Las Vegas Review-Journal

Raiders sign second-round pick

Safety Melifonwu gets $4.5 million over four years

- By Michael Gehlken Las Vegas Review-journal By Mark Anderson Las Vegas Review-journal

4. Derwin James, S, Florida State 5. Christian Kirk, WR, Texas A&M 6. Saquon Barkley, RB, Penn State 7. Josh Rosen, QB, UCLA

8. Arden Key, LB, Louisiana State 9. Calvin Ridley, WR, Alabama

10. Christian Wilkins, DL, Clemson

OAKLAND, Calif. — It took longer than it should have, but it’s done now.

Obi Melifonwu is officially under contract.

The Raiders signed their second-round pick Wednesday, putting an end to a negotiatio­n that cost the rookie safety a couple practices this week. Melifonwu was the NFL’S only draft selection after the first round to remain unsigned. His signature leaves cornerback Gareon Conley, the team’s first-round pick, as the last member of the nine-man draft class who has yet to agree to terms.

Disagreeme­nt over contract language is what held up Melifonwu’s four-year, $4.5 million deal. For further context, the ex-connecticu­t standout switched agents after the draft, leaving the Raiders to work with his new representa­tive, Sean Stellato of SES Sports, for a good portion of the negotiatio­n.

FIt is fairly unusual for a drafted rookie to switch representa­tives before signing his contract. Agents generally invest thousands of dollars to train a client for his NFL Scouting Combine and pro day appearance­s. Hours and additional dollars are devoted toward his recruitmen­t and handling. Agents do not see a return on such pre-draft investment­s until their client is secured and signs his first NFL deal. And even then, some agents come up short.

Raiders rookies reported Monday to Napa, California. Veterans are due Friday. The first full-squad practice is Saturday.

Contact reporter Michael Gehlken at mgehlken@reviewjour­nal.com. Follow @Gehlkennfl on Twitter.

unnoticed in high school and nearly completely passed over in junior college, Josh Allen now can’t walk into many places without eyes all over him.

He is the marquee Mountain West Conference player entering the season, someone talked about as possibly the No. 1 overall pick in next year’s NFL draft.

These are heady times for the Wyoming junior quarterbac­k, or at least they would be if he let the hype and publicity he has received affect him.

“He ain’t going to change. He’s got his Dodge pickup,” Cowboys coach Craig Bohl said. “When I see him walk in the weight room and there’s a freshman defensive back that can’t get the dumbbells up, he’s helping the freshman guy. Those are indication­s to me that he hasn’t forgotten where he’s from.”

Allen insisted at Mountain West media days at The Cosmopolit­an of Las Vegas that he will play with the same at

ALLEN

titude that brought him to this point.

The same attitude that drove him to show coaches they were wrong when he received no scholarshi­p offers coming out of Firebaugh (California) High School in 2014.

And the same one in which Wyoming was the only offer following his one season at Reedley (California) College.

“Last year was a vengeance trail for me,” Allen said. “I was trying to prove everybody wrong and show you why you screwed up by not offering me (a scholarshi­p).”

Bohl was looking for more than athletic ability when he recruited Allen, though the 6-foot-5-inch, 233-pound player has plenty of that. Allen not only passed for 3,203 yards last season in taking the Cowboys to the Mountain West championsh­ip game, he also ran for 523 yards.

Just as he did in leading North Dakota State to three consecutiv­e FCS national championsh­ips, Bohl focuses on recruiting players whose talent isn’t so obvious to others. That was the formula in landing Allen.

“I think we’ve done a good job in our homework, and I think we got lucky,” Bohl said.

Allen received valuable experience this past spring when he and a handful of others worked with quarterbac­k guru George Whitfield Jr. in San Diego. Then in June, Allen took part in the Manning Passing Academy in Thibodaux, Louisiana, working alongside other top prospects such as Southern California’s Sam Darnold and Heisman Trophy

winner Lamar Jackson of Louisville.

“The Manning family was one of the greatest families I’ve ever met,” Allen said. “They really cared about the kids there. Just asking Peyton his routine and how studious he was toward the game and what he did to prepare for games every week was cool to listen to. I’ll hopefully be able to take some of that and apply it to how I prepare.”

Allen comes from a city in central California of less than 9,000 residents, so playing in a college town in Laramie with a population of about 32,000 feels familiar. He grew up on a farm and carries the small-town approach of not taking himself too seriously while rememberin­g the value of hard work.

Those values will serve him well as the spotlight of a season approaches and everything he does will be magnified and dissected.

“It’s hard to push everything to the side,” Allen said. “I try not to read any articles. I try not to read any tweets about me because I frankly don’t really care. I don’t mean any disrespect to anybody when I say that, but I’m a Wyoming Cowboy football player. When everybody talks about the NFL, it doesn’t make any sense to me because I’ve got 14 games to play this season.”

Contact Mark Anderson at manderson@reviewjour­nal.com. Follow @markanders­on65 on Twitter.

 ??  ?? 1. Sam Darnold, QB, Southern California 2. Minkah Fitzpatric­k, DB, Alabama The Associated Press
1. Sam Darnold, QB, Southern California 2. Minkah Fitzpatric­k, DB, Alabama The Associated Press
 ?? Elizabeth Brumley ?? Las Vegas Review-journal Not heavily recruited out of high school or after one season of junior college, Wyoming quarterbac­k Josh Allen was the center of attention during the Mountain West Football Media Summit on Wednesday at The Cosmopolit­an of Las...
Elizabeth Brumley Las Vegas Review-journal Not heavily recruited out of high school or after one season of junior college, Wyoming quarterbac­k Josh Allen was the center of attention during the Mountain West Football Media Summit on Wednesday at The Cosmopolit­an of Las...
 ?? Benjamin Hager ?? Las Vegas Review-journal Raiders’ second-round pick Obi Melifonwu, a safety out of Uconn, missed two practices this week before signing his four-year $4.5 million deal.
Benjamin Hager Las Vegas Review-journal Raiders’ second-round pick Obi Melifonwu, a safety out of Uconn, missed two practices this week before signing his four-year $4.5 million deal.
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