Las Vegas Review-Journal

Bottom line: Wins originate in trenches

- COMMENTARY

ALAMEDA, Calif.

ELECHI Osemele was born and raised in Houston, but is of southeaste­rn Nigerian descent, where the principal native language of the Igbo people is spoken by 24 million, written in Latin and includes 20 dialects.

His first name means, “Thank God.”

Or, specifical­ly, what Derek Carr must think every time he approaches the line of scrimmage.

If it’s true the best way to construct a Super Bowl contender is from the inside-out, the Oakland Raiders own a significan­t edge on most others with legitimate aspiration­s of playing in early February.

Its offensive line was good in 2015 and great in 2016 and could absolutely challenge Dallas this season as the NFL’S best unit for nastiness and aggressive­ness and physicalit­y and

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just being a massive migraine for those who oppose it.

Good went to great with the arrival of Osemele at left guard last season, one of three Raiders offensive linemen to make the Pro Bowl and a Super Bowl winner with Baltimore in 2012.

His free-agent decision came down to Oakland or Minnesota, and he didn’t choose the East Bay merely for its weather, although who in their right mind would have blamed him if he had?

“This is the most tight-knit offensive line I have been on,” said Osemele on Wednesday, the second of a mandatory three-day minicamp. “We fight for each other every single play. This line is nastier than the one I won the Super Bowl with. It’s better than that one. Nastier, more athletic, more physical, stronger, better.

“We want to be known as the best. We don’t shy away from that at all. That’s all we talk about. We’re not worried about what the Cowboys are doing. … Everyone wants to be the toughest, baddest guy out there.”

Tough and bad in this manner: For any of the preseason hype that will

assuredly forecast big things for the Raiders, none of it will prove true if Carr goes down.

We saw the difference in Oakland last year when its quarterbac­k was healthy compared to when tackle Donald Penn slipped in pass protection on Christmas Eve against the Colts, leading to the sack on which Carr suffered a broken right fibula.

We saw contender become pretender in one brutal snap of a football, and leg.

“It’s like seeing someone run through your home and ransack your family,” Osemele said. “(Carr) is family, and we take lot of pride in protecting him. It doesn’t matter who slipped up in the play he was injured. We all took it personal and how we’re going to do better the next time. We need to make sure that never happens again.”

They are directed by assistant Mike Tice, former head coach with Minnesota and in his third season with the Raiders, more straight-forward than rah-rah, more a guy who says little to his offensive linemen before a game and expects a lot from them during it.

Oakland didn’t maneuver through last season without injuries to the front, far from it, but the line still managed to remain a catalyst for one of the league’s most explosive offenses. Carr emerged among the NFL’S elite players behind it, while a running game that had been lost in recent times was revived into a weekly threat.

“We have built this team in the trenches,” Carr said. “Those are the guys who put fear in people. It’s not the quarterbac­k. We might keep defensive coordinato­rs up at night, but it’s not us as skill guys that scare people. It’s the guys up front, man. That’s where it is won. I would take

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