Las Vegas Review-Journal

■ Gus Bradley plans to change the way Raiders’ defensive players Approach their play.

Bradley’s philosophy to improve Raiders hinges on brains, brawn

- By Vincent Bonsignore

If the Raiders’ defensive problems over the past two years create any concern for Gus Bradley, the coach now entrusted with solving them, he isn’t showing it.

In fact, the way the Raiders’ new defensive coordinato­r enthusiast­ically attacked his introducto­ry zoom press conference on Tuesday, it is

clear he is already champing at the bit to get started.

That will have to wait a few months. But there will be no

shortage of energy and passion when Bradley begins that process.

“Fast, physical and we have to find a way to get the ball” is how Bradley described his defense’s approach.

What that ultimately means for a defense that surrendere­d the thirdmost points in the NFL this season and let the Raiders down time and again in big moments remains to be seen.

But as Bradley plainly reiterated on Tuesday, the foundation he sets will be based on a handful of core principles.

“Great effort. Great enthusiasm. Great toughness,” Bradley explained. “And a defense that plays smart.”

The Raiders had difficulty stringing those attributes together on a consistent basis the past three years under Paul Guenther, who was fired 13 games into this season and replaced on an interim basis by Rod Mari

nelli.

Their search to find a coordinato­r capable of creating those dynamics led them to Bradley, the one-time protege of Raiders coach Jon Gruden and a confidante of Marinelli, who will stay on as defensive line coach.

From the Chargers, Bradley is bringing with him Ron Milus as defensive backs coach and Richard Smith as linebacker­s coach. He has yet to determine the makeup of the rest of his new defensive staff.

It was Gruden who plucked Bradley off the coaching staff at North Dakota State in 2006 to be his linebacker­s coach with the Tampa Bay Buccaneers. In doing so, he put Bradley on the coaching fast track.

Two years later Bradley became the defensive coordinato­r of the Seattle Seahawks, where he played a pivotal road in the drafting and developing of players who would ultimately form the Legion of Boom defense that helped lead the Seahawks to a Super Bowl victory over Denver in 2014 and a Super Bowl loss to New England in 2015.

After an unsuccessf­ul stint as the coach of the Jacksonvil­le Jaguars from 2013 through 2016, Bradley returned to his defensive roots as the defensive coordinato­r of the Los Angeles Chargers from 2017 through 2020.

In Los Angeles, Bradley oversaw a group that finished 15th, ninth, sixth and 10th in yards given up from 2017 through 2020.

And while the Chargers slipped to 23rd in points allowed per game last year at 26.6, they were among the top half of the NFL the previous three seasons while finishing third in 2017 at 17.0, eighth in 2018 at 20.6 and 14th in 2019 at 21.6.

Any replicatio­n of the Chargers’ efforts from 2017 to 2019 would represent a profound improvemen­t for the Raiders, and coupled with an offense that ranked 10th last season at 27.1 points per game could push the Raiders into legitimate playoff contention.

In fact, the offense was very much on Bradley’s mind upon sitting down with Gruden and a Raiders’ contingenc­y that included owner Mark Davis and general manager Mike Mayock to talk about the possibilit­y of coming on board as the defensive coordinato­r.

No longer as someone tasked with trying to stop it, Bradley arrives as a coach determined to create more chances for Derek Carr and Darren Waller and Josh Jacobs to produce more points.

Forcing turnovers and getting the opposing offense off the field as quickly as possible are now the starting point for everything the Raiders’ defense does under Bradley.

“We have to set up opportunit­ies for the offense to score, give them possession­s,” Bradley said. “We want the players to have the mindset that every call that we have is designed to get the ball.”

Bradley brings to the Raiders the 4-3 defensive front Gruden prefers, and while he is known primarily as a Cover-3 proponent on the back end, he promised flexibilit­y to fit the skills of the personnel he oversees.

“We’re going to be very multiple but not at the expense that we don’t play fast,” Bradley said. “That’s first and foremost.”

Time is of the essence, of course. The Raiders can’t afford to waste many more productive offensive seasons. And with all the draft capital and free agency money they devoted to their current defense, the need to get a return on their investment is urgent.

“I think our job as coaches is really to evaluate the players and put them in position to where they can make plays,” Bradley said.

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