Santa Cruz Sentinel

Raiders can end home season on good note

- By Jerry McDonald

The Las Vegas Raiders bring down the curtain on Year 1 at the “Death Star” Saturday night, never expecting their new home to be the place their season went to die.

There are myriad reasons the Raiders will soon officially be eliminated from the playoff race. It could happen Saturday night when they host the Miami Dolphins, who are in the thick of the postseason picture at 9-5.

The Raiders, having lost four of their last five, are 7-7 because they have been unable to defend their home turf at Allegiant Stadium, where they have a 2- 5 record as opposed to 5-2 on the road.

Owner Mark Davis determined in August he would be a no- show for home games out of respect to the season-ticket holders who can’t attend due to the coronaviru­s pandemic. What nobody knew at the time was the Raiders would join him. It was Davis who on Aug. 22 stood before his team and proclaimed, “Welcome to the Death Star, where opponents’ dreams come to die.”

Beating the Dolphins could allow the Raiders to close their first year at Alle

giant Stadium with a win.

“We don’t want to finish losing. We’ve got to show who we are,” cornerback Trayvon Mullen said. “We’ve got to show how tough we are. We’ve got to show that no matter the circumstan­ce or the outcome or whatever it is that we’re going to go out and we’re going to play hard. We’re going to finish.”

Four ways the Raiders can beat Miami and leave their final home game feeling as if they’re still in it:

1. CONVERT WITH TOUCHDOWNS IN THE RED ZONE >> The drive that ended when Derek Carr pulled up with a groin strain ended with a 23-yard field goal by Daniel Carlson. Later, with Marcus Mariota at quarterbac­k, it happened again for another 20-yard field goal. It was the 19th and 20th red zone field goals the Raiders have kicked this season — the most in the NFL.

The Raiders defense has been much maligned and deservedly so, but if their own offense scored touchdowns at a higher rate in the red zone, they’d probably be going to the playoffs.

It won’t be easy against Miami, a team that leads the NFL in third down defense (32.5 percent).

2. WIN THE TURNOVER MARGIN >> Yes, that again.. And it’s huge this week, because Miami leads the NFL with 26 takeaways and is third in turnover margin at plus

10. They’ve got a rookie quarterbac­k in Tua Tagavailoa who doesn’t take risks and takes care of the ball. The Raiders are in the bottom third in turnover margin at minus- 6.

In the last five games, four of them losses, the Raiders have turned the ball over 12 times and are at minus-7. Carr has 15 turnovers this season (seven intercepti­ons, eight lost fumbles). He’s expected to start but his mobility could be limited. Mariota had one intercepti­on in his debut against the Chargers.

3. STOP GIVING UP FIRST DOWNS BY PENALTY >> With one of the worst defenses in the NFL, the last thing the Raiders can afford to do is give opponents second chances. And third chances. And fourth chances.

During their 1- 4 streak, the Raiders have done just that, giving up an incredible 21 first downs by penalty and allowing the opposing offense to stay on the field. They did it five times each in losses and last week to the Chargers.

Miami is efficient offensivel­y but not particular­ly explosive. Avoid the first downs by penalty and there might be a few punts in the future of A. J. Cole.

4. LET THE STARS SHINE >> When Miami lost 3431 to the Chiefs, tight end Travis Kelce caught eight passes for 136 yards and a touchdown. Darren Waller, named to the Pro Bowl this week, is on a hot streak of late statistica­lly and has been Carr’s favorite receiver, targeted more than 28 percent of the time.

The Raiders other Pro Bowler, running back Josh Jacobs, last gained 100-plus yards on Nov. 15 against Denver with 21 carries for 112 yards. In his last four games (Jacobs didn’t play against the Jets because of a knee injury), Jacobs has 63 carries for 207 yards, averaging 3.3 yards per attempt. He’s 93 yards shy of a second straight 1,000yard season and needs a jump in production to get there.

The running game that meant so much during the 6-3 start has gone dormant during their 1- 4 stretch, and that’s no coincidenc­e.

Waller and Jacobs have accounted for 18 of the Raiders’ 42 touchdowns in 14 games.

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