RB Lynch returns from retirement to play for hometown Raiders
Wearing a white Raiders No. 24 jersey and a pair of baggy, black sweat pants, Marshawn Lynch trotted off the field following his first official workout with his new team and into the team’s nearby locker room.
Like in Seattle, Lynch didn’t have anything to say to the throng of reporters gathered to watch him participate in practice for the first time since coming out of retirement, a retirement that most certainly would have been permanent had not his hometown team come calling.
That point was not lost on Lynch or Raiders head coach Jack Del Rio.
While thanking Seattle fans for their support while he was with the Seahawks, Lynch couldn’t contain his excitement about playing for Oakland where he grew up. In his only public comments since the deal went down, Lynch took to Twitter and sounded like a kid in a candy store.
“Yes Lawd 12th man I’m thankful but s!@# just got REAL. I had hella fun in Seattle … But I’m really from Oakland doe like really really really from Oakland doe … town bizzness breath on me.”
Two weeks later on Instagram, Lynch posted a video from a block party he threw in Oakland to celebrate his return.
“I don’t know if I’ve ever seen anybody else be more excited or pleased to be joining a team, my team, our team, you know?” Del Rio said. “I told him, I said, ‘You’re lucky, man, because I didn’t get a chance to do that as a player. I wanted to finish here as a player too, I didn’t get that chance. You’re getting that chance.’ He’s fired up about it.”
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âWe have to be a much more detailed football team'
Like so many Raiders fans, coach Jon Gruden found himself searching for answers after the Raidersâ second-half collapse that cost the team a spot in the expanded playoffs.
WHAT THEY'RE SAYING
Starting Tackle Kolton Miller is entering the final year of his rookie contract.
Wanted: Defensive coordinator
The Raiders didnât wait long to begin their search for a new defensive coordinator, and itâs becoming clear that Jon Gruden has already narrowed his list down.
Raiders' good, bad, ugly
Raidersâ good, bad, ugly
NEWS & NOTES
The Raiders had one of the easier schedules in 2020 and got only eight wins to show for it. Things wonât get any easier in 2021, either.
Looking back at 2020 season
The 2020 season will absolutely be remembered for being one of the strangest and most disappointing in franchise history.
Gruden feeling the heat?
âI know there is a big bullâs-eye on my chest, certainly. If the people want to use that as an incentive, then so be it. I worked for Al Davis in 1998. That was pressure. I was 34 years old. Iâve dealt with pressure before. I donât really feel pressure. I love the excitement and thrill of competing, and I canât worry about things I canât control in that regard. I know people will want to step on me and beat me, and that is just the way this league is.â
From the SILVERANDBLACK.com Message Boards
S&BI continually scans the message boards across Raider Nation to see what Raider fans are talking about now that the 2020 season has ended for the Raiders. We chose some of the better posts and present them here.
Checklist for 2021
Now that the 2020 season has been put to rest for Las Vegas, the Raiders have shifted their focus to what figures to be a busy offseason as they prepare for 2021.
AFC WEST ROUNDUP
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