Wednesday, February 18, 2009

Curry

The Oakland Raiders will release wide receiver Ronald Curry today, according to NFL Network's Adam Schefter.

Curry's release will save the Raiders $2.3 million against the salary cap. Per NFLPA records, Curry was signed through 2011, at a base salary of $3.5 million this year.

The Raiders selected Curry, 29, in the seventh round of the 2002 draft. Riddled with injuries throughout most of his seven-year career in Oakland, Curry played in 13 games during the 2008 season and had 19 receptions for 181 yards and two touchdowns.

Lechler

OAKLAND, Calif. -- All-Pro punter Shane Lechler agreed to a four-year contract Wednesday to stay with the Oakland Raiders, allowing the club to avoid a potentially tough choice in free agency. Lechler could have become an unrestricted free agent next week after being chosen to the AFC's Pro Bowl team for the fourth time in his stellar nine-year career. The deal, sources told ESPN.com's John Clayton, is in excess of $3 million a season. Brian Moorman of the Chicago Bears had been the highest-paid punter at $2.354 million a year. It was expected Lechler was going to leave knowing that the team wasn't going to give him the franchise tag. Rather than leaving, he accepted becoming the highest-paid punter in football. "This contract is the greatest ever given to a punter in the history of the National Football League," Raiders senior executive John Herrera told The Associated Press. The deal also frees up the Raiders to apply the franchise player tag to cornerback Nnamdi Asomugha, another potential free agent. The Pro Bowl defender also had the tag last season, when he made $9.765 million. The Raiders have until 4 p.m. ET on Thursday to franchise Asomugha, but talks between both sides heated up Wednesday night with hopes of getting something done. Without locking down Lechler before free agency begins Feb. 27, Raiders owner Al Davis would have been forced to choose between keeping Lechler or Asomugha, Oakland's other All-Pro -- and Lechler probably would have left. Lechler, who made $1.5 million last season, has the highest career punting average in NFL history at 46.8 yards. He led the NFL last season with a 41.2 net average, slightly bettering the NFL record he set in 2007. His skills have been invaluable to the Raiders, who retained Tom Cable as their head coach earlier in the month. Although Lechler has sometimes expressed frustration with Oakland's six consecutive losing seasons, he'll be back for a 10th season with the club in the fall. If Asomugha is tagged again, he'll get a 20 percent raise to around $11.7 million. The Raiders tried to reach a long-term deal with the University of California product last year, but didn't get a contract.

Thursday, February 12, 2009

50


Johnson

RAIDERS SIGN CHRIS JOHNSON

The Oakland Raiders have signed one of their starting cornerbacks. But not the one that they’d really like to sue sign. [Editor’s note: I don’t know why in the hell I initially typed sue. Maybe it’s because I just had written the thing about Albert Haynesworth possibly getting sued. Or maybe it’s because, at some level, Al Davis would like to sue Nnamdi Asosmugha in order to keep him from leaving the team.]

According to David White of the San Francisco Chronicle, cornerback Chris Johnson has signed a four-year deal to remain with the team.

“It was the best opportunity for him,” agent Anthony Brown said. “His loyalty was to Mr. Davis for all the wonderful things he’s done for him.”

Update: Chris Johnson is signed

The Raiders re-signed cornerback Chris Johnson to a four-year contract, his agent confirmed Thursday, as the team made its first significant player transaction move of the offseason. Terms of the deal were not disclosed.

Johnson went from a special teams and nickel-package player to a replacement for two-time Pro Bowler DeAngelo Hall midway through last season. He had three interceptions, 12 passes defensed and a forced fumble.

He could have become an unrestricted free agent Feb. 27. He chose to stick with the first team to give him a chance to start since he was picked in the seventh round of the 2003 draft by the Packers.

"It was the best opportunity for him," agent Anthony Brown said. "His loyalty was to Mr. Davis for all the wonderful things he's done for him."

Johnson has what Al Davis likes to call "Raider speed." Though he'll be 29 years old when the 2009 season starts, Johnson has only three seasons of actual playing time under his belt so the Raiders are confident he has several good years to go.

Johnson should start opposite of Pro Bowl Nnamdi Asomugha, who expects (and is expected to) be retained with the exclusive franchise tag by next Thursday's deadline.

Injuries

McFadden, Russell undergo surgeries (w/update)

It turns out the future faces of the Raiders have some offseason healing to do.

Raiders running back Darren McFadden, the No. 4 overall pick of last year's draft, underwent minor surgery on his left shoulder, a family member said in confirming a previously undisclosed procedure.

Former No. 1 overall draft pick JaMarcus Russell had his own minor surgery last week to remove bone chips in his right ankle, a team official confirmed Thursday.

Russell's surgery was no surprise. Team owner Al Davis mentioned its possibility last week during a press conference to introduce Tom Cable as the new head coach.

No one has ever mentioned McFadden needing arthroscopic surgery, and one high-ranking team official said he was unaware it even happened.

McFadden had it done Jan. 13 by a doctor of his own choosing -- instead of letting the Raiders' staff do it -- in Fayetteville, Ark., where he starred as a college running back for Arkansas. He is recovering fine and doesn't expect to miss any offseason workouts, a family member said.

(UPDATE: After the story broke, Tom Murphy of the Arkansas Democrat-Gazette tracked down McFadden at the University of Arkansas, where he is working out and spending most of his offseason.

McFadden told Murphy, "It went real good. It was just a scope. I'm already working out again."

The scope was performed by Dr. John Park, one of the college's team doctors. Thanks to Chris Cocoles, a fellow Fresno State alum, for passing this along).

He injured his shoulder in the second game of the season, the same Chiefs game that he got the first of two turf toes that severely hindered his rookie season. In fact, for all the coverage of his toe problems, the shoulder injury went mostly unnoticed as it lingered all year.

He finished with 499 rushing yards and four rushing touchdowns but missed four starts and had 9 or fewer carries in eight of 13 games.

Players report for the voluntary offseason strength and conditioning program March 16.

** And for those who don't scroll down to the previous post, the Raiders have re-signed cornerback Chris Johnson to a four-year contract, his agent confirmed this morning. Dollar figures were not disclosed but one league source said he got "starter's money." We're looking into what exactly that adds up to.

** Not to bury this item, but the Raiders unveiled a logo to commemorate their upcoming 50th season, and they went out of their way to make it clear when the real Raiders were born.

According to a team release, the No. 50 in the middle is in the same style of the 1963 team's sleeve numbers. The 1960 and 2009 numbers in the logo use the same font as the 1963 team's helmet numerical decal.

By the way, did we mention Al Davis joined the franchise in 1963?

So this may be Year No. 50 on the calendar, but it's really just No. 47 in the Raiders' hearts.

McFadden

MCFADDEN SECRETLY HAS SURGERY FOR INJURY THAT APPARENTLY WAS KEPT SECRET

Raiders running back Darren McFadden had some injury problems as a rookie. The best known were two cases of turf toe.

The least known was a shoulder problem, which we don’t recall seeing on many/any injury reports. Per David White of the San Francisco Chronicle, McFadden suffered the shoulder injury in Week Two against the Chiefs.

In that game, McFadden rushed for 164 yards on 21 carries. It was 118 yards more than he gained in any other game for the rest of the year.

Per White, McFadden recently underwent surgery in Fayetteville, Arkansas. We’ve heard rumblings that McFadden specifically avoided the team’s medical staff because he wasn’t happy about the manner in which the team doctor’s handled his turf toe.

White also reports that, according to a McFadden family member, the two-time Heisman runner-up will be ready to go for offseason workouts, which begin on March 16.

Also, quarterback Jamarcus Russell had surgery to remove bone chips from his ankle. White reports that a team official confirmed the procedure on Thursday. (But does White have a second source?)

Wednesday, February 11, 2009

Gradkowski

ALAMEDA, Calif. -- The Oakland Raiders claimed quarterback Bruce Gradkowski off waivers from the Cleveland Browns.

Cable is Raiders' coach

NFL.com Video

Tom Cable becomes the Raiders' head coach after serving as the interim coach last season.

Gradkowski spent his first two NFL seasons with Tampa Bay, starting 10 games as a rookie in 2006. He briefly played for St. Louis last year before joining the Browns, appearing in two games and starting the season finale against Pittsburgh.

Andrew Walter and Marques Tuiasosopo were the Raiders' backups for former No. 1 draft pick JaMarcus Russell last season.

Johnson

RAIDERS CLOSE TO RE-SIGNING JOHNSON

The Raiders are expected to re-sign cornerback Chris Johnson before he can test free agency, reports the San Francisco Chronicle.

Oakland called on Johnson to start after releasing DeAngelo Hall near midseason. He had started just one game prior to 2008, spending his first three NFL seasons with the Packers and Rams.

According to the report, Johnson has told teammates a deal could be finalized this week, although the two sides are still working out details.

As for the Raiders’ other cornerback, Nnamdi Asomugha is expected to get the franchise tag, although it hasn’t happened yet.

“I think they have until the 19th to tag me and if they do it, it’ll probably be the last second,” he told The Sacramento Bee.

The Raiders waited until the final day to tag Asomugha last year.

Monday, February 9, 2009

Michalczik

Two months after being hired, now-former Washington offensive coordinator Jim Michalczik is leaving the school for a position with the Oakland Raiders, the Seattle Times is reporting.

Michalczik came to Washington along with head coach Steve Sarkisian after serving as an assistant with California since 2002. In addition to his offensive coordinator duties with the Huskies, he was also the offensive line coach.

The coach is widely regarded as one of the top offensive line coaches not only in the PAC-10, but in the nation as a whole. While his move to Washington from Cal was a stunner, this move to Oakland trumps even that as it came from somewhat out of the blue.

Michalczik and new Raiders head coach Tom Cable are longtime friends and associates, and that relationship no doubt played a part in the move.

It’s unknown at this time what position he will handle with the Raiders, although, given his experience, another OL coaching position would certainly seem to be in the offing.

UPDATE: The Oakland Tribune is reporting that Michalczik has indeed been hired as the Raiders’ new offensive line coach.

Raiders coach Tom Cable wasted little time in completing his staff by hiring former Cal coach Jim Michalczik on Monday to be his offensive line coach.

The move came only five days after managing general partner Al Davis introduced Cable as the full-time coach. Cable was entrusted with hiring offensive, defensive and special teams coordinators, as well as three other positions.

He has hired six new coaches since the season ended Dec. 28 and re-assigned five others to new positions. It remains to be seen whether Cable will retain or hire any quality control coaches.

"This hire completes our 2009 coaching staff, with the exception, perhaps, of a quality control position or two," Raiders senior executive John Herrera said.

Michalczik's arrival moves the needle more than usual in terms of an offensive line coach, for more than one reason.

Bay Area fans are familiar with him from his recent seven-year stint with Cal, and the bizarre path he took in getting to the Raiders provides a measure of revenge for an embarrassing series of events from a little more than two years ago.

Davis interviewed then-Southern Cal co-offensive coordinator Steve Sarkisian for the Raiders coaching vacancy in January of 2007. Things went so well that Davis permitted Sarkisian to send for fellow Southern Cal co-offensive coordinator Lane Kiffin so that Davis could interview him about being the Raiders offensive coordinator.

A few days later, Davis offered the coaching job to Sarkisian. He


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turned down Davis, as did Kiffin. Davis shifted his attention toward Kiffin for the coaching job. Kiffin accepted but lasted only 20 games before he was fired by Davis on Sept. 30.

Sarkisian was hired by the University of Washington in December. Michalczik was one of the first coaches he targeted. Ultimately, Sarkisian lured away Michalczik with a three-year contract reportedly worth in excess of $1 million to be the offensive coordinator and offensive line coach.

However, Michalczik wasn't thrilled about the prospect of moving his family to Washington and didn't sign the contract. The Raiders offer solved that problem and created a new one for Sarkisian.

Michalczik spent the past seven seasons at Cal. He was the assistant head coach under Jeff Tedford, as well as the team's co-offensive coordinator and offensive line coach last year.

Tedford credited Michalczik with turning Cal's offensive line into one of the best in the Pac-10. Michalczik's arrival enables Cable to concentrate on matters besides the offensive line for a change.

Cable coached the offensive line the past two seasons. However, he was forced to broaden his responsibilities once he replaced Kiffin.

Cable still helped with the offensive line, though assistant James Cregg assumed a heightened role. He also took over offensive play-calling duties from then-offensive coordinator Greg Knapp for the final eight games.

Saturday, February 7, 2009

Franchise

by Jerry McDonald

Raiders cornerback Nnamdi Asomugha fully expects to be designated as the Raiders franchise player.

Shane Lechler, meanwhile has already been tagged _ and not in a good way.

“Everyone knows I’ll probably get the franchise tag again,” Asomugha told ESPN’s Bill Williamson at the Pro Bowl in Honolulu.

Raiders owner Al Davis said Wednesday he would be inclined to use the “exclusive” designation for Asomugha should he be tagged again. That would give the Raiders sole negotiating rights and potentially driving his cost upward from the approximately $11.7 million he would make under the normal franchise tag, once the 2009 numbers are figured into the mix.

Asomugha, ever the diplomat, downplayed the thought of dysfunction in the organization, and it’s worth noting that at the end of a season-ending 31-24 win over the Tampa Bay Buccaneers, he was standing right next to coach Tom Cable, arms raised in triumph.

Asomugha missed the game due to injury but appeared thrilled with the outcome, coming as it did after convincing win the previous week against the Houston Texans.

The again, given the report in the San Francisco Chronicle which told the story of how Lechler took a punch to the face from defensive tackle Terdell Sands (I’d post a link to the story on sfgate.com but I can’t get it to work correctly) on the flight home from Denver on Nov. 23, at least one prospective free agent may be wondering about dysfunction.

In early December, I was tipped off by someone outside the organization about a problem on the plane following the Denver game, and that alcohol was involved. A few days later, a former Raiders player told me a “ruckus” on the flight. Two players confirmed the incident in general terms (without naming who was doing the fighting) but didn’t want their names in the paper.

It was never strong enough to put in print without getting the names of the players or confirmation from someone in the organization _ one of the many stories you hear throughout the course of the year which never sees the light of day.

(Kudos to David White of the Chronicle for nailing it down).

If there was any discipline involved, suspension wasn’t a part of it. Both Sands and Lechler were playing the next week.

Davis has long believed men are prone to disagreements and given little regard to behavior issues. He shrugged off a question about JaMarcus Russell’s conditioning and referred to the good ol’ days of Ken Stabler, who would lead the Raiders to victories during the day and drink scotch during the night.

When Bill Romanowski sucker-punched tight end Marcus Williams during practice, sending his teammate to the hospital with serious injuries, he received a hefty fine but didn’t miss a game.

There was no such outward damage inflicted upon Lechler, and it’s not clear how the fight started.

But if a punch was thrown on a team charter, it means there was potentially not only a retaliatory strike, but that several teammates were attempting to break things up. That means a couple-thousand pounds of moving force some 30,000 feet above the ground. When flight attendants talk about “items shifting during flight,” that’s not what they have in mind.

So if Asomugha is franchised, how could the Raiders make it up to Lechler?

To steal a line from the Corleone family, by making him an offer he can’t refuse.

Lechler has been at times openly disgusted by the last six years, wistfully recalling the three division titles of which he was a contributing member. He grumbled when the Raiders began bringing punters into practice toward the end of the season without ever telling him why, considering it a sign of disrespect.

Eventually, Ricky Schmitt was signed on Dec. 15.

Still, when sitting by his locker one day with only a game remaining, Lechler said he wouldn’t rule out a possible return even if he wasn’t franchised.

Davis, who once made Ray Guy a first-round pick, is proud of having drafted Lechler. It means he drafted two of the greatest punters in history, and Lechler is a link to the days when the Raiders were a dominant team.

He could conceivably offer Lechler far more than anyone else. Does Lechler want out so badly he’d take considerably less than a sum which would set him up for the rest of his life?

It’s the same argument I used last year when there was so much speculation that players wouldn’t want to come to the Raiders because of the organizational dysfunction. Of course they’d come if they got paid. And that’s exactly what happened, even if the production didn’t come close to meeting the pay scale.

Sands, meanwhile, is due $1.3 million in salary and roster bonus of $1.9 million and could be in a precarious position based on his performance since signing a four-year contract before the 2007 season.

In other news, don’t expect much in the way of discipline for running back Justin Fargas for appearing a in an on-line video on WorldHipHop.com (it has since been removed) promoting a marijuana “Smoke-A-Thon.”

He didn’t smoke any pot himself in the video, and didn’t have much of a part at all. He’ll get a lecture to be sure about common sense. When in the vicinity of a camera and an oversized blunt, it’s time to vacate the building . . .

Davis sounded as if he’s fine with Raiders young receivers, Johnnie Lee Higgins in particular. But it’s worth at least exploring what it would cost to get Anquan Boldin from the Cardinals. Boldin told the Palm Beach Post his situation with Arizona can’t be repaired . . .

Young Lance continues to win friends and influence people in the Southeastern Conference, failing to get his facts straight and taking on Florida coach Urban Meyer after a so-so-recruiting year.

Thursday, February 5, 2009

Asomugha


by Jason Cole

KAPOLOI, Hawaii – This is akin to having Frank Sinatra be the lead singer of a garage band.

You just wonder how much longer Nnamdi Asomugha will want to perform his stunning skills with an Oakland Raiders team that can’t do much more than clang. While he remains the picture of maturity, patience and understanding after six years lost in historic futility, Asomugha started to ask some questions.

Directly to Oakland owner Al Davis.

This season, as the Raiders were in the midst of their sixth consecutive year with at least 10 losses (an NFL record), Oakland made the decision to cut cornerback DeAngelo Hall. The former Pro Bowler had played all of eight games. While it was apparent Hall was having a tough transition to playing the Raiders’ style of man-to-man defense, the move made no sense to Asomugha.

“When DeAngelo got fired after eight weeks of play, that upset me,” said Asomugha, who is playing in his first Pro Bowl (he was a late selection in 2006, but couldn’t make it to the game. “Coming into it, we knew he didn’t play an extensive amount of man-to-man at Atlanta, but we knew he could make plays.”

Apparently that potential wasn’t enough – at least not as far as Hall was concerned.

“So I’m thinking, let’s give it a chance; maybe it will grow on him, I didn’t get it when I first got here; it’s all man [coverage],” said Asomugha, whom many coaches and players now consider the finest cornerback in the game.

The treatment of Hall was a pressure point for Asomugha. Throw in the soap opera between former coach Lane Kiffin and Davis, along with a 24-72 record over six years, and it’s apparent why Asomugha called for a private meeting with Davis.

“I was just real upset when that happened, and then there was this stuff with Lane and there’s this that and the other thing going on. So I said, ‘Look, we have to have a sit-down.’ So I sat down with him, voiced my opinion,” Asomugha said. “We had a conversation that we said we would keep between us, but I think there were a lot of things said to let him know how I felt about the direction we were going and what I felt needed to change. He voiced his opinion back and let me know the reason why things happen,”

In all likelihood, Asomugha will have to deal with the situation for the foreseeable future. He’s likely to be franchised again this year after he and the team were unable to work out a long-term deal in 2008. Last year, Asomugha made $9.97 million. This year, because he would be franchised for a second straight year, he would be given 120 percent of either his salary from 2008 or the 2009 franchise number.

That would make Asomugha’s salary for 2009 nearly $12 million. The lone hope for Asomugha to avoid the franchise tag is Oakland encountering such salary cap problems that it couldn’t afford to franchise him again, but that scenario is unlikely.

Like most things, Asomugha takes that in stride – along with the ribbing from his Pro Bowl teammates about the situation.

“One of the guys looked at me and said, ‘Are they threatening to franchise you again?’ Me and [Raiders punter] Shane [Lechler] just fell out laughing because he used the word ‘threatening.’ … It’s the whole negative connotation that goes with franchise tags.

“I’ve never viewed the franchise tag as a positive thing as it relates to getting a long-term contract. I just never have. What is it, a wait-in-limbo period? It’s never had this very positive thing in my mind. People say, ‘Oh, look at the money in the deal for one year.’ But there’s a lot that goes into that one year. You better stay healthy; you must perform. There’s so much that goes into it for it the next year to be worth it. So it’s a difficult situation, but it’s either going to happen or it’s not, and I don’t give it much thought.”

In the backdrop is the specter of losing. Asomugha has become so great while the Raiders have become so bad that opponents don’t feel compelled to throw at him. In 2006, Asomugha had eight interceptions, but he has had only one in each of the past two years.

When asked about the possibility that he could face a career of losing if he stays in Oakland, Asomugha said he preferred to look at it differently.

“I don’t necessarily think it’s being stuck on a team,” he said. “That’s a negative way of viewing it. I think if you’re on the team, you can have a chance to turn it around. It’s more so do I fear that I’m never going to be able to win in the league while I’m playing? I don’t want that. I don’t want to be that guy who was never able to win.”

Not that the Raiders are the only team in the league struggling right now.

“I could go to five teams and never win,” Asomugha said. “That would hurt because I know what winning means, and I know how much I put into the game and watching the Super Bowl every year and being in awe and being excited for the people who have that opportunity. But I don’t want to look at it that way. I’m like the ultimate optimist that there’s a chance that it will get better.”

Moreover, he’s trying not to let the losing overwhelm him and affect his play. After all, Asomugha can only help his team win by performing at a high level himself.

“Each game whether we’ve lost or whether our record is terrible or good, I’m always focusing on what I have to do. Pride has a lot to do with my performance. I’m never going to lower myself because of our record because I have a lot of pride in what I do,” Asomugha said. “I’m trying to turn it around, so I’m going to do the things I need to do to make it work.

“But it’s hard for guys to compartmentalize the negative things that are going on with the things you have to do. People are making them run all together. We’re not going to worry about Al and Lane going back and forth and letters on projectors because we still have a job to do, to play on Sunday. So I think at a point, you have to just look at yourself and how you can keep getting better, and you won’t be affected by that.”

It takes a strong-minded person to handle that, doesn’t it?

“I’ve been told that,” he said. “Maybe I make it sound easier to do than it really is, but it’s all I’ve known to do. So maybe what seems normal to me might be harder for somebody else. I’ve been in this all six years, you understand?”

Secondary-Coach

6'0" 185, from the University of Tulane. A 4th round draft pick in 1983.

Played 15 seasons in the NFL, including 9 with the Raiders.

37 career interceptions.

While with the Raiders, played in 122 games, intercepting 19 passes.

Washington is the father of Deron Washington, a professional basketball player who was selected in the second round of the 2008 NBA Draft.

Coaches

Coaching lineup

Head coach Tom Cable
Passing game coordinator Ted Tollner
Def. coordinator John Marshall
Special teams coordinator John Fassel
Quarterbacks Paul Hackett
Running backs Kelly Skipper
Tight ends Adam Henry
Wide receivers Sanjay Lal
Offensive line TBA
Defensive line Dwaine Board
Linebackers Mike Haluchak
Secondary Lionel Washington

Wednesday, February 4, 2009

Conference



Press Conference Transcript
February 4, 2009

020409 Raiders OWner Al Davis jokes with the media
Raiders Owner Al Davis chats with the media during Wednesday's press conference.

Tony Gonzales
Tom Cable was formally introduced as Head Coach of The Oakland Raiders during a press conference on Wednesday, February 4, 2009, at 1:15 p.m. at the Raiders’ facility in Alameda.

Mr. Davis: Approximately four months ago, I introduced to you Tom Cable as the interim head coach of the Raiders after the firing of Lane Kiffin. At that time, I had a hope that this guy had the ability, passion, love of our team, and love of our players that we would see improvements in the Raiders football team from what I didn’t feel was a true answer as to what we really were. To his credit, it has been a long process. There have been peaks and valleys through the process of picking a head coach. He was steadfast in his belief for the Raiders. Steadfast in his passion for the Raiders. Some of the things that he did with the football team that we can talk about later showed that we have a chance. We have a hope that we can go and do the things we think we can.

I bring up to you that since 2002, there have only been three other teams in the AFC who have played in the Super Bowl. And that means out of the 16 teams, 12 teams have not played in the Super Bowl since the year 2002. Now in the other conference, it is just totally opposite. Since 2002, they have had seven different teams play in the Super Bowl.

In any event, I am proud, and as I said it was a long process, we will tell you why and tell you some of the things that happened. And I only hope that the accountability of some of you to tell the truth will be printed, without any equivication, and firm belief in that what we tell you is exactly what happened. I will tell you along the way what happened with Tom Cable and Al Davis in the process, but what I want to do right now is introduce the new head coach of the Raiders, no longer the interim coach. And I say it with pride and I am proud of it, Tom Cable.

Coach Cable: I appreciate you all being here. Thank you for coming to this conference. You know, it’s been quite a journey, this whole thing. We will talk about this in more detail in a second, but I’m honored to have the privilege and the responsibility to be the head coach of the Oakland Raiders. I look forward to getting to work and working hard to bringing a championship to Oakland. It is something that is dear to all of us, dear to the city, and it is something that we will set out to do beginning now.

To the fans of Raider Nation, listen to me. It is time we came back to you with a team that you can be proud of every Sunday, that everyone walks into that stadium has a level of energy and excitement like no other. You have been great fans in the past, and it is time for us to give you something back, that is a great football team.

To this football team, we did some good stuff at the end. We learned what it is to be a team. We learned selflessness. We learned that the individual has no chance in this game, no chance to be business usual at this level. We will take off where we left and we will get right to work here come March. Our only goal is to get into the tournament, to get into the playoffs. To get into the playoffs, you have a chance to win the ring. That is what this organization has always been about, something that we should all look forward to. The success is in our future.

To the coaching staff that we put together, I am excited about the opportunity to pick every one of them myself. It was a great thing. I look for teachers, I look for character, and if there is one thing I do know in the beginning is that when we get this team back together in March, and with the off-season program starting, we have a chance to teach this game. And with their attitude and their abilities, we have something to look forward to.

020409 Coach Cable and Raiders Owner Al Davis in the auditorium
Raiders Head Coach Tom Cable and Raiders Owner Al Davis field questions from the media during Wednesday's press conference.

Tony Gonzales

Q: Al, why did it take as long as it did for you to make this announcement? What went on during those times, and what happened?

Mr. Davis: Three things manifested themselves. One, it was a process. And I really did consider another individual very strongly right up until the end. That individual and Tom were competing. When I met with Tom for approximately four hours and he outlined what he saw as the future of the Raiders, the staff, the players, and all those things..he told me what kind of staff he liked and I said to him, can you get that kind of staff? He said I can get that kind of staff. I said you go out and get that kind of staff and bring them back here. You tell me these are the people that you want on your staff and we will hire them. Let me see what you can do about putting a staff together. That’s number one. I gave the same consideration to the other individual. He went out with the idea of putting a staff together to bring back that would be the staff of the Raiders. And Tom was very, very strong on who he wanted to keep from the old organization and from the new organization. Number two, unfortunately, Tom suffered a very serious blow while this process was going on. His dad passed away, so we had a hiatus of about a week and a half of which all we did was talk on the telephone occasionally. But he had things to do in Merced, Seattle, and in Georgia. That held it up too. And Number three that held it up was that I could have done it last Thursday, but I didn’t want to interfere with the Super Bowl and thought that this was the best time for everyone. I didn’t want take you away from the Super Bowl, or take him, still with the things he had to do in Atlanta, Georgia, for a couple days. And so, these are the things that go on in the process and it was a battle down to the end. And I am proud to make the decision, and I thought that he took this team and showed me in those last couple of games. There were two things that came to my mind, I wanted to play the young players all year long. I wanted to play the young players. In the last two games, [Johnnie Lee] Higgins and [Chaz] Schilens accounted for five touchdowns. Higgins and Schilens accounted for five touchdowns. That was about the only time that someone started to play those two guys regularly where they could show that they could do, where they could run and show their speed. Higgins had other opportunities, but it was great that you take five touchdowns in two games and even whittle it down to two touchdowns in 16 games a piece. We have two guys that are catching eight touchdowns a piece. I think the youth of this team, if you really follow it and watch it, really has a chance to be pretty good and he believed in the youth and played them and showed us what they could do with those two young guys. H

He hired every assistant coach. I did not hire one, other than to talk to them about money, or to talk to them about philosophy. Not sure I agree with everyone, but I think that it is a hell of a staff and he hired every single coach. I just want you to know that. I want the few doubters in here who think that I hired these assistant coaches, that’s not true. I never hired Lane Kiffin’s, I never hired Art Shell’s, but on this one, I listened to him and the guys he had in mind were pro guys. People who were experienced and people who can teach.

020409 Raiders owner Al Davis answers questions
Raiders Owner Al Davis takes questions from the media during Wednesday's press conference.

Tony Gonzales
Q: Maybe it's my misunderstanding, but if you have two head coaching candidates and you tell them to go out and find what kind of staff they can get, how can they hire people?

Mr. Davis: They can’t hire people, but they can tell us who they want and tell us. We’ll bring them in to make sure we can get them. There are many times where you can get this guy. There was one guy that both of them ticketed, but what they want was responsibilities Tom or this other fella would give them. That is play-calling. Tom called the plays the last few games of the season, if you remember he took it away from Greg Knapp. It's pretty simple, that’s the way its done. That’s the way it’s done. Guys are told you have a shot at this job and immediately what are they doing? Calling around and getting a staff together. Who will join me? Who won’t join me? Things like that. Its always worked that way.

Q: What makes you so confident that this hiring will work out better than the last two hirings you made for head coach?

Mr. Davis: Well, I can only tell you that I thought Norv Turner would turn out pretty good and the first year of Norv he had Tim Brown, Jerry Rice, Jerry Porter, Ronald Curry and Doug Gabriel. I thought that Norv has a different ways of doing things and could satisfy all the receivers. What happened was we let Tim Brown go right before the season started and Jerry Rice got into argument and he didn’t catch a pass in the second game. (Rich) Gannon threw him a pass that bounced off his fingers and didn’t throw his way the rest of the game. I thought Norv would do well and he didn’t. Then we were going to go to Bobby Petrino, but instead we went to (Art) Shell and then I went to Lane Kiffin. What makes me think he’ll do well? It’s the fact that he did do well. He took over a team last year in the middle of the season and I thought he did well. There were peaks and there were valleys there. There were things that came up from time to time. He’s a young guy, but he loves it. He loves football and I admire his passion for it, whereas I’m not sure the other guys had it.

Q: Hi, Tom. You talked to prospective assistants when you weren’t under contract and I’m not sure if you hadn’t done player evaluations too, why were you willing to do that? Was it confidence that you were going to get the job?

Coach Cable: First of all, when the season was over we talked briefly on what the process would be. We took some time to reflect. We talked, initially, about the fact that I wanted to be the head coach and that was an unfortunate time. I lost my father and Al and the organization was gracious enough to give me a week-and-a half to two weeks to handle those things. Really for me, it started during the Senior Bowl and getting to know the process in this league that’s a very important time for guys to talk to prospective coaches, assistant coaches, and coordinators. At the same time, it gave me the opportunity to get a look at the talent for the new year. So, I was able to kill to birds with one stone, get a lot done. Talking to coaches and assistant coaches. I had a plan. I had a plan if that opportunity came to me, what I would move and what I would bring to the table. It was just a process of getting through it and last week was just getting final things together as we met again and talked about it all. And, here we are.

Q: Congratulations Tom. Mr. Davis was talking about peaks and valleys of last year. Can you talk about some of those peaks and valleys?

Coach Cable: I thought the first thing that jumped out at me was the first five weeks. There were some things that I thought were really trying. We had to release some players. We had to change some mindsets and get some players on the field that weren’t on it. I thought the last six weeks we became a very competitive football. A team that went 3-3 and really should have beaten Kansas City at home. I felt like this, I felt like the attitude is going the right way. I felt that they were starting to play for each other. I felt that the negative things were going away. I felt we were becoming a team that went to work for each other and that realized that its not all about stressing over winning or losing and that when you go to work every day and know when you leave every day that you gave your best. And, when you feel that way on Sunday you can win and become a playoff team. To win in your division and ultimately win your division. That’s the foundation that was laid. The peaks were at the end there and the valleys were probably at the beginning. It was climbing out of it, but we moved in the direction we wanted to go. Like I said, when this became an interim job in October, this is my dream. This is my team growing up, there isn’t anything else I rather be doing, I am honored to have this opportunity. I am very honored to what this team did the last six weeks of the season. Where we have grown as a football and I know, right now, where we need to go to be a good football team.

Q: Do you feel like you have an advantage from being the interim coach to the head coach? And, what are your biggest challenges?

Coach Cable: I do. I feel like I understand this locker room. I feel like I know who the leaders are. I know who the young people are that need to be pushed to become leaders. The biggest obstacle is getting this team evaluated with the new coaches we have. For example, the new D-line coach and knowing who he has at his position and what we need to get going for the combine, which is before the draft. Free agency starts in March. So, getting all those things laid out are the biggest things. The biggest thing is getting these new coaches with who they have at their positions. From there, making those decisions.

020409 Coach Cable answers questions from the media
Raiders Head Coach Tom Cable answers questions from the media at Wednesday's press conference.

Tony Gonzales
Q: No doubt that the players really responded to you toward the end of the year. They really played hard. They are professionals they are going to played hard no matter what. For some reason it just seemed to change. Why do you think the players responded to you?

Coach Cable: Well, I think first and foremost. They are going to know where I stand and I’m going to tell them the truth. I’m going to love how they work, I’m going to love them for that. When we go into the locker room on Sunday it's all of us against whoever they put out there. I think that mentality about taking care of each other and coaching for them and them playing for us and vice versa. All of that is so important that it does not work unless is all for one. I think that hopefully I brought that to them and hopefully they know that I [care] about them. As we continue to get better if you look at games like… I’m just going back to the Buffalo game, the Miami game, the Carolina game here. You could pick out three or four games right away that if we had that bond really to where it has come to and it has to get better, no question, but if we had that in place at those times we would have won those football games and that is the difference between winning and losing in the National Football League. We all have talented players and we have a young football team that has to mature, that has to grow up. We have to get some guys improved fundamentally, but I think that if you have that 'it' if you will in place, you win those football games and if you put two or three more wins on our record from last year, I think we win the division. That is how close we are. But make no mistake, all that talent and that big arm that JaMarcus [Russell] has and the fast legs that Darren [McFadden] has and the entire pass rushing that [Derrick] Burgess has...it does not mean anything, it does not make any difference if you can not put it there for each other with the passion and love for each other. That is how you win football games.

Q: Just trying to get this timeline right Mr. Davis. You said that Tom hired all the assistants. I know quite a few of them. You said that you did not hire [Cable] until Thursday. Guys like Lionel Washington, Skipper, Henry, Sanjay, Fassel. What I’m wondering is because this are guys that Tom wanted, what were you going to do if you had picked the other guy? What was going to become of all these hires that he made if you ended up hiring a different coach?

Mr. Davis: I went over that with him, the other fella. I don’t like to say the other guy. He understood and he was willing to accept it. You have to understand that we are hiring about 15 coaches. This is not an easy thing. He was willing to accept it that if we believed in it, if we thought that he was a good hire. I told him what we had done, who we had retained from the old staff and he was willing to accept it that way. He was interested in his offensive coordinator, his defensive coordinator. That was what he was interested in, although he was going to call his own plays so he really was not that interested in his offensive coordinator.

Q: [Who is going to call the plays]?

Coach Cable: I’m going to call the plays. We’ll get into this more a little later about the staff. Ted Tollner is going to be the passing game coordinator and we’ll move in that direction with them. We’ve talked about it with them. We’ll get great input from them as I just mentioned. They have a lot of experience and are very very valuable to what we are going to do. There’s a purpose and reason to why everyone was hired. Let’s be perfectly clear with this, I hired the coaches I thought would help us get to the playoffs at every position. The timeline isn’t the issue. The issue is we did the right thing for The Oakland Raiders to move forward. To be a playoff team and to find that success we all deserve.

020409 Coach Cable talks to the media
Raiders Head Coach Tom Cable chats with the media at Wednesday's press conference.

Tony Gonzales
Q : Tom, can you take us through the moment Mr. Davis shed the “interim” title from you? And, how did it differ from when you initially got the title?

Coach Cable: At first, there was so much going on with the change and everything. One minute you’re the line coach and the next you’re the head coach. To get organized and as I said earlier, those first few weeks were difficult times in changes that need to be made. Getting organized and getting the staff in the direction you needed it to go. I was so busy, I didn’t really have time to think about it. This time was very special. This is my team as a kid, this is a dream come true. I’m proud of it. I’m very appreciative in the opportunity to do this and the Oakland Raiders are back. We’re back. We’re going to go and win football games and we’re going to be a playoff team. You hear me? I’m not afraid to say that. All that negative is done. It’s our time now. Every great team in sports and there are three. In baseball it’s the New York Yankees. In basketball it’s the Boston Celtics and in football it’s The Oakland Raiders. All three of them have had their tough times. We’ve had ours. It ain’t been any fun. All of you have been through them longer than I have. But you know what? Now I get to be a part of the next set of great times. Every great team has done it. We’re no different than those other two.

Q: One, how serious did you consider Kevin Gilbride, I know you spoke to him on the phone for 1-1/2 hour, and brought him out? The second question, there was a report about Don Martindale, what did he interview with you for and did the head coaching job come up at all?

Mr. Davis: Number one, Kevin Gilbride is a bright, very exceptional coach and got tremendous consideration. He’s very good. And, Don Martindale was told what he could be here if he wanted to stay and he decided to go to Denver (Broncos) as the linebackers coach. Don Martindale was not considered as the head coach.

Q: Tom, I want to remind you we’re reporters and not fans, you sound like you are giving a motivational speech when you say “It’s our time, now.” Why should we believe you now?

Coach Cable: Because, it’s who I am.

Q: Is it who the team is?

Coach Cable: You bet it is. I’ll tell you why. When you look at the nucleus of this team, the make up of this team. Everybody would like to jump on when things are bad, you’ve had your chance. The make-up of this team is young, it's tough, it's smart, it's athletic, and you all know one thing about an Oakland Raider football team…it can fly. This football team just needs leadership and passion to play the game for each other, with each other and I believe I bring that to the table. If you paid attention, I am who I am. It is what it is. I’m this way whether it's at practice. I’m this way whether it's on Sunday. Or, I’m this way when I’m here sitting in front of you. I love this team. You ask why? It's because I believe in this team, that’s why.

Q: Do you think if you had been the head coach at the start of this season, this team would have made the playoffs?

Coach Cable: Yeah, I do. Because I believe in what I’m doing and I believe in this football team. So, yeah I do. But, that's not what it was. It worked out the way it was supposed to. I’m the head coach now and our goal will be to be a playoff team and get a chance at that Super Bowl.

Q: Have you hired a defensive coordinator? And I believe when you talked about Paul Hackett and Ted Tollner, you didn’t mention an offensive coordinator title for either one of them. Will there be an offensive coordinator?

Coach Cable: I don’t believe it’s necessary at this point because my involvement with the two of them. It wasn’t something I felt was necessary. To the defensive coordinator, I have hired John Marshall who will lead our defense. I’ll go ahead and give you those names real quick... Dwaine Board will be defensive line coach; Mike Haluchak will be the linebackers coach; Lionel Washington will be the defensive backs coach along with Willie Brown; On offense, as I mentioned Ted will be the passing game coordinator; Paul will be coaching the quarterbacks; Kelly Skipper will move from tight ends to coaching running backs; Sanjay Lal will go from being the assistant receivers coach to the receivers coach; And, Adam Henry will go from being a quality assistant coach to tight ends coach. The only position I haven’t hired yet is offensive line. I have hired a special teams coordinator who will be John Fassel, who is moving up from assistant special teams coordinator. The offensive line coach hasn’t been hired because that’s where I live. I have a plan for that and it will be done here shortly and out of respect for that we will get it done and when its time we’ll announce it.

Q: Now, how much input will you have in terms of eliminating and adding new players and in the draft what are some of your needs?

Coach Cable: In regards to the draft, those things are getting the new coaches familiar with the players they’re going to be coaching. That’s an issue for down the road. Before we can really get into this process they got to be understanding who they got to coach and how they’re going to get them better. We’ll have a plan for that, so it’ll be immature to talk about the draft and all those things right now. How we’re going to go through free agency and prepare for the draft and all of that, Al and I have talked about that. This is a partnership. I need his leadership, I need his wisdom. I need his experience. That is something I told him from the very beginning, there are some things that I’ll ask him to teach me and this is one of those things. At the same time, we’ve had great discussions about personnel. Whether it be players on our team or other teams. We’ve had agreements and we’ve had disagreements, but it's been great. The partnership in it has been exactly what I wanted it to be. Being able to be taught by a guy who probably knows more about football than anybody in the National Football League.

Q: A lot of coaches have come here in the past and have really bucked the Raider tradition of football, what is your style of football? What is your offensive philosophy? Will Raider football be incorporated in that philosophy?

Coach Cable: I think so. I think one of the things I’m most excited about is to put the complete stamp on it, if you will. Toughness, discipline, act with honor, play with honor, and play for each other. Throw it over their heads and when you get them down, beat them down by running the football. I think you score points by throwing the football, I mentioned that to you during the season, and you win championships by your ability to run the football at the end of games. Defensively, this team is very talented on defense. Not to put pressure on anyone, but it is. I’ve been around them for two years. I want to get back to what I used to see and I see it on NFL Films all the time. Raiders knocking off helmets and knocking them down and beating them down on defense. We’ve been fine on special teams, tremendous this past year. We can get better in all areas, but I want us to go back to playing hard, tough-nosed, playing the game the way it should be played by an Oakland Raider.

Q: For Mr. Davis, you guys spent more money than anybody in the NFL in free agency, when you look back on that spending spree last year? And, do you apply any of those lessons to this season?


Mr. Davis: I think you always learn from experience, but I don’t believe in consistency. I don’t believe that because you failed one year that you can’t succeed the next. But, I don’t think we did well in free agency. We went out and got the players on the market that were considered the best players at their positions available. And, they did not fare well for us. One was injured, that’s Javon (Walker), and certainly DeAngelo (Hall) got picked on the first game. We would have won that game had we played the other guy. When we went back and played them again and played the other guy, we won the game. That’s all it was. It was one guy that they took advantage of and beat us. When we went and played them again they were going to get after the new guy and they couldn’t get after the new guy. It’s a tough year for me because we didn’t do well in free agency, but I'd rather be right than consistent so we’ll see what happens. I think with the lockout looming down the road and what’s happening in free agency, I don’t know that you’re going to see the big bonuses you see for players. I just don’t know your'e going to see that.

Q: In a couple weeks, you have to decide what you’re going to do with (Nnamdi) Asomougha. That seems like a key move. Have you given much thought as to what you’re going to do?

Coach Cable: You know what, I have. I have looked at the roster a number of times and there is much to do in regards to Nnam, Shane Lechler, other free agents we have on our football team. We have a number of good players that are in free agency, so it’ll be an important time as we go through this. Nnam’s important, Shane’s important, all of them are important and that will be addressed rather quickly.

Q: What’s been your last contact with JaMarcus Russell? Are you satisfied that he’s staying in shape and is he carrying on from the way he picked up steam last year?

Coach Cable: I have talked to him at the Senior Bowl. He’s here now. My feeling with JaMarcus is that he has really embraced what his responsibility and role is. He had a rookie season that was short. He came in late and had played a few games there and started one game. Of course, he started the entire season this year. I think, through all that he has learned and accepted what his responsibility and role is. I’m not surprised to see him back now and doing the things that he needs to lead this football team.

Losers

Only One Way to Go

2003 thru 2008, 24 wins, 72 losses

Tom Cable has a lot of history to overcome -- the last time the Raiders had a winning season was 2002, when they went 11-5.

Season(s) W-L
Tom Cable 2008 (partial) 4-8
Lane Kiffin 2007, part of '08 5-15
Art Shell 2006 2-14
Norv Turner 2004, '05 9-23
Bill Callahan 2003 4-12

Cable

ALAMEDA, Calif. -- Although Tom Cable is aware of the stiff challenges he is assuming by staying with the Oakland Raiders, their no-longer-interim coach only sees the opportunities.

Owner Al Davis formally introduced Cable as his fifth head coach since 2003 on Wednesday in a news conference lacking the theatric vitriol of last year's rare public appearance by Davis, when he promoted Cable and fired Lane Kiffin four weeks into the season.

Tom Cable officially had the interim tagged removed from his head coaching title on Wednesday.

The Raiders also announced the hiring of several more assistant coaches, nearly completing Cable's overhauled coaching staff. Ted Tollner was named the Raiders' passing game coordinator, and veteran NFL assistant John Marshall will be Cable's defensive coordinator.

After finishing 4-8 as the interim coach last season, Cable gradually sold himself to Davis during a five-week process lengthened by the death of Cable's father. Although Davis said he strongly considered another candidate, Cable's enthusiasm and loyalty won over the Hall of Fame owner.

"As I said when this became an interim job in October, this is my dream," said Cable, who joined the club as offensive line coach in 2007. "This was my team growing up. There's not anything in the world I'd rather be doing. I'm honored to have the opportunity. I'm very honored by what this football team did in the last six weeks of the regular season and where we have grown as a football team, and I know right now where we need to go to get to the playoffs."

After a rocky start to a tenure that began in the wake of Davis' vicious public spat with his thirtysomething coach, Cable led the Raiders (5-11) to back-to-back victories at the close of their sixth consecutive losing season. That late surge made an impression on Davis, who praised Cable's leadership and play-calling while also defending the deliberate process of selecting him.

"He took over a team last year in the middle of the season, and I thought he did well," Davis said. "There were peaks and there were valleys there. There were things that came up from time to time, but he's young. He loves it. He loves football, and I admire the passion for it where I'm not so sure all the other [former Raiders coaches] had that passion."

Davis and Cable both said the coach hired the Raiders' new assistants, including several coaches who joined the club while Davis claims he was still deliberating between Cable and another unnamed finalist, suspected to be New York Giants offensive coordinator Kevin Gilbride.

With Wednesday's addition of linebackers coach Mike Haluchak and the promotion of Adam Henry to tight ends coach, Cable's staff has been filled except for offensive line coach.

The Raiders won't have an official offensive coordinator, with Cable calling the plays in conjunction with Tollner and quarterbacks coach Paul Hackett. Tollner was an offensive assistant for the San Francisco 49ers last season, while Marshall was the Seattle Seahawks' defensive coordinator for the past six seasons under Mike Holmgren.

Although much of the staff is new, Cable thinks his experience with the players will be significant.

"I feel like I understand that locker room," Cable said. "I know who the leaders are. I know who the young people are that have to be pushed to become leaders on this football team. ... They're going to know where I stand, and I'm going to tell them the truth."

Davis said quarterback JaMarcus Russell has an ankle problem that might require further treatment, although the owner didn't specifically mention surgery. Davis also said he was open to discussions about sharing a prospective new stadium with the San Francisco 49ers, encouraging a possibility that's been suggested for several months for the two Bay Area clubs playing in two of the NFL's worst buildings.

Tuesday, February 3, 2009

Sunday is a good day for revenge

by Hunter Thompson

I called Al Davis last night to make what turned out to be an ill-advised request. We are not close friends, but since we share a keen interest in the fate of the Oakland Raiders, I thought he might find it in his heart to do us both a favor. I needed to borrow his private jet-plane for a quick trip out to American Samoa for a meeting with a spectacular young quarterback who will be up for grabs in next year's NFL draft -- and as far as I know, I am the only person the boy will talk to, or at least the only one he trusts.

Football is not a primary sport in American Samoa, but many Samoan athletes are blessed with incredible hand-eye coordination and can easily hurl a football 90 yards and hit a moving watermelon nine times out of 10. The NFL has never seen a quarterback with an arm of this magnitude, and whichever team gets him is sure to dominate the league for many years. This boy is a Monster Talent who will change the NFL as we know it.

Under normal circumstances I would send a kid like this to Bill Walsh, the wizard of San Francisco -- but, for reasons I am not at liberty to discuss at this time, Oakland is the only team he can play for. He has apparently worshiped the Raiders all his life, and nothing I say to him will change his mind.

For obvious security reasons, we will have to call this boy by a generic Samoan name: Louis Finai will do for now, and it might have to do permanently, lest he be seized by La Migra and deported back to Samoa when he gets off the plane in Oakland. Young Louie might or might not have a frightening criminal background, but that is none of my business. I am a Football person, not a morality cop, and I make no apologies for it.

Al Davis
Al Davis blew his chance at a throwin' Samoan who could have dominated the NFL for years to come.

Al feels the same way, I think, so we will have to keep Louie under wraps for a while, or at least until he learns to control himself under stress in a military culture like ours.

That would have been My job, if Al had been smarter about lending me his airplane -- but No, he flew off the handle right away, like some kind of Ape having a seizure. "I can't believe that you would approach me with a criminal fraud like this!" he blurted. "You must be sick!"

I was shocked. How old is Al this year? I wondered. He must be at least 90, maybe more. "You are making a big mistake," I told him. "Hell, I don't want to fly the plane to Samoa. I have my own pilot."

"You don't have jack," Davis replied. "I should have finished you off when I had the chance. You should be on death-row." I heard other voices jabbering, then cursing and sounds of a struggle. Finally, he came back on the line. "Who else knows about this boy?" he asked sharply.

"Only Bill Walsh," I said with a laugh. "But he doesn't have a plane anymore. The 49ers are broke."

"I know," he chuckled. "How do you think I got Jerry Rice?" He made a snide noise that was meant to be a laugh, then he babbled for a moment in Spanish. "We will win it all this year," he said with unnatural calmness.

I knew Al Davis didn't speak Spanish. "Who the hell is this?" I demanded. "You're not Al Davis! What have you done with him?"

"I am he," said the voice. "I am the boss of the Raiders."

"Who cares?" I shrugged. "The Raiders are doomed. The 49ers will win the Super Bowl, and you will suck wind!" I screeched at him and slammed down the phone. Ugliness rolled over me like boiling smoke. Al Davis meant nothing to me now, and I no longer wanted his plane. It was bogus, and so was Louie Finai. All I had wanted to do, from the start, was run a nasty game down on this freak who called himself "the boss of the Oakland Raiders." It was Sunday, and Sunday is a good day for revenge. That was all I cared about, nothing more. Football was in my blood. I am a slave to it.

Raiders drop interim from Cable's title

by David White

Enough with the speculation, anonymous sources and company-line denials: the Raiders have finally dropped the interim label from coach Tom Cable's nameplate.

After weeks of waiting, Raiders owner Al Davis at long last made Cable the 17th head coach in franchise history Tuesday - and the fifth in seven years - more than a week after Davis decided the job was Cable's indeed.

A news conference is scheduled for 1:15 p.m. Wednesday, where Davis is expected to re-introduce Cable and explain the thinking behind his prolonged hiring process.

For the record, the coaching search lasted 37 days, the same time it took to hire Joe Bugel in 1997. It fell one day short of the franchise record for days without a coach, set in 2006 when Art Shell was finally hired.

During that time, Davis assembled a staff of assistants who will work with Cable. Davis is also close to naming John Marshall the defensive coordinator and is choosing between Paul Hackett and Ted Tollner for offensive coordinator - and leaning toward Tollner - a team source said.

Through it all, Cable was considered the frontrunner to replace Lane Kiffin once and for all. Cable was in on the interview process with his potential staff and represented the Raiders at the Senior Bowl - even though his contract had already expired.

Cable was named interim coach when Kiffin was fired Sept. 30. He went 4-8, winning his final two games and three of the last six. Two of those wins came against the Broncos and Buccaneers, teams that fired their head coaches - former Raider coaches Mike Shanahan and Jon Gruden - when their teams missed the playoffs.

Naturally, those unintended consequences didn't hurt Cable's chances.

"This is good news," Raiders center Jake Grove said. "I think most people bought into what he was saying. He showed he can definitely win there. It obviously helped him get the job and gave us momentum going into the offseason."

Giants offensive coordinator Kevin Gilbride and Packers assistant head coach Winston Moss also interviewed for the head coaching job.

Cable came to the Raiders as an offensive line coach in 2007, a job he previously held with the Falcons. His previous head coach experience came at the University of Idaho, where he went 11-35 from 2000-03

As interim coach, his offense initially struggled to score points. They scored two touchdowns in his first five games and at one point went 15 quarters without a touchdown.

He took over the play-calling from offensive coordinator Greg Knapp at midseason and things eventually improved. The Raiders scored 27 or more points in four of the last six games.

Cable also shook up the roster with no regard to salary or experience. Free safety Michael Huff, wide receiver Ronald Curry and left tackle Kwame Harris were benched and cornerback DeAngelo Hall was released after eight games.

"He's as honest as they come," said Grove, a free agent who wants to return to Oakland with Cable in place. "He's going to tell you exactly what he thinks and I think that's very refreshing. I think guys respected that."

Al Davis expands his control of Raiders

by Ray Ratto

The new target date for the announcement of Tom Cable as the Raiders' latest assistant coach is . . . wait for it . . . Wednesday.

Oh, they'll call him the head coach, and they'll go on and on about how his inspirational leadership at the end of last year turned a 3-11 team into a 5-11 team. He'll sit in his seat with an uncomfortable smile and an unconvincing story about the opportunity that has been re-gifted to him, but he gets it. He was confirmed publicly only after Al Davis hired his entire staff for him except for the defensive coordinator, which is almost surely going to John Marshall even though there has not yet been an announcement, and that of the offensive line coach, which will naturally fall to Cable.

In other words, that's Wednesday's show - Al and his trusty overhead projector showing us why the old system of leaving the power to hire in the hands of the head coach has been part of the reason the Raiders have seized the NFL's low ground, and why he is just the man to shake up the system to his benefit.

And were we Tom Cable, our first call of the day would be to Todd Haley in Hawaii, to see if he could use a really good offensive line coach in Kansas City. Other than the money, it would be a better job with greater respect than the one he has now.

But that's not likely to happen, so what we have is the show.

Oh, Al will mention the failed head coaches - he may go all the way back to Mike White, but we suspect he might limit the scope to the post-Gruden Era. That would take in Bill Callahan, Norval Turner, Art Shell and Lane Kiffin, and take in a number of assistants that range from Tom Walsh to Brian Schneider - all gentlemen now gone from the Slack-Jaw and Shield to spoil other teams.

Thus, the Raiders' talking point here is that the head coaches don't have Al's gift for finding nascent position coaching genius, and so he is going to take over more of that area, to match his level of input on the roster, the draft and the game-planning.

In other words, the new Raider master plan is that Al has put his mighty knowledge and football background to work and found something more encompassing than absolute power. And he has also managed to take the worst job in football and make it measurably worse.

Let's re-word that, so it sinks in.

Al has reinvented and expanded the idea of total control. And he has undercut the concept of head coach so that it is now total, total control.

Al promised at the Lane Kiffin-Isn't-Getting-Paid press conference to find a football guy - a de facto general manager, perhaps, or just a more contemporary/out-of-the-box thinker. That job is now filled - it's Al, and his out-of-the-box thought is that the staff is more important than its leader. And the guy who fills the staff is more important than the staff.

And here are some of the by-products of that decision. Paul Hackett could go from scout to quarterback coach to offensive coordinator in two weeks, unless it's Ted Tollner, who just completed an interview with Al for an as-yet-undefined job. Al finds a defensive coordinator, which almost surely will be John Marshall, and sends him to Cable for approval or approval, and then they look at carpet swatches for the office. The rest of the staff works for Al, not Cable.

And the players, who are neither stupid nor feckless, realize that they outrank Cable, too, because Al isn't giving up the prerogative of being their enabler, either.

In a truly brilliant moment in a largely brilliant career, Al has run a table we all thought he had already run. If he gets a hankering for the smell of fresh laundry and damp shoulder pad liners, equipment manager Bob Romanski is doomed.

Al has seen the obstacle that has thwarted his will, and it is the head coach. The head coach always lets him down because the head coach thinks he is . . . well, the head coach. Even though it is the Raiders' head coach, they all think their brilliance and command are so overwhelming that even Al cannot help but see the wisdom in giving a free hand.

They are always wrong, which is why they leave so soon, and why we always misunderstand the Raiders. Al never trusts that anyone can articulate his vision as well as he can, and since his experience, even with Jon Gruden, is that head coaches try to mold his message to their needs, so he has decided to neutralize the position.

At least it seems that way to the outside world, because we see the amount of power Al already wields and, given the results, wonder why a little less Al wouldn't be a stride forward toward .500, if not an actual playoff berth. Al, on the other hand, sees the problem as insufficient amounts of Al, and too many independent interpretations between Al and the product.

So that's the show. Al has changed the structure of command so that the head coach is at the bottom of the pyramid rather than the top of it. Tom Cable awoke today to see that he has more influence on the product as line coach, and other than the salary, there is no real reason for him to have the other title at all.

Now is that far enough out of the box for you, or what?

Almost as much, as it turns out, as the notion that a head coach in the NFL could call someone who isn't a head coach yet about a job as an assistant. Hey, out of the box is for everybody.