Making Ashton Jeanty focal point key in Week 17

Making Ashton Jeanty focal point key in Week 17
Silver And Black Pride Silver And Black Pride

As a Brock Bowers truther, writing “the offense must flow through Bowers” was excellent source material.

After all, the tight end is the Las Vegas Raiders best pass-catching option and the Georgia product runs routes and gets separation like a wide receiver even at his size at 6-foot-4 and 235 pounds. The 23-year-old paces the Silver & Black’s aerial attack with 64 receptions for 680 yards and seven touchdowns.

But that’s where Bowers’ 2025 stats will remain.

The Raiders placed their ultra-talented and productive tight end on injured reserve Wednesday, and as a result, a narrative shift is apt.

“Well, it’s always a next man up mindset. I think any coach that you’ve ever interviewed would tell you that. No one feels sorry for you. Nobody cares, to be honest with you,” Raiders interim offensive coordinator Greg Olson said on how big of a loss Bowers going to IR is. “And as coaches, we preach that all the time within practice. Sometimes you’ll pull a player out and make a backup step up to kind of prepare him for those situations. But the whole next man up mindset kind of carries you through.”

Thus: Making Ashton Jeanty the focal point is key for the Silver & Black — in both Week 17 and the season finale next Sunday.

By The Numbers
Ashton Jeanty

  • Rushing: 224 carries, 828 yards (long of 64), 5 touchdowns, 37 first downs
  • Receiving: 50 receptions, 326 yards (long of 60), 5 touchdowns, 12 first downs

With Bowers out of commission, Jeanty is the de facto offense for Las Vegas. In the 23-21 loss at the Houston Texans in Week 16, the Raiders’ 22-year-old tailback had 25 touches to produce 128 rushing yards and a touchdown and one reception for 60 yards and an additional end zone visit. Those 25 touches represents the third time Las Vegas provided volume to its sixth overall pick.

And against the incoming New York Giants, another 25-touch outing — perhaps even more — is an opportune time to flow the offense through Jeanty. Due in large part to the G-Men’s second-worst ranked rushing defense (2,224 yards allowed) that also ranks 28th in rushing touchdowns given up (19), Olson would be wise to feed his capable running back.

New York hasn’t held an opponent’s ground game to under 100 yards since Week 5 and 6 (two months ago) when the defense held the New Orleans Saints and Philadelphia Eagles to 88 and 77 rushing yards, respectively. The the last four games, the Giants yielded a grand total of 615 yards on the ground.

Get Jeanty 20-plus carries and receptions in the passing game and see where the chips fall. See if the adjustments from a using a majority of zone blocking scheme to more man/power concepts proves fruitful in back-to-back games.

“Yeah, I felt like we ID-ed it better, and our fits were better when you looked at it,” Olson explained on the offensive line coming together last week in...