The Mercury News Weekend

FULL THROTTLE

Raiders enjoy a very productive night as many players make presence felt in victory

- By Jerry McDonald jmcdonald@bayareanew­sgroup.com

The Raiders showed a little bit of everything they hope to be Thursday night in a 33-26 road win over the Arizona Cardinals.

Keep it mind it was against an opponent which in no way resembled a Los Angeles Rams team the Raiders practiced and played against a week ago. The Raiders were up 26- 0 in the second quarter and the outcome was never in doubt, with the Cardinals getting two touchdowns in the last 2:49 to make it cosmetical­ly close.

Eight takeaways as the Raiders (20) reached the midway point of the ex

hibition season:

1. COVER BETTER, BLITZ A LOT » With better speed on the back end, defensive Paul Guenther can dial up a pressure or two without being fearful of having someone running free in the secondary.

The Raiders came hard after Arizona rookie quarterbac­k Kyler Murray (3 of 8, 12 yards), the No.1 overall pick in the draft.

Johnathan Abrams came early on a safety blitz. Vontaze Burfict and Tahir Whitehead both blitzed over the middle. Lamarcus Joyner rushed from the slot and recorded a safety against Murray, who by midseason may be wonder

ing what life would be like as a Double-A outfielder for the A’s.

Using Guenther’s game plan as a blueprint, go ahead and assume Murray will be blitzed frequently.

There was also some good work done by Arden Key and Clelin Ferrell, when the latter wasn’t getting called for illegal hands to the face, which happened twice early in the game.

The Raiders finished with three sacks, including one in the fourth quarter by Ethan Westbrooks. That equaled their entire 2018 regular-season total of fourthquar­ter sacks.

2. DEREK CARR’S PERFECT CAMEO » Coach Jon Gruden opted to start Derek Carr at quarterbac­k , and didn’t need to see anything else after one possession. The Raiders drove 75 yards in six plays, with Carr hitting Tyrell Williams on a 27-yard jump and catch and an uncovered Ryan Grant for a 13-yard touchdown.

Carr’s passer rating? A perfect 158.3. Carr may play a series or two against Green Bay in Winnipeg. He may not. He’ll most certainly sit out the exhibition finale in Seattle.

In the meantime, Carr’s job will be to play catch-up with wide receiver Antonio Brown and be ready on Monday night, Sept. 9 at the Coliseum against the Denver Broncos.

3. DITTO JOSH JACOBS » The first-round draft pick out of Alabama carried four times for 21 yards with a long gain of eight. Jacobs didn’t face the Rams, and it’s impossible to tell in training camp how good a running back is with no tackling to the ground.

Jacobs’ first three carries were for 6, 8 and 6 yards He showed subtle inside moves and a good surge of power and like Carr, sat out the rest of the first half and perhaps the rest of the exhibition season.

4. BACKUP BATTLE » Mike Glennon replaced Carr and put up impressive numbers for the second straight week, this time completing 11 of 14 passes for 175 yards with a 53-yard strike to a wide open Rico Gafford and a fade to Derek Carrier for 2 yards with perfect touch. And this time, no intercepti­ons of the type which drew Gruden’s ire in the Rams game.

Glennon missed an open Darren Waller in the end zone on one play, forcing the Raiders to settle for a 25-yard goal. Other than that, not a lot to be critical about. Glennon’s superior passing passing ability already had him in the lead against Nathan Peterman. Avoiding the bad plays against Arizona was equally as important as converting the good plays.

Peterman, labeled a “house mouse” by Gruden on “Hard Knocks” because the coach wants to see more assertiven­ess, took the Raiders on a 15-play, 80yard touchdown drive in the second half and even lowered his shoulder to run for a first down.

In all, Raiders quarterbac­ks were 21 of 24 for 256 yards.

5. JOYNER STANDS OUT » Joyner’s sack of Murray was already referenced, but the slot/corner safety also showed sticky pass coverage skills in keeping with Larry Fitzgerald in the slot and played with passion and enthusiasm.

Compared by Gruden to Ronde Barber, his former do-it-all defensive back with Tampa Bay, Joyner has the look of an influentia­l presence in the secondary along the lines of Charles Woodson’s second stint with the Raiders.

“I think we did great. It was great to see some of the starters play together and show what we’ll be doing this season,” Joyner said on the broadcast. “It was a great flash.”

6. CURTIS RILEY MAKES HIS MOVE » Riley brought pressure with a blitz, and notably had a good punt rush in the first half.

Why is the punt rush significan­t? Because Gruden talked up Riley during the week and said they were looking to see more of him on special teams. Mission accomplish­ed. Riley, a Fresno State teammate of Carr, started 16 games for the New York Giants last season and had four intercepti­ons.

Riley is running behind Abram, but is still only 27. It’s a good sign for a Raiders team that had too many long-in-the-tooth defensive backs a year ago such as Reggie Nelson, Leon Hall and Dominique Rodgers- Cromartie.

7. ANTONIO BROWN UPDATE » Brown was on the field, suited up and running routes while wearing an approved helmet. (He also ran some routes without one). ESPN’s Lisa Salters reported Brown said he took his cryotherap­y sessions wearing only socks, and that the wide receiver would ease his way back into practice. She also reported Brown had received helmets from all over the country in his effort to find his preferred model that is less than 10 years old.

Any helmet Brown uses will have to be approved by the National Operating Committee for Standards of Athletic Equipment (NOCSAE).

8. COLE COMES THROUGH » A. J. Cole, the undrafted free agent who is the lone punter on the roster after the release of 2018 punter Johnny Townsend, averaged 49.4 yards on five punts. He had one punt bounce into the end zone when it could have landed inside the 5, but gave no indication that he’s not worthy of being the Week 1 punter.

 ??  ?? Raiders running back Mack Brown, right, celebrates his 3-yard touchdown run with wide receiver Rico Gafford.
Raiders running back Mack Brown, right, celebrates his 3-yard touchdown run with wide receiver Rico Gafford.
 ?? RALPH FRESO — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Mike Glennon, center, had an outstandin­g game in the Raiders’ win over the Cardinals. He completed 11 of 14 passes for 175 yards in his bid to win the backup quarterbac­k job.
RALPH FRESO — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Mike Glennon, center, had an outstandin­g game in the Raiders’ win over the Cardinals. He completed 11 of 14 passes for 175 yards in his bid to win the backup quarterbac­k job.

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