Q&A with GM Reggie McKenzie
Posted 9 hours ago
On how frustrating the season has been: “Going into this thing, from the offseason, I knew what role was in front in me and how we had to attack this thing. As we all know, it’s been well-documented, mostly by you guys, about what I had in front of me, including players and coaches, what we all had in store. Now, with that being said, when Mark Davis and I began this quest and talked about the future of the Raiders, my ultimate goal was to build this team into a consistent playoff contender and Super Bowl winner. And we both agreed that we were going to build this thing the right way. Now going into this training camp, I liked the prospects, the way it was going. I knew what the talent level was, and I knew we didn’t have depth, couldn’t afford to lose players, not one. I knew there was going to be a dropoff, without a doubt. But, to be where we are now, at 3-8, disappointing. I don’t want to be there. I know the fans aren’t happy. I’m not happy, the coaches and I know the players aren’t happy. This was a terrible November. This November, was a bad November. Now, you kind of knew in September, at the beginning of September, I knew there was going to be a little bit of a struggle, but in November, this part of the season, has not been good at all. That cannot continue to happen. It’s our job to fix it, starting with me, player-wise, and the coaches trying to get situations fixed. You guys see it; big plays killed us on defense. It’s hard to win when you’re giving up big plays on defense. It’s hard to win on defense that way. So, to answer your question, I was not looking at being at this point 3-8.”
On what happened between Atlanta, when the team played a great game, to now: “If I could put my finger on it, I would fix it myself. But, when you look at the tape, how we attacked Atlanta, how we stopped the run, how we did not give up big runs, when you count the number of big plays in that game, you can start with that, how we played on defense. That’s why we were in that game. But, since then, if you look game-by-game and see the big plays. Our D-line is not getting knocked off the ball. We’re stout. When you talk about run defense, run game, the one thing you worry about is getting knocked around up front. And our guys are not. Bottom line is the gaps. That’s fixable, but you can’t let it happen. That’s part of it right there, that and a big pass play, especially on third down when you think you can get off the field; too many of those since then, especially in November.”
On the gaps being a coaching issue, or a disconnect with the players: “I’ve played. I know some of my responsibilities. A lot of that is on the players. Do your job. Just do your job. If you’re going to attack, you shed off the block; you’re responsible for this gap. It’s been preached. This is your job, this is your gap. Most of it is that. Now, sometimes I’m sure certain plays, whether it’s a slant or whether it’s this, that’s a call. Whether slanting or blitzing, maybe that takes him out, because he wasn’t good enough to beat a guy across his face, or wasn’t the right call at that time. For the most part, it’s just being able to just do our job. So, you can live with that, because you can fix it. You can coach it up and say, ‘Hey, you know what you did.’ But the ‘my bads’ kind of get old after a while.”
On how you go about fixing gap discipline, whether it’s a bad habit of players having played under the previous staff: “Everybody’s trying to make a play, so you try to be the guy going around the opposite way. I understand that, but the guy next to you, the guy behind you, everybody’s got to be on the same page. You spoke of Warren Sapp, but I’m sure his teammates knew what he may do, so you’ve got to compensate for that. Is it innate? I couldn’t tell you that. Some players get used to doing what they do, yeah. But hopefully, that’s what my quest to change the culture of this thing, that part of it you can’t change overnight, because you just can’t change a guy. Some guys, you just can’t change.”
On his evaluation of the job Dennis Allen has done: “I’m still pleased with Dennis. I’m a rookie in this thing; Dennis is a rookie in this thing. He has some rookie mistakes, but overall, I’m happy with Dennis.”
On whether Dennis is safe for next season, no matter what happens the rest of 2012: “Hey guys, players, coaches, my scouts, equipment guys, I’m not going to get after, from the standpoint of who’s safe, who’s in or out, I don’t like to discuss anything during the season. Because it’s my job to evaluate this team, and that’s done on a weekly basis, so at the end of this thing, I have my evaluation of not only Coach Allen, but every player and my thoughts of every coach. That’s a season evaluation. That’s how I feel about that.”
On whether he feels he’s closer to having a competitive roster than when he arrived: “When I got here? Well, when I got here, we were millions and millions of dollars over the cap. I was trying to figure out how to make decisions from a cap standpoint. When that played such a role in your decision-making, some players, you’d like to keep if you had the money. But in the beginning, my statement was here’s what you dealt with. Mark told me, ‘Here’s what we’ve got. Here’s what we’re going to have to deal with in this first year. Here’s the draft picks. Here’s the money.’ Totally understand that. Now, it’s my job to figure out how you’re going to manipulate it. So, am I further along? Yes. Under the cap, we trimmed the guys we had to. But guys, this thing is going forward. We’re going to get better from here on out, especially in the player personnel department. So, that’s my quest. We get on that, really on a weekly basis.”
On communication regarding the Rolando McClain situation: “I step in from Point 1. Dennis and I talk on a daily basis numerous times. And I talk to Mark on an every-other-day basis, all the time. So, we communicate well and we’re all on the same page. Everything that came out of (Allen’s) mouth, I could’ve repeated it also. Coach Allen is the guy that is going to have to be in front of that team. I want him to be in charge of players.”
On whether Allen will evaluate the assistant coaches after the year, or McKenzie: “He’s going to have the evaluation, absolutely. Now, am I going to have evaluation also? Absolutely.”
On whether Allen will have total control of coaching staff hirings: “With my input. You’re talking about scheme and all that. Everyone’s going to show up with his long list and all that, but this is way it goes, guys: This is my football team. Now, it’s not a dictatorship by any means. But it’s my football team, and I’m responsible. We have a great line of communication, so that’s not going to be an issue, at all. It’s my job to evaluate the situation, and I’m going to get that done. We’re going to do it the right way. I can’t build a team without effectively evaluating what’s going on. You’ve got to do it the right way, week to week. That’s why the month of November, we’ve got five weeks to correct that now. I’ll be doing some evaluations in these five weeks.”
On whether he regrets allowing the offensive scheme to be changed: “Well, you talk about leaving the offense be, you’d also be talking about leaving all the coaches be. You’re saying that’s going to guarantee the same results. We don’t know that. Now, whether it’s power scheme, zone scheme, to me it’s all about knocking people off the ball, winning battles up front. I don’t care what kind of scheme it is. Either it’s a good run call, or a bad run call. It’s comes down to those types of things, instead of just scheme. You’ve got to mix it up, which we’ve been doing, especially as of late. Players have to win some battles, too, physically.”
On Mark Davis’ level of frustration: “Like I said at the beginning, Mark and I talk all the time. The bottom line is we want to see progress, and that November month, nobody was pleased with. Nobody. He and I discussed that quite a bit, trying to put a finger on it, but we want to see better play, and we’ve got five games to do it.”
On whether the Raiders are in the position to make offseason decisions they need to make, cap-wise: “Some, yeah. We should be in a good-enough situation to do some things. To do a lot of great things? We don’t have a lot of room to do great things. But guys, what happened this offseason (2012), I don’t wish that on anybody, other than maybe the other teams in our division. That was a struggle, especially coming in here as a rookie GM. I remember talking to (Green Bay general manager) Ted Thompson, his rookie year, we were able to get Charles Woodson. I would’ve like to have done that! I talk to guys all around the league and I didn’t realize what the situation, how difficult, what other people thought about it. I get the job and all these people called and said, ‘What are you going to do about the cap?’ We get it done, because you’ve got to. But, they didn’t wish that on me. But guys, that’s crying over spilled milk. That’s no excuse for what happened in November. The way we played in Atlanta, it shows what the players can do, without a doubt. So, from a consistency thing. Finishing drives. Defensively, we were probably more disappointed because of the number of big plays, time and time again. After you stuff them, have a good play or a great play, then all of a sudden, wham, seven points. Easy. Kind of knocks the wind out of you. A team like this, we’re not to the level where we can continue to overcome that time and time again.”