If you’ve missed seeing the orcish snarl of Jon Gruden on NFL sidelines, then you should be pretty stoked about the 2018 Oakland Raiders.

Gruden returns to coaching after serving as a color analyst for ESPN for nine years, during which time he celebrated grinding and popularized the word sequence “spider two Y banana.” He’s an entertaining dude and we’re lucky to have him in our football lives. But will his second coaching stint with the Raiders be as successful as his first? Well, that’s the 10-year, $100 million question.

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Under Gruden, the Raiders produced a .594 winning percentage from 1998 to 2001, winning a pair of division titles and going 2-2 in the playoffs. Al Davis traded his head coach to Tampa Bay following the 2001 season for draft picks and cash, then Gruden’s Bucs demolished Oakland in the Super Bowl. It was a wild ride. Nobody doubted that Gruden was a terrific and tireless head coach. His offenses relied on West Coast concepts and principles, but different Gruden teams won in different ways. He could deliver a league-leading rushing offense one season and an elite passing attack the next; he led teams that relied on dominant defenses and teams that won in spite of defensive shortcomings.

All things considered, Gruden had an excellent coaching career. And then it ended. And now it’s reanimated. This can’t possibly be a bad thing for the NFL.

Gruden is apparently an analytics denier, which is both weird and disappointing. But anecdotal evidence suggests his legendary dedication to film study hasn’t changed, and it sounds as if players are buying whatever he’s selling.

“[Gruden] really makes you like football again,” said tight end Jared Cook. So that’s good news.

Oakland haters will treat Gruden as if he’s been trapped in ice for the past decade, entirely out of touch with a fast-evolving game. But it’s not crazy to imagine that he’s taken full advantage of ESPN’s unfettered access to coaches, players and film. At 54, he’s hardly a relic. His new offensive coordinator, Greg Olson, spent last season under Sean McVay as the Rams’ quarterbacks coach, helping transform Jared Goff into a Pro Bowler. Don’t assume Gruden is bringing a 2003 playbook to a 2018 training camp. At the very least, the Raiders should be a fun watch in the year ahead.

For fantasy purposes, however, this team is something less than loaded. Oakland offers a few respectable supporting players, but none place among the top-16 at any position in the Yahoo consensus fantasy ranks. Thus, the Raiders are stuck at No. 28 in this ridiculous index.

Let’s review the key fantasy assets in Oakland, beginning with the the team’s good-not-great QB…

View photos Back to full health, Derek Carr looks to make a value leap. (AP Photo/Jeff Chiu) More

• Derek Carr deserves all kinds of credit for playing through a significant back injury last season, missing just one game after initial reports suggested he could be sidelined for over a month. He’s tough, no doubt. His regression last year was very likely related to the injury. But he’s also a guy who’s never averaged better than 7.0 Y/A in any season (6.8 last year) and he hasn’t yet reached the 4000-yard plateau. Carr now finds himself at the controls of a presumably horizontal passing attack, working with an unspectacular receiving corps. If Carr’s ADP holds at 102.3 (QB13), there’s almost no chance I’ll land him anywhere.

• Amari Cooper was a mess last season, catching only half of his 96 targets, dropping 10 balls and gaining just 680 yards. He scored almost one-third of his total PPR fantasy points in a single game (11-210-2 vs. KC), but was otherwise quiet, a season-wrecker for fantasy owners. Cooper does have a pair of 1000-yard campaigns on his resume, however, so we can’t simply dismiss him. He’s in line for 120-plus targets; Gruden has compared him to a young Tim Brown. It’s also worth noting that Cooper is still a developing player, only six months older than rookie Calvin Ridley. It’s easy to build a case for Cooper as a bounce-back candidate, but we’re drafting him as if he’s a sure thing (WR16, ADP 39.9). That’s nuts.