Las Vegas Review-Journal

Team has options to move up, down or hold tight

- By Vincent Bonsignore Contact Vincent Bonsignore at vbonsignor­e@ reviewjour­nal.com. Follow @Vinnybonsi­gnore on Twitter.

INDIANAPOL­IS — The Raiders came to the NFL scouting combine open-minded about what direction to go with their first-round pick.

Those options include trading up from pick No. 7 to secure their quarterbac­k of the future, standing pat to take the best player available, or trading down to accumulate more picks while still getting one of their top targets.

The Raiders will have 10 more picks after the first round when the NFL announces compensato­ry picks. That leaves them in an enviable position no matter what path they take.

That said, the price to move from No. 7 to No. 1 feels a bit prohibitiv­e. But the leap from seventh to third, fourth or fifth could be doable. That could put them in position to grab a highly regarded quarterbac­k such as Ohio State’s C.J. Stroud.

The Raiders, who are protective of the draft capital they have built, will be cautious about trading up.

“Once you move up, typically you’re subtractin­g other draft picks, which are other players,” general manager Dave Ziegler said. “And so that’s the thing that you have to weigh.”

As the Raiders stack their draft board, ideally they will create a comfort level with a handful of players at each selection. That way, depending on how things play out, they will be content selecting whichever players are still on the board.

That comfort level could motivate them to move back, too, knowing one of their preferred targets would still be available if they dropped down a few picks.

Of course, having a handle on that also means having a firm understand­ing of what the teams right behind them are thinking. Part of that is dependent on Ziegler and his staff doing their due diligence relative to getting in the heads of their colleagues.

“There’s a lot of I’d say intelligen­ce that goes into trying to answer those questions based on what you feel the needs of other teams are, things that you’ve learned about maybe what the direction other teams are going to go,” Ziegler said.

Raiders get high marks

As the Raiders prepare for the opening of free agency in two weeks, it appears they are among the most attractive destinatio­ns relative to how they treat their players.

That was the conclusion of a recent league-wide survey by the NFL Players Associatio­n, which ranked the Raiders third among the 32 teams on working conditions and how they treat players and their families.

The survey was conducted with the input of approximat­ely 1,300 players and covered eight categories ranging from treatment of families, nutrition, weightroom conditions, strength coaches, training rooms, training staffs, locker rooms and team travel.

The No. 1-ranked Vikings, Dolphins and Raiders ranked among the top three in each category.

The vote ranked teams from 1 to 32, with the Commanders ranking last. The final report included a report card for each team.

The Raiders’ report card included A’s for training room, strength coaches, food services and nutrition, among other categories.

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