Raiders Starter Facing Punishment After Injuring Chiefs Player With Late Hit
The Las Vegas Raiders didn’t do anything right against the Kansas City Chiefs in Week 7. On top of looking completely listless on offense and defense, the team committed eight penalties for 58 yards.

The worst one of the game was when starting left tackle Stone Forsythe hit Chiefs defensive tackle Omarr Norman-Lott, which led to him having to be helped off the field. According to
The NFL doesn’t take kindly to players getting injured on unecessary roughness penalties. A couple of weeks ago, Raiders safety Tristin McCollum hit
Forsythe should be expecting an even stiffer fine from the NFL, considering how late the hit came. Some fans are calling for his suspension, but that’s unlikely. He will almost certainly recieve a fine, but it’s hard to see the league suspending him.
This is a big blow to Norman-Lott and the Chiefs. He was a second-round pick in this year’s draft and was carving out a key role. He’ll now have to wait until next season to get a chance to get abck on the field.
Pete Carroll Talks Chiefs Loss
The Raiders can’t seem to do anything right this season. With the 31-0 loss to the Chiefs, Las Vegas is now 2-5 heading into the bye week.
Things are looking bleak for the franchise. While the defense couldn’t stop the Chiefs, the offense put together a historically bad performance. Head coach Pete Carroll lamented the poor showing in Week 7.
“We had the ball 10 snaps in the first quarter because we couldn’t make a first down and couldn’t stop them,” Carroll told reporters after the game. “It’s just not one thing. We came into this game really wanting to run the football, figuring that would be a key element of the makeup of this game, but we just couldn’t get there.
“We didn’t change our mind about that at all. We didn’t miss that thought. We just couldn’t be in charge of the down and distance well enough. It was a storm.”
Raiders Have to Do Some Soul Searching
The Raiders are hitting a critical point of their season. They’ve managed to win two games, but have been outright embarrassed in three of their five losses. The Raiders weren’t projected to be an amazing team this season, but even the biggest pessimist couldn’t have predicted them to be this bad.
Quarterback Geno Smith has been a massive dissapointment for the team and he knows the team has to look inward.
“There’s a lot of soul searching that needs to be done,” Smith said.
“I’m upset that we aren’t the team that I envision us being yet. … Tough losses like this should be a gut check and make you lock in with your teammates. … Thirty-one to nothing is embarrassing. We put too much into this game to come out here and not have a shot. My heart is broken for the Raiders fans.”
Raiders’ Latest Debacle Ranked Among Worst Since Move to Las Vegas

Raiders coach Pete Carroll said Monday the bye week will be spent working injured players back into the lineup and analyzing what has gone wrong for a team that had tried to foster a culture of expectations.
They will do it on the heels of one of the most embarrassing losses in franchise history, when they failed to gain 100 yards in a 31-0 beatdown in Kansas City on Sunday that could have been a lot worse.
One issue was the offense was missing its top two pass catchers in wide receiver Jakobi Meyers (knee, toe) and tight end Brock Bowers (knee).
Carroll hopes both will be back when the Raiders host the Jaguars on Nov. 2, along with star defensive end Maxx Crosby, who left Sunday’s game with knee and back injuries.
“Brock should be ready to go,” Carroll said of Bowers, who has missed three games. “Jakobi was close (after working out pregame). He should be ready to go. Gives us a chance to get Maxx, too.”