The Mercury News Weekend

Carr would love to take that fire in his belly to a new city

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Quarterbac­k Derek Carr said Thursday in his first public comments since being benched by Las Vegas Raiders coach Josh McDaniels that he is ready for the challenge of playing in a new city.

“I once said that if I'm not a Raider I would rather be at home and I meant that, but I never envisioned it ending this way,” Carr posted on Twitter. “That fire burning inside of me to win a championsh­ip still rages. A fire no man can extinguish; only God. So I look forward to a new city and a new team who, no matter the circumstan­ce, will get everything I have.”

Carr started 142 games over nine seasons for the Raiders, providing stability to a franchise that had cycled through 17 starting quarterbac­ks in the 11 years before he arrived as a second-round pick in 2014.

Carr helped lead the Raiders to playoff appearance­s in 2016 and 2021 and owns multiple team records, including most career yards passing (35,222) and touchdown passes (217). But he also had the third-most starts for one team in the Super Bowl era for a quarterbac­k who never won a playoff game for the team.

Carr struggled in his first year under McDaniels, despite the addition of star receiver and close friend Davante Adams to the offense, and was benched with two weeks remaining in the regular season.

Carr had his lowest marks since his rookie season in completion rate (60.6%) and passer rating (86.3), while posting his highest intercepti­on rate (2.8%) and his lowest yards per attempt (7.0) since 2017.

That ultimately led to the decision from McDaniels and first-year general manager Dave Ziegler to move on from Carr less than a year after signing him to a three-year extension for $120.5 million.

The deal signed last April gave Carr a $5 million raise in 2022, but provided an out for Las Vegas this offseason. The Raiders have until Feb. 15 to release Carr or his $32.9 million salary for 2023 and $7.5 million of his $41.9 million salary for 2024 will be guaranteed.

The Raiders can try to reach an agreement on a trade for Carr before that deadline, but a deal can't be finalized until the start of the new league year March 15. Any team that acquires Carr would then take on the rest of the contract, which would include the guarantees in 2023-24 and a nonguarant­eed $41.2 million salary for 2025.

Carr has a no-trade clause in his deal, giving him control over his destinatio­n. That could force the Raiders to simply cut him, absorbing a $5.6 million charge on the 2023 salary cap but saving more than $29 million.

“Derek's tenure with the Raiders is effectivel­y finished,” Carr's agent, Tim Younger, posted on Twitter. “Relationsh­ips do end, but as is the case here, a treasure of memories and friendship­s remain, along with a very special bond with his fans. These won't end.

“Teams constantly search for franchise players who invest themselves BEARS TAB WARREN AS NEW

PRESIDENT, CEO >> The Chicago Bears hired Big Ten Commission­er Kevin Warren as their president and CEO on Thursday, bringing him back to the NFL to help lead a founding franchise after three years running one of college athletics' marquee conference­s.

Warren, who replaces the retiring Ted Phillips, becomes Chicago's fifth president and the first from outside the organizati­on. He goes from becoming the first Black president of a Power Five conference to the first for the Bears. He is the team's second president that was not part of the Halas-McCaskey family tree, joining Phillips.

Warren's biggest task would be helping the Bears construct a new enclosed stadium, assuming they finalize the purchase of a 326-acre tract of land in suburban Arlington Heights and decide to move.

He also is joining an organizati­on with the No. 1 pick in the draft following one of the worst seasons in franchise history. The Bears went 3-14 and set a franchise record for losses.

“I am honored and recognize the responsibi­lity bestowed upon me to lead the Chicago Bears during this exciting and pivotal time for the franchise,” Warren said in a statement. “I join the Chicago Bears with gratitude and drive to carry out and build upon the legacy and spirit of this founding franchise and my predecesso­rs.”

Chairman George McCaskey called Warren “a man of integrity, respect and excellence.”

“He is a proven leader who has many times stepped outside of his comfort zone to challenge status quo for unconventi­onal growth and prosperity,” McCaskey said.

TITANS INTERVIEW TWO FOR GM POSITION >> The Tennessee Titans interviewe­d two in-house candidates on Thursday for the team's vacant general manager position.

The team interviewe­d vice president of player personnel Ryan Cowden and director of player personnel Monti Ossenfort for the position previously held by Jon Robinson, who was fired last month after seven seasons on the job.

Robinson was fired despite never posting worse than a 9-7 record and going 69-47 with six straight winning seasons.

The Titans are also expected to interview candidates from outside of the organizati­on as well before making a hire.

 ?? JOHN LOCHER — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Quarterbac­k Derek Carr thought he would end his playing days with the Las Vegas Raiders, but that has changed.
JOHN LOCHER — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Quarterbac­k Derek Carr thought he would end his playing days with the Las Vegas Raiders, but that has changed.

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