News Raiders Team Notes

Brock Bowers has lowest yardage production of season, not his fault

Brock Bowers


Here is a look at how the Las Vegas Raiders’ 2024 draft class fared in a 31-0 loss at the Philadelphia Eagles on Sunday and ahead to Week 16’s road game at the Houston Texans.

Brock Bowers:

Sunday was an example of how the Raiders are not taking advantage of having a sublime talent like Brock Bowers on their offense. He had a season-low 28 yards receiving on six catches. It was his second lowest yardage output of his career. What do you expect? The team had just 75 yards of offense their lowest in a game since 1961. What a waste of a superstar.

Jackson Powers-Johnson:

The second-round pick suffered an ankle injury in Week 10 and he is on the injured reserve. He reportedly might miss the rest of the season.

D.J. Glaze:

The third-round pick continued to struggle. he has allowed 10 sacks, tied for the second most among tackles (Raiders’ left tackle Stone Forsythe has allowed the most at 11). The team will likely look to upgrade from Glaze in the offseason.

Decamarion Richardson:

The fourth-round pick hasn’t played on defense yet this season. He played 14 plays on special teams.

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Tommy Eichenberg:

The fifth-round pick from Ohio State played played 12 snaps on defense and was very active. He had five tackles, one for loss. He has only played 47 defensive snaps this season. Maybe he deserves more playing time down the stretch.

Dylan Laube:

The sixth-round pick played two snaps late in the blowout and had four yards on two carries. He has played 27 offensive snaps this season. He did return four kicks for 99 yards.

Jonah Laulu:

Laulu, claimed last year off waivers from Indianapolis, played 74 percent of the snaps and tied his season high with five tackles for the second straight game. He started the season hot and then cooled for several weeks. Maybe he is going to finish the season strong.

Source: https://www.silverandblackpride.com...aiders-brock-bowers-lowest-yardage-production
 
Previewing 2026 Free Agent Offensive Lineman

Wyatt Teller


The Las Vegas Raiders offensive line is simply not good, and that’s likely underselling it as they rank near the bottom of the NFL in pass block win rate, last in run block win rate, 30th in pressure rate, 29th in clean pocket rate, and last in avg. yards before contact.

The Raiders will have an interesting dilemma this off-season after having spent a 2024 2nd and 3rd rounder on Jackson Powers-Johnson and DJ Glaze and then two third rounders in 2025 on Charles Grant and Caleb Rogers. Powers-Johnson played well as a rookie before moving to guard this season and then suffering a season ending injury. Glaze has struggled with his transition to the NFL largely in part to speed rushers that have the twitch and bend to exploit his weakness in foot speed, hip flexibility, and weight balance. The Raiders haven’t played Charles Grant this season as he’s taking essentially a redshirt season though is rookie year preseason wasn’t terrible and Grant contains all the athletic traits necessary to succeed in the NFL though coaching will be a massive step forward for his development. Rogers played well his first two games and vs the Eagles did struggle, though facing the Eagles is likely to do that to rookie offensive lineman.

Outside of the younger player, the Raiders will likely move on from Dylan Parham this season and Parham does deserve an opportunity elsewhere to shift back to right guard or center. Jordan Meredith finished 2024 strong before really struggling out of the gate in 2025 largely in part to a new offensive system, and the transition to center. Going forward, Meredith who’s an RFA will return more than likely in 2026 but likely into a role as a 4th IOL who can shift between C, LG, and RG. Kolton Miller is Kolton Miller and will anchor left tackle even despite his injuries the last two seasons he remains an impact tackle and an unlucky ankle sprain reduced his 2025 season where prior to injury Miller allowed just 5 pressures in 4 games. Stone Forsythe, Will Putnam, and Alex Cappa are replacement level players or backups and can’t be considered in the cards going forward.

The Raiders have two starters locked in next season with Kolton Miller and Jackson Powers-Johnson, outside of them there’s 3 possible starter spots up for grabs in 2026. Caleb Rogers is playing well enough to at least compete and earn an opportunity to start in 2026, which he likely will be competing for with a new addition and/or DJ Glaze which leaves two spots at left guard and right tackle. The Raiders have over 100 million in cap space and should spend heavily on adding multiple offensive lineman to anchor the unit and let their be competition for the final 1-2 spots.

Tackle:​


The Raiders won’t likely overspend on a tackle especially after drafting Charles Grant and he will likely have the chance to compete for that position along with DJ Glaze. Despite that, drafting a rookie is also realistic if the Raiders want to add a younger, cheaper player to the offensive line. Braden Smith headlines the tackle market this season and likely will earn north of 15 million a season at 30 years old. Smith has seen massive success in his career all at right tackle and all in Indianapolis which makes his departure highly unlikely if Indianapolis chooses to pay him. In the last three seasons, Smith has allowed just 5 sacks and 64 pressures though he’s missed time with injuries and been flagged 25 times as well. Jonah Williams has bounced back in Arizona as a serviceable right tackle but likely won’t increase the floor for the Raiders or the ceiling. Former Raiders T Jermaine Eluemunor is going to earn north of 9 million and anchor a teams right tackle position for likely another 3-4 seasons. Eluemunor has logged nearly 2000 snaps over the last two seasons where he’s allowed just 8 sacks and 47 pressures with 20 penalties. Eluemunor has been a starting RT for 4 straight seasons and consistently been among the better at the position, consistently providing good pass protection and run blocking though the penalty issues have risen. Eluemunor would enjoy coming back to Las Vegas, but the fit would have to be right. The tackle market is heavy at left tackle this off-season with a lack of RT, and the Raiders likely will need to bank on Grant or development. Other names to watch with most being depth or low ceiling, high floor options include Larry Borom (MIA), Rob Havenstein (LAR), Elijah Wilkinson (ATL), and Charlie Heck (TB)

#Raiders rookie OL Caleb Rogers asked about his PFF Grade from his 1st full game as a pro (74.7 overall)

“PFF is not my standard for my success and they’re lying, go watch the game. 0 sacks, 0 pressures, that’s not true…”

And proceeded to take ownership for two of his… pic.twitter.com/zppSDamghh

— Jesse Merrick – Silver & Black Sports Network (@JesseSBSN) December 10, 2025

Guard:​


The guard market is the headline this off-season, mainly with Bills guard David Edwards being the staple. Edwards missed time from 2022-2023 with injuries and since 2024 he’s logged 2000 snaps allowing just 3 sacks and 54 pressures with 5.4 ypc as a lead blocker mainly at left guard where the Raiders have a good fit to come. Joel Bitonio and/or Wyatt Teller will likely be leaving the Browns this off-season and the veterans would be good stop gap fillers if the Raiders don’t view their younger talent as ready this season, though both could also be looking to win which wouldn’t fit Vegas. Titan’s Kevin Zeitler has a similar veteran stopgap filler role though at 36 coming away from the Titans, winning is likely in his priority to end his NFL career. Texans G Ed Ingram has seen a career revival in Houston after spending three seasons in Minnesota with the Vikings, Ingram has struggled at times in pass protection allowing 3 sacks and 23 pressures but his 5.2 ypc lead blocking has been monumental for the Texans offense. Paying a one year standout at OL is risky, but Ingram could be someone to bank on for the right price. Notable names Daniel Faalele (BAL) and Zion Johnson (LAC) will be popular but both have had extreme struggles this season and wouldn’t benefit the Raiders going forward other than as depth options. Names to watch that could be high floor names or players to bank on development include Cole Strange (MIA), Dalton Risner (CIN), Will Hernandez (ARZ), Jamaree Salyer (LAC), and Brady Christensen (CAR).

Tyler Linderbaum is an elite football player. pic.twitter.com/Ms68CDtpJM

— Coach Dan Casey (@CoachDanCasey) September 8, 2025

Center:​


The clear cut top option, and maybe the best player to hit the market this off-season, is Ravens C Tyler Linderbaum. The multi time Pro Bowler likely won’t hit the open market strictly off the franchise tag but in the world he does, should be someone LV throws a blank check at. At just 26 years old, Linderbaum has allowed 5 sacks and 87 pressures in his career including just 2 sacks & 57 pressures since his rookie season in 2022. The center market in free agency is fairly competitive and deep with Jets C Josh Myers having a decent season and will likely receive a multi year deal after allowing just 1 sack and 25 pressures through 515 pass blocking snaps. Additionally, Browns C Ethan Pocic has continued to be a top 10 center and has allowed just 6 sacks and 62 pressures since 2023 in over 2800 snaps. Other names to watch include Panthers C Cade Mays who has earned his chance to start due to injury this season and been impressive.

Rico Dowdle deserves all the love he's getting, but I want to sing the praises of the #Panthers new franchise center, IMO, Cade Mays.

2nd time he's stepped in as the backup and the team hasn't missed a beat. Former top, SEC recruit has had a process changing schools, going in… pic.twitter.com/KPDlhrWNgt

— Marcus Whitman (@TFG_Football) October 13, 2025

Source: https://www.silverandblackpride.com...aiders-free-agent-offensive-line-preview-2026
 
Chase for No. 1 pick in going down the stretch

Mark Davis, John Spytek


There is a race for the No. 1 overall draft pick in the 2026 NFL draft with just three games remaining in the regular season and the Las Vegas Raiders are in the thick of the mix.

Let’s take a closer look of where things stand:

New York Giants, 1 spot, 2-12 rec0rd:

Remaining schedule: Minnesota Vikings (6-8), at Raiders (2-12), Dallas Cowboys (6-7-1).

Raiders, 2 spot, 2-12 record:

Remaining schedule: At Houston Texans (9-5), Giants (2-12), Kansas City Chiefs (6-8).

Tennessee Titans, 3 spot, 2-12 record:

Remaining schedule: Chiefs (6-8), New Orleans Saints (4-10), at Jacksonville Jaguars (10-4).

Cleveland Browns, 4 spot, 3-11 record:

Remaining record: Buffalo Bills (10-4), Pittsburgh Steelers (8-6), at Cincinnati Bengals (4-10).

New York Jets, 5 spot, 3-11 record:

Remaining schedule: At Saints (4-10), New England Patriots (11-3), at Bills (10-4).

Arizona Cardinals, 6 spot, 3-11 record:

Remaining schedule: Atlanta Falcons (5-9), at Cincinnati Bengals (4-10), at Los Angeles Rams (11-3).

Conclusion:

There will be tiebreakers, based on strength of schedule, that will come into play in the final three weeks and this chase will be continue. Clearly, the Week 17 home game against the Giants will loom large.

Source: https://www.silverandblackpride.com...17720/contenders-no-1-overall-draft-pick-2026
 
2026 Las Vegas Raiders Draft Scouting: Peter Woods

imagn-27021222.jpg


Position: DT

Height: 6’3

Weight: 310

Stats: 2025 (12 games) – 30 tackles, 3.5 TFL, 2 sacks, PBU | 15 pressures, 21 stops, 14.6% win rate

Class/Age: Junior, 20 (turns 21 in March)

Team: Clemson

Peter Woods is still a gamewrecking monster, don’t let the taper in production fool you pic.twitter.com/HPcdhMscvE

— NFL Draft Files (@NFL_DF) December 12, 2025

Positives:​


Despite a down year in 2025 largely due to defensive scheming and other issues along the Clemson roster, Woods still remains a massive playmaker at defensive tackle. Woods has a lethal first step for his size quickly getting into his rep in elite fashion allowing him to be a wrecker with size, speed, and initial quickness. Woods has elite movement skills beyond his first step showcasing exceptional lateral quickness to pair with his ankle/knee flexibility and fluid hips allowing him to turn and bend with good twitch as well. Woods pairs this with elite strength in his upper and lower body, he has a special ability to drive his legs through the rep and pair with upper body power to move lineman off their feet and positioning. Woods pairs this with his strong natural hand strength that allows him to grab on and jam his arms into lineman’s chest consistently winning with his power and speed to power traits. Woods consistently is able to out power offensive lineman, anchor in the run game, and utilize his lower body power in pass rush with an extremely effective bull rush. He uses his hands well in strength to win in hand combat but also shows a variety of pass rush moves including a rip, chop, and club along with an unrefined spin that he will translate with due to his athletic nature. He’s a highly effective and efficient pass rusher, consistently winning over 14% of his attempts in college while also being a high impact run defender with a career 53% run stop win rate. Woods understands rushing concepts, he consistently anchors well and is able to play one or two gap assignments due to his frame and strength. He works well as a looper and against double teams consistently combating them in the correct order and having the athletic traits to overpower or out maneuver lineman. Woods has an ability to collapse rushing lanes from the interior, work backside against the run, and utilize his athletic traits laterally to impact the play where he’s consistently pushing lineman back into the rushing lane, stacking, peeking, and shedding blocks to clear lanes. Woods utilizes his first step well to convert speed to power and does so through the rep also. He also displays an exceptional motor with sideline to sideline effort and high end conditioning. Woods has a good traditional frame with exceptional arm length that he pairs with natural leverage.

2026 iDL Class | Career Production (First Look)

College production matters at iDL more than any other position.

Peter Woods is a blue-chip prospect.

Under the radar names to watch: Santana Hopper, Lee Hunter, Mateen Ibirogba pic.twitter.com/n4SOcYAHsJ

— Gridiron Grading (@GridironGrading) October 2, 2025

Weakness:​


Woods will need to rely less on his strength which he does at times, solely trying to win with strength or bull rush attempts. He will need to refine his consistently approach to winning by overpowering lineman, though while effective and it should translate could lead to issues later on. Additionally, Woods is playing a little off and he will need to learn an effective pass rush strategy and plan that is versatile instead of solely using the power to speed he does. Woods will need to refine his pass rush traits as well not having a ton of high depth, highly effective moves but they’re refined enough to succeed in college and be building blocks in the NFL. Woods doesn’t maintain his balance the best, he’ll need to do better keeping his weight aligned instead of over reaching and extending outside his frame, additionally this can show with his pad level where he’ll get too tall and allow defenders into his chest where he’s able to adjust but not as effectively. Woods struggles with consistency, at times being out of position or leading with the wrong hand on a punch and opening up his inside chest, which will be taken advantage of in the NFL. Woods has rotated between different techniques and schemes, and in 2025 saw his first time working more as a traditional 2/3 tech causing a down year and his production to dip despite versatility being a key trait of his. Woods will also have to do better at putting his hands inside the tackles shoulders and preventing them from getting north into the facemask which has led to issues. The junior is young, will continue to grow but right now his production is a slight concern as well meeting below average thresholds and not seeing a ton of development year to year.

Currently on my final evaluation for #Clemson iDL Peter Woods. He's a cut-up from his game against Boston College. Overall: terrific size paired with exceptional power, explosive capacity, flexibility, DL versatility, disruption, and football intelligence. #NFLDraft pic.twitter.com/Y2XIGQ7gjB

— Jared Feinberg (new account :)) (@Jared_NFLDraft) December 10, 2025

Grade: 1.21- Early Round 1

Pro-Comp: Jeffery Simmons (TEN)

Peter Woods is a freak human being, his raw strength isn’t natural having a 240/310 pound split of lean muscle mass while benching 505 pounds (37 reps of 225), squatting 700, deadlifting 855, and a 385 power clean. Additionally, Woods has been clocked with a 33 vertical and 4.84 40 which would all combine to give him near a 10 RAS. Athletic ability and strength is not a question for Woods, he’s going to need to get better with his consistency and refined technique but at just 21 years old that likely won’t be a too big knock to turn teams away from him in round 1. Woods has exceptional quickness and speed to power where he’s able to combine the two and consistently beat lineman to spots they’re not able to readjust at. There’s a real world where Woods will not have a massive impact in year one but with consistency and good coaching he’s going to develop into a gamewrecking, multi time All-Pro. The floor is high for Woods as well with the base being a high end run defender who can provide 2-5 sacks a season. The Raiders lack any interior pass rush consistency, and Woods would provide a key boost for them. It’s likely that Maxx Crosby returns but Las Vegas needs a true interior threat they have lacked for years. Woods likely is gone by the end of round 1 but if he remains, a trade up should be considered after taking QB early.

Source: https://www.silverandblackpride.com...-las-vegas-raiders-draft-scouting-peter-woods
 
How have C.J. Stroud, Houston Texans turned around 2025 season after slow start?

C.J. Stroud


With their two final opponents already eliminated from the playoffs, Week 16 will be the Las Vegas Raiders’ final opportunity to play spoiler this season. The Houston Texans are locked into tight battles for the AFC South title and the conference’s final wild card spot, trailing the Jacksonville Jaguars by one game and holding a one-game advantage over the Indianapolis Colts.

To preview the contest for Raider Nation, Silver and Black Pride reached out to our friends at Battle Red Blog, and Scott Barzilla was kind enough to answer a few questions about the Texans.

Q: The Texans started the season slowly, losing the first three games of the year. However, they enter the weekend on a six-game winning streak. What’s been the difference between the first half of the season and the second half?

A: The biggest difference has been on the offensive end. Even in the first three games, the defense held their opponent to under 20 points in all three games. That streak has obviously continued throughout the season. So, the key to winning is for the offense to find a way to 20 points, and they have done that throughout the streak. The 20 points given up to the Cardinals were the second-most points given up during the streak. Don’t let the 40 points from last week fool you. This is still a defense-first team, and that will be the key again on Sunday.

Q: On a similar note, it feels like CJ Stroud has been up and down since his rookie season, from an outside perspective. What’s been the difference between Stroud’s strong performances and when he struggles?

A: I think the easy answer is the offensive line, but I think it runs a lot deeper than that. The bigger key is that the kind of offense they want to run is not the kind of offense they ran in year one or that he ran in college. He is growing within the new offense, and you can see individual games where it looks better than it did before.

When you look at their schedule this year, you can see how the level of defense they played dictates how well they perform. When they have played top ten defenses, they usually end up struggling, and that is particularly true when those defenses have strong pass rushes. They succeed against weaker defenses. That seems overly simplistic, but for those on the outside looking in, it can look like he is wildly inconsistent.

Q: Houston’s defense has arguably the best edge-rush duo in the NFL with Danielle Hunter and Will Anderson Jr. How do those two complement each other? Do you have any suggestions for slowing them down?

Will Anderson Jr., Danielle Hunter

A: They are very similar in that they have relentless motors, so they are never out of a play. Anderson in particular, has grown a lot in his third year, so he is able to win at the line of scrimmage in a variety of ways. I think Hunter has been good for him the last two years because they are very similar in how they play.

In terms of how to beat them, I would try prayer. Seriously, you cannot afford to get caught in a bunch of third-and-longs. That is a recipe for disaster. So, if you can run the ball and stay ahead of the chains, then you can utilize a quicker passing game. If you can get the ball out quickly, you can neutralize that pass rush.

Q: In the secondary, I think most people know about Derek Stingley Jr., but the Texans’ defense has talent on the backend beyond the 2024 First-Team All-Pro. Who would you say is the team’s second-most important defensive back?

A: The Texans have four defenders with multiple interceptions. Jalen Pitre is top top-rated safety in the NFL according to PFF and should be a lock for the Pro Bowl. Kamari Lassiter may not be a lock, but he has four interceptions on the season and has been playing better than Stingley so far on the season. Calen Bullock is not quite as strong as the other three defenders, but he has been opportunistic on the back end.

If I had to pick one to brag on out of those three, it would be Lassiter. Having Lassiter and Stingley on the outside allows the Texans to play man or zone with equal effectiveness. That obviously opens up the pass rush, which you have already mentioned.

Q: I know the Texans are gearing up for a playoff run, but Raider Nation is already looking at the future. So, can you give us a few key impending free agents that the organization will have to make hard decisions on this offseason? What needs do you anticipate the team having?

A: I don’t think the Texans will be losing any important players that are currently a part of the core, but they likely will be saying goodbye to Joe Mixon, and Nick Chubb is here on a one-year contract. So, the running back room will be a position of note in the draft and free agency. Woody Marks has been good, but he needs a running mate to complement him. Jawhar Jordan had over 100 yards last week, so it will be interesting to see if he can be a secondary threat in the backfield.

The majority of the attention will be on the offensive line. They need to figure out whether they have any long-term pieces on the line outside of Tytus Howard. Aireontae Ersery has played all season at left tackle, but the reviews have been mixed. Ed Ingram might be a long-term fixture at right guard. Outside of those three, they will likely be looking to upgrade.

On defense, they are pretty well set, but I imagine DeMeco Ryans would love reinforcements anyway.

Source: https://www.silverandblackpride.com...egas-raiders-houston-texans-preview-cj-stroud
 
2026 Las Vegas Raiders Draft Scouting: Rueben Bain

Rueben Bain


Position: EDGE Rusher

Height: 6’3

Weight: 275

Stats: 2025 (12 games) – 37 tackles, 7.5 TFL, 4.5 sacks, INT, PBU, 2 FF | 58 pressures, 11 QB Hits, 27 stops, 19.8% win rate

Class/Age: Junior, 20

Team: Miami (FL)

Starting today, I’m tweeting about one prospect every day before the 2026 NFL Draft. If I miss a day, I shake ass for the TL

Miami EDGE Rueben Bain Jr.

+ Violent motor
+ Lands strikes accurately
+ Very fast for 275
+ Speed to power
– Agility in space pic.twitter.com/6CLBgoiMvd

— Jacob Infante (@jacobinfante24) November 27, 2025

Positives:​


Bain has an exceptional first step where he consistently explodes into the rep and engages with the tackle immediately creating pass rush nightmare matchups for offensive coordinators. Bain’s movement skills continue to show within the rep where he has exceptional ankle flexibility and hip movement that allows him to bend the edge and explode laterally or horizontally to pressure the pocket. Bain moves well in space as well showing the ability to get through a block and chase down backside runners or a scrambling QB. Bain pairs his athleticism and explosive playstyle with good natural raw strength allowing him to convert speed to power while also winning with a variety of moves. Bain has heavy strong hands at the POA which allow him to make lethal contact quickly and violently. As a smaller framed pass rusher, Bain does understand leverage and utilizes it well while also having an ability to stay low and play outside of his frame at the same time. He’s demonstrated a variety of pass rush moves which include a swim, club, chop swipe, and some bull rush technique. Bain isn’t going to be overmatched athletically or physically in the NFL with elite anchor ability and a strong thick lower half that allows him to anchor back and drive through the rep or contain the edge in run support as well. His handwork is active and quick with strength as well and he dices the run game just as well as he does the pass game showing consistent stack, shed, and readjustment techniques. Bain worked well when lined up at 7/9 tech but also showed the ability to work at a 4/5 tech and be an effective stunt loop player in the NFL with above average lateral movement. Bain has shown consistent progression with his technique and football IQ through three years instead of relying solely on his natural athleticism and power. Bain is a high IQ run defender, knowing opposing rushing plays well with good discipline and strength to set and hold an EDGE. He’s able to defeat blocks in space and has true sideline to sideline motor consistently breaking down plays backside or chasing defenders far downfield.

Rueben Bain Jr.

An Edge setter who's as surprising in his pass rush abilities as he's excellent in run.
However, his tweener status will be something to watch, and the team where he ends up will be decisive for the rest of his career.

2nd Round talent with 1st Round Potential🔍 pic.twitter.com/wW7LBczL4c

— Rayane M (@RayaneScout) December 3, 2025

Weakness:​


Bain isn’t lack weight/muscle wise but height wise he does fall below NFL averages and his arm length is also just about average which could limit his ability to plant his arm into a tackles chest and turn the corner while also being outmatched by similar height athletic tackles. Additionally, he suffered an elbow and calf injury that caused his 2024 season to essentially be over before it could start due to lingering issues. Bain does get washed out in the run game at times due to his lack of length and over aggression where he constantly attempts to make up for his physical profile by extending himself too far and having clips of over pursuit in OZ run or true IZ situations. Bain also struggles at times to utilize his strength vs double teams getting washed out despite his anchor ability and becoming a non factor. Bain will win every rep off the LOS but he does struggle when tackles are able to plant on his inner shoulder causing him to have to adjust to his non dominant hand where he’s not as refined with his pass rush technique. Bain takes consistent bad angles in space and will whiff a good bit of tackles outside the tackles or TE in the NFL till he’s able to adjust better into space laterally and understand pursuit angles. Multiple clips of Bain making the wrong read, failing to set the edge, or getting washed out result in him making a play near the LOS due to his athletic ability but that will be exposed more in the NFL where Bain does struggle making the right read in option concepts or RPO instances. Bain is listed at 6’3, but there’s a real world he’s barely 6’2 or just over the mark which will cause some concerns into the NFL. From a pure box score line in three seasons, Bain has registered 104 tackles, 25.5 TFL, and 15.5 sacks with just 9 sacks in the last two seasons which is below average for a prospect his level though his pressure rate and win rate are highly above average to counter that.

Rueben Bain Jr. had 0 sacks, but was the main reason Stanford's offense couldn't function. All of this is from 48 snaps pic.twitter.com/DtCVZaabxm

— James Foster (@NoFlagsFilm) October 27, 2025

Grade: 1.41- Mid Round 1

Pro-Comp: Tuli Tuipulotu (LAC)

Bain is going to be a fascinating prospect. he’s got the athletic traits and strength to blow anyone away and should be dominant the combine if he chooses to participate. The true junior will be knocked for his very below average height and questionable arm length but he does showcase the ability to make up for this vs NFL caliber competition though how often he’ll be able to do the same things he does at Miami in the NFL are going to be a massive question. Bain is a high motor, high effort edge rusher with natural strength and advanced technique for his age, the main point is to not overthink how effective, efficient, and impactful he is due to measurables. Teams will have to “risk” things when considering him but he will reward that risk and likely go on to have a multi 10+ sack stretch a few points in his career. The Raiders need to get a running mate with Maxx Crosby, as Malcolm Koonce and Tyree Wilson have struggled and Bain would provide what they’re looking for, that said the main issue arises with his fit. Las Vegas is going to have the first overall pick, and Bain just can’t be the pick over a QB.

Source: https://www.silverandblackpride.com...-las-vegas-raiders-draft-scouting-rueben-bain
 
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