Raiders shouldn’t be deterred by Jaguars’ 6th-ranked run defense

Raiders shouldn’t be deterred by Jaguars’ 6th-ranked run defense
Silver And Black Pride Silver And Black Pride

Single digit carries for Ashton Jeanty is blasphemy.

Especially considering the Las Vegas Raiders spent the sixth overall pick on the Boise State running back just this past April. The high pick used demands adequate usage and giving the 21-year-old, 5-foot-8 and 208-pound tailback that kind of workload shouldn’t happen again.

During the bye week and heading out of it into a Week 9 matchup with the Jacksonville Jaguars (4-3 overall), Raiders head coach Pete Carroll put an emphasis in the ground game. And Las Vegas must get that portion of the offense clicking in order to obtain all-important balance.

“Yeah, we really do see the glimpses of the continuity that it takes to run the football. We have no question about what both Ashton (Jeanty) and Raheem (Mostert) bring to us. We’ve got to make sure that we’re giving them the opportunities. In the game last week when we really wanted to run the football, we couldn’t make a first down, so we didn’t have the opportunities. But I can see it and feel it, and it looks like we’re really connected, and so we need to show the results of that.”

Showing results — at least positive ones — are few and far between for the 2-5 Raiders. And what hell of a challenge to course correct the run game against the incoming Jaguars, owners of the sixth-ranked run defense in terms of yards allowed (638). But Las Vegas shouldn’t be deterred by that.

The Raiders should put that ranking to the test — early and often this Sunday.

Give Jeanty all he can handle and let him chip away at Jacksonville’s defense and see if he can break through. The rookie’s Year 1 tally thus far reads: 111 carries, 445 yards, three touchdowns; 15 receptions for 85 yards and two touchdowns. The 33-year-old veteran Raheem Mostert is second on the team in rushing yards with 80 on 16 carries. Quarterback Geno Smith adds another 72 yards on 22 carries.

As Carroll mentioned above, gaining first downs is vital for the offense as a whole. So more than single digit totes are in order for Jeanty with Mostert getting his opportunities, too. When broached with Carroll’s comments on seeing improvement in the ground game, Jeanty agreed.

“Yeah, I see the same thing. I mean, obviously it starts up front. I can’t do what I do without the guys blocking,” Jeanty responded. “But also me just building that chemistry with them, understanding the schemes better and better, and then just getting more reps.”

Jeanty is well aware what awaits him on this Sunday. Defensive tackle Arik Armstead (team-leading 3.5 sacks with 16 total tackles and four tackles for loss) anchors a Jacksonville defensive line that has size, speed, and power along the trenches. Then there’s a linebacker group led by Foyesade Oluokun (team-leading 55 total tackles, a sack, three stops for loss, and an interception) and Devin Lloyd (28 total tackles, league leading four interceptions) behind the...