Marysville Appeal-Democrat

In Oakland, ‘D’ isn’t for Desert

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Saturday.

In all, the Raiders used six of their nine picks on defensive players, with Lee, firstround cornerback Gareon Conley, secondroun­d safety Obi Melifonwu and third-round defensive tackle Eddie Vanderdoes all expected to press for significan­t playing time.

“The way it fell, we got a lot of players at the end of the day that it looks like we needed,” McKenzie said. “We feel like we got a lot of good players with huge talent levels.”

The Raiders needed plenty of help on defense after finishing near the bottom of the league in all significan­t categories last season.

Oakland finished last in the league with 25 sacks, allowed more 20 yard receptions than any team and gave up 4.5 yards per carry.

Here are some other takeaways from the draft:

FILLING A NEED Lee fills perhaps the biggest need on Oakland’s roster as a middle linebacker who can help shore up the run defense. Perry Riley played that role last season but is a free agent and has not signed a deal. The Raiders haven’t added anyone else at that spot and hope Lee can do the job. He had 20 tackles for loss last season and is expected to compete right away with Ben Heeney for a starting spot.

RISK-REWARD The first two days of the draft were about balancing risk and reward. Oakland used its first-round pick on Conley, who was recently accused of rape but has not been charged. Conley says he has passed a lie detector test and will meet with police Monday in Cleveland. The Raiders said they researched the situation and felt comfortabl­e taking a player who might have been off the board without the accusation­s.

Oakland took a different risk in the third round with Vanderdoes, who struggled keeping his weight down last season and was not overly impressive on film. Vanderdoes has lost 40 pounds since the end of the season and Oakland believes it will get the player who was much more impressive early in his career.

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