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Paul Gutierrez, ESPN Staff WriterSep 23, 2024, 04:58 PM ET
- Paul Gutierrez joined NFL Nation in 2013 and serves as its Las Vegas Raiders reporter. He has a multi-platform role – writing on ESPN.com, television appearances on NFL Live and SportsCenter, and podcast and radio appearances. Before coming to ESPN, Gutierrez spent three years at CSN Bay Area as a multi-platform reporter, covering the Raiders and Oakland Athletics as well as anchoring the SportsNet Central cable news show. Gutierrez votes for the Baseball Hall of Fame and is also a member of the Professional Football Writers of America and currently serves as the PFWA’s Las Vegas chapter president. He is also a member of the California Chicano News Media Association and the National Association of Hispanic Journalists. Gutierrez has authored three books: Tommy Davis’ Tales from the Dodgers Dugout, 100 Things Raiders Fans Should Know & Do Before They Die and If These Walls Could Talk: Stories from the Raiders Sideline, Locker Room and Press Box with Lincoln Kennedy. You can follow Paul on Twitter @PGutierrezESPN
HENDERSON, Nev. — Las Vegas Raiders coach Antonio Pierce would not rule out making a quarterback change from Gardner Minshew to Aidan O’Connell after O’Connell’s late-game touchdown drive in the Raiders’ blowout loss to the Carolina Panthers.
“We’ve got to get with the players and just evaluate everything first,” Pierce said Monday in his weekly media conference, which was delayed more than an hour due to extra meetings with his coaching staff in the wake of the 36-22 home-opening loss dropping the Raiders to 1-2.
And Pierce, a day after saying certain players made “business decisions” during the game, did not back off from his postgame comment.
Rather, he said: “I don’t bite my tongue.”
The Raiders, who host the Cleveland Browns (1-2) on Sunday, had yet to make any “business decisions” of their own, Pierce said.
“You’re going to have times where sometimes your best players don’t have their best days and other guys got to step up and that’s why it’s called team football,” Pierce said. “More importantly, I think all of us need to just understand you’ve got to roll, you need to do it the best you can do it at full speed.
“The effort wasn’t up to par as it had been in the previous games, and that showed up. That didn’t look good at the end of the game.”
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O’Connell, however, performed well in relief of Minshew, who won a training camp battle with the second-year pro.
With the Raiders trailing 36-15, O’Connell took over with 4:47 to play and led Las Vegas on a 70-yard, 13-play drive. Though he was almost intercepted, he completed 9 of 12 passes for 82 yards, including an 8-yard TD to Tre Tucker.
O’Connell said afterward that he was not sure what his insertion into the game meant going forward.
“I want to execute any time my number’s called and, obviously, the game is a lot different when I’m out there, versus [playing] the entire game, and so it’s a different situation,” O’Connell said. “We hope to be winning and not coming from behind, but I’m definitely grateful for the opportunity … as a team as a whole, we’ve got a lot to get better — myself included.”
Minshew, meanwhile, passed for 214 yards in completing 18 of 28 attempts with a touchdown and an interception.
On the season, Minshew has completed 73.7% of his passes (which ranks fourth in the NFL among passers with at least 50 attempts) for 747 yards (sixth in the league) with three TDs and three interceptions.
“AP was talking about it in the locker room, not riding the roller coaster, not following the ups and downs, but continue to try to get better,” Minshew said after the game. “And if we do that — we’ve got the right people to do it — we’re going to be all right.”
Meanwhile, safety Marcus Epps suffered a torn ACL, per NFL Network.