The
Oakland Raiders are a professional American football team in the NFL based in
the city of Oakland,
California
. They currently play in the
Western Division of the
American Football Conference
(AFC) in the
National Football
League (NFL). The Raiders began play in
1960 as the eighth
charter member of the
American
Football League (AFL), where they won one championship and
three division titles. The team joined the NFL in 1970 as part of
the
AFL–NFL merger. Since
joining the NFL, the Raiders have won twelve division titles and
three
Super Bowls (XI, XV, XVIII), and
have appeared in two other Super Bowls.
Thirteen former
players have been enshrined in the Pro Football
Hall of Fame
.
During their first three seasons, the Raiders struggled both on and
off the field. In 1963,
Al Davis was
brought to the team as head coach and general manager, and from
1963 until 2002 the team had only seven losing seasons. He also
initiated the use of team
slogans such as
"Pride and Poise," "Commitment to Excellence," and "Just Win,
Baby"—all of which are registered
trademarks. Except for a brief term as AFL
Commissioner in 1966, Davis has been with the team continuously.
Upon his return to Oakland in 1966, he became a managing partner of
the franchise.
After a
few years of legal battles, Davis moved the team from Oakland to
Los Angeles,
California
, in 1982. While in Los Angeles, the Raiders
won their third
Super Bowl, but
made just two playoff appearances through the rest of the 1980s. In
1995, Davis moved the team back to Oakland. In 2000, head coach
Jon Gruden led Oakland to a 12–4 season
and their first division title since 1990, which was the first of a
3-year winning streak for the Raiders in the
AFC West. In 2002, under head coach
Bill Callahan, Oakland faced Gruden's
Tampa Bay Buccaneers in
Super Bowl XXXVII, where the team
lost a lopsided affair, 48–21. Following the loss, the Raiders won
a league-worst 26 games during the six full seasons from
2003-2008.
Franchise history
The early years (1960–62)
A few
months after the first AFL draft in 1959, the owners of the
yet-unnamed Minneapolis
expansion team accepted an offer to join the
established National Football
League as an expansion team (now called the Minnesota Vikings) in 1961, sending the
AFL scrambling for a replacement. At the time, Oakland
seemed an unlikely venue for a professional football team.
The city
had not asked for a team, there was no ownership group and there
was no stadium in Oakland suitable for pro football (the closest
stadiums were in Berkeley
and San
Francisco
) and there
was already a successful NFL franchise in the Bay
Area
: the San Francisco
49ers. However, the AFL owners selected Oakland after
Los Angeles Chargers owner
Barron Hilton threatened to forfeit
his franchise unless a second team was placed on the West Coast.
Accordingly, the city of Oakland was awarded the eighth AFL
franchise on January 30, 1960, and the team inherited the
Minneapolis club's draft picks.
Upon receiving the franchise, Oakland civic leaders found a number
of businesspeople willing to invest in the new team. A
limited partnership was formed to own
the team headed by managing general partner
Y. Charles Soda
(1908-1989), a local real estate developer, and included general
partners Ed McGah (1899-1983), Robert Osborne (1898-1968),
F. Wayne
Valley (1914-1986), restaurateur Harvey Binns (1914-1982), Don
Blessing (1904-2000), and contractor Charles Harney (1902-1962) as
well as numerous limited partners. A "name the team" contest was
held by a local newspaper, and the winner was the Oakland Señors.
After a few weeks of being the butt of local jokes (and accusations
that the contest was fixed, as Soda was fairly well-known within
the Oakland business community for calling his acquaintances
"señor"), the fledgling team (and its owners) changed the team's
name nine days later to the Oakland Raiders, which had finished
third in the naming contest. The original team colors were black,
gold and white. The now-familiar team emblem of a pirate (or
"raider") wearing a football helmet was created, reportedly a
rendition of actor
Randolph
Scott.
When the
University of California,
Berkeley
refused to let the Raiders play home games at
Memorial
Stadium
in Berkeley, they chose Kezar Stadium
in San Francisco as their home field. The
team's first regular season home game was played on September 11,
1960, a 37–22 loss to the
Houston Oilers.
Raiders games were
broadcast locally on KNBC (680 AM; the station later became
KNBR
), with Bud
Foster handling play-by-play and Mel
Venter providing color analysis.
When the Raider games were on KDIA (1310 AM)
Bob Blum, did the play-by-play and
Dan Galvin, did the color. In 1966,
Bill King was hired for the play-by-play and
Oakland Tribune sports
writer,
Scotty Sterling as color
man.
The
Raiders were allowed to move to Candlestick Park
for the final three home games of the 1960 season after gaining the approval of
San Francisco's Recreation and Park Commission, marking the first
time that professional football would be played at the new
stadium. The change of venue failed to attract larger crowds
for the Raiders, with announced attendance of 12,061 (vs. the
Chargers in a 41–17
loss on December 4), 9,037 (vs. the
New York Titans in a 31–28 loss
on December 11) and 7,000 (estimated, vs. the
Broncos in a 48–10 victory to
close out the season on December 17) at Candlestick.
The
Raiders finished
their first campaign with a 6–8 record, and lost $500,000.
Desperately in need of money to continue running the team, Valley
received a $400,000 loan from
Buffalo
Bills founder
Ralph C.
Wilson Jr.
After the conclusion of the first season Soda dropped out of the
partnership, and on January 17, 1961, Valley, McGah and Osborne
bought out the remaining four general partners. Soon after, Valley
and McGah purchased Osborne's interest, with Valley named as the
managing general partner.
After splitting the previous home season
between Kezar and Candlestick, the Raiders moved exclusively to
Candlestick
Park
in 1961, where total attendance for the season was
about 50,000, and finished 2–12. Valley threatened to
move the Raiders out of the area unless a stadium was built in
Oakland, but in 1962 the Raiders moved into 18,000-seat Frank Youell
Field
(later expanded to 22,000 seats), their first home
in Oakland. It was a temporary home for the team while
the Oakland-Alameda County
Coliseum
was under
construction. Under
Marty Feldman and
Red Conkright—the team's second and third head
coaches since entering the AFL—the Raiders finished 1–13 in 1962,
losing their first 13 games (and making for a 19–game losing streak
from 1961 and 1962) before winning the season finale, and
attendance remained low.
Al Davis comes to Oakland (1963–1981)
After the 1962 season, Valley hired Al Davis, a former assistant
coach for the
San Diego Chargers, as head coach and
general manager. At 33, he was the
youngest person in professional football history to hold the
positions. Davis immediately changed the team colors to silver and
black (he was reportedly inspired by the
Army football black and gray uniforms), and
began to implement what he termed the "vertical game," an
aggressive offensive strategy based on the
West Coast offense developed by Chargers
head coach
Sid Gillman. Under Davis the
Raiders improved to 10–4, and he was named the AFL's Coach of the
Year in 1963. Though the team slipped to 5–7–2 in 1964, it
rebounded to an 8–5–1 record in 1965.
In April 1966, Davis left the Raiders after being named AFL
Commissioner. Two months later, the league announced its
merger with the NFL. With the merger, the
position of commissioner was no longer needed, and Davis entered
into discussions with Valley about returning to the Raiders. On
July 25, 1966, Davis returned as part owner of the team. He
purchased a 10 percent interest in the team for US $18,000, and
became the team's third general partner and head of football
operations.
On the field, the team Davis had assembled and coached steadily
improved. With
John Rauch (Davis's
hand-picked successor) as head coach, the Raiders won the 1967 AFL
Championship, defeating the
Houston Oilers 40–7. The win
earned the team a trip to
Super Bowl
II, where they were beaten 33–14 by
Vince Lombardi's Green Bay Packers. The
following two years, the Raiders again won Western Division titles,
only to lose the AFL Championship to the eventual Super Bowl
winners—the
New York Jets
(1968) and
Kansas City
Chiefs (1969). In 1970, the AFL–NFL merger took place and the
Raiders joined the Western Division of the American Football
Conference in the newly merged NFL.
In 1969,
John Madden
became the team's sixth head coach, and under him the Raiders
became one of the most successful franchises in the NFL, winning
six division titles during the 1970s. The achievement was marred
somewhat by three consecutive losses in AFC Championships from 1973
to 1975, two against the
Pittsburgh
Steelers. Then, after finishing 13–1 in
1976, the
Raiders defeated the
Steelers 24–7 in the
AFC Championship game. Oakland
then defeated the
Minnesota Vikings, 32–14, in
Super Bowl XI for the franchise's
first NFL championship.
In
1972, with Wayne Valley out of the
country for several weeks attending the Olympic Games in Munich
, Davis's
attorneys drafted a revised partnership agreement that gave him
total control over all of the Raiders' operations. McGah, a
supporter of Davis, signed the agreement. Under partnership law, by
a 2–1 vote of the general partners, the new agreement was thus
ratified. Valley was furious when he discovered this, and
immediately filed suit to have the new agreement overturned, but
the court sided with Davis and McGah. In January 1976, Valley sold
his interest in the team, and Davis — who now owned only 25 percent
of the Raiders — was firmly in charge.
After ten consecutive winning seasons and one Super Bowl
championship, Madden left the Raiders (and coaching) in
1979 to pursue a career as a television
football commentator. His replacement was former Raiders
quarterback
Tom Flores, the first
Hispanic head coach in NFL history. In the
fifth week of the
1980 season,
starting quarterback
Dan Pastorini
broke his leg and was replaced by former number-one draft pick
Jim Plunkett. Plunkett led Oakland to
an 11–5 record and a
wild card
berth. After playoff victories against the
Houston Oilers,
Cleveland Browns, and
San Diego Chargers, the
Raiders clinched their second NFL championship in five years with a
27–10 win over the
Philadelphia Eagles in
Super Bowl XV. With the victory, the
Raiders became the first ever wild card team to win a Super Bowl."
Two
Super Bowl records of note
occurred in this game: 1) Kenny King's 80-yard, first-quarter,
catch-and-run reception from Jim Plunkett remained the longest
touchdown
Super Bowl pass play for the
next 23 years; and 2) Rod Martin's three interceptions of Eagles'
quarterback
Ron Jaworski still stands
today as a Super Bowl record. Reflecting on the last ten years
during the post-game awards ceremony, Al Davis stated "...this was
our finest hour, this was the finest hour in the history of the
Oakland Raiders. To Tom Flores, the coaches, and the athletes: you
were magnificent out there, you really were."
Move to Los Angeles (1982–1994)
Before the
1980 season, Al Davis
attempted unsuccessfully to have improvements made to Oakland
Coliseum, specifically the addition of
luxury
boxes.
That year, he signed a Memorandum of Agreement to move the
Raiders from Oakland to Los Angeles
. The move, which required three-fourths
approval by league owners, was defeated 22–0 (with five owners
abstaining). When Davis tried to move the team anyway, he was
blocked by an
injunction.
In response, the
Raiders not only became an active partner in an antitrust lawsuit filed by the Los Angeles
Memorial Coliseum
(who had recently lost the Los Angeles Rams), but filed an antitrust
lawsuit of their own. After the first case was declared a
mistrial, in May 1982 a second jury
found in favor of Davis and the Los Angeles Coliseum, clearing the
way for the move. With the ruling, the Raiders finally relocated to
Los Angeles for the
1982
season to play their home games at the Los Angeles
Coliseum.
The team finished 8–1 in the
strike-shortened 1982 season, first in the AFC, but lost in
the second round of the
playoffs to the
New York Jets. The following
season, the team finished 12–4 and won convincingly against the
Steelers and
Seattle
Seahawks in the
AFC
playoffs. Against the
Washington Redskins in
Super Bowl XVIII, Los Angeles built
a 21–3 halftime lead en route to a 38–9 victory and their third NFL
championship. The next two seasons, the Raiders qualified for the
playoffs but lost in the wild card round and the divisional round,
respectively. From 1986 through 1989, Los Angeles finished no
better than 8–8 and posted consecutive losing seasons for the first
time since 1961–62. After finishing 5–10 in 1987, Tom Flores moved
to the front office and was replaced by
Denver Broncos offensive assistant coach
Mike Shanahan.
After starting the
1989 season with
a 1–3 record, Davis fired Shanahan, which began a long-standing
feud between the two.
He was replaced by former Raider offensive
lineman Art Shell, who had been voted into
the Pro Football
Hall of Fame
earlier in the year. With the hiring, Shell
became the first
African American
head coach in the modern NFL era. In
1990, Shell led
Los Angeles to a 12–4 record
and an appearance in the AFC Championship Game, where they lost a
lopsided affair to the
Buffalo
Bills, 51–3.
The team's fortunes faded after the loss. They made two other
playoff appearances during the 1990s, and finished higher than
third place only three times. This period was marked by the
career-ending injury of two-sport athlete
Bo
Jackson in 1990, the failure of troubled quarterback
Todd Marinovich, the acrimonious departure
of
Marcus Allen in 1993, and the
retirement of Hall of Fame defensive end
Howie Long after the
1993 season. Shell was fired
after posting a 9–7 record in the
1994
season.
Shell's five-plus-year tenure as head coach in Los Angeles was
marked particularly by a bitter dispute between star running back
Marcus Allen and Al Davis. The exact source of the friction is
unknown, but a contract dispute led Davis to refer to Allen as "a
cancer on the team." By the late 1980s, injuries began to reduce
Allen's role in the offense. This role was reduced further in 1987,
when the Raiders drafted Bo Jackson—even though he originally
decided to not play professional football in 1986 (when drafted by
the
Tampa Bay Buccaneers in the
first round). By 1990, Allen had
dropped to fourth on the team's depth chart, leading to resentment
on the part of his teammates. In late 1992 Allen lashed out
publicly at Davis, and accused him of trying to ruin his career. In
1993, Allen left to play for the rival
Kansas City Chiefs.
As early
as 1987, Davis began to seek a new, more modern stadium away from
the Coliseum
and the dangerous neighborhood in South
Central Los Angeles
that surrounded it at the time (which caused the
NFL to schedule the Raiders' Monday Night Football appearances
as away games). In addition to sharing the venue with the
USC football team, the Coliseum
was aging and still lacked the luxury suites and other amenities
that Davis was promised when he moved the Raiders to Los Angeles.
Numerous
venues in California were considered, including one near Hollywood
Park
in Inglewood
and another in Carson
. In August 1987, it was announced that the
city of Irwindale
paid Davis USD $10 million as a good-faith deposit
for a prospective stadium site. When the bid failed, Davis
kept the non-refundable deposit.
In the summer of 1988, rumors of a Raiders return to Oakland
intensified when a preseason game against the
Houston Oilers was scheduled at
Oakland Coliseum. Negotiations between Davis and Oakland commenced
in January 1989, and on March 11, 1991, Davis announced his
intention to bring the Raiders back to Oakland. By September 1991,
however, numerous delays had prevented the completion of the deal
between Davis and Oakland. On September 11, Davis announced a new
deal to stay in Los Angeles, leading many fans in Oakland to burn
Raiders paraphernalia in disgust.
Return to Oakland (1995–present)
On June 23, 1995, Davis signed a
letter
of intent to move the Raiders back to Oakland.
The move was approved
by the Alameda
County
Board of Supervisors the following month, as well
as by the NFL. The move was greeted with much fanfare, and
under new head coach
Mike
White the
1995
season started off well for the team.
Oakland started 8–2, but
injuries to starting quarterback
Jeff
Hostetler contributed to a six-game losing streak to end the
season, and the Raiders failed to qualify for the playoffs for a
second consecutive season.
Gruden era
After three unsuccessful seasons under White and his successor,
Joe Bugel, Davis selected a new head coach
from outside the Raiders organization for only the second time when
he hired
Philadelphia Eagles
offensive coordinator
Jon Gruden, who
previously worked for the 49ers and Packers under head coach
Mike Holmgren. Under Gruden, the
Raiders posted consecutive 8–8 seasons in
1998 and
1999, and climbed out of last
place in the AFC West.
Oakland finished 12–4 in the
2000 season, the team's
most successful in a decade. Led by veteran quarterback
Rich Gannon, Oakland won their first division
title since 1990, and advanced to the AFC Championship, where they
lost 16–3 to the eventual Super Bowl champion
Baltimore Ravens.
The Raiders acquired all-time leading receiver
Jerry Rice prior to the
2001 season. They finished 10–6 and won a
second straight AFC West title but lost their divisional-round
playoff game to the eventual Super Bowl champion
New England Patriots, in a
controversial game that became known as the "
Tuck Rule Game." The
game was played in a heavy snowstorm, and late in the fourth
quarter an apparent fumble by Patriots quarterback
Tom Brady was recovered by Raiders linebacker
Greg Biekert. However, the play was
reviewed and determined to be an incomplete pass (it was ruled that
Brady had pump faked and had not yet "tucked" the ball into his
body which, by rule, cannot result in a fumble - though this
explanation was not given on the field, but after the NFL season
had ended). The Patriots retained possession of the ball, and drove
for a game-tying field goal. The game went into overtime and the
Patriots won, 16–13.
Callahan era
Shortly after the season, the Raiders made an unusual move that
involved releasing Gruden from his contract and allowing the Tampa
Bay Buccaneers to sign him. In return, the Raiders received cash
and future draft picks from the Buccaneers. The sudden move came
after months of speculation in the media that Davis and Gruden had
fallen out both personally and professionally.
Bill Callahan, who served as
the team's offensive coordinator and offensive line coach during
Gruden's tenure, was named head coach.
Under Callahan, the Raiders finished the
2002 season 11–5, won their
third straight division title, and clinched the top
seed in the playoffs.
Rich Gannon was named
MVP of
the NFL after passing for a league-high 4,689 yards. After beating
the New York Jets and Tennessee Titans by large margins in the
playoffs, the Raiders made
their fifth Super Bowl appearance in
Super Bowl XXXVII. Their opponent was the
Tampa Bay
Buccaneers, coached by Gruden. The Raiders, who had not made
significant changes to Gruden's offensive schemes, were intercepted
five times by the Buccaneers en route to a 48–21 blowout. Some
Tampa Bay players claimed that Gruden had given them so much
information on Oakland's offense, they knew exactly what plays were
being called.
Callahan's second season as head coach was considerably less
successful.
Oakland
finished 4–12, their worst showing since 1997. After a late-season
loss to the
Denver
Broncos, a visibly frustrated Callahan exclaimed, "We've got to
be the dumbest team in America in terms of playing the game." At
the end of the 2003 regular season Callahan was fired and replaced
by former Washington Redskins head coach
Norv Turner.
Coaching carousel (2004–present)
The team's fortunes did not improve in Turner's first year.
Oakland finished the
2004 season 5–11, with
only one divisional win (a one-point victory over the Broncos in
Denver). During a Week 3 victory against the
Buccaneers, Rich Gannon
suffered a neck injury that ended his season. He never returned to
the team and retired before the 2005 season.
Kerry Collins, who led the
New York Giants to an appearance in
Super Bowl XXXV, signed with Oakland after
the 2003 season, became the team's starting quarterback.
In an effort to bolster their offense, in early 2005 the Raiders
acquired Pro Bowl wide receiver
Randy
Moss via trade with the
Minnesota
Vikings, and signed free agent running back
LaMont Jordan of the New York Jets. After a
4–12 season and a second consecutive last place finish, Turner was
fired as head coach. On February 11, 2006 the team announced the
return of Art Shell as head coach. In announcing the move, Al Davis
said that firing Shell in 1995 had been a mistake.
Under Shell, the
Raiders
lost their first five games in
2006
en route to a 2–14 finish, the team's worst record since 1962.
Oakland's offense struggled greatly, scoring just 168 points
(fewest in franchise history) and allowing a league-high 72
sacks. Wide receiver
Jerry Porter was benched by
Shell for most of the season in what many viewed as a personal,
rather than football-related, decision. The Raiders also earned the
right to the first overall pick in the
2007 NFL Draft for the first time since 1962
(as members of the AFL) and the first time as being members of the
NFL, by virtue of having
the league's worst record.
One season into his second run as head coach, Shell was fired on
January 4, 2007. On January 22, the team announced the hiring of
31-year-old
USC offensive
coordinator
Lane Kiffin, the youngest
coach in franchise history and the youngest coach in the NFL. In
the 2007 NFL Draft, the Raiders selected
LSU quarterback
JaMarcus Russell with the #1 overall pick.
Kiffin coached the Raiders to a 4-12 record in the
2007 season. After months of
speculation and rumors, Al Davis fired Kiffin on September 30,
2008.
Tom Cable was named as his interim
replacement, and officially signed as the 17th head coach of the
Oakland Raiders on Tuesday, Feb 3rd, 2009.
Their finish to the
2008 season
would turn out to match their best since they lost the Super Bowl
in the 2002 season. However, they still finished 5–11 and ended up
3rd in the
AFC West, the first time they
did not finish last since 2002. In 2008, the Raiders became the
first team in NFL history to lose at least 11 games in six straight
seasons.
Ownership structure
Legally, the club is a
limited
partnership with nine partners — Davis and the heirs of the
original eight team partners. Since 1972, however Davis has
exercised near-complete control as president of the team's general
partner, A.D. Football, Inc. Although exact ownership stakes are
not known, it has been reported that Davis currently owns 47% of
the team shares.
Ed McGah, the last of the original eight general partners of the
Raiders, died in September 1983. Upon his death, his interest was
devised to a family
trust, of which his
son, E.J. McGah, was the
trustee. The
younger McGah was himself a part owner of the team, as a limited
partner, and died in 2002. Several members of the McGah family
filed suit against Davis in October 2003, alleging mismanagement of
the team by Davis. The lawsuit sought monetary damages and to
remove Davis and A. D. Football, Inc. as the team's managing
general partner. Among their specific complaints, the McGahs
alleged that Davis failed to provide them with detailed financial
information previously provided to Ed and E.J. McGah. The Raiders
countered that—under the terms of the partnership agreement as
amended in 1972—upon the death of the elder McGah in 1983, his
general partner interest converted to that of a limited partner.
The team continued to provide the financial information to the
younger McGah as a courtesy, though it was under no obligation to
do so.
The majority of the lawsuit was dismissed in April 2004, when an
Alameda County Superior Court judge ruled that the case lacked
merit since none of the other partners took part in the lawsuit. In
October 2005, the lawsuit was settled out of court. The terms of
the settlement are confidential, but it was reported that under its
terms Davis purchased the McGah family's interest in the Raiders
(approximately 31 percent), and which gave him for the first time
owns a majority interest for a limited time, speculated to be
approximately 67 percent of the team. As a result of the
settlement, confidential details concerning Al Davis and the
ownership of the Raiders were not released to the public. His
ownership share went down to 47% when he sold 20% of the team to
Wall Street investors
Recently, Davis has been attempting to sell the 31 percent
ownership stake in the team he obtained from the McGah family. He
has been unsuccessful in this effort, reportedly because the sale
would not give the purchaser any control of the Raiders, even in
the event of Davis's death. Full control of the team will be
assumed by Davis's wife, Carol, upon his death.
Financial operations
According to a 2006 report released by
Forbes
Magazine, the Raiders' overall team value of US $736
million ranks 28th out of 32 NFL teams. The team ranked in the
bottom three in league attendance from 2003–2005, and failed to
sell out a majority of their home games. One of the reasons cited
for the poor attendance figures was the decision to issue costly
Personal Seat Licenses (PSLs)
upon the Raiders' return to Oakland in 1995. The PSLs, which ranged
in cost from $250 to $4,000, were meant to help repay the $200
million it cost the city of Oakland and Alameda County to expand
Oakland-Alameda County Coliseum. They were only valid for 10 years,
however, while other teams issue them permanently. As a result,
fewer than 31,000 PSLs were sold for a stadium that holds twice
that amount. Since 1995,
television blackouts of
Raiders home games have been common.
In November 2005, the team announced that it was taking over ticket
sales from the privately run Oakland Football Marketing Association
(OFMA), and abolishing PSLs. In February 2006, the team also
announced that it would lower ticket prices for most areas of
McAfee Coliseum. Just prior to the start of the
2006 NFL season, the Raiders revealed that
they had sold 37,000 season tickets, up from 29,000 the previous
year. Despite the team's 2-14 record, they sold out six of their
eight home games in 2006.
Legal battles
The Raiders and Al Davis have been involved in several lawsuits
throughout their history, including ones against the NFL.
When the
NFL declined to approve the Raiders' move from Oakland to Los
Angeles in 1980, the team joined the Los Angeles
Memorial Coliseum
Commission in a lawsuit against the league alleging
a violation of antitrust laws. The Coliseum Commission
received a settlement from the NFL of $19.6 million in 1987. In
1986, Davis testified on behalf of the
USFL in their unsuccessful
antitrust lawsuit against the NFL. He was the only NFL owner to do
so.
After
relocating back to Oakland, the team sued the NFL for interfering
with their negotiations to build a new stadium at Hollywood
Park
prior to the move. The Raiders' lawsuit
further contended that they had the rights to the Los Angeles
market, and thus were entitled to compensation from the league for
giving up those rights by moving to Oakland. A jury found in favor
of the NFL in 2001, but the verdict was overturned a year later due
to alleged juror misconduct. In February 2005, a
California Court of Appeal
unanimously upheld the original verdict.
When the Raiders moved back from Los Angeles in 1995, the city of
Oakland and the Oakland-Alameda County Coliseum Authority agreed to
sell Personal Seat Licenses (PSLs) to help pay for the renovations
to their stadium. But after games rarely sold out, the Raiders
filed suit, claiming that they were misled by the city and the
Coliseum Authority with the false promise that there would be
sellouts. On November 2, 2005, a settlement was announced, part of
which was the abolishment of PSLs as of the 2006 season.
In 1996,
the team sued the NFL in Santa Clara County,
California
, in a lawsuit that ultimately included 22 separate
causes of action. Included in the team's claims were claims
that the
Tampa Bay Buccaneers'
pirate logo diluted the team's California trademark in its own
pirate logo and for trade dress dilution on the ground that the
League had improperly permitted other teams (including the
Buccaneers and
Carolina Panthers)
to adopt colors for their uniforms similar to those of the Raiders.
Among other things, the lawsuit sought an injunction to prevent the
Buccaneers and Panthers from wearing their uniforms while playing
in California. In 2003, these claims were dismissed on
summary judgment because the relief sought
would violate the
Commerce Clause of
the
United States
Constitution.
Logos and uniforms
The original Raiders uniforms were black and gold, while the
helmets were black with a white stripe and no logo. The team wore
this design from 1960–1962. When Al Davis became head coach and
general manager in 1963, he changed the team's color scheme to
silver and black, and added a logo to the helmet. This logo is a
shield that consists of the word "Raiders" at the top, crossed
swords, and the head of a Raider wearing a football helmet. Over
the years, it has undergone minor color modifications (such as
changing the background from silver to black in 1964), but it has
essentially remained the same.
The Raiders' current silver and black uniform design has
essentially remained the same since it debuted in 1963. It consists
of silver helmets, silver pants, and either black or white jerseys.
The black jerseys have silver numbers, while the white jerseys have
black numbers. Originally, the white jerseys had silver numbers
with a thick black outline, but they were changed to black with a
silver outline for the 1964 season. In 1970, the team used silver
numerals for the season. However, in 1971 the team again displayed
black numerals and have stayed that way ever since (with the
exception of the 1994–95 season where they donned the 1963 helmets
with the 1970 silver away numbers).
Due to intense heat in the Bay Area, the Raiders wore their white
jerseys at home for the first time in their history on September
28, 2008 against the San Diego Chargers.
For the
2009 season, the
Raiders will be taking part in the
AFL Legacy Program and will be wearing
1960's
throwback jerseys for games
against other teams who used to be a part of the
AFL.
File:RaidersScript.png|Raiders script logo
Rivals
The Oakland Raiders have four primary rivals: their divisional
rivals (Denver Broncos, Kansas City Chiefs, and San Diego Chargers)
and their geographic rival, the San Francisco 49ers. They also have
rivalries with other teams that arose from playoff battles in the
past, most notably with the Pittsburgh Steelers and the New England
Patriots. The Seattle Seahawks is an old rivalry with Oakland as
well, but the rivalry became less relevant with the Seahawks moving
from the American Football Conference Western Division to the
National Football Conference Western Division.
Divisional rivals
The
Denver Broncos and the Raiders
have been divisional rivals since the two teams began play in the
AFL in 1960. While the Raiders still hold the advantage in the
all-time series (54-40-2), the Broncos have won 21 of the last 27
games (through four weeks of the 2008 season), dating back to the
1995 season, when
Mike Shanahan became
the Broncos coach. Shanahan coached the Raiders before being fired
just four games into the 1989 season, which has only served to
intensify this rivalry.
The
Kansas City Chiefs and the
Raiders have had several memorable matches and have a bitter
divisional rivalry. Oakland lost the 1969 AFL Championship against
Kansas City, who appeared in the first Super Bowl. Kansas City
leads the overall series 50–45–2.
The
San Diego Chargers' rivalry
with Oakland dates to the 1963 season, when the Raiders defeated
the heavily-favored Chargers twice, both come-from-behind fourth
quarter victories. One of the most memorable games between these
teams was the "
Holy
Roller" game in 1978, in which the Raiders fumbled for a
touchdown in a very controversial (and now illegal) play. The
Chargers currently have a thirteen game win streak against the
Raiders, although the Raiders hold the overall series advantage at
54–44–2.
Geographic rival
The
San Francisco 49ers, located on
the other side of San Francisco Bay
, are the Raiders' geographic rivals. As a
result, games between the two are referred to as a "Battle of the
Bay." Since the two teams play in different conferences,
regular-season matchups are infrequent. Fans and players of the
winning team can claim "bragging rights" as the better team in the
area.
Oakland currently holds a 6-5 edge in the
all-time regular season series, although the 49ers won the last
time the two teams played each other on October 8, 2006 at Candlestick
Park
in San Francisco. The 49ers won the latest
match between the teams in a
pre-season
game on August 22, 2009.
Historic rivals
The rivalry between the Raiders and the
New England Patriots dates to their
time in the AFL, but was intensified during a 1978 preseason game,
when Patriots wide receiver
Darryl
Stingley was permanently paralyzed after a vicious hit
delivered by Raiders free safety
Jack
Tatum. The two teams met in a
divisional-round playoff game in 2002,
which became known as "The Tuck Rule Game." Late in the game, a
fumble by Patriots quarterback Tom Brady was
overturned, and New England went on to win in overtime and
eventually won the Super Bowl against the heavily favored
St. Louis Rams. Since that game, the Patriots
have won two of the last three regular season contests between the
two teams. The first contest being the following year during the
2002 season in Oakland, with the Raiders winning 27–20; they met on
the 2005 season opener in New England with the Patriots ruinning
Randy Moss's debut as an Oakland Raider 30-20;the most recent
meeting saw the Patriots victorious, 49–26 during the
2008 season.
The
New York Jets began a strong
rivalry with the Raiders in the AFL during the 1960s that continued
through much of the 1970s, fueled in part by Raider Ike Lassiter
breaking star quarterback
Joe Namath's
jaw during a 1967 game (though
Ben
Davidson wrongly got the blame), the famous
Heidi Game during the 1968 season, and the
Raiders' bitter loss to the Jets in the AFL Championship later that
season. The rivalry waned in later years, but saw a minor
resurgence due to some late-season and playoff meetings from
2000-2002. The Jets won the most recent matchup 38-0 on October 25,
2009.
The
Pittsburgh Steelers' rivalry
with the Raiders was extremely intense during the 1970s. The
Steelers knocked the Raiders out of the playoffs in three of four
consecutive seasons in the early 1970s (the first loss was the
"
Immaculate Reception" game)
until the Raiders finally beat the Steelers in the 1976
AFC Championship (and went on to win
Super Bowl XI). During the 1975 AFC Championship game, Raiders
strong safety
George
Atkinson delivered a hit on Pittsburgh wide receiver
Lynn Swann that gave him a
concussion. When the two teams met in the 1976
season opener, Atkinson hit Swann again and gave him another
concussion. After the second incident, Steelers head coach
Chuck Noll referred to Atkinson as part of the
"criminal element" in the NFL. Atkinson subsequently filed a $2
million
defamation lawsuit against Noll
and the Steelers, which he lost. Most recently, Oakland recorded a
20-13 win over Pittsburgh on October 29, 2006.
Raider Nation

Members of Raider Nation are known for
attending games in elaborate costumes
The nickname
Raider Nation refers to the die hard
fans of the team spread throughout the United States and the world.
Members of the
Raider Nation who
attend home games are known for arriving to the stadium early,
tailgating, dressing up in face
masks, and black outfits. The Raider Nation is also known for the
"Black Hole", a specific area of the Coliseum (sections 104, 105,
106, and 107) frequented by the team's rowdiest and most fervent
fans.
In September 2009,
Ice Cube recorded a song
for the Oakland Raiders named "Raider Nation" .
Raiders Radio Network
Raider
games are broadcast in English on 20 radio stations in California
, including flagship station KSFO
(560 AM) in
San
Francisco
and KCAL-FM (96.7FM) in Riverside-San Bernardino.
Additionally, games are broadcast on ten radio stations in Hawaii,
Oregon, Nevada, New Mexico, and British Columbia.
Greg Papa is the play-by-play announcer, with
former Raider coach and quarterback
Tom
Flores doing commentary.
George Atkinson and
Jim Plunkett offer pre- and post-game
commentary. Raider games are also broadcast in Spanish on six radio
stations, including station KZSF (1370 AM) in San Jose and five
other stations in California's Central Valley. Erwin Higueros
handles play-by-play in Spanish, with Ambrosio Rico doing
commentary.
Season-by-season records
Players
Current roster
Pro Football Hall of Famers
The Pro Football Hall of Fame has inducted eleven players who made
their primary contribution to professional football while with the
Raiders, in addition to owner Al Davis and head coach John Madden.
The Raiders' total of thirteen Hall of Famers is tied for
seventh-highest with the St. Louis Rams.
Retired numbers
The Raider organization does not retire the jersey numbers of
former players on an official or unofficial basis. The number 00,
worn by
Jim Otto for his entire career, is
no longer allowed by the NFL. It was originally permitted for him
only by the AFL as a marketing gimmick since his jersey number 00
is a
homonym pun of his name
(aught-O).
Staff
Current staff
Head coaches
Notes and References
- Dickey, Just Win, Baby, p. 7.
- Dickey, Just Win, Baby, pp. 7–8.
- Harney was the builder of San Francisco's Candlestick Park,
built on a bleak parcel of land he owned; to date, the road leading
to the stadium is known as Harney Way. With a push from Harney, the
Raiders were allowed to play their final three 1960 home games at
Candlestick.
- "Grid Team Named-- They're Senors", Oakland Tribune,
April 5, 1960, p37. Soda said, "My own personal choice would have
been Mavericks, but I believe we came up with a real fine name."
The selection committee narrowed the choices down to Admirals,
Lakers, Diablos, Seawolves, Gauchos, Nuggest, Señors Dons, Costers,
Grandees, Sequoias, Missiles, Knights, Redwoods, Clippers, Jets and
Dolphins.
- "Now It's Hi, Raiders! (Bye, Senors)", Oakland
Tribune, April 14, 1960, p1
- Dickey, Just Win, Baby, p. 8.
- Otto, The Pain of Glory, p. 69.
- Raiders management took out ads in the Oakland
Tribune, in hopes of attracting fans to the game. The paid
attendance for the inaugural game at Kezar was announced as
12,703
- Oakland Tribune, numerous editions, September-December 1960,
including
- Oakland Tribune, , November 24, 1960 (No. 147), p. 57. The
Tribune article covering the result of the first Raiders game at
Candlestick appeared in the , continued on The San Francisco 49ers
would not move into Candlestick Park until the 1971 season.
- Dickey, Just Win, Baby, p. 10.
- Dickey, Just Win, Baby, p. 41.
- Dickey, Just Win, Baby, pp. 98–101.
- Football's Blackest Hole: A Fan's Perspective; Craig
Parker; Frog, Ltd.; Berkeley, CA; 2003; pg. 69.
- Dickey, Just Win, Baby. p. 168.
- Dickey, Just Win, Baby. p. 172.
- Dickey, Just Win, Baby. p. 230.
- Dickey, Just Win, Baby. p. 232.
- Dickey, Just Win, Baby. p. 234.
- Dickey, Just Win, Baby. pp. 234–239.
- Dickey, Just Win, Baby. pp. 240–244.
-
http://www.nfl.com/news/story?id=09000d5d80b41921&template=with-video&confirm=true
-
http://sports.espn.go.com/espn/page2/story?page=lukas/090909&sportCat=nfl
See also
External links