Raiders Young Corner Is Running Out Of Time To Prove It

As the Raiders' coaching staff weighs potential over immediate performance, Decamerion Richardson faces mounting pressure to prove he belongs in their defensive plans.

Decamerion Richardson enters Raiders training camp in a spot that no longer leaves much room for “potential” to do the heavy lifting.

That was supposed to be the selling point. Richardson came into the league with the kind of frame and athletic profile that fit Pete Carroll’s boundary-corner mold, and after a rookie season that showed some promise, it seemed reasonable to think he’d get a real chance to carve out a role.

Instead, he barely played. In a season where the Raiders’ cornerback situation went sideways and Kyu Blu Kelly offered little resistance to opposing receivers, Richardson still didn’t see a defensive snap until the final game, when he logged just 13.

Now the path is even steeper. Under new head coach Klint Kubiak, any hope of a clean reset likely got complicated fast when the Silver and Black brought back Eric Stokes on a big deal and then drafted Jermod McCoy and Hezekiah Masses in the 2026 NFL Draft.

That leaves Richardson in a crowded room with little margin for error. Stokes, McCoy if healthy, Masses and Darien Porter all appear to be ahead of him right now, and Taron Johnson in the slot makes five cornerbacks who look like roster locks in Las Vegas. That’s before you even get to the fact that Richardson was a Tom Telesco pick, not one made by current GM John Spytek - and Spytek has already shown this offseason that he won’t hesitate to move on from players tied to the previous regime, as seen with Tyree Wilson, Daniel Carlson and Dylan Parham.

Richardson’s appeal has always been obvious. The size.

The speed. The raw tools that made plenty of people think the Raiders had landed a steal in the fourth round.

But the missing piece is still the same one: he hasn’t yet put the football side together.

That matters more now than it might for another team, or in another year. A rebuilding roster can usually afford patience with a young defender who looks the part. Las Vegas, though, is also trying to develop a wave of other young cornerbacks, and the new staff has no obvious reason to sink extra time into a player who isn’t one of its own and hasn’t shown enough on film to inspire confidence.

Richardson also got thrown into the fire early last season when injuries stripped the secondary down. He went from no action to being forced into real snaps, and he took his lumps. What he didn’t get was much of a runway after that to show what he took from the experience.

So he heads into camp with a thin NFL résumé, a crowded depth chart and no signs yet from OTAs or mandatory minicamp that he’s made a real move. That doesn’t mean the door is shut. If the Raiders keep six corners, there’s still a path for him to hang around if he performs in practice and in the preseason.

But this is no longer a situation where upside alone buys time. Richardson is going to have to win a job from someone who already looks deserving of it, and that’s a tough ask on a defense that’s supposed to be better across the board.

McCoy’s health could change the math, and if he isn’t available, Richardson might have a better opening. Still, when the pads come on in late July, the message is clear: promise won’t be enough.

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