USA TODAY International Edition

Del Rio won’t use Carr’s injury as excuse for Raiders’ loss

- Lindsay H. Jones

INDIANAPOL­IS Jack Del Rio learned one big lesson from the disappoint­ing way the Oakland Raiders’ 2016 season ended.

“Don’t lose your quarterbac­k,” the Raiders coach said at the NFL scouting combine. “You don’t want that to happen.”

Del Rio laughed as he said it and proceeded to expand on how Derek Carr’s broken leg, suffered Dec. 24, affected the team. Oakland lost control of the AFC West the next week and then fell to the Houston Texans in the wild- card round with rookie Connor Cook at quarterbac­k.

Del Rio said the main takeaways from those January losses was that, when playing without your starting quarterbac­k — and especially without one who had been playing as well as Carr had — the rest of the team must be better. But the Raiders weren’t.

“If you lose your quarterbac­k, to me, there’s still a way to get it done — it just became a lot harder. But there’s still a way. There was no concession, and there never will be. Honestly, when we finished the year, I was disappoint­ed. In my opinion, what we need to be about is, ‘ Hey, let’s rally. Let’s find a way and get it done, no matter what.’ And we weren’t able to do that,” Del Rio said.

“That will be part of what we’ll do this year is attack that going in and understand, ‘ Hey, there is not any one person that is more important than the team — we want all our studs. But if somebody is missing, we have to fill in.’ We have to run the ball better; we have to play better defense. We have to do certain things to help offset, in that particular case the quarterbac­k.”

Carr had surgery to repair the broken fibula three days after being injured, and Del Rio said his recovery is going well and points to a full return no later than training camp.

“He’s in good spirits. Everything that I’ve seen and heard is on track or even ahead of schedule,” Del Rio said. “We expect a complete recovery and no issues.”

But there are other issues the Raiders face, including a potential need for a new starting running back, assessing upgrades for the defense — and hoping for stability with the franchise’s future in Oakland up in the air.

Last season’s No. 1 running back, Latavius Murray, who joined Carr and receiver Amari Cooper as the young core of the Raiders’ offensive resurgence, is an impending free agent.

If he were to depart, that would leave the Raiders with two young running backs, Jalen Richard and DeAndre Washington. Their inexperien­ce, along with the team’s $ 42 million- plus in salary cap space, would potentiall­y put the Raiders in the market for another starting- caliber back, perhaps even Adrian Peterson.

Landing a premier free agent the likes of Peterson would have been wishful thinking for the Raiders in previous years. Now that Oakland is a playoff contender, recruitmen­t should be easier.

Del Rio recently received a new four- year contract from owner Mark Davis after two seasons with Oakland. Del Rio said he appreciate­d Davis’ willingnes­s to renegotiat­e so soon, given the contract he signed when hired in 2015 was below market value.

“I bet on me with that contract,” Del Rio said.

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