The biggest weakness for the Oakland Raiders is widely considered to be their secondary. On Wednesday, the franchise finally addressed it with the signing of cornerback Dominique Rodgers-Cromartie. From ESPN:

The Oakland Raiders have agreed to a deal with free-agent cornerback Dominique Rodgers-Cromartie, a source told ESPN's Adam Schefter.

Prior to Schefter's report, free agent cornerback Charles James II tweeted out that Rodgers-Cromartie had agreed to join the Raiders:

In addition to Oakland, Rodgers-Cromartie worked out for the Seattle Seahawks and received interest from the Washington Redskins and the Los Angeles Chargers.

The 32-year-old veteran played each of the last four seasons for the New York Giants before his release this offseason. He made a Pro Bowl for the franchise in 2015 in addition to a second-team All-Pro honor in 2016. Prior to landing in New York, Rodgers-Cromartie bounced around between the Arizona Cardinals, Philadelphia Eagles, and Denver Broncos.

Despite his age, Rodgers-Cromartie has only played less than 15 games once in his career (2011). His durability is a welcome addition for a Raiders' secondary that is not only lacking talent; projected starters Rashaan Melvin and Gareon Conley have struggled to stay on the field, with Melvin missing 10 games last year and Conley only playing twice as a rookie in 2017 after undergoing surgery for a shin injury.

Meanwhile, there's a chance Daryl Worley will be suspended due to his arrest back in April. After that, their depth in the secondary his pretty thin, leading to the team scouring for talent on the open market for much of the offseason. They hope landing Rodgers-Cromartie will at least improve their ability to slow down opposing passing games in Jon Gruden's first game back as the head coach.