USA TODAY International Edition

Raiders raising the bar for Carr

QB aims to take team to next level

- Jarrett Bell @ JarrettBel­l USA TODAY Sports

ALAMEDA, CALIF. Derek Carr sounds like a man fueled by unfinished business.

This is what tends to happen when a magical season turns into a nightmare, as was the case when the emerging quarterbac­k suffered a broken left leg ( fibula) in Week 16 and the Oakland Raiders’ hopes for a Super Bowl run essentiall­y went up in smoke in December.

“I’ve completely gotten over it,” Carr said this week at minicamp, speaking specifical­ly about his physical state after surgery and rehab.

“But I have not gotten over the fact that we lost our last game. I was really looking forward to our guys going on a run and making a chance to play in the Super Bowl. That was tough, but we get another shot at it.”

Actually, the Raiders lost their last two games after Carr was injured amid suspect circumstan­ces — exposed on a fourthquar­ter pass with Oakland leading 33- 14 against the Indianapol­is Colts. They lost the regular- season finale at the Denver Broncos, costing the Raiders the division crown. Then, forced to start rookie quarterbac­k Connor Cook after then- backup Matt McGloin was hurt in Week 17, they were drubbed in their playoff game at the Houston Texans.

For all that went right during a 12- 4 season — the franchise’s first winning campaign in 14 years — the Raiders are still on a learning curve when it comes to this territory of being a legit contender.

That theme applies to Carr, too, who made steady strides in his first three seasons. He had his most efficient campaign in 2016 with a 96.7 passer rating ( eighth in the NFL) and a stellar 28- to- 6 touchdown pass- to- intercepti­on ratio. Now he’s challenged to take another step.

“That’s what you push for,” Raiders coach Jack Del Rio said.

He wants Carr to take more ownership at the line of scrimmage, with coaches ( including coordinato­r Todd Downing, promoted after two years as Carr’s position coach) trusting him with more leeway to change plays.

Yes, the bar is rising for Carr — as it should for a young quarterbac­k who could be on the verge of a new contract that projects to be in the range of, if not exceed, the package that Andrew Luck got last year from the Colts, which averages $ 23.3 million a season.

In a passing league, the best quarterbac­ks — Tom Brady, Aaron Rodgers and Drew Brees — have a knack for consistent­ly putting their team in position to win cat- and- mouse games.

How Carr rolls with additional responsibi­lity might be a key marker for the Raiders’ prospects of growing into a team that can challenge not only the Super Bowl champion New England Patriots but also the AFC West champ Kansas City Chiefs, who have won seven of the last eight meetings against Oakland, including the last five.

Carr describes the task as follows: “Get us in the right play, but do it fast.”

With offseason tweaks that include new dimensions in running back Marshawn Lynch, tight end Jared Cook and receiver- returner Cordarrell­e Patterson, more options loom for a unit that was potent enough to rank sixth in the NFL in total yards and seventh in scoring last season.

Carr seems game to take more command at the line. The last two years, he took occasional liberties with since- departed coordinato­r Bill Musgrave’s system and went off- script to switch plays. “Doing it here and there, on my own, just being silly,” he said. And now? “Just do it the right way,” he said. “That’s what we’ve been working on all offseason.”

It sure beats rehabbing from ankle surgery. As demonstrat­ed during Tuesday’s practice — when he sometimes scrambled and other times moved to buy time in the pocket before zipping tight throws — all is well with his physical comeback.

It has been several weeks since he regained full confidence in his foot, a process that included being tackled by his wife and kids before hitting the practice field.

“I was just thinking about it the other day,” he said. “It’s been so far in the past, I thought it was ( injured) … like two years ago.”

What doesn’t seem so long ago, though, was the lost opportunit­y to make a playoff run.

 ?? KIRBY LEE, USA TODAY SPORTS ?? Raiders quarterbac­k Derek Carr threw for 28 touchdowns last season before suffering a broken left leg in the next- to- last week of the regular season and missing the playoffs.
KIRBY LEE, USA TODAY SPORTS Raiders quarterbac­k Derek Carr threw for 28 touchdowns last season before suffering a broken left leg in the next- to- last week of the regular season and missing the playoffs.

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