It seems that the Oakland Raiders are not done bringing in new faces to their coaching staff. According to Albert Breer of The MMQB, the Raiders conducted interviews with a pair of personalities who are eyeing to become the team’s next quarterbacks coach.

Tim Rattay is currently serving as the Louisiana Tech Bulldogs’ wide receivers coach. He played as quarterback for the San Francisco 49ers from 2000-2005 before having brief stints with the Tampa Bay Buccaneers, Tennessee Titans, Arizona Cardinals. Brian Callahan, on the other hand, was the Detroit Lions' QB coach from 2016 until his split with the team last week. Callahan is the son of Brian Callahan, who coached the Raiders for two seasons (2002-2003). Callahan was also part of the Denver Broncos that won Super Bowl 50 as an offensive assistant.

The Raiders, however, are not in an urgent need of a QB coach, and it’s possible that they will not hire one at all. Oakland's new head coach Jon Gruden, along with newly-installed offensive coordinator Greg Olson, are both offensive-minded mentors who are capable of tutoring quarterbacks. Still, it would not hurt Oakland if it adds one more coach to its fold.

The Raiders’ offense needs a jumpstart, particularly in their air attack, as they averaged just 226.9 passing yards per game in 2017. That’s significantly lower than Oakland’s average of 246.5 a year prior.

That said, Raiders quarterback Derek Carr has proven that he is capable of leading the offense. In 16 games played in 2017, Carr managed to rack up 3,270 passing yards and 21 touchdowns against 12 interceptions.