Daily Democrat (Woodland)

RAIDERS OPEN NEW STADIUM MONDAY

- By Jerry McDonald Bay Area News Group

Coach Jon Gruden and general manager Mike Mayock have prided themselves on bringing in self-starters, players who need nothing artificial to get excited about playing the sport they love.

But even for the most dedicated Raiders, there was nothing really to prepare them for the Week 1 experience of playing a real game in an empty stadium.

Tight end Darren Waller noticed it even before the ball was snapped before a 34-30 win over the Carolina Panthers in Charlotte, N.C.

“There were a lot of weird moments, a lot of awkward silences,” tight end Darren Waller said. “They played music, then it cut off and we were warming up to dead silence. Somebody would score a touchdown adn it would be weird. It’s something that’s going to take some getting used to.”

Stategical­ly, Gruden cited the need for changing snap counts, audibles and even hand signals.

Quarterbac­k Derek Carr said making those changes is standard operating procedure anyway, but noticed how strange things would be when he overthrew Henry Ruggs III on the Raiders’ opening possession.

“There was no reaction,” Carr said. “Usually you’d hear an `Aww!’ or a cheer or something that you’d know the outcome of the play. And there was nothing. There wasn’t even a buildup. That was really weird for me to comprehend.”

The Raiders will get the silent treatment again Monday night when they host their first game in Allegiant Stadium against the New Orleans Saints. Citing COVID-19 health risks and not wanting to choose among season ticket holders, owner Mark Davis decreed the Raiders would

not play in front of fans at home this season.

So the Raiders can plan on having New Orleans defense playing close attention when they’re in their huddle, which running back Josh Jacobs noticed against Carolina.

“The opposite team, you can see them try to look in your huddle and figure out what you’re saying and things like that,” Jacobs said.

New Orleans won its opener at home 34-23 against Tampa Bay in the Supedome, a similar environmen­t to what the Saints will see at the new stadium Davis has called the “Death Star,” the fictional mobile space station of Star Wars fame.

Given that the NFL has mandated the level of crowd noise, it will have the impact of elevator music. Gruden said he barely even noticed the noise in Carolina.

“If you were trying to describe it it might be “convention center happy-hour type audio,’ ” Saints coach Sean Payton said by conference call. “The unique thing is you can hear a lot on the field, almost similar to a joint practice.”

Tight end Jason Witten, as well as offensive coordinato­r Greg Olson and others, also compared the atmosphere to a scrimmage and said it was important to make sure the intensity level didn’t decrease in the relative silence.

“Sometimes you feed off the fans and you don’t even realize it,” Witten said. “I just try and echo that to the

team. I think everybody is going through it. But you’re a pro football player and it’s a great opportunit­y. I thought we did a great job bringing our own juice and having it for the entire game.”

Payton, having watched other sports going through the same things, believes the best should still prevail.

“Golf is going on without any fans and the No. 1 player in the world is still playing at a high level,” Payton said. “Hockey is the same way, the NBA. It’s different, but then pretty soon you get back to what you’re focused on.”

Defensive end Maxx Crosby believes the debut of Allegiant Stadium will still be special.

“Obviously we wish the fans were in the crowd. It was going to be an insane environmen­t, but we’re going to have to wait for that,” Crosby said. “It’s football and we just have to go out and do our thing.”

 ?? BRIAN WESTERHOLT — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Las Vegas Raiders defensive tackle Maurice Hurst (73) celebrates with teammate defensive end Carl Nassib (94) after a sack during the second half against the Carolina Panthers on Sept. 13, in Charlotte, N.C.
BRIAN WESTERHOLT — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Las Vegas Raiders defensive tackle Maurice Hurst (73) celebrates with teammate defensive end Carl Nassib (94) after a sack during the second half against the Carolina Panthers on Sept. 13, in Charlotte, N.C.
 ?? JOHN LOCHER — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Las Vegas Raiders players stretch during practice at Allegiant Stadium in Las Vegas on Aug. 21.
JOHN LOCHER — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Las Vegas Raiders players stretch during practice at Allegiant Stadium in Las Vegas on Aug. 21.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States