JaMarcus blows his second act

OAKLAND -- A few days earlier, the lilt and the optimism had returned. JaMarcus Russell, the disappointment, faced the media and the music.

“There’s better days to come,’’ Russell finally said of his earlier demotion from the starting lineup. “Just move on with it.’’

What a great introduction for his second act, whenever that might arrive. JaMarcus was dealing with his failings, dealing with reality, understanding that when you’re the No. 1 pick in the draft, when you’ve been given a contract guaranteeing $31 million, the demands are high and patience short.

The opportunity arrived Sunday, in the gloom and rain of the Oakland Coliseum. Bruce Gradkowski, who had taken over, and successfully, for Russell a month earlier, went down with medial cartilage damage in both knees. Now, unexpectedly, the Oakland Raiders again were JaMarcus’ team.

He couldn’t produce. It wasn’t only Russell’s fault. The Raider offensive line couldn’t block. But when Gradkowski left, Oakland still was in the game, trailing 17-10 at the half. And then, seemingly becoming dispirited and definitely becoming disoriented, the Raiders collapsed.

Maybe it was the incessant booing from the announced crowd of 44,506, Raider fans already deciding Russell would be their target, especially when his passes can’t find their target. Maybe it was the situation, and the O-line, JaMarcus getting sacked six times, when Gradkowski only got nailed twice. Maybe it’s JaMarcus Russell, who in his third season gives no indication he’ll ever be a competent NFL quarterback, no matter his salary or ranking in the draft.

With Russell in there, the Raiders were out of there, eventually getting beat 34-13 by the Washington Redskins, one of the few teams with a record worse than Oakland’s. Until the game. Now both are 4-9. And now the questions about Russell’s progress are even more unavoidable.

JaMarcus just can’t escape the rush. He takes too long to find a receiver. He is immobile. And, of course, added to the problem, he plays for the Raiders, a franchise destined to have an 11-loss season for a seventh consecutive season.

“I thought it was a tough situation,’’ Raiders coach Tom Cable said of JaMarcus. “Could he have done better? Probably, but everybody could have.’’

Indeed, this was a team loss. Eight sacks in all. Fourteen penalties for 118 yards, two of those, each at 15 -- one for not giving enough space for a fair catch of a punt, the second for arguing the call -- at the same time late in the second quarter.

The 30 yards moved the Redskins from the spot of the catch, their own 10, to their own 40. In four plays, they swept to the touchdown that broke a 10-10 tie and seemingly broke what little resistance the Raiders had presented before that sequence.

“We had the opportunity to take another step forward,’’ said Cable, alluding to last Sunday’s upset of the Steelers and a blown chance to notch a second straight victory in 2009.

“We did not do that. We had too many penalties. There was not enough flow offensively. Defensively we struggled in the first half, and then we were never able to come back, make a stand, do anything in the second half.’’

Which is the half JaMarcus Russell played quarterback, throwing 16 passes, completing 10 for 74 yards, having the obligatory interception and, of course, getting sacked those six times for 52 yards.

Yes, Cable conceded, there was a discussion about pulling Russell and bringing in the third-stringer, Charlie Frye, meaning Russell could not return. But the Raiders stayed the course to oblivion.

When Gradkowski became the starter three weeks ago and the Raiders surprised the Bengals, the Raiders were uplifted. This guy, they implied, gives them the know-how and the electricity. He makes the other players better, as do all good quarterbacks.

When Russell moved in for the third quarter, the life went out of the Raiders. Maybe it was more perception than actuality, but it appeared they knew they were doomed. Which they were. Cable said he has confidence in “whoever we put out there or you can’t put them out there,’’ but do those on the field have confidence with JaMarcus?

“I think the guy can succeed,’’ Cable said of Russell. “I’ve not ever said he couldn’t.’’

Whether he means that is hard to discern. The fans may have given up on Russell -- you almost feel sorry for the way he’s treated -- but Raider management hasn’t. At least on the record. You think they’re going to stand up and say, “Sorry, folks, we were wrong’’?

Russell didn’t say anything after the game. He fled before the media entered the locker room.

Cable said the Raiders need to get “Russell where he needs to be,’’ and no, that isn’t on the sideline.

“Every quarterback is different,’’ Cable said. “Some guys get it quicker. Some guys take longer. We just have to keep working, helping him get where he wants to be. It’s a difficult position to play in this league.’’

For JaMarcus Russell, unfortunately, so far it’s an impossible position.

Gradkowski might make it last

OAKLAND -- He was talking about the team, about the Oakland Raiders. “Ultimately,’’ said Bruce Gradkowski, “we can make this last.’’ He just as well could have been speaking about himself.

Maybe this time, Gradkowski finds permanence as an NFL quarterback. Maybe this time, he ends up on a roster instead of transactions.

“He’s just what a quarterback should be,’’ said Raiders tackle Robert Gallery of Gradkowski. “Confident, has the trust of everybody, because he knows that he’s doing.’’

As opposed to the man he replaced, JaMarcus Russell, who was expected to do what on Sunday Bruce Gradkowski did, lead Oakland to a comeback victory, this one 20-17 over the Cincinnati Bengals.

If the Raiders made a bad choice in Russell, the No. 1 selection in the 2007 NFL draft, they made a wonderful choice in Gradkowski, signed as a free agent after being dismissed by three other teams in the preceding year.

Ultimately, maybe they can make it last, the Raiders and Gradkowski, a team that has been for years wallowing in the lower depths and a quarterback who has to keep proving himself.

There’s some pedigree. The 26-year-old Gradkowski was a star in the same West Pennsylvania high school league as Joe Montana, Dan Marino, Joe Namath and Johnny Unitas. Taken in the sixth round of the 2006 draft by Tampa Bay, he became a starter and then an afterthought, going to St. Louis and Cleveland in an un-merry-go-round.

“That’s how the NFL is,’’ said Gradkowski, who played his college ball at Toledo. “You shift around here and there, and finally you catch on and get a break.’’

Sometimes that depends on whether your receivers catch a ball, which is what two Raider rookies did at very significant times against a Bengals team eight days from a win over the Steelers.

Darrius Heyward-Bey, of whom it was said early on had more names than catches, made a grab of a Gradkowski ball early in the third quarter on a third-and-three play of a drive that culminated with a Sebastian Janikowski field goal.

Later, with Oakland behind 17-10 and only a half-minute remaining, Louis Murphy made a beautiful over-the-shoulder reception and pushed over the goal for a 29-yard touchdown that tied the score.

A Cincinnati fumble on the subsequent kickoff, and a Raider recovery, enabled Janikowski to kick the 33-yard game-winning field goal.

For the first time in four games, the Raiders had a victory. For the first time since the season's opening week, the Raiders had more than one touchdown.

For the first time all season, it seemed the Raiders had a quarterback on whom they could depend.

“He looked pretty good,’’ Raiders coach Tom Cable said of Gradkowski.  So, too, did Cable, who after replacing Russell last week for a second straight game made the decision in mid-week to go with Gradkowski in the opening lineup.

“I thought he was too amped up early in the game,’’ said Cable. “But that’s what I expected. He needed to settle down. But after, he was pretty darn good . . . and I don’t know if you can ask for a better closing drive.’’

It was the stuff of Montana, or Tom Brady or Peyton Manning.  It started on the Raiders' 20 with 2:12 remaining and included a fourth-and-10 pass for 29 yards to Chaz Schillens. Gradkowski spiked the ball and then threw the ball 29 yards to Murphy.

“He’s pretty calm,’’ Cable said of Gradkowski. “He goes out before a drive and has some thoughts with (the coaches). He knows where he’s headed. He’s into feedback. He’s into it the way you’re supposed to be.’’

Asked why Gradkowski had been signed and waived, signed and waived, Cable said, “You have to get things going right away in this business, very quickly, or you’re not around very long. That’s coaches, players, whatever.’’

Especially you’re if a sixth-rounder. If you’re the first guy taken in the draft and have a $32 million contract, as does JaMarcus Russell, you’re around perhaps longer than you should be.

Gradkowski showed up for the post-game interview dressed as if he going to a Hollywood party, in suit and tie. “Watch out for the glare off my head,’’ he joked, what hair that still remained having been shaved.

He explained that on the tying touchdown, Heyward-Bey was the first option but was covered. “I went through my progression,’’ said Gradkowski, “and saw the defensive back was on top of (Murphy), so I just kind of threw it the back shoulder. He made a great play. But if he didn’t get into the end zone, I was going to give him crap.’’

Something the Raiders had received more than enough of this season, and in recent seasons. But on this day, they were deserving of praise. And Bruce Gradkowski of getting that starting position as an NFL quarterback.