The Raiders knew exactly what they were buying when they went after Tyler Linderbaum this offseason: a premium center in a market full of suitors, and a player they were willing to pay up for.
That price tag was steep. Las Vegas reset the center market to land him, and the number attached to the deal - $27 million per year - is a lot for a center or any interior offensive lineman. But the Raiders clearly believed the investment was justified, and the early signs keep backing that up.
Linderbaum’s latest recognition only adds to that case. In ESPN’s recent survey of NFL executives, coaches and scouts, he checked in at No. 8 among interior offensive linemen and second among centers.
That moved him up two spots from last year, and one personnel evaluator even had him at No. 1.
"Linderbaum upgrades the Raiders' offense immediately," Fowler noted. "He's known as an elite run blocker. But in the passing game, he also ranked second among centers in pass block win rate (97.2%) last season."
He also drew a strong endorsement from a veteran defensive coach.
"A heavy-handed center that can get to the second level," a veteran NFL defensive coach said. "There aren't many of those at the center position who can do that at a high level. And he can run the show from a communication standpoint."
Not every coach sees him as flawless in pass protection, but the broader picture still points to a player who held up well, even with a shaky guard situation next to him in Baltimore. That matters, because it means he was carrying more than his share while still producing at a high level.
The Raiders have already seen enough to feel good about the move, even before the pads come on. And with Maxx Crosby already ranked No. 4 among defensive ends, Brock Bowers leading the tight end list, and both Ashton Jeanty and Kolton Miller getting votes in Fowler’s survey, Linderbaum now joins a growing list of players in Las Vegas drawing league-wide respect.
For a team that paid a premium to get him, that kind of validation matters. The Raiders made a big bet on a young center who is still ascending, and so far, that investment looks like it’s aging gracefully.
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Burford is the name to watch on the offensive line because there is a real opening for him to push into a bigger role, and Booker already looks like the kind of player who can help a defense without much fanfare. Masses gives Las Vegas another young defensive back to develop, and Slone is the sort of camp body who can turn into something more if he makes enough noise in the summer. None of those moves changed the leagues view of the Raiders overnight, but together they may end up looking a lot smarter than they did on the day they were announced. [Read more 🡒]
