Las Vegas Review-Journal

Raiders not as far away from success as many fans believe

Organizati­onal powers hinting at plans to fill quarterbac­k vacancy in the NFL Draft

- By Case Keefer A version of this story was posted on lasvegassu­n.com.

Amonth ago, a large number of football fans were convinced Aaron Rodgers was buying a home in Las Vegas ahead of becoming the Raiders’ next quarterbac­k. Now they’re ready to put the for-sale signs back up in the yard.

Such is the seesaw of the NFL offseason, when every square inch of informatio­n spurs an overreacti­on.

Social media chatter, and some fairly innocuous campaignin­g from current Raiders, initially helped link the team to the four-time NFL MVP who might be traded from the Green Bay Packers this offseason. The front-and-center presence of Raiders general manager Dave Ziegler and coach Josh Mcdaniels at the NFL Scouting Combine last week in Indianapol­is has shifted the focus elsewhere.

Mcdaniels and Ziegler got their first up-close-and-personal look at what’s being regarded as an above-average quarterbac­k class in the 2023 NFL Draft, scheduled to start on April 27 in Kansas City, Mo. They also gave every indication that they plan to address their need at football’s most important position through the draft, if not with their current No. 7 overall pick.

“The goal for us is to eventually have somebody that’s going to be here for a long time,” Mcdaniels said of the next quarterbac­k in his combine news conference. “You see the teams that are having success right now in our league, in our conference, and specifical­ly in our division, they’re young players that were drafted by their clubs, and they’re being developed there under the same continuity.”

That message should come as a relief to Raider fans. Drafting and developing the right quarterbac­k has always looked like the Raiders’ best course of action to set themselves up for sustained success in the post-derek Carr era.

But don’t count out a move for Rodgers or some free agent just yet either. And, more importantl­y, don’t count it out because of what’s becoming the most popularly cited reason in NFL circles: that the Raiders aren’t strong enough elsewhere to justify springing for a luxury at the position.

Las Vegas has too many top-end roster pieces to go with too many other advantages elsewhere to be considered among the dregs of the league. The Raiders are coming off a disappoint­ing first season under Mcdaniels and Ziegler, but one where they went a highly unlucky 4-9 in one-score games.

Translatio­n: They’re not as far behind as their overall 6-11 record from this past season may indicate. Acting like the Raiders are a helpless cause with no hope of an immediate turnaround gives

Ziegler and Mcdaniels a builtin excuse if they have a second straight underwhelm­ing season.

They deserve some runway in trying to turn around one of the NFL’S worst franchises of the past 20 years, but not that much of one. The Raiders should be expected to compete in the upcoming 2023 season.

A year ago, they were a trendy pick to contend for the AFC West if not the Super Bowl after acquiring wide receiver Davante Adams and edge rusher Chandler Jones.

There are those offseason overreacti­ons again.

Calling for the Raiders to spring to the top of the NFL last year was as much of a reach as relegating them to the bottom this year. Las Vegas is not in a rebuilding situation, even if some of the messaging makes it sound that way.

“We feel like we have the opportunit­y with the amount of picks we have this year, with where we’re picking ... to build that core group of players,” Ziegler said at the combine. “That doesn’t always mean that you (draft) 12 superstars, 12 starters. Some of those guys are working-class individual­s that provide depth to your team too, but there’s a healthy excitement, a healthy anxiousnes­s to have that opportunit­y in front of us and go capitalize on it.”

Ziegler saved himself with the second part of that statement, because the team has three core players — Adams, edge rusher Maxx Crosby and running back Josh Jacobs, whom the team is expected to keep either via a contract extension or a franchise-tag designatio­n — as good trio to build around as any in the league. The Raiders owe it to that group to chase as many wins as possible right now.

The NFL is built on parity. Seeing a few teams complete a dramatic turnaround every year is the norm.

Four straight Super Bowls have featured a team that wouldn’t have been considered a real contender at the end of the previous season. Two of the sides (the 2021-22 Cincinnati Bengals and 2019-20 San Francisco 49ers) were coming off worse campaigns than the Raiders had in 2022-23.

The commonalit­y with all those teams is they had, or found, the right quarterbac­k to bring out the best in a promising surroundin­g roster. That’s the challenge facing the Raiders.

“When you’re looking at the desire to win now and a future quarterbac­k, it’s interestin­g because you’ve seen it go both ways in terms of you draft a guy and he sits,” Ziegler said. “Like (Patrick) Mahomes, he sat for a year. … There’s a history of doing that and players having success, and then there’s a history of guys getting thrown in the fire right away and it worked out.

“It’s just a philosophi­cal thing that you have to make a decision on, and you have to be aligned from the top of the organizati­on down.”

It’s a tricky propositio­n, but navigating it is why Ziegler and Mcdaniels are paid so handsomely. They must know the rest of their team is better than it’s perceived.

The Raiders’ offense was above average by most metrics last season despite a mediocre year from Carr that has him looking for a new job. Their defense was … not above average by any metrics but should be fixable.

Defensive performanc­e in general is far less steady yearover-year, though the Raiders have defied the trend by staying below average every season for more than a decade. As long as Crosby is around, perhaps with Jones maintainin­g the late-season form that had him playing better before a season-ending injury in Week 16, there’s a path to the Raiders being more respectabl­e on defense.

Las Vegas has plenty of resources to make it happen. The Raiders are third in salary cap space with more than $46 million free going into the start of the new league year March 15, per spotrac.com. They’re sixth in draft capital with 11 picks.

The problem with acquiring Rodgers is that he’d greatly cut into both collection­s of assets. A trade would surely cost draft picks and Rodgers’ current salary would take up more than half of the Raiders’ available space.

But the number of picks required to get him could turn out relatively low if Rodgers dictated he wanted to come to Las Vegas, and he’s already said he would be open to restructur­ing his contract in the right situation.

The 39-year-old Rodgers is probably not the answer for the Raiders, but if Ziegler and Mcdaniels believe he can play at the Mvp-winning level he showed in 2020 and 2021, then he must be seriously considered. Rodgers wouldn’t lack for surroundin­g talent with the Raiders.

That’s true no matter who becomes the next quarterbac­k. Whether it’s ultimately the greenest of rookies or the biggest-name veteran, the timeline shouldn’t budge.

The Raiders need to win now. “It’s obviously one of the biggest factors that will certainly impact our season, let alone our offseason,” Mcdaniels said of the quarterbac­k decision. “But there’s nothing we can do other than go through our process and really do a good job of evaluating our opportunit­ies and options, and make smart decisions about what’s best for the Raiders.”

 ?? STEVE MARCUS FILE ?? Las Vegas Raiders head coach Josh Mcdaniels watches from the sidelines during a loss to the Kansas City Chiefs on Jan. 1 at Allegiant Stadium.
STEVE MARCUS FILE Las Vegas Raiders head coach Josh Mcdaniels watches from the sidelines during a loss to the Kansas City Chiefs on Jan. 1 at Allegiant Stadium.

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