Week 1: 5 Raiders with the most to prove

Week 1: 5 Raiders with the most to prove
Silver And Black Pride Silver And Black Pride

Starting the 2025 campaign on the road is an opportune time to find out what the Pete Carroll-led Las Vegas Raiders have to offer this coming year.

Carroll and his desert marauders head East to face the New England Patriots at Gillette Stadium in Foxborough this Sunday for a 10 a.m. (Pacific Standard Time) matchup to kick off the regular season. It’s double debut for both head coaches for the Silver & Black and Pats as Carroll and Mike Vrabel are in their inaugural seasons helming the two teams, respectively.

Las Vegas and New England come off cellar-dweller 2024 seasons that saw both teams finish 4-13 and have staggeringly embarrassing point differentials: -125 for the Raiders (309 points scored to 434 allowed) and -128 for the Patriots (289 points scored, 417 allowed).

Suffice it to say, both AFC teams are looking for a rebound this coming year.

Thus, let’s take a look at the five Raiders who have the most to prove in the regular-season opener:

No. 1: Jordan Meredith, Center

The figurative and literal center of attention who appeared an afterthought early in camp only to win the all-important job at the pivot of Las Vegas’ offensive line. Meredith, an undrafted free agent who has become a mainstay in the Raiders trenches, was lauded by teammates and the coaching staff for his communication skills. And that, along with steady play, helped secure the center spot for him.

How Meredith functions at the pivot is integral to how the Raiders offense performs and going on the road in hostile territory will be a solid test for the 27-year-old. At 6-foot-2 and 301 pounds, the Western Kentucky product will not only be aligned with the quarterback on getting everyone on the same page and barking out any adjustments, but Meredith will contend with Patriots defensive tackles Christian Barmore and Milton Williams, along with nose tackle Khyiris Tonga, at various points in Sunday’s matchup.

No. 2: Geno Smith, Quarterback

Reunited with the coach who resurrected his NFL career, Smith’s arrival in Las Vegas gives the Raiders a bona fide QB1. Now we’ll see if Smith can create a Raider renaissance at signal caller alongside both Carroll and offensive coordinator Chip Kelly. Smith built a rapport with Meredith and the quarterback-center combination is going to be vital to the success (and failure) of Kelly’s offense.

Smith is older at 34 years old (35 on October 10), but the 6-foot-3 and 221-pound second-round pick (39th overall) from the 2013 NFL Draft still has plenty to prove. Does he still have an accurate and strong arm? Does he have the wherewithal and athleticism to scramble when need be? In the three season where he was the starter with the Seattle Seahawks (2022-23 with Carroll), Smith completed 68.5 percent of his passes for 12,226 yards, 71 touchdowns and 35 interceptions — while absorbing 127 sacks.

No. 3: Kyu Blu Kelly, Cornerback

Bouncing between four teams since getting drafted by the Baltimore Ravens in...