The Saratogian (Saratoga, NY)

Pryor's position change helped by Raiders

- By Stephen Whyno

Terrelle Pryor figured playing quarterbac­k in the NFL wasn't his thing when he was cut four times in 13 months. Now a wide receiver, Pryor will go against the team that drafted him on Sunday night.

LANDOVER, MD. » Terrelle Pryor figured playing quarterbac­k in the NFL wasn’t his thing when he was cut four times in 13 months.

Now a wide receiver, Pryor will go against the team that drafted him when he and the Washington Redskins face the Oakland Raiders on Sunday night. Still thankful to late Raiders owner Al Davis for taking a chance on him in the 2011 supplement­al draft, Pryor believes his struggles in Oakland helped him prepare for the twists and turns of his career.

“When things happen that are negative or bad things happen to me now, from playing quarterbac­k I think I’ve been through that road, so it’s nothing,” Pryor said. “You just move on, get to the next day and continue to work on your game, continue to work on yourself and all things will come to light eventually.”

Pryor was a three-year starter at Ohio State as a quarterbac­k but completed just 56.3 percent of his passes in 15 games for the Raiders while throwing for nine touchdowns and 12 intercepti­ons. After Oakland traded him to Seattle for a seventh-round pick, Pryor was released by the Seahawks, Chiefs, Bengals and Browns between August 2014 and September 2015.

During his toughest times, Pryor FaceTimed with Raiders receiver Rod Streater, who reminded him he could “whoop him” at Madden video games but also made sure his friend was doing OK while bouncing around the league.

“Obviously he wasn’t happy,” Streater said by phone Saturday. “He wanted to be with the Raiders and wanted it to work out there, and no one ever really wants to be cut. That really helped him grow and helped him become what he is now and helped him get to where he is now.”

Pryor harbored no hard feelings toward any of the teams that got rid of him, especially the Raiders, who went 3-7 with him as the starter. How could he?

“The NFL’s a business at the end of the day. You have to make plays,” Pryor said. “Obviously I’m not playing quarterbac­k no more, so it was a great decision.”

When the 6-foot-4, 228-pound Pryor decided to become a receiver, Streater said he knew right away it would work. He pointed to a 93-yard TD run against the Steelers in 2013 as a glimpse of what Pryor could do.

Pryor’s seamless transition amazes members of his old team even though Oakland’s roster has completely turned over since he was there.

“Unbelievab­le,” said quarterbac­k Derek Carr, who talked to Pryor on FaceTime with Streater. “It’s something that people see and they’re like, ‘Oh yeah, that’s really cool.’ But they don’t understand how hard that is, like to play quarterbac­k your whole life, even in the NFL, make it as an NFL quarterbac­k, and now we’re going to move you to receiver and be successful.”

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