Las Vegas Review-Journal

GRADING THE RAIDERS

- Ed Graney

OFFENSE

B+This was easily one of Derek Carr’s best games as quarterbac­k of the Raiders. He Grade completed his first 11 passes and finished 23-of-31 for 275 yards with three touchdowns and one intercepti­on. The Raiders averaged 6.4 yards on just 57 plays. Carr targeted 11 receivers and they all had at least one catch. Darren Waller (7 for 88 with a score) and Nelson Agholor (6-88, score) led the way. For the first time in four games, the Raiders weren’t able to control the clock. They possessed the ball for just 27:55 compared to 32:05 for the Chiefs. Josh Jacobs carried 17 times for 55 yards and a score. Truth is, when your defense is this accommodat­ing to an opponent like Kansas City, you have to play near-perfect offense. The Raiders were good, but not flawless.

DEFENSE

DThe only thing keeping this from an “F” was the intercepti­on from cornerback

Trayvon Mullen near the end of Grade the first half that denied Kansas City points. It’s true that several regulars missed a week of practice while on the COVID-19 list and it showed. The Raiders allowed scoring drives of 14, 7, 16, 12 and 7 plays. They just couldn’t get off the field all night. Patrick Mahomes finished 34-of-45 for 348 yards with two scores and an intercepti­on. Tight end Travis Kelce (eight catches, 127 yards, game-winning score) and Tyreek

Hill (11-102, score) burned the Raiders time and again. Johnathan Abram had a team-best seven tackles, and linebacker Nick Kwiatkoski added six. Neither team recorded a sack.

SPECIAL TEAMS

Grade

This has fast become the team’s most consistent unit. It rarely makes mistakes. Daniel Carlson was perfect on all four extra point and added a 35-yard field goal.

COACHING

It was one of the better called offensive games in some time. Jon Gruden’s attack

found a nice rhythm early. But Grade did you know Gruden has been Bsuccessfu­l on just 19 percent of his challenges since returning as head coach? He lost another Sunday on what was ruled a catch during Kansas City’s scoring drive to open the second half. The Raiders also lost 15 yards on an unsportsma­nlike conduct call against their coaches when they left the sideline box to argue a non-call, which didn’t allow Gruden to at least contemplat­e going for it on fourthand-goal from the 1. His team was too sloppy for such a back-and-forth contest, penalized eight times for 72 yards. The defensive staff couldn’t dial up much of anything during those long Kansas City scoring drives, including a game-winning push that was far too easy for the visitors.

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