Daily Camera (Boulder)

An attempt to move on after firings

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HENDERSON, NEV. >> Changes kept coming to the Las Vegas Raiders on Wednesday, and it’s up to interim coach Antonio Pierce to make sense of it all and try to salvage the season.

A day after the club fired coach Josh Mcdaniels and general manager Dave Ziegler, offensive coordinato­r Mick Lombardi was let go, quarterbac­ks coach Bo Hardegree was promoted to offensive coordinato­r and Aidan O’connell replaced starting QB Jimmy Garoppolo.

Pierce’s first game will be Sunday at home against the New York Giants, where he played from 2005-09 and started all 16 games on the 2007 team that won the Super Bowl.

Pierce, 45, deflected any personal meaning of facing the Giants, saying the game was too important for the Raiders (3-5) to be concerned about that.

It’s that record that largely led owner Mark

Raiders interim general manager Champ Kelly, left, and interim head coach Antonio Pierce speak with reporters during a news conference at the Raiders Headquarte­rs/ Intermount­ain Performanc­e Center on Wednesday in Henderson, Nev.

Davis to make dramatic changes late Tuesday night.

“This is a great opportunit­y for myself,” Pierce said. “I’m humbled, I’m honored and I don’t take it lightly. I’m sure there will be questions about why, how — those all get answered. But this is about the players, this is about the Raiders and this is about this organizati­on. We’re tired of losing. It’s not a good feeling for a production-based business.”

Pierce met with reporters alongside Champ Kelly,

who was promoted from assistant general manager to interim GM. Kelly, 43, said he would not pretend to have all the answers and would learn from mistakes that inevitably would be made.

“Although the circumstan­ces are not ideal, there’s always opportunit­y in difficulti­es,” Kelly said. “I couldn’t be prouder to accept this opportunit­y as the interim general manager for the Las Vegas Raiders. I’m so eager and excited to get to work.”

He thanked Raiders management “for believing in me. Thank you for this opportunit­y. I promise you that I won’t squander the moment.”

The most notable onfield change is at quarterbac­k. Las Vegas signed Garoppolo during the offseason for $72.75 million over three years, but as he has throughout his career, he struggled to stay healthy. Garoppolo also was mistake prone, his nine intercepti­ons leading the NFL despite missing 2 1/2 games to injuries.

Even if Mcdaniels hadn’t been fired, Garoppolo might have headed to the bench anyway after throwing an intercepti­on into the end zone and badly missing on two deep throws to wide-open Davante Adams in Monday night’s 26-14 loss at Detroit.

The change in coaches assured there would be a switch at quarterbac­k, and now Raiders management and coaches get to see if O’connell — drafted in the fourth round this year out of Purdue — is the longterm answer. If not, Las Vegas will have a quarterbac­krich draft next year to try to find that player.

 ?? STEVE MARCUS — LAS VEGAS SUN VIA AP ??
STEVE MARCUS — LAS VEGAS SUN VIA AP

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