Daily Democrat (Woodland)

Raiders may upset Chiefs for road win

- By Jerry McDonald Bay Area News Group

The Raiders are 12-point underdogs, a whopping margin and the second biggest point spread this week.

The Raiders are an afterthoug­ht in Kansas City, and for good reason.

As quarterbac­k Derek Carr noted with candor this week, it takes two to make a rivalry and the Raiders haven’t held up their end, especially at Arrowhead Stadium.

The Chiefs are coming off a Super Bowl championsh­ip, are 4-0 and destined for another AFC West title. The Raiders have lost two straight, are 2-2, and their season could go either way with a long list of injuries and a leaky defense.

Under coach Andy Reid, the Chiefs are 10-2 against the Raiders and 6-0 at Arrowhead Stadium since 2013, outscoring their alleged rival 17670 in Kansas City. Since his return to coaching, Jon Gruden is 0-4 against the Chiefs, coming within 40-33 the first time they played but outscored 103-20 in the last three games.

So it’s no wonder the Raiders are 12-point underdogs, a whopping margin by NFL standards and the second biggest point spread this week behind Cincinnati (plus 13 ½) against Baltimore.

But Chiefs players have a lot on their mind, and the Raiders aren’t necessaril­y atop their list of priorities. They are coming off a 26-10 win over New England, after which the Patriots’ Stephon Gilmore tested positive for COVID-19. Gilmore interacted with several players after the game, including quarterbac­k Patrick Mahomes, the Chiefs’ $503 million man.

One of the Chiefs’ practice squad players, quarterbac­k Jordan Ta’amu, is on the COVID-19 list and presumably has interacted with Mahomes on some level as they play the same position.

When Mahomes did his video teleconfer­ence with the media this week, he spent most of the time talking about the coronaviru­s. The Raiders were barely mentioned.

While the Raiders follow the Chiefs with a bye week, Kansas City has a Thursday night game coming up against Buffalo, which is currently unbeaten at 4-0.

Keep in mind that while the Chiefs are formidable, and cemented their status with a convincing Week 3 win over Baltimore, they were fortunate to beat the Los Angeles Chargers in Week 2 and were more workman-like than spectacula­r against New England, which was using Brian Hoyer and Jarrett Stidham at quarterbac­k in place of Cam Newton.

This isn’t the usual December game at Arrowhead where the weather is frigid and the Chiefs are grinding toward a playoff berth. If the Raiders are to break through at their least favorite venue, there’s no time like the present. “Kansas City is for real. They are the defending world champions,” Gruden said. “I think every starter is returning for the most part. Very uncommon feat, winning a championsh­ip and returning the entire squad. Yeah, it would mean a lot.”

A few ways in which the Raiders could beat the Chiefs and snap their losing streak at Arrowhead Stadium at seven:

1. THE SUN SHINES ON DEREK CAR » Carr has done some good things against the Chiefs, just not at Arrowhead Stadium. He’s going in with the best supporting cast he’s had with the possible exception of 2016, and he’s not doing it in December like usual.

The Raiders will be better off, of course, if Carr is winging it about the same ratio as Josh Jacobs and Co. are running it. While the Chiefs can score from anywhere, favorable down and distance en route to the end zone is what feeds the beast for the Raiders.

2. THE DEFENSE STEPS UP — WITH MINIMAL BLITZING » The masses would have you believe the Raiders should send the house at Mahomes to disrupt the rhythm of the NFL’s most explosve passer. And defensive coordianto­r Paul Guenther noted the Raiders have blitzed more of late to try and bring more pressure.

One problem. Mahomes does some of his best work in chaotic situations, and he has begun to acquire a trait common to truly great quarterbac­ks. You blitz, you pay.

“Mahomes sees the blitz and he has the quickest trigger in the league, probably,” Gruden said. “He knows how to buy time and they have some great audibles that defeat the blitz.”

3. HENRY RUGGS III, AND NOT TYREEK HILL, CHANGES THE GAME » The Raiders drafted Henry Ruggs IIII with the thought of having their very own Tyreek Hill, a wide receiver with gamebreaki­ng speed who can sprint past the defense or take a bubble screen or jet sweep to the house.

Ruggs should be back after missing two games with a hamstring injury. He’s missed a lot of practice. Hill is at full speed and has caught a touchdown pass in each of the Chiefs’ four games.

But if the Raiders want to flip the script, then dialing up a big play for Ruggs while at the same time keeping Hill out of the end zone would mean a lot.

 ?? ED ZURGA — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Kansas City Chiefs defensive end Tanoh Kpassagnon (92) closes in as Oakland Raiders quarterbac­k Derek Carr (4) hands off the ball to running back Josh Jacobs (28) during the second half in Kansas City, Mo., Dec. 1, 2019.
ED ZURGA — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Kansas City Chiefs defensive end Tanoh Kpassagnon (92) closes in as Oakland Raiders quarterbac­k Derek Carr (4) hands off the ball to running back Josh Jacobs (28) during the second half in Kansas City, Mo., Dec. 1, 2019.
 ?? JOHN LOCHER — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Las Vegas Raiders wide receiver Henry Ruggs III (11) attends practice on Aug. 13, in Henderson, Nev.
JOHN LOCHER — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Las Vegas Raiders wide receiver Henry Ruggs III (11) attends practice on Aug. 13, in Henderson, Nev.

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