Raiders consider signing edge rusher Irving
The Raiders got defensive tackle Maurice Hurst back Monday and are looking into the possibility of adding David Irving, a former edge rusher from the Dallas Cowboys who was reinstated last week by the NFL after an indefinite suspension for violating the league’s policy on substances of abuse.
Hurst, the Raiders’ top interior pass rusher, missed a 40-32 win over the Kansas City Chiefs. The Raiders mounted their best pass rush of the season against the Chiefs despite being without Hurst, who was on the COVID-19 reserve list, and getting just four snaps from defensive end Carl Nassib, who left with a toe injury.
With Nassib expected to miss Sunday’s game against his former team — the Tampa Bay Buccaneers — and possi
bly additional games, the Raiders are considering whether to sign Irving, according to a team source.
A 6-foot-7, 290-pound defensive end, Irving has run afoul of both the NFL’s performance
enhancing drugs policy as well as the league’s substance abuse restrictions. He served a four-game suspension for the former in 2017, a season in which he also missed time with concussion symptoms.
Despite the limited playing time, Irving had seven sacks in eight games.
Then two games into the 2018 season, Irving received a four-game suspension for violating the policy on substances of abuse, at which time he said he’d be retiring from the NFL because of the league’s drug policy specifically with regards to marijuana.
Irving didn’t play at all in 2019. For his career, he has 12 1/2 sacks in 37 games, with 10 starts and five forced fumbles.
While he was sitting out, Irving, who has invested in cannabis-related businesses, talked about his retirement with Sports Illustrated.
“I know the perception people have of me is that I’m some sort of gangsta, homeless pothead,” Irving told Richie Whitt. “But I gave up football for a big
ger cause. I want to change the bias toward marijuana. I want to educate America that it’s not a drug, it’s medicine. The real reason I’m not in the NFL is that I’d rather be out here saving lives.”
Irving had this to say about his own marijuana use:
“I’ve been smoking since I was in middle school. Always had a 3.0 GPA. Never had any trouble with the law. We just need to stop already with the lies and misconceptions. Marijuana is easing the pain of cancer patients. It’s adding years to dogs’ lives. It could help the NFL with its CTE problem, too. The stereotypes
are nonsense. It’s just like prohibition, only 100 years later.”
While Irving was on suspension, the NFL in its new collective bargaining agreement decreased the testing frequency for marijuana as well as increasing the number of nanograms (from 35 to 150) required to qualify as a positive test.
Whatever Irving said to the NFL during the process of getting back in the game apparently hit the mark, because he was officially reinstated Friday and the Raiders were the first team to come calling. He was in town Monday.
COLE, CARLSON ARE THINK
ING ALIKE >> At some point in their 13-year union as holder and place kicker, Shane Lechler and Sebastian Janikowski stopped talking.
T hey talked plent y while playing a round of golf or shooting a game of pool, but it came time for a field goal, there was little more than a knowing glance. Lechler already knew based on the wind, weather and field conditions where Janikowski wanted the ball.
It mattered, too, because when Lechler left following the 2012 season to sign with the Houston Texans, Janikowski struggled with holder Marquette King to the point where backup quarterback Matt Schaub took over as holder. Janikowski and King eventually worked through it with endless repetition.
Current Raiders punter A. J. Cole and place kicker Daniel Carlson are working toward the Lechler-Janikowski relationship. The two trained together in the offseason and worked together all of 2019.
“One of our goals is to have the best battery in football,” Cole said during a video conference Monday.