Latest Oakland Raiders Stories
Posted: Jul 3rd 2009 7:00 PM ET by Calvin Watkins (RSS feed)
Filed Under: 49ers, Arizona Cardinals, Broncos, Browns, Buccaneers, Dolphins, Jets, Lions, Raiders, Vikings, NFL Analysis
We're entering a dark period of the NFL life right now. Nothing is going on. Players and coaches are on vacation. With that we look at 10 quarterback situations worth looking at before training camps start in late July, because, well, it's always about the quarterback.
1. Detroit.
Matthew Stafford vs.
Daunte Culpepper.
The situation: It's the same old argument. Do you start the rookie or the veteran? The No. 1 pick of the draft is Stafford, but the vet with a chance to win a few games is Culpepper. Stafford is the future but you don't want to damage it. For every
Matt Ryan and
Joe Flacco there's a
Ryan Leaf and
Vince Young.
Solution: Start Culpepper and wait until 2010 for Stafford.
Posted: Jun 19th 2009 9:22 PM ET by Dan Graziano (RSS feed)
Filed Under: Raiders

Some NFL teams have confidence. Some have big dreams. Some have hope that they'll be this year's surprise. And some teams are just looking for any sign at all that they might not be a complete embarrassment to their sport. The Oakland Raiders fall into the last category, and
JaMarcus Russell is offering such a sign.
According to Steve Corkran of the Oakland Tribune, Russell is
organizing a special minicamp for the Raiders' quarterbacks, receivers and tight ends at an undisclosed location sometime before training camp begins on July 30. The fact that Russell, the No. 1 overall pick in the 2007 draft, is taking this upon himself is seen as a sign that he is trying to show the kind of leadership expected of an NFL quarterback. This in turn is seen as good for the Raiders and good for Russell, who will enter training camp with veteran backup
Jeff Garcia breathing down his substantial neck.
From Corkran's story:
Posted: Jun 17th 2009 3:50 PM ET by Ryan Wilson (RSS feed)
Filed Under: Raiders, NFL Fans, NFL Injuries, NFL Training Camp

It would have been nice if, after the Raiders selected wide receiver
Darrius Heyward-Bey with the seventh-overall pick in April's draft, the talented but raw Maryland product quietly went about proving his critics wrong.
Instead, he suffered a hamstring injury two weeks after the draft (
speed kills, apparently), which made it easy for detractors to point out that
Michael Crabtree or
Jeremy Maclin -- two receivers everybody but
Al Davis had rated higher than Heyward-Bey -- might have been better choices.
Then again, Davis loves the vertical passing game, and to pull it off you need a strong-armed quarterback and a receiver who can blow past defenders.
JaMarcus Russell was an obvious choice for the former, and of all the available pass catchers in the 2009 draft, Heyward-Bey made too much sense (at least from Al's perspective) for the latter.
Posted: Jun 13th 2009 3:47 PM ET by Tom Mantzouranis (RSS feed)
Filed Under: Raiders, NFL Police Blotter
Today, our society is better at understanding and accepting mental disorders. Troubles that were once delegitimized are now seen as serious medical issues and are attended to as carefully as physical ailments; people who were once discredited for being different are now seen in a different light.
Posted: May 21st 2009 1:40 PM ET by Ryan Wilson (RSS feed)
Filed Under: Raiders, AFC West

It's May, NFL practices are voluntary, and they mainly consist of 80 or so players running around in shorts and t-shirts trying not to get hurt. Despite barely resembling football, organized team activities (OTAs) are an opportunity for coaches to install new schemes, and new faces to get acclimated to their surroundings.
It's also a chance for veterans to become more comfortable. This assumes the scheme doesn't change every offseason. Which brings us to
JaMarcus Russell, the first overall pick in 2007, and currently penciled in as the Raiders starting quarterback.
Posted: May 19th 2009 10:40 AM ET by Ryan Wilson (RSS feed)
Filed Under: Raiders, Redskins, NFL Fans

Last season, the Raiders paid
DeAngleo Hall $8 million for eight weeks of service before cutting bait. Not the best use of the salary cap, but it makes sense when put in perspective: Oakland has had four coaches, four quarterbacks and 16 wins in four years. Blowing $8 million on Hall is nothing.
Hall wasn't out of work long; he signed with the Redskins and played well enough to get a long-term deal (apparently,
leaving Oakland is good for your career).
Posted: May 19th 2009 9:25 AM ET by Ryan Wilson (RSS feed)
Filed Under: Patriots, Raiders, AFC East, AFC West, NFL Rumors

After an injury-filled, $8 million season in Washington,
Jason Taylor was back on the free-agent market this spring. Several teams needing a pass rusher showed interest, including the Patriots, who had previously traded veteran linebacker
Mike Vrabel to the Chiefs.
Taylor ended up in Miami, where he started his career and played for 10 seasons. It was one of the few examples of a player turning down a chance to join the Pats; head coach and evil genius
Bill Belichick has an incredible knack for convincing free agents -- through Charles Manson-styled brainwashing, no doubt -- to come to Foxboro. Not this time.
Posted: May 14th 2009 10:50 AM ET by Ryan Wilson (RSS feed)
Filed Under: Raiders, NFL Draft, NFL Fans

Mocking the Oakland Raiders is a year-round affair, and the NFL Draft is no different. People who make it their business to know such things were predicting the Raiders would take wide receiver
Darrius Heyward-Bey with the seventh overall pick because -- wait for it --
Al Davis loves speed.
The year before, some folks thought running back
Darren McFadden was a stretch with the fourth selection, and then there were the
Fabien Washington and
Michael Huff first-round debaclements in 2005 and 2006. But the 2007 draft was different: the Raiders chose quarterback
JaMarcus Russell with the No. 1 pick, and we all agreed it was the right move.