Raiders need to focus in practice
Written by Patrick A. Patterson   
Wednesday, 30 September 2009 23:31

Perhaps, Warren Sapp was on to something. The Raiders got some good press after nearly beating the Chargers in week one, and have regressed further towards the abyss in each of the games since. Both the offense and the defense have been less effective in each passing game.

It would seem that coming off the miserable performance in Kansas City that they were able to somehow pull a win out of, the Raiders would refocus their efforts and find a way to take their late game heroics on offense and combine them with the early game defensive strength and play a complete game. Instead, the Raiders came out flat as a blown out tire against the Denver Broncos. The flatness was manifested in the game, but it had its roots in the final practice before the game. In the Friday practice, the Raiders practiced flat, and as the truism goes 'you practice like you play.'

Defensive end Greg Ellis told the local media, "[Friday's practice] wasn't what we need to do and to be if we want to go out there and be a serious contender in this league right now. There's a lot of [parity} in the league, there's talent on every team in the league, including this one. But we're not the golden child where we stand out enough talent wise where we can go out there and kind of BS through practice and think we can win. We have to go out there and concentrate in practice, eliminate the mistakes and get to the football game and do the same thing."

It is disconcerting when a team has the legacy of losing over the past several years that the Raiders have endured. It is time for the Raiders to realize that they need to work harder. Cable stressed the fundamentals early in camp, but it does not seem to be paying the desired dividends on the playing field. Ellis essentially said that the young players are not working hard enough without speaking those exact words, "Obviously enough people did not understand that last Friday. Hopefully everybody learned and we can go out there today and leading up to this game and be more concentrating in practice and eliminate mistakes. Early in the week you expect some mistakes because it's a new, you don't change the whole scheme but there's some new things that coaches tell you, 'For this team we got to do this.' Today you can kind of expect some mistakes. But when you get down to Friday you expect for it to be real crisp, not so physical practice just crisp and not making those mistakes."Ellis spent his first eleven seasons with the Dallas Cowboys, so he knows how things work on a team that is in competition for the post-season every year. He is not seeing this same determination with the Raiders, which is quite disconcerting.

Apparently, the issue runs deeper than the seeming lack of leadership. The issue is that the individuals don't have the discipline to motivate themselves. "I think it has to be more than one guy. You can have that guy who wants to yell, scream and cuss at other teammates but everybody in the NFL we're grown men so we can choose how you respond to that firecracker guy if you will. The head coach can yell at you, anybody can yell at you but you as an individual have to take it upon yourself to say, 'OK, I'm going to receive this stuff and I'm going to use it as a positive.'"

If the Raiders are ever going to get off the schnide, they need to find that motivation within themselves. The veteran leaders who have tasted success like Greg Ellis and Richard Seymour need to lead by example, and the other guys need to see that is the route to success, not continuing with what has not worked.

You can also find Patrick Patterson on EXAMINER.com

Follow TFDSsports on twitter!
Follow Patrick on twitter!

 



Digg! Reddit! Facebook! Technorati! StumbleUpon! BallHype: hype it up!
Comments (2)Add Comment
...
written by BlackSunday, October 01, 2009
The old Raiders would get emotional and pissed on the field just like Seymour did when he got that personal foul. Not saying that was the right thing to do at the time but you like to see the passion.

Last game I didn't see much passion other than to get off the field as a majority. If you go three and out, interception, 3 and out, fumble; at some point somebody has to frustrated and passionate about turning it around.

We need to score and take care of the ball. Its the Offense that needs the passionate leaders to step up. That's why Fargas was the starter last year, because he runs great and leads like a leader should.

Murphy looks like he's getting there, Russell, McFadden and DHB look like dear in headlights, the point is everybody needs to take this more serious.

So do the fans, don't blame the economy, the Niners didn't have a problem selling out.

I want to win.
...
written by NuclearWinter, October 01, 2009
Just FYI, I know economy was brought up in another article and sure the economy isn't the only reason we didn't sell out, but nonetheless it has some effect.

San Francisco
Ranks third of American cities in median household income as of 2007. The average median household income for 2008 was $75,648. The median family income was $83,616.

The city's poverty rate is 11.8% and the number of families in poverty stands at 7.4%, both lower than the national average.

Oakland
The median income for a household in the city was $40,055, and the median income for a family was $44,384.

About 16.2 percent of families and 19.4 percent of the population were below the poverty line, including 27.9 percent of those under age 18 and 13.1 percent of those age 65 or over.

According to "Oakland Trends" data, the number of Oakland, California jobs has decreased by 31% since February 2008.

Doesn't sound good to me.

Hope these guys start pushing each other, failure is not an option!

Write comment

busy
 

About Bloguin

Bloguin is the revolutionary blog network specifically focused on helping bloggers get the most out of their websites. We're currently working on building a large network of online communities and hope to expand our blogging coverage to include a wide range of topics.

Advertisers

The Bloguin Network allows advertisers to promote their products and services to our ever-growing number of visitors. We offer both site-specific ad placements as well as the ability to run a network-wide campaign. If you're interested in working with Bloguin to meet your advertising needs, please contact us.

Bloggers Wanted

The Bloguin Network is always looking to expand. We're specifically looking for blogs in the sports, entertainment, and video games field, but are open to adding any type of quality site.. If you're a blogger and interested in joining our network, please fill out our application form.

The Bloguin Login

The Bloguin Login gives you full access to everything our network has to offer. Your name and password will work for each and every one of our sites. Signing up is simple, and will allow you to post in all our forums, create member blogs, and access other cool features! What are you waiting for? Create an Account!