Las Vegas Review-Journal

London galling

Raiders enter bye seeking solutions after pummeling from Seahawks

- By Michael Gehlken Las Vegas Review-journal

LONDON — The sixth sack Derek Carr took Sunday, the one that awkwardly wrenched his left arm in the fourth quarter, prompted the Raiders quarterbac­k to jog off the field and be rushed into a blue medical tent on the sideline.

He’d taken his shots from the Seattle Seahawks.

Once evaluated, Carr emerged and found coach Jon Gruden. Time to give it a shot.

“I wanted to go back in,” he said. Carr repeatedly was pummeled in RAIDERS

the pocket at Wembley Stadium, at times blindsided during a lopsided 27-3 loss. His offensive line entered the day battered and became more so. Two wide receivers exited with concussion­s. Carr and company can relax during a bye week that mercifully begins now.

The Raiders (1-5) might not be 2018 playoff contenders, their almost nonexisten­t prospects largely accepted as such within the organizati­on. But surely their offense is better than this.

Oakland followed up last week’s season low of 289 yards with 185 on Sunday. That two-week sum, 474, is less than the 565 yards recorded in a Week 4 overtime win over the Cleveland Browns. Sunday’s yardage figure was the franchise’s worst since a disastrous 128-yard outing on “Sunday Night Football” at the Washington Redskins in Week 3 of2017.

The drop-off starts with the offensive line.

In the first half of Week 4, left tackle Kolton Miller suffered a Grade II MCL sprain and right tackle Donald Penn suffered a groin strain.

Pro Bowl left guard Kelechi Osemele suffered a similar knee injury late in the fourth quarter of that game, too.

And so, for these final two games before the bye, the Raiders accepted they’d have to battle.

Seattle had a distinct advantage at the line of scrimmage, and that was before Osemele’s replacemen­t,

Jon Feliciano, suffered a first-quarter ribs injury that forced his exit. Tackle Justin Murray, who’d never logged an offensive snap in his NFL regular-season career, finished the evening at guard beside Miller. Meanwhile, rookie third-round pick Brandon Parker still settled in at right tackle during his second pro start.

This is how 1-5 happens. This is how 185 yards happen.

This is how Carr absorbs 10 hits, scrambles four times for 31 yards, and ultimately injures himself late in regulation.

Carr isn’t expected to miss any time for what he called “just a little bruise,” although he likely will undergo further testing in the Oakland area on Monday. With about five minutes remaining, he exited the medical tent and attempted to talk his way back into the game. When doing so, backup A.J. Mccarron warmed up his arm and took practice snaps from center Rodney Hudson. Gruden wasn’t hearing it. The score wasn’t close.

The protection was brutal. Amari Cooper and Seth Roberts exited with concussion­s in the second and fourth quarters, respective­ly, so the only remaining wide receivers were Jordy Nelson, Martavis Bryant and Dwayne Harris.

“I made the decision if we did get the ball back, we go to Mccarron,” Gruden said. “There’s too much fire today. Too much fire around the quarterbac­k. … We didn’t get an opportunit­y to step up in the pocket and go through progressio­ns. It was closing in quick. You know, Derek was on the run a lot, and he got hit too much. We can’t allow that to happen. We just can’t do it.”

Carr said that he was approached by at least one offensive lineman who told him “sorry,” in reference to the lack of protection. That apology, Carr said, wasn’t necessary.

“I promise you, they didn’t go out there and want to screw things up or a mistake or have a mental (lapse) on purpose,” Carr said. “I promise you they didn’t go out there and want to get physically beat up on a play and get me hit and things like that. I know that, and I love those guys. I will never complain.

“You can hit me a thousand times, and I’m never going to complain about those guys because their whole job is they want to keep me upright. They are sick right now.”

Sick and injured. Theyhaveab­yetoget well.

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

 ?? Heidi Fang ?? Las Vegas Review-journal @Heidifang Raiders quarterbac­k Derek Carr (4) is sacked by Seattle Seahawks defensive end Frank Clark, who caused a fumble. Carr was sacked six times and fumbled twice in the Raiders’ 27-3 loss to the Seahawks at Wembley Stadium in London.
Heidi Fang Las Vegas Review-journal @Heidifang Raiders quarterbac­k Derek Carr (4) is sacked by Seattle Seahawks defensive end Frank Clark, who caused a fumble. Carr was sacked six times and fumbled twice in the Raiders’ 27-3 loss to the Seahawks at Wembley Stadium in London.

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