Imperial Valley Press

Raiders still beloved in LA, but Chargers have playoff hopes

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CARSON — The Raiders spent only 13 seasons in Los Angeles after moving down in 1982.

Al Davis took them back to Oakland after 1994, and Mark Davis is almost certainly moving them yet again to Las Vegas in the near future.

But during that largely successful era, the Raiders formed a passionate bond with a generation of LA football fans — and they won the city’s only Super Bowl title.

“Going off of what I know and seeing what I’ve seen growing up, the Raider fans stayed the Raider fans,” said Hayes Pullard, the Chargers’ Inglewood-born linebacker who went to Crenshaw High School and USC. “That was pretty much the loyalty with them. They never stopped.”

It’s not hard to see why. The Raiders’ swaggering outlaw image meshed splendidly with LA’s emerging West Coast hiphop ethos.

Their home games in the cavernous Coliseum were exciting, occasional­ly dangerous parties, and they raised that Super Bowl trophy in early 1984 with a profusion of dynamic stars ranging from Marcus Allen to Howie Long.

Many Angelenos believe the Raiders are still this sprawling city’s most popular NFL team, nearly a quarter-century after they left LA and two seasons after the return of the Rams, who largely ceded Los Angeles’ Generation X fans to the Raiders by spending the 1980s in Orange County.

And for the first time in 23 years, the Raiders are back in Hollywood on Sunday. Or at least Carson.

The Los Angeles Chargers (8-7) are only the nominal home team at StubHub Center for the long-awaited return of the Raiders (6-9), who have the generation­al support in LA that the newcomer Bolts are still a generation away from earning.

“All my brothers, uncles, other relatives were all LA Raiders fans even after they went to Oakland,” Pullard said with a laugh. “They’re still Raiders fans. Now I’ve got some of the family that wants tickets to this game, so I have to say, ‘Do you want to see me, or do you want to see the Raiders? Let me know now!’”

The Chargers are in LA because they gained the NFL’s permission for relocation over the Raiders, who also wanted to come home — but the Bolts have got work to do to win LA’s hearts, and a big win over the Raiders to earn a playoff berth would help greatly.

This New Year’s Eve game has been spotlighte­d by Raiders booster clubs since the Chargers’ first LA schedule came out, and tickets are being offered for hundreds of dollars over face value on resale sites. Most Chargers realize the crowd will be filled with Raiders faithful.

“If they’re not getting in the game, they’re going to definitely be in the parking lot, for sure,” said Chargers defensive lineman Brandon Mebane, who also grew up in LA surrounded by Raiders supporters.

What the Chargers have — and these Raiders don’t — are playoff hopes, albeit complicate­d ones.

With a victory over Oakland, a loss by Tennessee and a win by either Baltimore or Buffalo, the Chargers will become the first team since 1992 to make the NFL postseason after an 0-4 start.

Even if those dominoes don’t fall, the Chargers would have the satisfacti­on of securing a winning record with a season sweep of their biggest rivals. That’s no small feat considerin­g the rough beginning to their relocation season.

“We’re not going to scoreboard-watch, because if we don’t win, none of that matters,” Chargers pass-rusher Melvin Ingram said.

 ?? PHOTO/MICHAEL PEREZ ?? This Monday file photo shows Oakland Raiders’ Marshawn Lynch (24) running against Philadelph­ia Eagles’ Ronald Darby (41) during the second half of an NFL football game in Philadelph­ia. Lynch has money on the line in the season finale. AP
PHOTO/MICHAEL PEREZ This Monday file photo shows Oakland Raiders’ Marshawn Lynch (24) running against Philadelph­ia Eagles’ Ronald Darby (41) during the second half of an NFL football game in Philadelph­ia. Lynch has money on the line in the season finale. AP

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