Jul 122010
 

The Washington Redskins parted ways with Jason Campbell after five seasons, trading him to the Oakland Raiders for a fourth-round pick in the 2012 NFL draft.

The Redskins along with new General Manager Bruce Allen and Head Coach Mike Shannahan decided Campbell wasn’t going to lead the team to the promised land and traded for veteran Donovan McNabb.

The Eagles traded McNabb within the division opting to go with young quarterback Kevin Kolb, who was drafted the same year as JaMarcus Russell.

Comparing Quarterbacks 2009 Stats (as starters)

Bruce Gradkowski - 4 starts
65 Comp
118 Att
55.1% Comp
844 yards
210 YPG (injured in 4th)
6 TD
1 INT
2 Fumbles Lost (4 Total)
91.2 Rating

Donovan McNabb – 14 starts
267 Comp
443 Att
60.3% Comp
3553 Yards
254 YPG
22 TD
10 INT
3 Fumbles Lost (13 Total)
92.9 Rating

Jason Campbell – 16 starts
327 Comp
507 Att
64.5% Comp
3618 Yards
226 YPG
20 TD
15 INT
3 Fumbles Lost (13 total)
86.4 rating

Kevin Kolb – 2 starts
55 Comp
85 Att
64.7% Comp
718 yards
359 YPG
4 TD
3 INT
0 Fumbles Lost (0 Total)
92.2 rating

There doesn’t seem to be significant differences from quarterback to quarterback. Obviously, the smaller sample the greater the risk.

So what made the difference between 11-5 and 5-11 teams?

Defenses:

Eagles:
21.1 PTS/G
321.1 YPG
38 Takeaways
23 Giveaways (Offense)
+15 Ratio

Redskins:
21 PTS/G
319.7 YPG
17 Takeaways
28 Giveaways (Offense)
-11 Ratio

Raiders
23.7 YPG
361.9 YPG
20 Takeaways
33 Giveaways (Offense)
-13 Ratio

The largest statistical difference here is obvious. Turnovers.

Giveaways:
Jason Campbell – 18 total giveaways in 16 games which is 1.125 per game
Donovan McNabb – 13 total giveaways in 14 games which is .929 per game
Bruce Gradkowski – Three total giveaways in four games which is .750 per game
Kevin Kolb – Three total giveaways in two games which is 1.5 per game.

The biggest statistical differences in turnover ratio had little to do with this group of quarterbacks. Rather it was the work of the rest of the offense and the defensive takeaways.

What changes with the shuffling of quarterbacks?

The Redskins will likely use the Bill Walsh version of the West Coach Offense. Dink and Dunk. This is basically the same offense used by Andy Reid in Philadelphia, Jon Gruden, etc.

Jason Campbell has been playing Jim Zorn’s version of this offense for the last two seasons.

However, Campbell was drafted by Joe Gibbs. Gibbs favors the Air Coryell type of offense, popularized by the late, great Don Coryell.

This is the same offensive type favored by Al Davis, John Madden, Tom Flores, Norv Turner and Cam Cameron. Cameron being the Offensive Coordinator in Baltimore, where Hue Jackson most recently coached quarterbacks.

This is why Jason Campbell is actually a better fit for the Raiders than he was the Redskins. The Raiders will rely on deeper passing and the run game.

In John Madden’s Hall of Fame induction speech, Madden mentioned Coryell, “with a great coach that someday will be in here, Don Coryell. He had a real influence on my coaching. Joe Gibbs was on that staff, too.”

There is often much confusion, because the Coryell offense is sometimes referred to as the West Coast Offense, but in today’s NFL a West Coast Offense more commonly describes Bill Walsh’s system.

Campbell’s first 20 games came under Joe Gibbs. Campbell completed 57.7% of his passes for 3997 yards (199 ypg), 11.1 ypc, 22 TD & 17 INT with a 7-12 record from 2006 to 2007.

May 072010
 

People will be talking about JaMarcus Russell for weeks to come. Who was responsible for him being so terrible? Who will give him a second chance?

JaMarcus Russell is a “big” bust in every sense. He has struggled with weight and he will be in the conversation as the biggest draft bust in NFL history, even if he doesn’t take the title. As the NFL moves to a rookie wage scale, smack in the middle of the history books will be the $39 million that Russell pocketed over the course of three seasons.

You will have people come out on Russell’s side, as his high school coach already has. Various Raiders players will support Russell in the days to come, while many others will give a no comment or simply refuse to comment.

I’ve said before that Russell was not a bad guy, but a raw football player that didn’t have the work ethic to become a good football player. Maybe he was coming along and the Raiders would have liked to keep Russell provided he didn’t cost $9 million to have on the roster. No one knows.

The blame can be pinned on Russell alone, and many fans will be happy to pin it squarely on Russell’s shoulders. Apologists will cite a tumultuous coaching situation and locker room, poor offensive line and nothing but a very young group of offensive weapons. Not exactly the perfect environment for a number one overall selection with questionable work ethic.

Regardless of your opinion on Russell, I think even apologists aren’t sad to see Russell move on, where he might have a chance as a backup. The bashers are more than happy to throw a party and BBQ their Russell jersey if they haven’t already.

Speculating where Russell will land is a popular blog topic today. The futile exercise is hardly engaging and a complete waste of time.

What are worth discussing are the reasons for Russell’s failure. Russell was exhibit A, and he has been jettisoned to the waiver wire, but what about those offensive weapons? What about that offensive line? A defense that couldn’t stop the run?

Russell was a problem, but far from the only problem and maybe not even the biggest one.

The Raiders also addressed the offensive line, the defenses ability to stop the run, and the quarterback position all in one offseason. The Raiders are banking that the young talented offensive weapons will have a banner year.

The Raiders drafted Darren McFadden to be a dynamic playmaker out of the backfield. While he has shown flashes at times, he has a hard time staying on the field, because he is either hurt or fumbled the ball away to the defense.

This season will likely be the final chance for McFadden. NFL runningbacks are among the few positions expected to produce in the first few seasons. The Raider nation is hoping Hue Jackson can put McFadden to better use, and that McFadden can avoid the fumble problems and injury bug that has plagued him in his first two seasons.

Michael Bush needs to be the runningback carving up defenses and blowing up defensive backs, not the back that runs in mud and gets blown up by linebackers in the backfield.

Louis Murphy, Chaz Schilens and Darrius Heyward-Bey have the making of a nice receiver group, but there isn’t a proven commodity among them. Heyward-Bey needs to remove a lot of the negativity from his first season. Murphy needs to build on his first season success and Schilens needs to stay on the field long enough to be the possession receiver the Raiders have lacked since Tim Brown and Jerry Rice were sent packing.

The good news is the Raiders have plenty of young talent to spread around, which gives Raiders fans some hope for the upcoming season and beyond. The last thing the Raiders need is an old troublemaker like Terrell Owens to wreck the development of this young core. The Raiders intentionally failed to address the receiver position, hoping the young players will make a leap this season.

The area the team probably would have liked to address more was the offensive line.

Jared Veldheer and Bruce Campbell were nice draft additions, but the team didn’t add a sure fire starter on the offensive line during the offseason. The infamous Langston Walker is the favorite to start at right tackle and Robert Gallery is the only starter from last season that will not be locked in the competition this offseason. Gallery, however, hasn’t been able to stay healthy and that will surely be a concern for the Raiders.

One would presume the Ravens’ left tackle Jared Gaither would be an option by trade. I’m sure Hue Jackson has the details about Gaither and has shared them with the coaching staff and Al Davis. It could be that Gaither’s questionable work habits will scare the Raiders away, but his performance last season would make him a likely bargain for the tackle hungry Raiders.

A good left tackle like Gaither might cement the offensive line by allowing the players to be reshuffled. Reportedly the Bills are very interested, but the Raiders should be.

While dumping Russell was one piece of the puzzle to fix the Raiders anemic offense, fixing the woeful offensive line and getting the players at the skill positions to produce consistently will be the next steps.

May 032010
 

I’m about as steadfast in these predictions as a politician is in a campaign promise. Read. Laugh. Enjoy.

1. The quarterback depth chart will be Jason Campbell, Bruce Gradkowski, JaMarcus Russell barring injury.

2. The Raiders will win nine games or more.

3. Darren McFadden will have 1500 all-purpose yards

4. The offensive line will continue to be Achilles Heel of the team.

5. The Raiders will have a top ten defense.

6. The Raiders will have a top 15 run defense.

7. The Raiders will have a top ten running game.

8. Jason Campbell will improve on his 2009 season statistically.

9. Rolando McClain will be the defensive rookie of the year.

10. Tyvon Branch will be a Pro Bowl alternate.

11. Stanford Routt will be a starting corner by season’s end.

12. Bruce Campbell will be a beast on special teams, but won’t see the field as an offensive lineman very much.

13. Nnamdi Asomugha will be thrown at him this season.

14. Richard Seymour will register more than six sacks.

15. Jared Veldheer will start at least one game at tackle.

16. Cooper Carlisle will be cut before the start of the season.

17. Kamerion Wimbley will be the most productive offseason acquisition.

18. Jacoby Ford will return two kicks/punts for a touchdown

19. Darrius Heyward-Bey, Louis Murphy, and Chaz Schilens will each have 50+ receptions.

20. Michael Bush will lead the team in touchdowns.

Apr 302010
 

How about some one-liners?
- JaMarcus Russell looked good, who knows what that means going forward.
- Russell looked noticeably thinner than last season, not 300 pounds (Shame on NationalFootballPost.com for reporting it)
- Richard Seymour is working on a long-term contract with the Raiders
- Oren O’Neal was waived
- Veteran Michael Bennett is in for a tryout as was rookie DT Allen Smith from Stanford.
- Bruce Campbell has a severe learning disability, which likely aided his fall in the draft. More on that as it becomes available.
- Additions and subtractions to my undrafted rookie list. Add TE John Owens and DB Joey Thomas, remove WR Trent Guy (Panthers).
- Russell hasn’t taken a pay cut…yet.
- The Raiders are still a 4-3 defense, despite much speculation.
- Lamarr Houston is indeed playing left end. He will have a tough time earning a starting role there.
- Russell’s bling necklace inventory: #2 Jersey, The Chosen One, Russell Figure with a cape, a hand giving a middle finger. Of course, all diamond encrusted to the hilt.
- Robert Gallery was participating.
- Chaz Schilens, Nick Miller, and Bruce Gradkowski (obviously) did not participate.

Apr 282010
 

According to ESPN's Adam Schefter, Russell will be allowed to report to minicamp and compete for the job.

If Al Davis is intent on keeping Russell, this is the way to do it.

Cutting Russell right now would be a favor, allowing him to potentially hitch a ride with another team. It also gives Russell time to learn the offense for that new team.

Keeping Russell around allows him to compete for *a* job on the team.

If the Raiders decide not to hold onto JaMarcus come cut down day, he will walk away with the $3 million and be hard-pressed to find another team.

This type of maneuver gives the Raiders serious leverage in trying to force Russell to take a pay cut.

If the report proves true, the Raiders are happy to keep JaMarcus around in a reserve roll or are intent on seeing how he responds to true competition.

I'll call ESPN out for reporting this both ways.

It is easy to float a rumor like this, the Raiders will never confirm the report and usually they don't even bother to deny it.

ESPN gets two stories for the price of one when, of course, they report the exact opposite of their previous report.

This type of yellow journalism has earned the network the name, "BSPN" from more than one member of the Raider Nation, something that isn't likely to go away until they stop reporting untrue or inaccurate information.