Times Standard (Eureka)

What the Raiders are up to in the offseason

- By Jerry McDonald

The NFL has done all it can to provide continuity in the wake of the coronaviru­s pandemic, holding its draft, schedule release and offseason as scheduled although not without major tweaks because of shelter-in-place restrictio­ns.

The Las Vegas Raiders have been more under the radar than most. Coach Jon Gruden has let general manager Mike Mayock do almost all the talking save for a couple of brief responses on the club website and one syndicated radio appearance with a club employee.

Although draft picks were made available via conference call after being selected, free agent signings have been simply listed as transactio­ns on Raiders. com without press releases or press conference­s.

With relative silence as a backdrop, here’s an attempt to answer some questions as to how the Raiders are going about their virtual offseason:

WHAT ARE THE RAIDERS DOING NOW? » The Raiders are in to their third week of their voluntary virtual offseason which consists of teleconfer­ence meetings between 8 a.m. and 10 a.m. Monday through Thursday. Players log in for a team session and then are dispatched to smaller gatherings with their position groups with the appropriat­e position coaches.

Work is done on tablet computers, which have informatio­n about the systems of offense and defense including video of plays. Players are quizzed and can ask questions, much the same as a regular position group meeting.

WHAT ABOUT THE ROOKIES? » Rookies had a “virtual” minicamp May 1-3 in place of their usual on-field camp. They weren’t allowed to participat­e with the full group until this week and on Wednesday had a session of media training as part of their player engagement program.

WHAT ARE PLAYERS MISSING THAT THEY NORMALLY WOULD BE DOING AT THIS POINT OF THE OFFSEASON? » All on-field activities. Although at this point rules wouldn’t have allowed any offense vs. defense or padded practicing, in normal years players would have been able to work on the field with their offensive or defensive unit and in position groups. There has been little in the way of face-to-face relationsh­ips other than players that live near each other who have managed to get in some work together.

In other words, the Raiders are like most everyone else.

“It’s not unlike kindergart­en teachers and the third grade teachers and everyone around the country trying to put their best foot forward and teach people from home,” Mayock said at the conclusion of the draft. “That’s what I stress with all the veterans and to every single rookie we drafted. Once we get them integrated into our virtual program, we expect 100 percent attention. They better be ready to hit the ground running whenever we’re allowed to.”

WHEN MIGHT THAT OCCUR? » The NFL on Wednesday announced that the virtual offseason would continue through May 29 for all teams. The Raiders organized team activity practice sessions were scheduled for the weeks of May 26, June 2 and June 9. The first one will be virtual, and the other two could be as well. WHO IS PRESENTLY AT THE CLUB FACILITY IN ALAMEDA? » Athletic trainers and medical staff are there to work with players coming back from surgery or major injury. There is an informatio­n technology presence in

Alameda and Las Vegas and a smaller security detail. Everyone else — players, coaches, media relations, front office — is working remotely as per NFL shelterin-place guidelines.

WHAT IS THE LIKELIHOOD OF THE RAIDERS BEING ABLE TO HAVE THEIR TRAINING CAMP IN NAPA IN LATE JULY AS SCHEDULED? » The Napa Valley Marriott, which has housed the Raiders since 1996, is closed. A representa­tive said the tentative plan is for the hotel to open on June 1.

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