
ESPN's John Clayton cites the Raiders as one of the "five surprise teams to watch in 2008" (oddly, no mention of those upstart Arizona Cardinals; I guess we finally all agree that they'll never be any good). I'm skeptical, but the regular season is still some four months off, so what the hell.
Clayton writes that JaMarcus Russell is the wild card, but points to Al Davis' huge offseason investments in Kwame Harris, DeAngelo Hall, Tommy Kelly, Drew Carter and Javon Walker (not to mention first-round pick Darren McFadden) as reasons for optimism.
Russell showed up to OTAs well under the rumored three bills and looked sharp, particularly throwing on the move. The reviews were less than laudatory for Walker, however:
Drew Carter outperformed the more expensive Javon Walker, who Kiffin said needs to improve his conditioning. Todd Watkins is the sleeper, a big, active, former BYU receiver who could make a run if he continues his progress.This is the same Drew Carter who ranked 66th in total value among all wideouts last season, according to Football Outsiders.
To be fair, it's May, the time of year football is played in shorts and t-shirts, and Walker is recovering from a knee injury that hampered him for parts of the last three seasons. Still, anytime you're referred to as "the other receiver" in a conversation including Drew Carter, well, it's not a good thing.
Luckily, if the passing game struggles early, the Raiders have 27 running backs to carry the load.

If he hadn't broken his leg in the first game of the 2006 college football season, 

I didn't even know this was up for debate, but during his radio show yesterday, Dan Patrick asked recently retired Raiders defensive tackle 


