USA TODAY US Edition

Only Dolphins object to Raiders’ relocation

- Lorenzo Reyes @LorenzoGRe­yes USA TODAY Sports

The Raiders are on the move again, and this time they’re headed to Las Vegas.

The Raiders received 31 of a possible 32 votes to approve the move on Monday, with the Miami Dolphins being the sole team to stand in opposition.

Raiders owner Mark Davis needed at least 24 votes, and there were several hours of meetings and presentati­ons Monday at the NFL annual meetings at the Arizona Biltmore.

The Raiders plan to remain in Oakland for at least the next two seasons, Davis wrote in a statement after the move had been approved. He added the team was open to the possibilit­y of staying for the 2019 season as well.

“The Raiders were born in Oakland and Oakland will always be part of our DNA,” Davis said. “We know that some fans will be disappoint­ed and even angry, but we hope that they do not direct that frustratio­n to the players, coaches and staff.”

NFL Commission­er Roger Goodell said the team needed time to get its stadium built in Las Vegas, as NFL executive vice president Eric Grubman said the project was expected to be ready by 2020.

Oakland fans who had purchased season tickets before the relocation announceme­nt will be granted refunds if they request them, Davis said.

The Raiders become the third franchise to push through a successful relocation vote in the last 15 months, after the Rams and Chargers both finalized their moves to Los Angeles.

Goodell wrote a letter to Oakland Mayor Libby Schaaf late Friday evening that expressed disappoint­ment in the city’s latest stadium finance proposals and sparked a strong jolt of momentum for the relocation.

“Despite all of these efforts, ours and yours, we have not yet identified a viable solution,” Goodell wrote. “It is disappoint­ing to me and our clubs to have come to that conclusion.”

The letter was in response to additional details Schaaf released publicly on Friday regarding the last-minute efforts from the city to keep the Raiders in Oakland. Schaaf wrote to Goodell that 55 acres just south of the Oakland-Alameda Coliseum were “immediatel­y available” for a new stadium constructi­on, and the proposal also indicated that the Fortress Investment Group would offer $600 million for the project.

Schaaf had on Monday requested the owners delay their vote. After relocation was granted, she released a statement saying that the city’s fans “deserved better.”

“I am proud that we stood firm in refusing to use public money to subsidize stadium constructi­on and that we did not capitulate to their unreasonab­le and unnecessar­y demand that we choose between our football and baseball franchises,” Schaaf wrote. “As a lifelong Oaklander, my heart aches today for the Raider Nation. These are the most committed and passionate fans any city or team could hope to have.”

Davis and the Raiders were wooed by a $1.9 billion stadium project — with $750 million in public funding — to be built near the Strip in Las Vegas. The project gained significan­t momentum when Davis secured Bank of America as a replacemen­t investor for the $650 million commitment that was withdrawn by Sheldon Adelson, the casino mogul, in January.

The Raiders have been in Oakland in 44 of the franchise’s 57 seasons, including the last 22.

 ?? JOHN LOCHER, AP ?? Team owner Mark Davis, center, will move the Raiders to Las Vegas by 2020.
JOHN LOCHER, AP Team owner Mark Davis, center, will move the Raiders to Las Vegas by 2020.

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