what’s the challenge younger players face to get more consistent reps.

Source: https://www.silverandblackpride.com...aiders-offense-must-flow-through-brock-bowers
 
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