The Official 2013 Oakland Raiders Season Thread

Skooby

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Man at Raiders’ Draft Table Has Unique History with Organization

Reggie McKenzie may make the decision, after advice from dozens of scouts, coaches and staff, but no draft pick becomes a Raider without Jerry Davis.

Jerry Davis answers the phone at the Raiders draft table in 2008. AP Photo
Reggie McKenzie may make the decision, after advice from dozens of scouts, coaches and staff, but no draft pick becomes a Raider without one important individual.

That individual is Jerry Davis.

Al Davis’ older brother, Jerry has one major responsibility on draft weekend: Write the name on the card. Having been around professional football since Al Davis worked for the San Diego Chargers in 1960, Jerry was never far away.

“I never made any football decisions of any kind,” Jerry said, “whether a guy was good, bad or indifferent as a ballplayer.”

Raiders fans may have seen Jerry at the Raiders draft table over the years. His involvement in the event began when his brother’s did.

“Well, one of the first jobs that Al had in pro football was as a scout,” Jerry said, “and he filled in on the first draft of the American Football League in New York. In other words, in those days, each team would send one man to New York. The American Football League wasn’t a part of the National Football League at the time.

“Al was with San Diego and he was with a very famous coach [Sid Gillman]. The American Football League was a league unto itself. Eventually, Al caused the combining of the two leagues and it became one league. That was the first draft I ever went to, the draft that Al came into New York to do. I sat at the table with him and neither of us knew that I would eventually take over the draft in New York, but for the combined team, the new team that eventually was the Oakland Raiders. So that’s when I started – the first draft of the American Football League.”

Jerry Davis’ participation will continue at next week’s draft at Radio City Music Hall in New York City.

“I stayed with the draft from that day forward and when the two leagues combined, I just took over [at the draft table],” Jerry said. “I did the drafting for him. Now, let me just say one thing to you, so you’ll understand and get it in perspective: I never made the decision as to which ballplayer to pick or not pick; I carried out someone else’s dictum in telling me what they wanted to me pick. I didn’t make the decision.”

As Jerry’s role with the draft remained the same, his younger brother’s position with the Oakland Raiders and the NFL continued to progress.

Jerry takes a call at the Raiders draft table at Radio City Music Hall. AP Photo

“A natural evolution,” said Jerry, regarding his brother’s transition from head coach to general manager, AFL Commissioner and, eventually, Raiders owner. “He was more or less destined to be an owner. And it just evolved.”

Prior to Al Davis’ ascension in professional football, baseball was his sport. Al Davis’ desire to build the Raiders using the best qualities of the New York Yankees and the Brooklyn Dodgers not only stemmed from his upbringing in Brooklyn, N.Y., but also his love for baseball.

“Originally my brother was a baseball fanatic,” said Jerry. “He was originally a baseball coach. His best sport, by far, was baseball. He was a spectacular third baseman in high school and in college. At Syracuse University, he was on the football squad, and I mean squad; you had to look deep to find him. But in baseball, he was out there as a third baseman and I would say almost every year after he became a junior in high school the problematic thing for him was to break a finger in playing third base.”

Jerry believes his brother really transitioned to football when he joined the Army in 1952. “He got into football, I think, when he went into service and he started to be the head coach of a football team on a service team and had the champion service team when he was in the Army,” said Jerry Davis.

As Raiders fans know, the rest is the storied history of the Silver and Black.
 

King Poetic

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THANK GOD HE'S NOT OUR PROBLEM NO MORE


Ravens LB Rolando McClain arrested again in Alabama

Rolando McClain's stint with the Baltimore Ravens may turn out to be brief as the 2010 first-round pick out of Alabama was arrested on Sunday, WHNT News 19 reports.

According to the report, McClain was arrested in his hometown of Decatur on charges of disorderly conduct and resisting arrest following an incident at Pines Park. McClain was part of a large crowd that had been asked to disperse. McClain allegedly refused to do so and began cursing at the officers.

McClain has been released from jail after posting bond.

McClain, 23, has had multiple run-ins with the law in Alabama. In January 2011, McClain was arrested after allegedly pointing a gun at another man and firing it next to his head. McClain was convicted and sentenced to 180 days in jail, but upon appeal, the charges were dropped when the victim would not cooperate with the criminal case against McClain. In January 2013, McClain was again arrested in Decatur after giving a false name to police during a traffic stop.

Those off-field issues, as well as an argument with head coach Dennis Allen that resulted in a two-game suspension during the 2012 season, led to the Oakland Raiders to place the eighth overall pick of the 2010 NFL draft on waivers on April 5. McClain cleared waivers and signed a one-year, $700,000 contract with the Ravens that included no guaranteed money, but an opportunity to earn an additional $400,000 in playing-time incentives.

McClain signed his contract with the Ravens on April 12 after an important, in-person meeting with general manager Ozzie Newsome in Baltimore. As thin as the Ravens are at the inside linebacker position, McClain's latest arrest not only jeopardizes his availability for the team's offseason workout program, which began on April 15, but it may also jeopardize his spot on the roster.
 

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One GM: "Quiet before the storm." My response: "Not for the #Raiders." They are getting a ton of calls for No. 3. "It's red-hot," I'm told.
9:03am - 25 Apr 13
@rapsheet
 

PTBG

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A top-ten draft trade means that the team trading up has a specific player in mind. For the team trading down, the thinking is that there are players they want that they can get later, along with the other stuff that comes from trading down.

For the Raiders, who reportedly are talking about trading down from the third overall pick in the draft, one of their prime targets at a lower spot on the board would be, we’re told, Houston cornerback D.J. Hayden.

Hayden has made a late rise up the draft boards. And not in the classic media-finally-waking-up sense. Once it was clear that Hayden has no lingering health issues following November’s near-death experience involving a fluke rupture of the inferior vena cava, his stock steadily has grown.

At the Scouting Combine, the sense was that he’d definitely go in the first two rounds. In recent days, he has become a sure-fire first-round pick.

One source said that many teams view both his game film and his medical file as better than Alabama cornerback Dee Milliner.

So at a time when plenty (including our final mock draft) have the Browns taking Milliner at six, the outcome could be a Raiders-Browns trade, with the Raiders snagging Hayden in that spot.
:leon: What prefer getting a run-stopper, but if we can get an extra pick, I'm for it. :whoo: Let's see what McKenzie has in store tonight, :obama: can't wait.
 

BayArea Breez

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:leon: What prefer getting a run-stopper, but if we can get an extra pick, I'm for it. :whoo: Let's see what McKenzie has in store tonight, :obama: can't wait.

latest update states Raiders will take Hayden at 3 if they can't move down.

I hope he's the next coming of Charles Woodson. God knows this team needs a strong corner, but i'm surprised to see them want to address the secondary before the DLine.

Then again, McKenzie was on local radio stating that you take the best available player always in the 1st round. Draft for need in the latter rounds. I guess he thinks Hayden is that dude. I hope he's right...
 

Skooby

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latest update states Raiders will take Hayden at 3 if they can't move down.

I hope he's the next coming of Charles Woodson. God knows this team needs a strong corner, but i'm surprised to see them want to address the secondary before the DLine.

Then again, McKenzie was on local radio stating that you take the best available player always in the 1st round. Draft for need in the latter rounds. I guess he thinks Hayden is that dude. I hope he's right...

Update from who?
 

BayArea Breez

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so far, so good. chances of renewing my season tickets just jumped up 20%
 
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