Lodi News-Sentinel

For Raiders offense, slowing Myles Garrett has to be top priority vs. Browns

- Mike Grimala LAS VEGAS SUN

Myles Garrett is a one-man wrecking crew, and that term applies to the Cleveland defensive end very literally: If the Raiders aren’t careful, that one man will wreck their offense on Sunday.

Through seven weeks, Garrett has emerged as a candidate — perhaps the favorite — for the NFL’s Defensive Player of the Year award. He has racked up a league-best 9.0 sacks (for comparison’s sake, Las Vegas has recorded 7.0 sacks, total, as a team), including at least one sack in six straight games. He is rated as the third-best edge rusher by Pro Football Focus, and on Wednesday he was named the AFC Defensive Player of the Month.

In Cleveland’s 37-34 win over Cincinnati in Week 7, Garrett added two more sacks to his total, including a strip-sack that he recovered himself.

Because of his incredible production, Garrett certainly has the attention of the Las Vegas coaching staff. Slowing him down in the passing game will be the biggest factor in whether the Raiders are able to sustain their offense on Sunday.

In his Wednesday press conference, Raiders coach Jon Gruden was asked how Garrett, the No. 1 overall pick in the 2018 draft, stacks up against past greats.

“I don’t really compare Myles to anybody because he’s unique,” Gruden said. “He can play right end, left end. He can go inside. He’s a complete, everydown difference maker.”

That certainly counts as an endorsemen­t from Gruden. So, how will the Raiders block Garrett

on Sunday?

The Las Vegas offensive line has done a good job of pass blocking this season — good, not great — as the team currently ranks 13th in the league in sacks allowed with a 5.0% sack rate. Derek Carr has been pressured on 18.6% of pass plays, but that’s a pretty good number for a line that has shuffled players in and out of the starting lineup this season due to injuries and COVID-19 circumstan­ces.

The Raiders have only faced one “elite” edge rusher so far this season, and it came last week when they faced off against Tampa Bay and outside linebacker Shaquil Barrett. Barrett led the league with 19.5 sacks last year and came into last week’s game with 3.0 sacks and 19 pressures, so that served as a pretty decent warm-up for Garrett.

There was some good and some bad when it came to getting Barrett blocked, and it mostly depended on where he lined up. When he rushed against right tackle Sam Young (who was playing in place of starter Trent Brown), Barrett won his matchup and came within a whisker of making a couple game-changing plays. When he rushed against left tackle Kolton Miller, however, the Raiders got him blocked pretty reliably.

On this play in the first quarter, Barrett beat Young to the

outside with a speed rush. Young reached back and probably got away with a slight tug as Barrett turned the corner, which saved Derek Carr’s skin:

That was too close for

comfort.

Later, Barrett tried to speed rush around the right tackle again. While Young was able to push him past the pocket, Barrett still got close enough to spook Carr, forcing the QB to pull the ball down and scramble up the middle for no gain.

 ?? JOHN KUNTZ/CLEVELAND.COM ?? Cleveland Browns defensive end Myles Garrett works on the block of Cincinnati Bengals offensive tackle Bobby Hart trying to get to Cincinnati Bengals quarterbac­k Joe Burrow on Sunday.
JOHN KUNTZ/CLEVELAND.COM Cleveland Browns defensive end Myles Garrett works on the block of Cincinnati Bengals offensive tackle Bobby Hart trying to get to Cincinnati Bengals quarterbac­k Joe Burrow on Sunday.

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