Las Vegas Review-Journal

Gruden still has his edge

Ex-raiders coach would return with benefit of time spent studying NFL as analyst

- By Michael Gehlken Las Vegas Review-journal

ALAMEDA, Calif. — If NFL coaching is a blade, Jon Gruden has stayed sharp during a prolonged stint as an ESPN broadcaste­r. His experience includes a popular eight-year installmen­t called “Gruden’s QB Camp,” a series in which he sits individual­ly with draft-eligible quarterbac­ks and peppers them with a mixture of compliment­s and questions.

Take the 2014 draft class, for example.

Gruden sat across from a quarterbac­k who starred at Fresno State. The prospect was following the footsteps of an older brother who played quarterbac­k in the NFL. Gruden, though, identified key difference­s between the two. Different schemes.

Different traits. Different eras. He then shared his preference.

“I want you,” Gruden said. “What do you say about that?”

“I appreciate that,” Derek Carr said. “Let’s go win some championsh­ips now.”

Four years later, Carr and Gruden appear poised to have that chance. Raiders owner Mark Davis dismissed Jack Del Rio from his duties as coach Sunday following the conclusion of a 6-10 campaign with a 30-10 loss to the Los Angeles Chargers. Gruden

RAIDERS

college games were allowed to end in ties and seasons would sometimes conclude with co-national champions based on votes.

And that’s better than a defective playoff?

Computers and formulas and polls having the last word?

So while the College Football Playoff committee will never offer a reality of perfection, it every now and then produces excellence with a certain matchup.

That happened Monday.

For as much as some will talk of Oklahoma blowing a 31-17 halftime lead and the conservati­ve second-half play calling that aided it, as much as Sooners coach Lincoln Riley was compared in an unflatteri­ng manner to predecesso­r Bob Stoops across Twitter those final 30 or so minutes, there was also quarterbac­k Baker Mayfield destroying the trend of Heisman Trophy winners playing poorly against top-rated defenses.

He fought a flu bug all week and still finished 23-of-35 for 287 yards while throwing two touchdowns and catching one.

For as much as that vaunted Georgia defense will now be labeled another overrated Southeaste­rn Conference unit built mostly within the oh-so-average SEC East, the Bulldogs saw running backs Sony Michel and Nick Chubb combine for 327 yards and five scores in becoming the most productive tandem in FBS history.

For as much as a misplaced squib kick by the Sooners just before halftime gifted Georgia three points and handed the Bulldogs some semblance of momentum, as much as there were missed field goals and blocked field goals and fumbles returned for scores, there were also five touchdowns of 38 yards or longer and the first overtime in Rose Bowl history.

And they needed two of them to settle things.

“Our kids were so resilient, they never stopped chopping wood,” Georgia coach Kirby Smart said. “They believed. They kept fighting. We didn’t play near as well as we can, but the best news is, we get to play again. If that game measured a heart attack, mine would have been high on the Richter scale.”

Maybe it was a case of Oklahoma losing it. Maybe the Bulldogs won it.

It was as thrilling in parts as poorly coached in others.

It was something, is all.

College football isn’t worse now than those BCS days. You can’t watch a game like this and claim such with any level of seriousnes­s. It’s just far from perfect, beginning with a bracket that is at least four teams short.

Central Florida coach Scott Frost, in a final parting shot before heading to Nebraska, said after his team’s win against Auburn on Monday that the selection committee made a conscious effort to keep the Knights low in its playoff rankings so as to ensure the American Athletic Conference team couldn’t advance to the semifinals. Of course it did.

Of course the system is blatantly unfair in this way and others.

But that doesn’t mean it can’t produce a matchup of drama and exhilarati­on and heartache and torturous shifts of fortune and misfortune.

Go ahead and keep debating whether a playoff is good for college football.

I just know this: Georgia-oklahoma in the Rose Bowl sure was.

Contact columnist Ed Graney at egraney@reviewjour­nal.com or 702383-4618. He can be heard on “The Press Box,” ESPN Radio 100.9 FM and 1100 AM, from 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. Monday through Friday.

Follow @edgraney on Twitter.

 ??  ?? The Associated Press file Then-raiders coach Jon Gruden shouts instructio­ns during a 16-13 overtime loss to the New England Patriots in a 2002 AFC Divisional playoff game.
The Associated Press file Then-raiders coach Jon Gruden shouts instructio­ns during a 16-13 overtime loss to the New England Patriots in a 2002 AFC Divisional playoff game.

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