Imperial Valley Press

Cable feels back at home in second stint with Raiders

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ALAMEDA (AP) — As soon as Tom Cable drove into the Raiders facility seven years after being fired from his dream job as head coach in Oakland, he knew he wanted to return to the franchise he cheered for as a kid.

Instead of feeling bitterness over his firing, Cable wanted to come back as coach Jon Gruden’s offensive line coach to complete some unfinished business.

“This has been my team since I was a little boy, so it’s not like it changed because I got run out of town,” Cable said Thursday. “It probably just made it a little bit deeper for me, which is cool. That’s why I’m here.”

Cable’s first tenure in Oakland was a chaotic one before he was fired after two-plus seasons as head coach following the 2010 season. Cable led the Raiders to an 8-8 record in his final season, the team’s first non-losing season since 2002.

He memorably proclaimed “we’re not losers anymore” after that season ended, a comment that didn’t please late owner Al Davis, who fired him shortly after.

“When I left here, I left here and I didn’t want to,” Cable said. “That’s just the truth. I put that team back and got it up off the mat. Dusted itself off, got to .500 and then we’re going to change. It was like unfinished business. It was really kind of natural and a comfortabl­e decision to be back and wear these colors again.”

Cable joined the organizati­on in 2007 as offensive line coach under Lane Kiffin and took over as interim coach four games into the 2008 season when Kiffin was fired.

Cable ended up keeping the job after the season, thanks in part to a season-ending win in Tampa Bay that knocked the Buccaneers out of the playoffs and ended Gruden’s tenure there.

The following season, Cable was accused of breaking assistant coach Randy Hanson’s jaw during a fight at training camp. No charges were ever filed and a civil suit was settled in arbitratio­n. Cable was also accused of physical abuse against two ex-wives and an ex-girlfriend that year.

Davis fined him $120,000 because of turmoil those cases brought the franchise. Davis was extremely critical of Cable’s behavior in a news conference after the firing but Cable remains appreciati­ve of what Davis did for his career.

“My respect for him is unblemishe­d,” Cable said. “I think that’s where people would say, ‘Why aren’t you bitter?’ Well, because you see for me it’s different. He’s a teacher to me. He’s a mentor to me. Whether I get along with him or not, wasn’t the issue. I took so much from him. To have the opportunit­y to come back and help make this right, like the vision I had earlier was and to help Jon see this though the right way, that’s pretty powerful to me.”

After being fired by the Raiders, Cable went to Seattle where he spent the past seven years as offensive line coach. He helped the team build a Super Bowl winner in the 2013 season and returned to the title game the following year where Seattle lost to New England on a late goal-line intercepti­on.

The Seahawks struggled on the line the past two years, failing to protect Russell Wilson or generate an effective running game.

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