Oakland Raiders

2006 Oakland Raiders

The Oakland Raiders had a disappointing season in 2005, ending up, as did the San Francisco 49ers, the Tennessee Titans and the New York Jets, grateful that 4 wins and 12 losses did not constitute the worst record in pro football. (Their benefactor: the hapless Houston Texans, at 2 and 14.) Just the same, the Raiders had plenty of loyal fans, thousands of whom bought tickets and showed up at McAfee Coliseum to cheer them on. In fact, their paid attendance averaged over 52,000 tickets sold per game.

Oakland drafted defensive power in Michael Huff of Texas, Thomas Howard of UTEP and Darnell Bing of USC. Newly acquired QB Aaron Brooks, who led the New Orleans Saints to their only playoff to date, should enjoy passing the pigskin to Randy Moss, Ronald Curry and Doug Gabriel. Can the return of Art Shell as head coach pull the Raiders into a cohesive unit? Get your tickets to see for yourself!

Some Oakland Raiders history: The Raiders were professional football’s most consistent team from the mid-1960s through the mid-1980s, reaching the playoffs 15 times and earning four NFL or American Football League (AFL) titles in 19 seasons. As AFL champions, they played in the second Super Bowl, in 1968, and lost to the Green Bay Packers (33-14). During John Madden’s ten years as head coach (1969-1978), Oakland played in seven league or conference championship games and won one Super Bowl, in 1977. From 1980 to 1993 the team reached the postseason eight times, winning the Super Bowl in 1981 and 1984. The Raiders are the only team that appeared in at least one Super Bowl each decade during the 1960s, 1970s, and 1980s.

The Raiders joined the AFL as a charter member in 1960. Al Davis, a former assistant coach for the San Diego Chargers, was hired as head coach and general manager in 1963. He reorganized the Raiders, and the team improved to a 10-4 win-loss record. Four years later, the club captured the 1967 AFL title under head coach John Rauch. Quarterback Daryle Lamonica won the first of his two passing titles as Oakland advanced to the Super Bowl to face the NFL-champion Green Bay Packers. Green Bay won 33-14, but the Raiders had established themselves as an AFL power.

Oakland joined the NFL in 1970 when the NFL and AFL completed their merger. The team promptly won the 1970 Western Division crown and advanced to the AFC Championship Game, where they lost to the Baltimore Colts. Under Madden the Raiders gained a reputation as one of the most intimidating teams in professional sports. The Raiders lost three consecutive AFC Championship Games from 1973 to 1975 before winning the game in 1976. In the subsequent Super Bowl, the Raiders defeated the Minnesota Vikings, 32-14.

Madden left the Raiders after the 1978 season and was replaced by Tom Flores, who had been the team’s first quarterback. In Flores’s nine seasons as head coach he led the club to five postseason appearances and two Super Bowl championships: in 1981, at Super Bowl XV, they beat the Philadelphia Eagles, 27-10; in 1984, at Super Bowl XVIII, they defeated the Washington Redskins, 38-9.

With hopes of a better-equipped stadium and more fan support, the Raiders franchise had moved to Los Angeles, California, following the 1981 season. At its new home in the Los Angeles Coliseum, the team put together a 12-4 record in 1983 and returned to the Super Bowl.

Following the 1994 season the Raiders moved back to Oakland, as fan support in Los Angeles reached an all-time low and disagreements over renovations of the Los Angeles Coliseum continued between the city and owner Al Davis. After the 13-year hiatus, the Oakland City Council welcomed the team back with a remodeled, expanded stadium and helped the franchise pay for relocation expenses. Despite the move, the club remained near the bottom of the division through the mid- and late 1990s. Things seemed to turn around in the new millennium, and the Oakland Raiders returned to the Super Bowl in January of 2003, but lost to the Tampa Bay Buccaneers, 48-21.


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