Raiders add new faces on defense, but will results follow?
With free agency and the NFL draft complete, it’s time to take a deeper look into how the Raiders’ roster is shaping up.
The defense goes under the microscope first.
Overview
The Raiders allowed the third-most points in the NFL last season at 29.9 per game, had the fourth-fewest sacks with 21 and the third-fewest takeaways with 15. They allowed opponents to convert 48.7 percent of their third downs into first downs, third-worst in the league.
If you’re wondering why the Raiders suffered a second-half collapse for the second straight season and how an offense that scored the 10th-most points in the NFL did not reach the playoffs, those dismal defensive numbers tell the story.
They spent most of the offseason making sure that doesn’t happen again, beginning with the hiring of Gus Bradley as defensive coordinator and a slew of free agent and draft additions.
Here is a look at the defense by position:
DEFENSIVE LINE
Starters
DE: Cle Ferrell, Yannick Ngakoue.
DT: Quinton Jefferson, Johnathan Hankins.
Reserves
DE: Maxx Crosby, Carl Nassib, Malcolm Koonce, Matt Dickerson, Kendal Vickers, Gerri Green.
DT: Solomon Thomas, David Irving, Darius Philon, Darius Stills, Niles Scott.
Overview
The Raiders signed in free agency one of the most feared pass rushers in the NFL in Ngakoue, whose ability to get to the quarterback (45.5 sacks and 18 forced fumbles since 2016) adds a whole new dynamic to the defense. His addition allows Crosby to become more of a pass-rush specialist in which his efficiency rises over a reduced number of snaps. Ferrell remains the edge setter in the base defense, but can move inside on known passing situations, allowing Ngakoue, Crosby and rotational edge rushers Nassib and Koonce to attack off the edge. Jefferson, Hankins, Philon, Thomas and Irving add depth and versatility inside.
Comment
The Raiders can’t survive another 14-sack season from their front four, nor another year in which the defense gives up 123 yards rushing per game. The Raiders addressed those issues, but now it has to convert to the field.
LINEBACKERS
Starters
Nick Kwiatkoski, Cory Littleton, Nicholas Morrow.
Reserves
Divine Deablo, Tanner Muse, James Onwualu, Javin White, Asmar Bilal, Max Richardson.
Overview
The shift from Paul Guenther to Bradley and the addition of new linebackers coach Richard Smith is expected to have a major impact on this group. It all starts with Littleton, whose ineffectiveness last season after signing with the Raiders set the tone for a dismal defense. If Littleton gets back on track, it changes the dynamic of the defense. Kwiatkoski and Morrow were solid last season, but both are capable of more. The depth is questionable in terms of experience, with Muse missing his entire rookie season because of toe surgery and Deablo making the transition from college safety to linebacker after being drafted in the third round.
Comment
Littleton understands his 2020 season was unacceptable. From the Raiders’ perspective, he has to return to form for this unit to be dependable. Bradley has a track record of quickly developing young players and getting them on the field.
DEFENSIVE BACKS
Starters
CB: Damon Arnette/Casey Hayward, Trayvon Mullen.
S: Johnathan Abram, Trevon Moehrig.
Reserves
CB: Rasul Douglas, Nevin Lawson, Keisean Nixon, Amik Robertson, Nate Hobbs, Rashaan Gaulden, Isaiah Johnson, Kemah Siverand, TJ Morrison.
S: Karl Joseph, Tyree Gillespie, Shaun Crawford, Dallin Leavitt.
Overview
The Raiders are counting on a better pass rush, the maturation of Abram, Arnette and Mullen, and an immediate impact from Moehrig to help straighten out a unit that struggled mightily last season. The arrival of Moehrig, a second-round pick from Texas Christian, allows Abram to be used in a way that better suits his skill set. By playing closer to the line of scrimmage, Abram can tap into his physicality in the run game and blitz potential while minimizing his pass-defense weaknesses by enabling him to defend a smaller portion of the field.
Arnette struggled through an injury-plagued rookie season, and there are no guarantees he will keep his starting job with Hayward on the team. If Hayward beats out Arnette on the outside, Arnette is a candidate to move inside to fill the slot corner job vacated by the release of Lamarcus Joyner. Mullen has been solid in his first two seasons, but needs to take a big step forward in 2021. Joseph, Douglas, Lawson and Nixon add experience in reserve roles, an element the secondary has sorely missed the last two seasons.
Comment
Too often last season the secondary looked confused and disconnected, and that lack of cohesiveness was apparent in pass and run defense. Arnette, Mullen and Abram are heading into pivotal seasons, and their ability to either seize the moment or stand pat will set the tone for a unit for which the Raiders are heavily counting on.
Contact Vincent Bonsignore at vbonsignore@reviewjournal.com. Follow @VinnyBonsignore on Twitter.