The Oakland Press

Raiders ready for big opening act on Las Vegas Strip

- By Tim Dahlberg

LAS VEGAS » The Death Star comes alive for the first time Monday night in a prime-time debut that just a few years ago would have been unimaginab­le.

The NFL in Sin City. Even the bookies in this gambling city would never have bet on this happening.

It took a seismic shift in philosophy from a league that once feared sports betting more than anything. It also took a leap of faith by the Raiders — along with $750 million in taxpayer money — to embrace a city that seems to fit perfectly with the culture of the Silver and Black fan base.

The gamble pays off Monday night when the Raiders meet the New Orleans Saints in the opening game of the glittering $2 billion stadium that Raiders owner Mark Davis dubbed the Death Star. They’ll do it in a spectacula­r new home that looms over the Las Vegas Strip, a far cry from the dilapidate­d stadium in Oakland where players often churned through a dirt infield.

The moment is bitterswee­t. No fans will be allowed because of the pandemic, and Davis himself will stay away in solidarity with them. But a national TV audience will tune in for some football and spectacula­r vistas, and with typical Las Vegas glitz the Killers will rock the nation during halftime from the rooftop of nearby Caesars Palace.

It’s a new era for the NFL, which once forbid players to even go into casinos. It’s also confirmati­on of Las Vegas as one of the great sporting cities in the world, as well as a needed psychologi­cal boost to a town suffering badly from a drop in tourism caused by COVID-19.

“I feel bad that (fans) won’t be able to be at the game, but I do know that with us being here and playing a home game there is still a feel around town: ‘Oh, the Raiders are playing in town,’” quarterbac­k Derek Carr said. “So, it’s still exciting and I got people driving up next to my car and waving and going nuts and stuff.”

If the Raiders have embraced Las Vegas, the city has embraced them back. Season tickets were quickly sold out even with hefty prices for seat licenses — and before it became clear that no fans would attend the Raiders were the hottest team in the NFL in the secondary ticket market.

Around the city there are fans wearing silver and black, and you don’t have to drive far to see Raiders flags flying. There will be no Black Hole filled with crazed fans as in Oakland, largely because ticket prices are so expensive, but the team is eager to create new traditions in a home it has committed to spend the next 30 years playing in.

And when the lanai doors open on the north end of the stadium Monday night to reveal a panoramic view of the Las Vegas Strip just past the massive torch honoring the late Al Davis, the moment will finally be at hand.

“This is our field of dreams,” Mark Davis told the team last month when it gathered at the stadium for the first time. “This is our house.”

And quite a house it is. The black glassed stadium —which some say resembles a giant Roomba — sits just off I-15 next to the Las Vegas Strip, looming over the main road that brings tourists in from Southern California. It has a translucen­t roof, natural grass and seats 65,000, bringing the city a state-of-the-art stadium venue it never had that will be used for concerts, fights, UFC events and likely a Super Bowl.

The view through the huge lanai doors and the Al Davis torch will be the iconic features, but everything about the stadium seems to scream Raiders in Las Vegas, including the location at Dean Martin Dr. and Al Davis Way.

“It’s imposing and intimidati­ng, and it’s perfect for the Raiders,” team president Marc Badain said. “We love the way it looks.”

A lot of moving parts had to come together — and quickly — to get to this point. The Raiders at first were going to partner with the Chargers on a stadium in Los Angeles, but NFL owners instead decided to approve the new $5 billion stadium built by the Rams that opened last week.

A few weeks after that vote in January 2016, the Raiders were still trying to decide what to do when the phone rang, with former Raiders running back Napoleon McCallum on the line. McCallum, who works for Sheldon Adelson, said the casino owner was interested in getting both a stadium built and an NFL team to put in it.

“Vegas wasn’t really a thought at the time,” Badain said. “They were instrument­al in making it happen and guiding us through the process.”

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