GameScout: Raiders at Texans
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[January 05, 2017]
The Sports Xchange
Oakland Raiders (12-4) at Houston Texans (9-7)
KICKOFF: Saturday, 4:35 p.m. ET, NRG Stadium. TV: ESPN.
SERIES HISTORY: First playoff meeting. Texans lead regular-season
series 6-4. Raiders won 27-20 on Nov. 21 in Mexico City, as
quarterback Derek Carr completed 21 of 31 passes for 295 yards.
Trailing 20-13 early in the fourth quarter, Carr threw a 75-yard
touchdown pass to Jamize Olawale and a 35-yard strike to Amari
Cooper for the win. The Raiders have won the last two regular-season
meetings in Houston, 28-23 in 2013 behind three touchdown passes
from Matt McGloin and 25-20 in 2011 the day after Raiders owner Al
Davis died. Houston beat the Raiders 30-14 in Oakland in 2014.
GAMEDATE: 1/7/17
KEYS TO THE GAME: Biggest hype for this game will be focused on the
quarterback duel. Raiders rookie Connor Cook will be the first QB in
the Super Bowl era to debut in a playoff game. The Texans counter
with expensive, but disappointing, free-agent acquisition Brock
Osweiler, who is returning to duty only because the man who took his
job, Tom Savage, was concussed last week.
Cook is on the spot after Raiders MVP candidate Derek Carr broke his
leg two weeks ago and journeyman replacement Matt McGloin injured
his non-throwing shoulder last week.
The resulting game strategies should be fun to watch. Expect the
Texans to unleash their aggressive defensive front, led by Jadeveon
Clowney, to harass the rookie QB. But Oakland has an interesting
counter with the biggest offensive line in the NFL, including three
Pro Bowl blockers.
That could help Cook either hand off to one of three dangerous
running backs -- Latavius Murray and rookies Jalen Richard and
DeAndre Washington -- or throw to 1,000-yard receivers Amari Cooper
and Michael Crabtree.
Adding more intrigue are echoes of scouting reports that state that
Cook has a stronger throwing arm than Carr or McGloin. Arm strength
doesn't necessarily mean he is the best passer, but he was cool on
the big stage at Michigan State (Cotton Bowl, Rose Bowl wins) and
was not overwhelmed off the bench last week. All that is something
for Houston's defense to keep in mind as it tries to harass him.
Meanwhile, there is tension in Houston as Osweiler's key stats are
$72 million, $37 million guaranteed, 16 interceptions, 72.2 rating.
Coach Bill O'Brien and Osweiler did not deny they had a heated
sideline discussion last week. But teammates say Osweiler looked
better and played looser after his return from the bench.
The Raiders hope for a heated confrontation on the field as they
send their active pass rushers, including Kahlil Mack, to harass
Osweiler.
MATCHUPS TO WATCH:
--Raiders RT Menelik Watson vs. Texans LDE Jadeveon Clowney. Clowney
was virtually unblockable in the Nov. 21 meeting, dominating right
tackle Austin Howard and almost personally shutting down the
Raiders' running game. In Week 16, the Raiders replaced Howard with
Watson, who has won the job each of the last two seasons only to be
injured. Watson isn't quite as massive as Howard, but he's more
explosive and a better athlete and should be able to give the
Raiders a better matchup.
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--Texans
TE C.J. Fiedorowicz vs. Raiders SS Karl Joseph. Fiedorowicz did what
most tight ends have done against the Raiders this season -- get
open in the middle of the field. He had 82 receiving yards as
Osweiler found him six times, tying his high-reception mark of the
season. Joseph, a rookie first-round draft pick, has been out the
last four games with turf toe. He'll be forced back into action,
with Nate Allen not expected to make it through concussion protocol.
PLAYER SPOTLIGHT. Raiders QB Garrett Gilbert. A practice squad
quarterback for the Raiders last season, Gilbert is expected to be
placed on the 53-man roster. If Matt McGloin's left shoulder leaves
him inactive, Gilbert would be the quarterback should something
happen to rookie starter Connor Cook.
FAST FACTS: The Raiders won 12 games for the first time since 2000
and had seven players selected to Pro Bowl. ... Rookie QB Connor
Cook passed 150 yards and a touchdown in his NFL debut last week.
... Raiders RB Latavius Murray ranked fifth in the NFL with 12 TD
runs, the most by a Raider since 1990. ... Oakland RB Jalen Richard
ranked fifth among NFL rookies with 491 yards rushing. ... Oakland
WR Amari Cooper is one of three players in NFL history with 70
receptions, 1,000 yards and five TD catches in each of his first two
seasons. He ranked third in the AFC with 1,153 yards receiving, the
most by a Raider since Jerry Rice (1,211) in 2002. ... Raiders WR
Michael Crabtree led the team with a career-high 89 catches and tied
for fourth in the AFC with eight TD catches. ... Raiders DE Kahlil
Mack has 10 sacks, 11 TFL, five forced fumbles, three recoveries and
a pick-six in his past 11 games. He leads the NFL with 26 sacks
since 2015. ... The Texans won their second consecutive AFC South
title. QB Brock Osweiler is 6-1 as a starter at home. ... Houston RB
Lamar Miller ranked sixth in the AFC with 1,073 rushing yards. ...
Houston WR DeAndre Hopkins led the team with 78 catches and 954
yards. ... Texans WR/PR Will Fuller was third among NFL rookies with
635 yards receiving. ... Houston DE Jadaveon Clowney was named to
the Pro Bowl after ranking second among AFC ends with 16 tackles for
loss. He also had six sacks.
PREDICTION: The day after iconic owner Al Davis died in 2011, it was
on this field that the Raiders made a goal-line stand to preserve a
win, with only 10 defenders on the field, not counting Al's
presence, as Raiders' lore recalls. Now, in the Raiders' first
return to the playoffs since 2002, a series of injuries open the way
for the strongest passer on the team to start. Hello, Al? Just grin,
baby.
OUR PICK: Raiders, 32-28.
--Frank Cooney
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