Raiders Daily: Amari Cooper’s Short Unfinished Business Trip, Prepping for Ground Game

Raiders Daily: Amari Cooper’s Short Unfinished Business Trip, Prepping for Ground Game
Sportsnaut Sportsnaut

Following Amari Cooper‘s abrupt retirement, the Las Vegas Raiders are thin at wide receiver, and they have two days to decide on how to fill his roster spot. Meanwhile, defensive coordinator Patrick Graham is focused on two particular aspects of the game ahead of the team’s matchup with the New England Patriots.

Raiders Daily delves into what might’ve led to Cooper’s decision and Graham’s expectations for Sunday’s game.

Amari Cooper Retires Following Lackluster Showing at Practices

To some, Amari Cooper calling it a career was just as surprising as his return to the Raiders. Less than two weeks ago, he signed a one-year deal worth up to $6 million, but on Thursday, he decided to walk away from the game, at least for now.

According to The Athletic’s Tashan Reed, Cooper showed signs of decline in his preparation.

“In theory, Cooper would’ve provided some veteran insurance to the room,” Reed wrote. “According to a team source, however, Cooper was unimpressive in practice and didn’t have the look of a difference maker.”

Last week, Cooper discussed “unfinished business” entering his second stint with the team, but this brief stay in Las Vegas turned into a short business trip.

The Raiders may sign a veteran wideout like DJ Chark Jr. or Kendrick Bourne to fill a void within the pass-catching group. They can also elevate 29-year-old Alex Bachman to the active roster. Last year, he played 42 percent of the special teams snaps.

Amid a contract dispute with the front office, Jakobi Meyers‘ agent should be keen on this development as it gives the seventh-year wideout some leverage on his value to the offense and specifically a young receiver group.

Read: Las Vegas Raiders’ 5x Pro Bowler Abruptly Retires 3 Days Before Kickoff

Patrick Graham Emphasizes Toughness and Tackling Ahead of Week 1

Patrick Graham is familiar with New England Patriots offensive coordinator Josh McDaniels, who hired him to be the defensive coordinator on his staff. Three years later, he holds the same position under head coach Pete Carroll and speaks highly of McDaniels’ coaching acumen.

Having been an assistant on McDaniels’ staff, Graham is prepared to see certain tendencies play out through the Patriots offense in Sunday’s matchup.

“You know with Josh’s offense, they’re going to run the ball, and we’re going to have tackle,” Graham said. “I want to see a level of toughness, get off blocks, tackle their ball-carriers, tackle their receivers. That’s what we’re looking for.”

McDaniels has been an NFL head coach or offensive coordinator for 19 years, and in nine of those campaigns, his teams finished within the top 10 in rushing yards.

Graham knows the Patriots’ offensive play designer well, but he should also be aware that the Raiders gave up an average of 149 rushing yards in three preseason games. In fairness, the starting defenders played sparingly. That said, second- and third-stringers will have rotational roles along the defensive line during the regular season.

New England’s backfield will feature Rhamondre Stevenson, who’s...