Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

Training camp preview: Pressing questions arise for the Raiders

Raiders need their new hire to be a hit

- By Vincent Bonsignore Las Vegas Review-Journal

THE ringing endorsemen­t chiming loudest for new Raiders defensive coordinato­r Gus Bradley came not from his new boss, Jon Gruden, or any current or former players. In fact, the text message lauding the Bradley hire was from an NFL coaching colleague whose name had been bandied about for the Raiders’ job. It offered hope for a beleaguere­d Raiders defense and a battered fan base shell-shocked by the frustratin­g ineptness of a group that gave up the third-most points in the NFL last year, came up with the third-fewest sacks and turnovers, and ranked 30th in third-down defense. “Gus is a stud,” texted Joe Barry, then the Rams’ linebacker­s coach who ended up being hired as the Packers’ defensive coordinato­r. “He’s going to do a great job.”

At the risk of turning up a spotlight on Bradley that already shines as brightly as any in the NFL, the truth is the Raiders can’t afford for him to be and do anything less than that.

With an offense that scored the 10th-most points in the NFL last year, a quarterbac­k going into his fourth season under the same head coach for the first time in his career, a slew of playmakers all over the field and a young, rebuilt offensive line, the Raiders are in position to not just duplicate their 2020 offensive output but exceed it. That puts the playoffs squarely on their radar.

But for the latter to become a reality, the Raiders need their new defensive coordinato­r to fix a unit that has been an Achilles heel for far too long. As they gather for training camp on Tuesday, priority No. 1 is getting the defense squared away.

Otherwise, all those points will be for naught. Just like last year.

While a beefed-up defensive line bolstered by the addition of passrush specialist Yannick Ngakoue and a secondary strengthen­ed by the additions of veteran cornerback Casey Hayward and rookie free safety Tre’von Moehrig will play prominent roles in the Raiders’ defensive effort, it is Bradley, one of the most respected defensive leaders in the NFL, and the veteran group of assistants he brought with him who could be the key that finally unlocks the potential in the Raiders’ defense.

Glass-half-full approach

“I really look at this team as, ‘All right, here’s where they’re at,’ and it’s our job to build on what was already taking place,” Bradley said. “So I think there is some good young talent. We’re very impressed with them. I think that as far as the overall group, obviously we drafted some players on the defensive side, so creating more depth and creating more competitio­n within. But like I said, I’ve been pretty impressed with their skill set and how they pick things up.”

The support staff includes holdover and longtime Bradley ally Rod Marinelli, who is in charge of the defensive line, secondary coach Ron Milus and linebacker­s coach Richard Smith. Milus and Smith coached with Bradley over the last four years with the Chargers.

Together, they bring a track record of developmen­t, teaching, communicat­ion and success that has been conspicuou­sly lacking among the Raiders’ defensive staff the last three seasons. All of which painfully played out on the field, where far too often the Raiders looked disjointed and disorganiz­ed, specifical­ly on key third downs and late in games.

Last year, the Raiders stopped opponents just 48.7 percent of the time on third down. They failed to hold late-game leads in three critical losses — with 1:43 remaining against the Chiefs, 19 seconds left against the Dolphins and in overtime against the Chargers. In each case, a failure to understand and execute basic assignment­s appeared to be as much a culprit as talent.

Enter Bradley, whose energetic style, friendly and approachab­le demeanor and formidable track record make him an easy buy-in for a young Raiders defense starving for direction.

For Bradley, that begins with an approach that values personal relationsh­ips above X’s and O’s. The belief being, once mutual respect is achieved, everything else will organicall­y follow.

“The biggest thing is the man,” said defensive end Cle Ferrell. “Coach Bradley is a guy who is going to talk to you about your vision for your life when you sit down and meet with him. … So I think the biggest thing with Coach Brad, first of all, he’s a good dude. I think that makes you want to play for a guy even more.”

Way back with Gruden

It’s been Bradley’s M.O. almost from the moment Gruden plucked him off the staff at North Dakota State in 2006 to be his linebacker­s coach with the Buccaneers.

The chance Gruden took on the young college assistant was the starting point for a career in which Bradley has overseen quality defenses in Seattle and Los Angeles and included four years as the head coach of the Jaguars.

Bradley ultimately failed as a head coach, but the talent he accumulate­d in Jacksonvil­le set the foundation for the Jaguars’ AFC Championsh­ip game run in 2017. Bradley eventually landed in Los Angeles, where he spent the last four years calling the shots for a typically sound defense.

When the Chargers moved on from head coach Anthony Lynn at the end of the 2020 season, Bradley became available. Gruden, in need of an establishe­d and respected leader to get his defense turned around, immediatel­y turned to his old friend from Tampa Bay.

Bradley, impressed by the investment the Raiders have made over the last few years in young defensive players like Ferrell, Maxx Crosby, Trayvon Mullen, Johnathan Abram, Cory Littleton and Nick Kwiatkoski, and buoyed by the promise they would invest heavily on that side of the ball during the offseason, quickly accepted the offer.

“The thing that’s really crazy to me is that he’s the same guy. If not, he has way more energy,” said Ngakoue, who played under Bradley in Jacksonvil­le. “He always was a high-energy guy, a guy that’s personable, a great coach and unfortunat­ely in Jacksonvil­le we didn’t do what we were supposed to do to keep him there.

“But here, he’s just putting us in great positions to make plays and allow us to be free. That’s a guy that loves the game, brings passion every day no matter what’s going on in his life. He’s always going to have a smile on his face.”

Heading in right direction

A full offseason into his first year with the Raiders and more than 2,000 practice reps under his belt, Bradley feels good about where things are headed. Ngakoue headlines a rebuilt defensive line that features fellow newcomers Solomon Thomas, Quinton Jefferson and Darius Philon.

The hope is the new additions mesh with Crosby, Ferrell, fellow holdover Carl Nassib and rookie edge rusher Malcolm Koonce to create more heat on the quarterbac­k and greatly improve on the paltry 14.5 sacks the Raiders’ defensive line produced last year.

If so, a linebacker group that returns all three starters and an improved secondary should be much better in pass coverage.

As a bonus, the Raiders also ended up with Milus and Smith, a pair of noted teachers with long track records of developmen­t.

“He’s a great communicat­or,” Gruden said of Bradley. “He also has a staff that’s been with him for a long time. I think that’s the biggest thing that he has going for him. A lot of coordinato­rs get hired and they have to implement their defense with a lot of coaches they’ve never worked with. Richard Smith is a great linebacker coach. Ron Milus is a great secondary coach. Marinelli just got the Lifelong Achievemen­t Award for the defensive line coach. So we have a great defensive staff, and Gus is a great communicat­or.”

It sets up the 55-year-old Minnesota native as a potential hero. By merely turning the Raiders into an average defensive unit, it could change the entire narrative of a franchise that has reached the playoffs only one time over the last 20 years and desperatel­y wants to take a decisive step forward in their second year in Las Vegas.

Given how bad the Raiders were defensivel­y last year, it seems unfathomab­le they could be as ineffectiv­e in 2021.

The question becomes, how much better can they be? With Bradley at the helm, the Raiders hope the answer is much better.

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 ?? L.E. Baskow Las Vegas Review-Journal @Left_Eye_Images ?? Defensive coordinato­r Gus Bradley is tasked with improving a unit that ranked among the bottom of the NFL last season in several categories, including 30th in points allowed.
L.E. Baskow Las Vegas Review-Journal @Left_Eye_Images Defensive coordinato­r Gus Bradley is tasked with improving a unit that ranked among the bottom of the NFL last season in several categories, including 30th in points allowed.
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Defensive coordintao­r Gus Bradley shouts instructio­ns during a Raiders team practice on June 16 in Henderson.
Las Vegas Review-Journal @Heidi Fang Heidi Fang Defensive coordintao­r Gus Bradley shouts instructio­ns during a Raiders team practice on June 16 in Henderson.

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