2 0 1 4 OAKLAND RAIDERS AL DAVIS COMMITMENT TO EXCELLENCE AL DAVIS July 4, 1929 – Oct. 8, 2011 Al Davis, a true legend, was a maverick, a giant among giants, a star among stars, a hero, a mentor and a friend. When Davis passed away during the 2011 season, football lost an innovator, a pioneer with a deep love and passion for the game, a man who most assuredly will never be forgotten or duplicated. A Pro Football Hall of Famer who arguably did more to change the game than any other individual, Davis was honored the day after his passing with a moment of silence at every NFL stadium. At one of those venues, Houston’s Reliant Stadium, Davis’ players took the field without his guidance for the first time in 17,710 days. And in one of so many franchise games for the ages, this comeback featuring key contributions from three of his first-round draft choices, the Raiders that day honored Da- vis by doing what he cared about most – they won. “Just win,” Davis once said. “Play hard. Try not to make mis- takes, but don’t worry about mistakes because there’s only one thing that counts: Just win.” Before that win in Houston, Davis’ death spawned an overwhelming outpouring of statements from football executives, coaches and players, past and present. A clear common thread in those expressions of remembrance was that anyone with any level of affinity for football should acknowledge that the game would not be what it is without Davis. That’s not just because Davis held the titles of general manager, head coach, league commissioner and principal owner, and led the Raiders to more wins than any other team. The game would not be what it is because, through his unyielding efforts to build the finest franchise in sports, Davis broke social barriers, creating opportunities for countless individuals, and cared selflessly about people, treating them the way they wanted to be treated. No one has had a more profound and lasting impact on pro football. SEEDS OF GENIUS Had Davis remained in coaching, fellow innovator Bill Walsh once theorized, Davis would be considered one of the greatest coaches of all-time. On Jan. 15, 1963, the American Football League Raiders made a 33-year-old Davis the youngest general manager and head coach in pro history. And before the budding genius called his first play, Davis took complete control over all phases of the franchise, in- cluding changing Oakland’s uniform colors to silver and black, to resemble the great Army teams he had idolized during the 1940s, and re-branded the Raiders into an image that is today instantly recognized worldwide. “If there’s anything that we’ve done that I’m particularly proud of,” Davis recalled later in his life, “I would have to say the perpetu- ation of the greatness of the Raiders; to take a professional football team and give it a distinct characteristic, that’s different from all others.” That characteristic in his first season on the Raiders sideline became forever linked to winning. Davis earned Coach of the Year honors after leading the Raiders, 1-13 the season before, to the most significant year-to-year improvement in pro football history, a 10-4 mark. Although he sacrificed his coaching career to become AFL Commissioner following the 1965 season, the profession always remained important to him, partly because it served as the foundation for his contributions to football. That foundation was first poured in his hometown, the borough of Brooklyn, N.Y., where he played basketball and learned some of his unshakeable principles under Coach Al Badain at Erasmus Hall High School. Davis graduated with a degree in English literature from Syracuse University, which later honored him with a Letterman of Distinc- tion award, and shortly after, in 1950, launched his career as line coach at Adelphi College. raiders.com 1 OAKLAND RAIDERS AL DAVIS After entering the Army in 1952, Davis served as head football coach at Ft. Belvoir, Va. There, he molded a national power, finishing with a win over Maryland, the reigning national champion. Davis worked in the player personnel office of the Baltimore Colts for one year (1954), then spent two seasons (1955-56) as line coach and chief recruiter at The Citadel, before becoming in 1957 the University of Southern California’s line coach. His next job didn’t take him very far, moving across town from USC to the Los Angeles Chargers of the new AFL, but the move to pro football was a major step. Hired by Sid Gillman in 1960 as the Chargers’ offensive ends coach, Davis helped the team to a pair of division titles in just three years. That rise gave Davis the opportunity to lead his own team in 1963. Several factors influenced his head-coach blueprints. In addition to his coaching career, the precision of the Black Knights of the Hudson, their quickness and explosion with Doc Blanchard and Glenn Davis, left an indelible impression on Davis growing up. He also took several chapters from another sport. “As a young guy,” he said, “I had a dream that someday I would build the finest organization in professional sports. I had a lot of thoughts on how I would do it. I had the inspiration of two great organizations when I was growing up. “The Yankees to me personified the size of the players, power, the home run, and intimidation and fear. Very important character- istics to me of what I thought a great team and a great organization should have. The Dodgers, under Branch Rickey, were totally different in my mind. They represented speed. They represented development of players, a way of playing the game, the Dodger way of playing the game. And I always thought that someone intelligent could take all the qualities, the great qualities of both, and put them together and use them.” In addition to those qualities, he also instilled in the Raiders tenets that were all his own, and in the process, he revolutionized pro football. Offensively, Davis created the vertical game, now known as stretching the field. “When we came out of the huddle,” he remembered about his Raiders, “we weren’t looking for first downs. We didn’t want to move the chains. We wanted touchdowns. We wanted the big play, the quick strike. It’s No. 1 to say that you want to do that, it’s No. 2 to say that you have the players to do it, but it’s No. 3 to do it. Do it on first down of any football game, on that defense that you’re playing against. For those cornerbacks that play out there on the corners, to know that the Raiders are coming at you, they’re coming at you on top, they’ve got the speed to do it, and they will do it. It’s like having the bomb and being willing to drop it. The adage that goes around in professional football, and I hear everyone say it, ‘Take what they give you.’ That all sounds good to everybody, but I always went the other way: We’re going to take what we want.” On the other side of the line, Davis also wanted to attack, to put pressure on the pocket, and do more than just disrupt the offense physically. “I do believe that this is a game, psychologically, of intimidation and of fear. I don’t mean cowardly fear, but fear. I think this: That somewhere within the first five to 10 plays of the game that the other team’s quarterback must go down, and he must go down hard. That alone sets the tempo for a game.” Once that tempo was established, taking a cue from college basketball, Davis was the first to utilize his cornerbacks in a bump- and-run principle. “We used to call it the press. We got the idea from John Wooden, when he had his great zone press, with his great basketball teams, where they picked you up as soon as you took the ball out, and they pressured you. And we got the idea and called it press. And then I think Don Shula started calling it bump-and-run, so we changed to bump-and-run.” Davis’ vision to see where the game was headed, or to pave a new road to winning, led future successful coaches like Bill Parcells and Bill Belichick to regard Davis as the NFL’s most in- telligent individual. From 1963-2002, the Raiders dominated pro football, posting the game’s best cumulative won-loss record. Earning the mon- iker “Team of the Decades,” the franchise posted 17 winning seasons over an 18-year stretch from 1963-80. The Raiders then posted 11 more winning campaigns from 1982-2002, including double-digit wins in 1983, 1984, 1985, 1990, 1993, 2000, 2001 and 2002. All told under Davis, the Raiders won four league championships -- Super Bowls XI, XV and XVIII and the 1967 AFL title. 2 raiders.com OAKLAND RAIDERS AL DAVIS FROM HEAD COACH TO COMMISSIONER, TO MERGER Persuaded by American Football League owners who viewed him as the perfect person to lead their battle against the es- tablished NFL, Davis reluctantly became league commissioner on April 8, 1966. Remarkably, Davis would spend less than 16 weeks in that role, but the shots his administration fired during that short period still reverberate today. For the first half of the 1960s, the AFL and NFL fought a tena- cious fight for college talent, but they battled with a significant unwritten rule that veterans were off limits. A little more than a month after Davis took office, the NFL’s New York Giants violated that rule, signing veteran Buffalo kicker Pete Gogolak. As long- time Raiders executive Al LoCasale remembered, the NFL took a shot with a revolver and Davis shot back using a machine gun. Davis passionately and strategically convinced AFL owners to go after established NFL stars. In a short period, the AFL had signed many of the NFL’s veteran playmakers, including the NFL’s lead- ing passer John Brodie, and Roman Gabriel from the Los Angeles Rams. “We had about four or five quarterbacks all lined up,” Davis said. “Three or four of their other great players had already signed. It was a preliminary strike to let them know what’s going to happen if they continue this.” Within months, the two leagues had agreed to a merger that formed the league familiar to today’s fans, including as part of the agreement a world championship game now known as the Super Bowl. Having served as the driving force behind that merger, Davis resigned on July 25, 1966, returned to Oakland as head of football operations and purchased an interest in the franchise. Davis, who became managing general partner in 1972, teamed with head-coach successors John Rauch, John Madden and Tom Flores in building a stalwart that would become the league’s most successful franchise. A CHAMPION OF DIVERSITY AND EQUALITY A trailblazer, Davis innovated not only how the game was played and coached, but also changed who held those roles, opening countless doors for qualified individuals, regardless of skin color. Davis was 17 when, a short distance from his home, Jackie Robinson broke the color barrier in Major League Baseball. Shortly after, at Syracuse, Davis befriended Bernie Custis, who would fight racism and become pro football’s first black quarterback. At USC, he convinced future Pro Football Hall of Famer Willie Wood to remain at the school as the Trojans’ quarterback. Wood and Ron Mix became the school’s first interracial co-captains, and Davis helped Mix understand how athletics could serve as a leader in ushering needed social change. With the Chargers, Davis teamed with Gillman to lead the fight for equality. In addition to refusing to stay at segregated team ho- tels, the team, inspired by Davis, recruited players from black programs, creating what Eddie Robinson called a new day for players of color and giving them a sense of belonging in the American Football League. Later that decade, Davis brought to the Raiders guard Gene Upshaw and tackle Art Shell, eventual Hall of Famers. Upshaw and Shell joked that a convention of pro football’s black offensive linemen could be held in a phone booth. But Davis gave them an opportunity, and Upshaw said he never experienced racism on the Raiders because Davis would never tolerate it. And neither would Davis tolerate discrimination at the game’s most important position. A year after Upshaw as a rookie helped the Raiders to an AFL championship, Davis in 1968 made Eldridge Dickey the first African-American quarterback ever selected in the first round. Again, Davis cared about one thing: Winning. “We called it an untapped reservoir,” Davis recalled. “We wanted to win. We wanted the players. We weren’t interested in who they were, or exactly where they came from. I’ve always said, it’s not important to be consistent; it’s important to be right. It was done because it was right and fair, and to help the team win, and continue to win. “The Raiders did become a proving ground for great minority players. I think it was an evolution, an evolution of equity and fairness, and we hope that’s one legacy we leave.” Another legacy Davis left was hiring in 1989 the NFL’s first African-American head coach, Shell. Davis told Shell the reason he hired him was not because he was black, but because he was the best available candidate for the job, and because he was a Raider. Upon winning his coaching debut, Shell had to remind reporters that he was not the game’s first minority head coach. A decade before, Davis had hired Tom Flores to lead the Raiders to two Super Bowl victories. Additionally, Davis later made Amy Trask the NFL’s first female chief executive. raiders.com 3 OAKLAND RAIDERS AL DAVIS THE RAIDER MYSTIQUE To Davis, shattering barriers wasn’t only about race or gender. He defined it on a larger scale, by creating an environment that allowed any individual the chance to succeed, and in the process fostered a unique brotherhood. “The fire that burns brightest in me,” Davis said, “and the fire that burns brightest in this organization is the will to win.” That philosophy evolved the Raiders’ locker room into an us-versus-them mentality, a group that like its owner valued being feared more than respected. Davis brought in mavericks and molded them into champions, a group of rugged and colorful individualists that carried Davis’ torch with swagger and intimidation. Many of the players that won for the Raiders were rejected by other teams. But Davis did not treat them like misfits. He treated them like men, and those men brought him three Super Bowl titles and dominated the league like no other team. “We may take a player in who doesn’t have good social habits, or has been a failure somewhere else,” Davis explained. “But it’s predicated on bringing them into an environment, that can inspire them the will to do great, and they have done great.” A BELIEF IN HOW TO TREAT PEOPLE Part of Davis’ ability to acquire the right players and put them in an environ- ment that bred success was his belief in how to deal with people. Davis al- ways said that the Golden Rule was not good enough. “When you have to lead men, you don’t do unto others as you would have others do unto you,” Davis said. “You do unto them, in a paramilitary situ- ation, as they want to be done unto. You have to treat them the way they want to be treated.” That way of treating people led friends and former players to remember Da- vis as the epitome of loyalty. And in turn, he showed the rest of the NFL how to treat former players. Of all the awards he received, the recognition from men that played the game meant the most to Davis. In 1997, the NFL Alumni inducted Davis into the Order of the Leather Helmet, a lifetime-achievement award. Six years earlier, the NFL Players Association honored Davis with its inaugural Retired Players Award of Excellence, citing the care he had shown players long after they retired. “I feel we’re one of the last bastions of hope, as a team image, as a team organization,” Davis explained. “I don’t want to give that up with the Raiders. We believe in tradition. We believe in the glory. We believe in the debt we owe to our players from the past.” No question, the way Davis treated people led to a record nine Hall of Famers asking him to present them in Canton, Ohio, at their induction ceremonies, an exceptional fact that exists nowhere else in sports, and speaks volumes of Davis’ compassion for others. In 1992, Davis earned his own enshrinement in the Pro Football Hall of Fame, and for the first time stood at the familiar podium after someone else – his most successful Raiders coach, Madden – had introduced him. Davis took the opportunity to look back on the team that mirrored his life. “Enshrinement is a reflection of a life’s work, a reflection of a love affair with the greatest game the world has ever known. This honor is a testament to a great organization, and to all the capable people that have poured their talent and enthusiasm and loyalty into the greatness of the Raiders, and the Raiders legend and mystique.” 4 raiders.com OAKLAND RAIDERS DIRECTORY TELEPHONE NUMBERS EQUIPMENT Main switchboard 510-864-5000 Bob Romanski Equipment Manager Ticket office 1-800-RAIDERS (724-3377) Thomas Arguello Equipment Assistant Raider Image 510-780-5040 Adam Johnson Equipment Assistant Administration fax 510-864-5034 Danny Molina Equipment Assistant Ticket office fax 510-864-5044 Raider Image fax 510-864-5044 MEDICAL/TRAINING STAFF Football Operations fax 510-864-5248 H.Rod Martin Head Athletic Trainer Chris Cortez Athletic Trainer Mark Davis Owner Emilio Rabelo Athletic Trainer/Physical Therapist Reggie McKenzie General Manager Scott Touchet Athletic Trainer Dr. Warren King Team Orthopedist COACHING STAFF Dr. Stephen Corday Medical Consultant Dennis Allen Head Coach Dr. Fred Nicola Medical Consultant Tony Sparano Assistant Head Coach/Offensive Line Dr. Navdeep Singh Team Medical Physician Bobby April Special Teams Coordinator Dr. Warren Strudwick Orthopedic Consultant Greg Olson Offensive Coordinator Jason Tarver Defensive Coordinator VIDEO OPERATIONS Chris Boniol Assistant Special Teams Dave Nash Director - Video Operations John DeFilippo Quarterbacks Jim Otten Video Operations Ted Gilmore Wide Receivers John Otten Scouting IT/Video Coordinator John Grieco Strength and Conditioning Greg Reuveni Video Assistant Justin Griffith Quality Control - Offense Nick Holz Offensive Assistant MEDIA RELATIONS Mark Hutson Tight ends Will Kiss Director - Media Relations Marcus Robertson Assistant Defensive Backs Erin Exum Media Relations Coordinator Bob Sanders Linebackers Billy Jones Media Relations Coordinator Eric Sanders Quality Control - Defense Al Saunders Senior Offensive Assistant Kelly Skipper Running Backs Travis Smith Defensive Assistant Vernon Stephens Assistant Strength and Conditioning INTEREST HOLDERS Terrell Williams Defensive Line Joe Woods Secondary A. BOSCACCI FOOTBALL OPERATIONS GINNY BOSCACCI Tom Delaney Director - Football Administration FIRST FOOTBALL - PAUL LEFF Fred Formosa Director - Team Security GOPPPL, LLC Lamonte Winston Director - Player Engagement Willie Brown Football Administration/Personnel JACK HARTMAN Pete Caracciolo Team Travel and Logistics DORAY VAIL Derek Haithcock Coaching Assistant BOB SEAMAN Tom Jones Assistant to Head Coach George Li Football Operations Statistical Analyst Zach Longenecker Field Manager PLAYER PERSONNEL Joey Clinkscales Director - Player Personnel Shaun Herock Director - College Scouting Teddy Atlas Scouting Coordinator Calvin Branch College Scout Zack Crockett College Scout Von Hutchins Pro Scout Brad Kaplan College Scout Mike Krupoff Player Personnel Assistant Howie Long Player Personnel Assistant Mickey Marvin College Scout Dave McCloughan College Scout Raleigh McKenzie College Scout Kalie Pagel Administrative Assistant General Manager/Player Personnel Trey Scott College Scout Dane Vandernat Pro Scout raiders.com 5 OAKLAND RAIDERS DIRECTORY BUSINESS STAFF Name Dept. Name Dept. Airikuh Anderson............Corporate Sponsorship Sales Kelly McDonald ..........Group Sales John Andrews .............Raider Image Willie McHargue ..........Corporate Sponsorship Sales Krystal Arce.....................Premium Seating and Suites Donna Mendoza ............Administration Jessica Aronis .................Ticket Operations Brian Moran.................Raider Image Francisco Ascencio .............Season Tickets Scott Murray................Raider Image Marc Badain ................Business Operations Keyon Nash....................Premium Seating and Suites Brad Badger ................Corporate Sponsorship Sales Cheryl Nichols ................Special Projects Kristi Bailey ..................Administration Hannah O’Leary ...............Client Services Justin Barnes ................Season Tickets Marcus Padilla .................Broadcast Kris Bayliss .................Raider Image Zoe Panayides ...........Corporate Sponsorship Services Tom Blanda ................Business Operations Panos Pappas ................Premium Seating and Suites Rosie Bone ...................Community Relations Matt Pasco ..................Technology Morris Bradshaw ...........Senior Administrator Carolyn Paul .....................Administration Esteban Carbajal ..............Business Development Rick Pellum ................Client Services Freddy Carcamo .............Raider Image Derek Person ................Business Operations Doug Catanzarite .........Corporate Sponsorship Services Brad Phinney ..............Broadcast Teresa Cetraro ...............Raider Image Sophia Rodriguez ...........Raider Image Jay Chess ..................Season Tickets Jeff Romanski ...........Raider Image Rebecca Corman ..............Digital Media Jessica Romero ..............Broadcast Ranya De Castro ............Client Services Samantha Romero ..............Client Services Vittorio DeBartolo ...........Broadcast Adam Sanda ..................Business Operations Brooke DeGroot .............Group Sales Cesar Serrano ...............Season Tickets Greg Ditmer ................Community Relations Joe Shapero ..............Business Development Brandon Doll ......................Business Operations Mark Shearer ...............Ticket Operations Michael Donato ...............Season Tickets Zeric Sigmon, Jr. ..........Premium Seating and Suites Evan Durlester ............Group Sales Taylor Silva .....................Group Sales AJ Erakat..................Season Tickets Mino Solomon .............Group Sales Adam Feldman .............Ticket Operations Chris Sotiropulos .........Ticket Operations Dennise Garcia .................Human Resources Kelly Stein ....................Business Development Greg Garrett ................Security Monica Sweetwyne ........Administration John Garrison .............Raider Image Karla Tai ........................Human Resources Alex Geche .................Premium Seating and Suites Wahaj Tariq ....................Business Operations Tony Gonzales .............Photography Mike Taylor ..................Public Affairs Ryan Goucher .............Raider Image Paul Taylor ..................Raider Image Qiava Harper ................Premium Seating and Suites Joseph Tesconi ................Raider Image Amin Hasan..................Client Services Shawn Testa....................Technology Robert Henriquez ..........Client Services Jeanette Thompson ..........Broadcast/Raiderettes DJ Hollingsworth ....Raider Image Desiree Togami ................Client Services Benny Hong ...................Technology Pat Valerio ................Administration Daniel Huie ....................Business Operations Dan Ventrelle .............Legal Jackie Kaufman .............Raider Image Warren Verrett ................Client Services Jerry Knaak ..................Digital Media Andres Villalobos ............Season Tickets Greg Larkin ..................Season Tickets Ed Villanueva...........Business Operations Jeanine Liebelt .................Raider Image Jennifer Vu ........................Premium Seating and Suites Tom Lydon ..................Raider Image Caitlin Wienck ...............Business Development Zack Madonick ...........Season Tickets Anne Wilcoxon ............Ticket Operations Paul Maldonado ........Technology Crystal Williams..............Season Tickets Jonathan Martinez.............Business Development Erin Wright.................Community Relations Anthony Mayo ..................Community Relations Jesse Yeager .................Corporate Sponsorship Services John Yow .....................Legal QUICK FACTS First Season: 1960 (American Football League) Conference: American Football Conference Founding Co-owners and Directors: Y. Charles Soda, F. Wayne Division: West Division Valley, Robert L. Osborne, Don Blessing, Charles L. Harney, Stadium: O.co Coliseum Roger D. Lapham, Jr., Wallace A. Marsh, William J. Hayes, Capacity: 56,057 Edward W. McGah Surface: Overseeded Bermuda All-Time Record: Regular season: 434-375-11 (.536) Year opened: 1966 Postseason: 25-18 (.581) League games: 284 (including 17 postseason) AFL Championships: 1 - 1967 Team Colors: Silver and Black Super Bowl Championships: 3 - 1976, 1980, 1983 Radio: Flagship KGMZ (95.7 The Game) and nation-wide Division Titles: 17 - 1967-70, 1972-76, 1980, 1982-83, 1985, Raiders Radio Network 1990, 2000-02 Preseason TV: KTVU-TV (Ch. 2) and KICU-TV (Ch. 36) in Bay Area 6 raiders.com OAKLAND RAIDERS INDEX 2013 game summaries .........................263 Harris, Shelby ........................................242 2013 in review .......................................257 Hayden, DJ ...............................................93 2013 participation.................................261 Herock, Shaun .........................................38 2013 results ...........................................258 Holmes, Andre ........................................95 2013 statistics........................................259 Holz, Nick .................................................20 Al Davis ......................................................1 How built ...............................................256 Allen, Dennis ...........................................12 Howard, Austin .......................................97 All-league selections .............................399 Hutson, Mark ..........................................21 All-time honors .....................................401 Important Dates, 2014 ..........................425 All-time results, postseason .................346 Index.... ......................................................7 All-time results, preseason ...................327 Jackson, Gabe ........................................243 All-time results, regular season ............330 Janikowski, Sebastian ..............................99 Annual leaders ......................................309 Jenkins, Greg .........................................104 April, Bobby .............................................14 Johnson, Shelton ...................................105 Assistant coaches, all-time ...................396 Jones, James ..........................................106 Atkinson III, George ...............................246 Jones, Taiwan ........................................112 Ausberry, David .......................................50 Jones-Drew, Maurice ............................115 Autry, Denico .........................................246 Kasa, Nick ..............................................122 Barnes, Khalif ..........................................52 King, Marquette ....................................123 Bergstrom, Tony ......................................54 Kistler, Dan .............................................248 Boniol, Chris ............................................15 Ladson, Erle ...........................................249 Boothe, Kevin ..........................................55 Last time ................................................272 Branch, Tyvon ..........................................57 League results .......................................322 Brown, Tarell ...........................................61 Leonhardt, Brian ...................................234 Burnett, Kaelin ........................................66 Little, Greg .............................................125 Burnett, Kevin .........................................67 Lumpkin, Ricky ......................................128 Burris, Miles ............................................73 Mack, Khalil ...........................................244 Business Staff ..........................................42 Mady, Lamar .........................................129 Butler, Brice .............................................75 Maiava, Kaluka ......................................130 Carr, Derek .............................................238 McCants, Matt ......................................133 Carrie, TJ ................................................239 McFadden, Darren ................................134 Casey, Chance..........................................77 McFadden, Marshall .............................139 Chekwa, Chimdi ......................................78 McGee, Stacy ........................................140 Chronology, Raiders ..............................409 McGill, Keith ..........................................245 Cleary, Emmett ......................................234 McGloin, Matt .......................................142 Clinkscales, Joey ......................................38 McKenzie, Reggie ....................................10 Cole, Justin ..............................................81 Media information ................................427 Community............................................423 Moore, Denarius ...................................144 Condo, Jon ...............................................83 Moore, Sio .............................................147 Cornell, Jack.............................................85 Murphy, Jake .........................................249 Crawford, Jack .........................................86 Murray, Latavius ....................................235 Criner, Juron ............................................88 Nix, Lucas ...............................................149 Davis, Mike ............................................247 Olawale, Jamize .....................................150 DeFilippo, John ........................................16 Olson, Greg ..............................................22 Delaney, Tom ...........................................38 Overtime history ...................................324 Directory ....................................................5 Palardy, Michael ....................................250 Dowling, Jonathan ................................240 Passing, 300-yard games ......................318 Draft choices, all-time ...........................389 Penn, Donald .........................................152 Edwards, Trent ........................................90 Playoff history .......................................352 Ellis, Justin .............................................241 Playoff records, individual ....................366 Fields, Carlos .........................................247 Playoff records, team ...........................369 Filimoeatu, Bojay ..................................248 Prime time games .................................323 Gilmore, Ted ............................................17 Pro Bowl selections ...............................402 Grieco, John .............................................18 Pronunciation guide..............................254 Griffith, Justin ..........................................19 Radio network .......................................419 Hall of Fame Raiders .............................403 Raider Image .........................................422 raiders.com 7 OAKLAND RAIDERS INDEX Raiderettes ............................................424 Smith, Antonio ......................................186 Raiders vs. NFL ......................................340 Smith, Travis ............................................30 Raiders.com ...........................................421 Sparano, Tony ..........................................31 Receiving, 100-yard games ...................315 Stephens, Vernon ....................................33 Records, individual ................................275 Stewart, Jeremy ....................................192 Records, team .......................................293 Streater, Rod ..........................................194 Reece, Marcel........................................154 Super Bowl, Raiders in ..........................347 Results by season .................................325 Superlatives ...........................................313 Rivera, Mychal .......................................158 Support Staff ...........................................39 Roach, Nick ............................................160 Tarver, Jason ............................................34 Roberts, Seth .........................................250 Thorpe, Neiko ........................................196 Robertson, Marcus..................................24 Ticket information .................................418 Robinson, Ryan......................................165 Top seasons, passing .............................320 Rogers, Carlos ........................................166 Top seasons, receiving ..........................321 Ross, Brandian .......................................172 Top seasons, rushing .............................319 Roster, all-time alphabetical .................372 Troup, Torell ...........................................197 Roster, all-time numerical .....................380 Tuck, Justin ............................................199 Roster, alphabetical ...............................252 Vaughn, Rahsaan ...................................236 Roster, numerical ..................................254 Video and television .............................420 Roster, positional...................................255 Watson, Jansen .....................................251 Rushing, 100-yard games .....................314 Watson, Menelik ...................................205 Sanders, Bob ...........................................25 Williams, Karl .........................................251 Sanders, Eric ............................................26 Williams, Terrell .......................................36 Saunders, Al.............................................27 Wilson, C.J. ............................................206 Schaub, Matt .........................................174 Wisniewski, Stefen ................................209 Shaw, Jarrod ..........................................236 Woodley, LaMarr...................................211 Sheets, Kory ...........................................180 Woods, Joe ..............................................37 Shutout victories ...................................324 Woodson, Charles .................................217 Simonson, Scott ....................................250 Young, Usama .......................................229 Sims, Pat ................................................182 Skipper, Kelly ...........................................29 8 raiders.com COACHES AND ADMINISTRATION OWNER MARK DAVIS raiders.com 9
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