Get all your news in one place.
100's of premium titles.
One app.
Start reading
The Philadelphia Inquirer
The Philadelphia Inquirer
Sport
Josh Tolentino

Eagles-Raiders instant analysis: Embarrassing, mistake-filled loss in Las Vegas leads to questions about coaching

LAS VEGAS — The Eagles had 10 days to prepare for their Week 7 road matchup against the Raiders.

Turns out, the extra time didn’t mean much for the visitors, who were embarrassed in Sin City. The Eagles were on the wrong side of a 33-22 smashing Sunday. They return to Philadelphia with a 2-5 record.

Atrocious defensive effort vs. Raiders, Derek Carr

Throughout the season, defensive coordinator Jonathan Gannon has struggled to make in-game adjustments against veteran signal callers. Raiders quarterback Derek Carr was the latest example to carve through the Eagles.

Even without top tight end Darren Waller — who sat out with an ankle injury — Carr and the Raiders moved the ball at will versus Gannon’s defense. Carr repeatedly attacked the middle part of the field and stunned the Eagles linebackers with quick darts in the intermediate passing game.

Carr’s first-half stat line: 21-of-23 completions and 215 passing yards. One of his two incompletions occurred on a tipped-ball interception from cornerback Avonte Maddox.

Gannon and Co. failed to make the proper adjustments at halftime. After the Eagles failed to convert a surprise onside kick attempt, the Raiders quickly maximized on the short field and put the game out of reach with Kenyon Drake’s 4-yard touchdown rush.

Carr finished with 31 of 34 completions, 323 yards and two touchdowns, setting a career high for single-game completion percentage. Three incompletions won’t cut it by any standard in the NFL. It has become apparent that improving the defensive personnel needs to be a priority in the offseason. For now, more harsh conversations are bound to happen from Nick Sirianni, Gannon and the rest of the coaching staff.

Sanders hurt

Miles Sanders suffered an ankle injury and did not return.

On the sixth play of the second drive, Sanders took a dump-off from Jalen Hurts and was stopped behind the line of scrimmage by Raiders linebacker Denzell Perryman. For a moment, Sanders popped back up and appeared fine. But the third-year running back limped off and fell to the field before he could reach the sideline. After being checked out briefly inside the medical tent, Sanders was carted off to the locker room in tears and with a towel hanging over his head.

Sanders was initially ruled as “questionable” to return with an ankle injury. He was later downgraded to “out” at the beginning of the second half. Sanders finished with six carries for 30 yards and the one reception.

Other players who were injured during the loss: wide receiver JJ Arcega-Whiteside (back) and defensive lineman Milton Williams.

Run-pass ratio

NFL fans and pundits had crushed the Eagles for their refusal to incorporate the run game. Well, Sirianni finally showed some adjustments — at least initially.

The first-year coach’s opening script called for five rushes from Sanders. Rookie tailback Kenneth Gainwell capped the 8-play opening drive with a 13-yard touchdown reception from Hurts.

QB Breakdown

The Eagles played from behind for three quarters, which meant more responsibility for Hurts in Sirianni’s offense that still has many question marks. Overall, Hurts struggled against a middle-of-the-pack Las Vegas defense.

Hurts finished with 18 of 34 completions with 236 passing yards and two touchdowns. He also finished as the team’s leading rusher with 13 carries for 61 yards.

Hurts strung together most of his completions in the second half. But success was hard to come by for the second-year quarterback, who mishandled multiple snaps from center Jason Kelce. Hurts’ fumble that occurred inches away from the end zone in the third quarter cost the Eagles an opportunity at six points.

Controversial call

The Eagles had a chance to tie the game before halftime, but they squandered the two-minute opportunity when Gainwell fumbled on the first play of the drive.

On replay, it appeared Gainwell’s knee was down before the ball was punched loose. But because the play was ruled a fumble on the field, it was always going to be tough for officials to overturn the call, especially considering the lack of quality camera angles. Following a lengthy review, officials stuck with their original ruling. The Raiders scored three points off the turnover and took a 17-7 lead into the half, riding that momentum to the final buzzer.

Sign up to read this article
Read news from 100's of titles, curated specifically for you.
Already a member? Sign in here
Related Stories
Top stories on inkl right now
One subscription that gives you access to news from hundreds of sites
Already a member? Sign in here
Our Picks
Fourteen days free
Download the app
One app. One membership.
100+ trusted global sources.