OAKLAND -- The Raiders will play their last game at Oakland Coliseum on Sunday against the Jacksonville Jaguars. It will be an emotional day for everyone involved.
That includes Jon Gruden, as attached to this East Bay fan base as anyone. The Raiders coach has shut off his emotions all week, driving focus into preparation for this game against the Jacksonville Jaguars. Thatâs the last Oakland moment he can control, and Gruden plans to take advantage.
Gruden desperately wants this win, and a victory might finally provide the opportunity to be emotional about the teamâs scheduled move to Las Vegas.
âI wish I had time to stand up here and thank all the fans," Gruden said earlier this week. "I wish I had more time to really sit down and make that the big story here, and thank the fans for their support over the years, and what this franchise has accomplished, and what it means and what Oakland means to the Raiders. So, Iâd like to thank everyone that welcomed us back when we came back and I know that they are going to stay with us when we go, but I appreciate all the fans and their loyalty and their support. Weâll try to give you one hell of a show.â
In order to put on a showstopper, the Raiders will need good performances from these five guys.
QB Derek Carr
I generally try to leave the franchise quarterback off these lists, but weâll make an exception for the last Raiders game in Oakland. He got booed off the field after last weekâs first half and again at the end, but this fan base still has a great affinity for the signal-caller who started virtually every game since 2014.
Carr owes them his best on Sunday, and odds are great heâll put on a show for the faithful. He must improve upon recent performances to execute his plan. Carr will need help from a so-so receiver corps and an offensive line -- Trent Brownâs questionable with a pectoral strain -- that havenât been at full strength all season.
Emotional Derek Carr is generally the best Derek Carr -- the season opener is a great example -- so we should anticipate him being on top of his game. The Jaguars have struggled mightily this season. but theyâre sure to put up a fight during the final game in Oakland.
Carr is capable of putting a team on his shoulders, and he might have to with the Raiders defense playing as it is.
RB Josh Jacobs
The Raiders donât have much to play for. Their playoff hopes are essentially dead, with the path to the postseason now complicated calculus when it was simple math not long ago. Jacobs is this teamâs offensive engine, the player who matters most in what the Raiders do moving the football.
They know that. They believe his fractured shoulder canât get worse and are hoping to trot him out there Sunday to help win the last game in Oakland. Jacobs' play exponentially increases their chances to win, and Jacobs knows that. He desperately wants to win this game.
The rookie is expected to be active, though itâs unclear exactly how much he will play. A 20-plus carry dose should do the Jaguars in. If he can provide that, the Raiders are in great shape if the defense holds up even a little bit. If not, Sunday could well be a struggle.
CB Isaiah Johnson
Thereâs no telling how much the fourth-round draft pick will play Sunday. Heck, he might not play at all.
Johnson hasnât done much since returning off injured reserve, at times a healthy scratch since being activated around midseason. He has sat behind other guys during a playoff push and that made sense, but now it doesnât. The Raiders are essentially out of the postseason running, with cornerback Daryl Worley either out with a neck injury or moving to strong safety in the base package.
That provides an opportunity to see what Johnsonâs got. He wonât be his absolute best, not after missing most of training camp and half the regular season with a facial fracture suffered in the first regular-season game. Rookies canât make up for that lost time until the following offseason, and Johnson clearly wouldâve played earlier had he not been behind.
But itâs time to throw him out there as a test, to see what youâve got in a talented young player. If he gives up a massive play, so what? The guy has to learn on the job. Thatâs how Trayvon Mullen has done it, and the Clemson product has thrived despite making some rookie mistakes. Itâs time to let Johnson do the same.
DE Maxx Crosby
A devout Raiders follower made a flag to hang over the Oakland Coliseum railing -- enjoy that while you can Raider Nation, the tradition isnât following you to Las Vegas -- to honor the departing club. He featured a skull and swords as crossbones, with a name filling out the remaining fabric. It said Mad Maxx.
That honors the rookie pass rusher who has already adhered himself to the fan base with one sack and pressure after another. He has proven a better run defender than people have expected. The Silver and Black need him to step up Sunday and generate heat largely missing from recent games.
Crosby currently has 7.5 sacks and would certainly like to reach 10 in his rookie year, needing at least a sack on Sunday to make that happen and give him a chance to compete for the Defensive Rookie of the Year award.
WR Tyrell Williams
The veteran receiver just isnât right. Coaches volunteered that Williams' plantar fasciitis has plagued him all season despite it keeping him out just two games in the early going.
Williams simply hasnât produced at a No. 1 receiver level, which has hurt the offense as a whole. Drops have been a real issue, and his lack of consistent separation can be attributed to his ailing foot.
He is not even on the injury report and is expected to play, and Williams has to produce if thatâs the case. He remains the teamâs best receiver and has to act like in the final game played in the spot where his grandparents live, in the town where he spent so much time as a kid.