Las Vegas Review-Journal

Raiders’ Davis gets his man

Owner finally able to lure popular former head coach back into fold

- By Michael Gehlken Las Vegas Review-journal

ALAMEDA, Calif. — One hundred fifteen media members were credential­ed for a news conference that drew “Event Parking” signs outside Raiders headquarte­rs.

About 50 retired Raiders players attended. Fifteen fans held signs near the facility’s entrance.

Around 8:30 a.m., one fan said, Jon Gruden autographe­d his sign, which read, “Welcome back Chucky” in black marker.

Not just another news conference.

Not just another coach. “Raider Nation” owner Mark Davis said seconds before Gruden took the stage: “This is a big f-ing deal.”

Gruden formally was introduced to the public on Tuesday. There was less a sense of a 54-year-old man being hired for a job but rather an overdue reunion and even prodigal coach’s return. Gruden made his first comments about his arrival since ending a nineyear tenure Saturday as an

RAIDERS

head coach and having counseled numerous quarterbac­ks, Gruden has never tutored the individual skill and promise he will find in Carr.

“He has great arm talent, he’s athletic, he has natural leadership skills, he’s young and in his prime,” Gruden said. “He’s been in a lot of different systems. There hasn’t been a lot of continuity around him that way. He has huge upside. With the system we are going to put in place, it’s going to demand a lot from him. That’s what is going to unlock the greatness in him.”

No one used the G-word in regard to Carr this season, when the Raiders were 6-10 and their $125 million leader regressed from the 2016 campaign that earned him such lifetime security.

How much an injury at Denver in early October — Carr suffered a transverse process fracture in his back — affected his play as the season wore on is unknown. But he wasn’t right most weeks. He wasn’t 100 percent.

His numbers from last season to this dipped in all categories, including a passer rating that went from 96.7 to 86.4. There were issues on the offensive line and wide receiver. The culture of a locker room suffered. Things weren’t great internally. Losing will do that.

But if Tuesday was about a clean slate for everyone, nobody will be more impacted by the arrival of Gruden than Carr, and how he responds to the insanity of which his new coach refers will go a long way in determinin­g how fast the Raiders are again winning more games than not.

“I told Derek this is an unbelievab­le opportunit­y,” said Gannon, who played under Gruden in Oakland from 1999-2001. “If he just takes advantage of it, there are so many great things in store.

“I don’t know if anyone can match Jon’s intensity. I don’t know if that’s possible. But what you have to do is put the work in and be prepared and have a passion for the game. I don’t care how hard Derek has worked before, he’s going to have to change his work habits to fit in.”

There has been a video shared around the internet in recent days of when Carr met Gruden during the coach’s television “QB Camp” before the 2014 draft. Gruden, as he has with so many soon-to-be drafted quarterbac­ks, watched tape of Carr during his college days and offered his thoughts.

“Your position playing style is completely different. I want you,” Gruden told Carr on the ESPN show. “What do you have to say about that?”

Offered Carr: “I appreciate that. Let’s go win some championsh­ips now.”

Maybe this really was the plan all along from the guy who writes checks.

Maybe the stars just aligned and this is how things fell.

But there is no maybe about this: Jon Gruden just inherited the best quarterbac­k of his career as a head coach. How Derek Carr responds could shape the Raiders for years to come as they prepare to arrive in Las Vegas in 2020.

Carr needs to get working.

Insanity waits on no one.

Contact columnist Ed Graney at egraney@reviewjour­nal.com or 702383-4618. He can be heard on “The Press Box,” ESPN Radio 100.9 FM and 1100 AM, from 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. Monday through Friday. Follow @edgraney on Twitter.

 ?? Marcio Jose Sanchez ?? The Associated Press New Raiders head coach Jon Gruden, right, smiles as team owner Mark Davis applauds after Gruden was formally introduced to the media on Tuesday in Alameda, Calif.
Marcio Jose Sanchez The Associated Press New Raiders head coach Jon Gruden, right, smiles as team owner Mark Davis applauds after Gruden was formally introduced to the media on Tuesday in Alameda, Calif.

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