Inside the Scheme Shift
The transformation isn’t just cultural. It’s schematic.
Defensive coordinator Patrick Graham, once a Belichick protégé himself, has gradually retooled the defense to mirror Seattle’s 2013–2016 identity — aggressive zones disguised as man coverage, interchangeable safeties, and physical corners pressing the boundary.

The team studied old Legion of Boom tape this offseason. They even ran drills named after former Seahawks legends — “Kam’s Strike,” “Sherm’s Wall,” “Earl’s Angle.”
“It’s not about copying,” Graham clarified. “It’s about philosophy — closing space, controlling tempo, playing free but smart.”
Statistically, the results are emerging:
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The Raiders rank top-10 in red-zone defense and yards per play allowed since Week 5.
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Opposing quarterbacks have a passer rating of under 85 when throwing outside the numbers — a hallmark of Seattle’s cover-3 philosophy.
Offensively, Pierce has given coordinator Luke Getsy (also with past Carroll connections via Green Bay and Russell Wilson’s era) freedom to open the playbook for Aidan O’Connell, emphasizing quick reads and bootlegs to create rhythm.
The goal: fewer scripts, more flow.
Leadership by Emotion: Pierce’s Way
If McDaniels’ strength was structure, Pierce’s is emotion.
He opens team meetings with film not just of mistakes but of effort. “Look at this chase,” he’ll say, rewinding a play of Crosby sprinting 30 yards downfield. “That’s Raiders football.”
He uses personal stories from his playing days — moments when the Giants were doubted — to remind his players that belief precedes execution.
“You can’t fake energy,” Pierce said in a recent presser. “You can’t talk swagger into existence. You have to live it.”
Players say those words hit different because he’s lived both sides — the undrafted grind, the championship run, the post-retirement uncertainty. He knows how fragile momentum can be.

That empathy has made him magnetic in a locker room once divided by hierarchy.
The Turning Point: Learning from Failure
When the Raiders stumbled to a 3–5 start, critics resurfaced the old doubts: too emotional, too inexperienced, too inconsistent. But inside the building, panic never arrived.
Pierce’s message was simple: “We’re building habits, not headlines.”
The bye week became a workshop — not in punishment, but in honesty. Players and coaches held open forums, discussing everything from miscommunication to motivation. “That’s the first time I’ve seen a team meeting like that,” said running back Josh Jacobs. “Nobody was scared to talk.”
The atmosphere mirrored the same environment Carroll built in Seattle — where dialogue replaced dictatorship.
Since that reset, the Raiders’ second-half surge feels less like coincidence and more like convergence.
The Seattle Connection: Influence Behind the Curtain
Behind the scenes, Pierce has quietly leaned on a network of former Seahawks for advice. Sources confirm he’s spoken multiple times with Pete Carroll himself, who remains active as an informal mentor to several coaches across the league.
Carroll reportedly told him: “Don’t chase perfection — chase connection.”
That phrase now hangs on a whiteboard inside the Raiders’ defensive room.
Players have noticed the shift. “We’re having more fun,” said cornerback Nate Hobbs. “And when you’re having fun, you play faster. That’s what Seattle had for years. That’s what we’re chasing.”
Mark Davis’ Role: Letting Go of the Ghost
For years, owner Mark Davis has wrestled with identity — wanting to honor his father’s rebellious vision while chasing the professionalism of modern dynasties. The McDaniels experiment was his attempt at the latter; the Pierce era feels like a return to the former.
“Al built this organization on defiance,” Davis told reporters recently. “Antonio gets that. He’s got that fire.”

Davis’ willingness to embrace Pierce’s looser, player-driven model marks a rare act of restraint — letting football men lead football players, something the Raiders hadn’t done since Jon Gruden’s early tenure.
That trust is what allowed Pierce to remodel not just schemes, but soul.
The Locker Room Pulse
The energy at Raiders headquarters feels almost collegiate now. Ping-pong tables hum. Teammates linger after practice. Leaders like Crosby, Adams, and Jacobs openly challenge younger players — not from arrogance, but investment.
“You feel like everybody’s pulling the same direction,” Adams said. “That’s not something we could say before.”
Still, tension lingers beneath the optimism. Adams, at 32, knows his championship window is closing. Jacobs’ contract future remains uncertain. For the culture shift to mean anything, it must translate into wins — now.
And that’s where the “Seattle South” experiment faces its test.
The Second-Half Blueprint
Pierce’s roadmap for the second half of the season mirrors Seattle’s early-2010s philosophy: dominate physically, create chaos defensively, control tempo offensively.