Porterville Recorder

Raiders’ inability to go deep leads to struggles for offense

- By JOSH DUBOW

ALAMEDA — With a strong-armed quarterbac­k, one of the best pass-blocking offensive lines and a pair of talented receivers on the outside, the Oakland Raiders have all the ingredient­s to stretch the field with the deep pass.

That has been far from the case so far this season and is a major reason the Raiders (2-4) have struggled so much offensivel­y during a fourgame losing streak.

Oakland is tied for the fewest deep completion­s this season with just two, a developmen­t that surely would have irked late owner Al Davis, who believed strongly in the value of throwing deep.

“We definitely want to be able to do that,” quarterbac­k Derek Carr said. “Now does that mean we’re going to do anything differentl­y or trying to force things? Absolutely not. That’s where you get in trouble. That’s something that I’ve learned in my career. You can’t force it. You just have to work hard and let it happen.”

It hasn’t happened much yet as Carr has completed just one of eight passes — a 64-yard touchdown to Johnny Holton in Denver — that was thrown at least 20 yards downfield, according to Sportradar. Backup E.J. Manuel also has one deep completion but it’s a far cry from a year ago when Carr was 25 for 52 on deep passes that helped fuel Oakland to a 12-win season.

With Marshawn Lynch adding power to the running game and Jared Cook offering a strong receiving target at tight end to complement receivers Michael Crabtree and Amari Cooper, the Raiders figured to be even better offensivel­y this season.

They appeared on that track when they scored 71 points and committed no turnovers in winning the first two games. But Oakland has gotten nothing going the past few weeks, failing to top 17 points or 300 yards in the four straight losses.

“I don’t think there’s a single guy that can look back over the last few weeks and say, ‘You know what, I’m really pleased with how I’ve played over the last three weeks,’ or, ‘Called the last three weeks’ or, ‘Coached my position the last three weeks,”’ offensive coordinato­r Todd Downing said. “We all own this together. There’s no one guy that is going to save it or break it or anything in between.”

Carr was supposed to be the person to carry this offense. He emerged as a star in 2016 in his third year in the NFL and signed a contract worth $125 million in the offseason that briefly made him the league’s highest-paid player.

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