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Author Topic: McClain was always close by  (Read 33 times)
R8RMR
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« on: July 30, 2010, 06:52:29 AM »

Like every other first-round draft pick not named JaMarcus Russell, there was little drama associated with the signing of Alabama linebacker Rolando McClain.

McClain said he intended to be in camp on time, and his agent struck a deal with the Raiders late Wednesday night, enabling him to participate in the first practice Thursday.

“I know I missed a few meetings but my whole goal was to be here for the first practice,’’ McClain said Thursday. “We got it accomplished.’’

According to ESPN, McClain’s deal at No. 8 overall was similar to that of Darrius Heyward-Bey, last year’s No. 7 pick _ five years, $23 million guaranteed with a maximum value of $40 million.

Heyward-Bey got $500,000 more in guaranteed and $2 million less in maximum value.

McClain said he stayed in his apartment in Oakland until the deal was completed so he could get to Napa quickly.

He is counted on to be a leader of the Raiders defense and like fellow rookie Lamarr Houston, was in as the starter from the first snap of the first practice.

“I have my own goals, my own personal goals,’’ McClain said. “I’ve never really been a follower. I just know what I need to do in order to succeed, in order to help the team succeed. And that’s what I’m going to do.’’

More notes and quotes following the Raiders first training camp practice:

– As the Raiders went about the offseason, the Raiders offense was described by Michael Bush as “smashmouth’’ and by receivers as “vertical.’’

Coordinator Hue Jackson isn’t talking, or hasn’t been allowed to yet, and it may not matter all that much since the Raiders will create an identity over the next month or so which will determine the direction of their offense.

Quarterback Jason Campbell resisted characterizing the offense as either run-heavy or pass-heavy.

“It’s not like it’s going to be a run team or just a passing team,’’ Campbell said. “We’re going to do a lot of different things. Our whole game is to keep defenses off balance. It’s kind of like we do what we have to do to test defenses.’’

Campbell is absorbing yet another offense, having played for nine different coordinators dating back to his college days at Auburn.

“One day I can be an (offensive coordinator) and draw from nine different playbooks,’’ Campbell said.

Not that he doesn’t occasionally get confused.

“We were in a meeting the other day and coach asked me what the protection change and I called out one of my protections in last year’s offense when I was in Washington,’’ Campbell said.“It started with the same letter. Sometimes you have to just focus on trying to learn these plays.’’

– Louis Murphy was 12th among NFL rookies with 34 receptions in 2009, 10th in yardage (521) and his 75-yard touchdown reception was the longest of any rookie in the league.

He led Raiders wideouts in both catches and yards. Not bad for a fourth-round draft pick, particularly when the starting quarterback for 10 games was Russell.

Upon further review, Murphy thinks he could have done much better.

“There’s a lot of plays I left out there, man,’’ Murphy said. “I broke down every film, every play, of the entire year, I could have had a thousand yards.’’

Murphy wants to retain his zest for the game but tame some of the emotional swings which occasionally hurt his play.

“That’s what I really have to do this year, is tone it down,’’ Murphy said. “I remember one time in particularly I came in so amped up I forgot the first play.

“ I’ll tone it down, man, (I’m) feeling my way through the NFL. This second year, I feel way more comfortable. It’s a great feeling.’’

– “I want us to be tough, I want us to be physical, there’s no question about that, in both running the ball and stopping the run. But we’ve also got to be great defending the pass on defense, on third down and in the red zone, and offensively we got to be 180 degrees different in the red zone than we’ve been. So, we got a lot of work to do,’’ _ Cable on the Raiders 2010 identity.

– Inquires about the difficulties of Russell were in most cases deflected or redirected to praise for Campbell.

“It’s unfortunate the way everything went down. I really don’t want to get into that too much, but right now I feel we’ve got a good guy, a dependable guy, a guy who’s going to work hard, who will be there for us every day,’’ wide receiver Chaz Schilens said.

“He’s not going to shy away from anything. You know what to expect. We know what to expect. You know where the balls are going to be. That’s really all you can ask for as receivers, a dependable guy that’s going to go out and work hard every day.’’

Said Murphy: “He spoke loudly, commanded the huddle. It was great being able to follow our quarterback.’’

– Safety Mike Mitchell will always remember the training camp conversation he had with Jack Tatum a year ago.

“The one thing I got from him is he’s a very real guy,’’ Mitchell said. “.He’s not going to B.S. you. He heard the comparisons people were making from me to him, but he just told me to be myself, go out and play the way I play.

“He liked my passion, he liked my enthusiasm. I think that’s the thing you can learn from a guy like that, take the knowledge that he gives you and do what you do, don’t try and be anyone else. Play the way you play.’’

Mitchell felt he was behind almost all season physically because of hamstring issues which derailed his training camp.

`This is the best shape I’ve been in since I’ve been a Raider,’’ Mitchell said. “I’m excited. I was flying around today even though we weren’t supposed to. I’m just excited to show everybody what I can do this year. It’s going to be a big Year 2 for me.’’


 McClain was always close by - Inside the Oakland Raiders - A look inside the world of the highly classified Oakland Raiders from the writers of Bay Area News Group
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R8RMR
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« Reply #1 on: July 30, 2010, 07:15:29 AM »

Rookie McClain is at practice after signing with Raiders

NAPA – Rolando McClain was lounging around his Oakland apartment late Wednesday when his agent called.

McClain, the No. 8 overall pick in the NFL draft, would not participate in a JaMarcus Russell-like holdout. McClain would not even miss a training camp practice, a la Darrius Heyward-Bey.

In fact, the Butkus Award-winning middle linebacker from Alabama would be on the field when the Raiders began four days of two-a-day, non-contact walk-through practices in helmets and shorts.

"I know I missed a few meetings," McClain said following Thursday's morning session. "But my goal was to be here for the first day of practice. We got it accomplished."

And then some. McClain signed a reported five-year, $40 million contract with $23 million guaranteed.

It was with a modicum of irony, then, that McClain took the podium wearing a T-shirt with a cartoonish homeless man holding a sign that read: "Why Lie? Need Money For Kicks."

Truth is, McClain, 21, could go on an Imelda Marcos-esque shoe-shopping spree and still take care of the guys surrounding him in the Raiders' 4-3 scheme.

He was drafted to replace Kirk Morrison in the middle and shore up Oakland's shoddy run defense, which ranked 29th in the NFL last season in giving up 155.5 yards per game.

"I played for coach (Nick) Saban, and he always talked about stopping the run," McClain said of his time with the Crimson Tide. "He said, 'You stop the run, you win the game.' That's the attitude here. We're going to change from what we did last year, which wasn't too good."

He's also expected to be a team leader, a vocal one at that, besides filling the shoes of Morrison, who led the Raiders in tackles for five consecutive seasons.

"Yeah, when he gets comfortable and kind of settled in to what he is as a player and understanding his role, those things will certainly come out," coach Tom Cable said. "He shows that in his own group, his peers of rookies, so I would expect that to come out very soon."

It was only one practice, one without pads and full contact at that. But McClain had a strong enough presence in minicamp and organized team activities that he already was in with the first-team defense.

The alignment had fellow rookie Lamarr Houston at left end, Tommy Kelly at left tackle, Richard Seymour at right tackle and Matt Shaughnessy at right end on the line. Kamerion Wimbley was at strong-side linebacker, and Trevor Scott was on the weak side. The secondary was composed of cornerbacks Nnamdi Asomugha and Chris Johnson, and safeties Tyvon Branch and Michael Huff.

"I think we're going to be good," McClain said, pausing for effect. "Real good.

"It's scary how good … we could be. We may have a little steppingstone in there, but if everybody comes to work and everybody (does) their job, we should be fine."

And in an age when Dallas Cowboys rookie wide receiver Dez Bryant refused to carry Roy Williams' shoulder pads as part of a hazing ritual, McClain walked off the practice field Thursday morning with his hands empty.

Money gone to his head? Not likely.

"I feel the exact same," McClain said. "We got (the contract) done at midnight (Thursday). I don't even think it's hit me yet.

"And I don't have the money right now."

McClain laughed. For once, the joke was not on the Raiders.


Rookie McClain is at practice after signing with Raiders - Sacramento Sports - Kings, 49ers, Raiders, High School Sports | Sacramento Bee
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psj3809
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« Reply #2 on: August 02, 2010, 07:58:32 AM »

I'm really interested to see what Mitchell can do.  I know he was a risk last year when we took him so high, in short yardage situations (only time he really played last year) he made some good hits
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