No division looks harder to decipher than the AFC West. Each franchise appears set to deploy a higher-variance operation compared to last season.
The two-time reigning champion Chiefs ditched their high-floor quarterback for a talented wild card, but Patrick Mahomes likely won’t be a sure thing in 2018. The Chargers possess the division's most balance, but their injury problems and astonishing place in the NFL fandom lexicon (perhaps no NFL team since the advent of television has carried a smaller fan base than the current Bolts) could bizarrely limit them. Denver is banking on a journeyman passer to revive its division-kingpin status.
Then, the Raiders: perhaps the league’s most difficult team to read. At a point when the division doesn’t have a clear front-runner, the Raiders pivoted in a radical direction that has their trajectory difficult to determine.
While Oakland’s previous setup spent last season squandering plenty of the goodwill built up over the previous two years, bringing back the third-most successful coach in franchise history is not the success certainty the 10-year contract suggests.
General manager Reggie McKenzie now has less power, and it showed this offseason. After years of a steady rebuild, and some turbulence in 2017, the Raiders gave Jon Gruden the keys. He's driven the vehicle in a different direction.
Aging cogs now flood the roster. The Raiders signed 11 players who are either north of 30 or will be by season's end. By far the most such signings in the league, Oakland's number is more than the rest of the AFC West combined and more than three other entire divisions. The Silver and Black, which employed some rather famous older players the last time Gruden was in charge, have a good chance of carrying between 15 and 19 veterans the new coach signed this year — approximately a third of the team.
Unlike many of McKenzie’s past free agency buys, these newcomers don’t look like long-term investments. However, it's arguable the Raiders needed a new direction.
McKenzie bizarrely allocated most of his 2017 free agency funding to offensive upgrades, leaving a perpetually shaky defense alone. With Oakland’s first- and second-round defenders (Gareon Conley and Obi Melifonwu) playing a combined seven games, McKenzie’s top rookies contributed strikingly little to the cause. The Raiders ended the year 29th in defensive DVOA.
But previously, McKenzie's Raiders showed legitimate progress — to the point that high-level free agents finally agreed to take the franchise’s money. Oakland's offensive line mercenaries (Donald Penn, Kelechi Osemele, Rodney Hudson) and seminal 2014 draft class (Khalil Mack, Derek Carr, Gabe Jackson) still represent the Raiders’ core. But Gruden supplemented it with a stream of one-year deals, mid-level commodities with low ceilings (see: Oakland’s new-look linebackers and secondary) and, as evidenced by the Martavis Bryant/Arden Key/Maurice Hurst draft-weekend acquisitions, viewed no risk as too great.
Gruden explained his affinity for these veterans, viewing them as willing mentors for the younger players. Hurst and Key have the new coaching staff giddy; these picks working out would bring vital depth to a pass rush that’s lacked a reliable interior presence throughout Mack’s tenure.
This cavalcade of moves, though, is a lot to process at once. To say the least, this was an atypical player-procurement period. Of the 16 free agents the Raiders signed in the spring, just two of them (Rashaan Melvin and fullback Keith Smith) are fifth-year players, the customary free agent age. Everyone else is older.
How much does all of it even matter if this Mack saga continues?
Non-“Monday Night Football” analyst Gruden still hasn’t met Mack, and the predominant reporting doesn't indicate the Raiders have made him an offer. This sequence seems strange and won't endear Mack to the Raiders long term.
Carr and Jackson signed their landmark contracts five months after becoming extension-eligible. Because of the team-friendly, fifth-year option, Mack, who didn't hold out like Aaron Donald did last summer, had to wait (and risk a career-altering injury in 2017) while inferior Raiders draftees cashed in.
If the Raiders haven’t gotten serious about a deal with their best player since a prime Charles Woodson, with Mack being the kind of talent the team for years couldn’t acquire, this sends a bad message.
Rumblings of Mark Davis not having the financial wherewithal to authorize a Von Miller-level guarantee (in the $70 million range and likely more since the cap’s risen by $22M since the Denver dynamo's extension) have surfaced. If true, that would be a rather bad look for a team that accepted a record $750M in public stadium funding.
Trading Mack would be a locker-room catastrophe and a PR disaster for a team that’s achieved so little over the past 15 years. But somehow, we’re at the point that it's in play, even if the Raiders still hold the leverage over their disgruntled star.
Davis’ Gruden coup does not offer much security that the Raiders can re-establish themselves as a Super Bowl threat — something that seemed close to imminent before last season's 6-10 disaster. Gruden guided the Buccaneers to a dominant Super Bowl conquest, but stripped of a world-conquering defense and a Rich Gannon-caliber quarterback, his 1.0 coaching career ended meekly. Now 55, Gruden re-enters a much different NFL.
Were the Raiders too harsh in abandoning their previous arrangement? They were on the precipice of the AFC’s No. 2 seed two seasons ago before Carr's leg break. Is it possible Carr’s subsequent back injury accelerated the offense’s regression last season? Of course, other than the core 2014 trio, along with Amari Cooper and Latavius Murray, McKenzie’s drafts have yet to produce additional upper-echelon contributors.
This Raiders nucleus, however, no longer looks like the rising force it recently did — bad timing in a division that has three other teams facing big-picture questions. And if Mack's traded, the AFC West will not be a four-team race this season.
That'd be a pretty sharp turn from this franchise's outlook the last time Carr was fully healthy and would put the lame duck Raiders on the verge of positioning themselves for a more prosperous Las Vegas future rather than aiming for a memorable Oakland goodbye.
While it can’t be certain Gruden’s once-transformative presence won’t revive the Raiders immediately, the events of the past several months should induce caution regarding how promising this new path will be.
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It might have been a good thing the Chicago Bears didn’t play Caleb Williams on Sunday. The Bears might need to hide their second-year quarterback as he irons out his wrinkles in the pre-snap process and with accuracy issues. The No. 1 pick in the 2024 draft struggled with timing and accuracy during the Bears’ joint practice with the Miami Dolphins on Friday. Caleb Williams was inaccurate in the red zone against no defenders On Sunday, Chicago Bears head coach Ben Johnson chose not to play second-year quarterback Caleb Williams against the Dolphins in their first preseason game. Instead, Johnson led a workout with Williams and wide receivers Rome Odunze and DJ Moore before the game. Per Brad Biggs of the Chicago Tribune, the Bears ran a total of 87 plays during the workout. All of the plays were routes in the air with no defenders on the field for the scripted practice. Despite going against no defenders bringing pressure or guarding his receivers, Williams struggled to hit his targets in the red zone. "Williams would stand next to Johnson, who would give him the play," Biggs wrote. "Then, the quarterback simulated a huddle with the player (only one ran a route on each snap) and gave the play call. They’d break the huddle, go to the line of scrimmage, Williams would simulate pre-snap actions and then the play would be run… "Before ending the session with eight deep balls, there was a 25-play set of snaps in the red zone. One thing Williams struggled to connect on was out routes to Moore and Odunze near the goal line. Those throws were not close and Williams consistently led the receivers too much." A closed-door problem for the Chicago Bears The throws weren’t close during routes on air… in the red zone? Williams wasn’t ready to take the field for the preseason game. For all of the flak he’s been getting from practice reports, the quarterback would have been relentlessly mocked for having these issues shown during an NFL Network broadcast. Biggs’ report is troubling, with a month to go before the season. Williams has much to improve upon, and the Bears are very much trying to do so without cameras present for a reason.
Oregon wide receiver Jurrion Dickey has struggled to live up to expectations in his first two seasons with the Ducks, and he is now in a terrible position heading into 2025 as well. Dickey has been suspended indefinitely by Oregon, head coach Dan Lanning announced on Tuesday. Lanning also suggested that Dickey may not play for the Ducks again. "We have two team rules; that’s respectful, be on time,” Lanning said, via James Crepea of The Oregonian. “There’s some pieces of that where I felt like he needed a break from us and we needed a break from that so we could focus on what’s in front of us right now. "Wishing him nothing but the best, as far as success and want to see him get back to where he can be a contributor somewhere; that might be here that might be somewhere else.” Dickey was a five-star recruit and rated as one of the top wide receivers in the country when he came out of Menlo-Atherton High School in Atherton, California, in 2023. He suffered an injury in his senior year in high school and redshirted as a freshman at Oregon. Dickey has two catches for 14 years during his time with the Ducks. Oregon went 13-1 in Lanning's third season with the program last season. The Ducks lost to eventual national champion Ohio State in the College Football Playoff quarterfinals.
Cincinnati Bengals rookie EDGE Shemar Stewart learned an important rule Wednesday: Don't hit the franchise quarterback during practice. In the 11-on-11 period of practice, Stewart knocked down Bengals QB Joe Burrow, a perennial league MVP candidate. A scuffle then ensued between Stewart and the offensive line. After practice, Bengals center Ted Karras said he likes Stewart's intensity but reminded him not to hit Burrow. "Just be smarter," Karras said, via Charlie Clifford of WLWT-TV in Cincinnati. "Great player. But, come on, man. That's all our hopes and dreams right there. And we got to be better, too. That's on us." Without Burrow, the Bengals' Super Bowl hopes would evaporate. He already carried Cincinnati to the big game during the 2021 season and is coming off a career year. Last season, he led the league in touchdown passes (43 in 17 games) and passing yards (4,918), winning Comeback Player of the Year for the second time. Not to mention, Burrow can be injury-prone. He suffered a season-ending left knee injury during his rookie season in 2020. Then in 2023, he tore his right wrist, sidelining him for the season's final seven games. The Bengals subsequently finished 9-8 and failed to make the playoffs. Burrow didn't suffer an injury after Stewart hit him, but the Bengals don't want to put their most important player at risk. "We've gotta protect No. 9," Bengals right guard Lucas Patrick said, via Jay Morrison of Cincinnati Bengals on Sports Illustrated. "It starts with me up front. I've got to play better, protect better. Can't let No. 9 get hit." The Bengals need their O-line to provide Burrow with much better protection for the rest of the season. And they need Stewart to follow the critical rule.
Another former Los Angeles Chargers player is on the move in free agency. Not long after a former Chargers tight end signed with the Los Angeles Rams, yet another former Chargers tight end has found a new home. This time, it’s Tre' McKitty signing with the Houston Texans. As Chargers fans surely remember, Los Angeles drafted McKitty in the third round of the 2021 NFL draft and he was with the team through October of 2023 before his release. Since, McKitty has bounced around with teams like the Buffalo Bills and Cleveland Browns before this latest stop with the Texans. Over his first two seasons with the Chargers, McKitty caught 16 passes, yet hasn’t broken onto the field in a regular season game since. As for the Chargers, they’re currently enjoying a nice period of depth at a position that is usually problematic. They added Tyler Conklin in free agency and Oronde Gadsden in the draft to a depth chart with Will Dissly.