Las Vegas Review-Journal

Will NFL pit Brady vs. Carr, Raiders?

Oh, what a grand opening game for Allegiant Stadium

- By Vincent Bonsignore Las Vegas Review-journal

The NFL will release its 2020 schedule this week, and while contingenc­y plans are expected to address whatever restrictio­ns are imposed by the COVID-19 crisis, the plan is to play a full schedule that begins Sept. 10 and ends Feb. 7 in Tampa, Florida, the site of Super Bowl LV.

It’s a day that fans mark on their calendars, including in Las Vegas, where the Raiders begin their new journey in their new home at Allegiant Stadium. So, could Las

Vegas be on center stage in Week One?

Like, say, Tom Brady making his debut with the Tampa Bay Buccaneers under the bright lights of a national TV audience against the Raiders at Allegiant Stadium, either as the centerpiec­e for the NFL’S opening night Sept. 10 or as the prime-time jewel on “Sunday Night Football” on Sept. 13?

Nobody throws a party like Las Vegas, so you know Derek Carr and all of his new offensive toys will be greeted like rock stars. Slowly but surely the Raiders have built an exciting young roster filled with promising playmakers. Their new home can’t wait to wrap its arm around them.

Now more than ever, fans need the escapism that sports provides. The NFL has remained in the spotlight during the coronaviru­s pandemic, supplying endless storylines throughout an eventful offseason and a virtual draft that took fans’ minds off COVID-19 for three days. If the record-breaking TV ratings for the draft are any indication, fans can’t wait for the season to start — even if they might not be allowed into stadiums to watch the games.

No doubt, if the NFL can pull off the season with minimal glitches, it will go a long way toward lifting up a nation fatigued by this

pandemic.

But the league could take it one step further by offering an opening act that will blow the lid off.

The Raiders’ national appeal would rock the ratings as is, but this year in particular with speedy rookie wide receiver Henry Ruggs catching long balls from Carr and defensive newcomers

Cory Littleton and Nick Kwiatkoski adding more punch and flair. Throw in their new digs in iconic Las Vegas and it increases the enchantmen­t.

Adding Brady to the mix is next-level drama and intrigue.

Love him or hate him, there is no doubt Brady moves the needle. But there was a predictabi­lity to his existence in New England that was growing stale. That has changed now that he’s with the Buccaneers, who have transforme­d from a team

nobody cared about to one everyone is now fascinated by.

With six Super Bowl rings, Brady perhaps is the greatest quarterbac­k, if not player, of all time. But how much of his greatness was self-created and how much was dependent on Bill Belichick and the infrastruc­ture provided by one of the most wellrun franchises in sports history?

We rarely get answers to those types of questions, but with Brady fleeing New England in pursuit of

new challenges, we’ll finally get an idea of whether it was Brady who made the Patriots or the Patriots who made Brady.

There is no better place to start getting those answers than in Las Vegas against the Raiders on one of the two prime-time opening week NFL stages.

Contact Vincent Bonsignore at vbonsignor­e@reviewjour­nal.com. Follow @Vinnybonsi­gnore on Twitter.

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