Raiders bench Derek Carr with playoffs all but lost, $33M injury guarantee looming

The Las Vegas Raiders have benched quarterback Derek Carr with two games remaining in the regular season.

Head coach Josh McDaniels announced the news on Wednesday.

Head Coach Josh McDaniels addresses the QB position. pic.twitter.com/1rdhTSsNKr

— Las Vegas Raiders (@Raiders) December 28, 2022

Jarrett Stidham will start in his place on Sunday against the San Francisco 49ers and presumably in next week's regular season finale against the Kansas City Chiefs. Carr will be inactive. The Raiders are still mathematically alive for the postseason at 6-9, but last week's loss to the Pittsburgh Steelers all but eliminated them from reasonable contention.

Meanwhile, Carr is due $33 million next season that's fully guaranteed in case of injury. He'd also be guaranteed $7.5 million in 2024 in case of injury, The Athletic's Vic Tarfur reports. According to the report, the Raiders front office met on consecutive nights this week to discuss the course of action regarding Carr.

"There’s a lot to be sorted through once the season is over,” McDaniels said Wednesday.

Carr has been the Raiders starter for nine seasons since they selected him in the second round of the 2014 draft. He's missed just two regular season games in his career. He missed both of those games because of injury.

The decision raises obvious doubts about his future with the franchise. Carr has made three Pro Bowls in his nine seasons, with has last arriving after the 2017 campaign. The Raiders have made the playoffs twice with Carr at quarterback, including a wild-card berth last season. They've not won a playoff game since 2002.

In 2022, Carr's completed 60.8% of his passes for 3,522 yards with 24 touchdowns and 14 interceptions. His completion rate is his worse since his rookie season and a steep drop from his 68.4% rate in 2021. His 14 interceptions are the most in the league through Week 16. He threw three interceptions in Saturday's 13-10 loss to the Steelers that all but eliminated them from the postseason.

The Raiders hired McDaniels last offseason in part because of his prowess as the longtime offensive coordinator for the New England Patriots. Carr and the Raiders offense regressed in his first season as head coach. McDaniels and general manager Dave Ziegler will be under pressure in their second season together to show improvement on offense and in the standings regardless of who's playing quarterback.

The Raiders also traded last offseason for All-Pro receiver Davante Adams, a college teammate and close friend of Carr's. Carr is a respected leader in the locker room. Moving on from him is not a decision that would be taken lightly.

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