Lodi News-Sentinel

Davis hints he won’t attend Raiders games if fans can’t

- By Jon Becker

Frustrated Raiders owner Mark Davis said he’ll likely decide to play games without any fans this season at their new $1.9 billion Allegiant Stadium in Las Vegas.

And, if fans can’t be there, neither will Davis.

Because of the pandemic, Davis isn’t sure anybody should be there — other than people essential to the production of the game. He doesn’t count himself among that group.

“The only thing I’m essential for is after the game, yelling at Jon (Gruden),” Davis wisecracke­d to ESPN. “I can do that over the phone.”

The NFL’s latest plan to is to allow each team, in consultati­on with local health and government officials, to make its own decision on how many fans can safely attend games.

“If you asked me right now, I would say we will go with no fans in the stands,” Davis told the Las Vegas ReviewJour­nal on Sunday.

Davis added that the decision was practicall­y made for him by other NFL owners. They recently voted to place tarps, adorned with advertisin­g, over the first eight rows of seats in every stadium. Davis’ was the lone dissenting vote.

The Raiders, unlike most other teams, say they’ve already sold every ticket for every home game this season. They can’t move any displaced fans to other areas of their 65,000-seat stadium. Worst of all, Davis said, the league-mandated tarps will keep out the team’s biggest fans.

“That’s the Black Hole,” Davis told ESPN. “It’s the people that want to be in the front row. Boisterous fans ... now I’ve got to tell 8,000 people that helped build this thing that they can’t come to a game? I don’t have 8,000 seats to move them to. We’re sold out.

“The optics are terrible: Advertisin­g on top of seats belonging to people you’re telling can’t come to the game. I’d rather have everybody pissed at me than just one person. I’ve got to make it up to them, and I will. This is all about safety and equity.”

The rising cases of COVID-19 in Clark County (Nev.), where the Raiders’ stadium is located, only heightens the question of fan safety in Las Vegas. As of Monday morning, Clark County has had 30,432 overall cases of the virus with 527 deaths attributed to coronaviru­s. Those number dwarf the positive tests and deaths due to the virus in the Raiders’ old home in Alameda County, which has had 9,258 cases and 162 deaths.

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