Say one thing for Mark Davis, the man knows how to throw a party.
For the Raiders owner, the return of Jon Gruden as head coach after a six-year pursuit was all the reason in the world to celebrate.
Celebrate they did with a gala that had all the makings of a Hollywood premiere.
There were celebrities — an estimated 50 former players including nine Hall of Famers. Oakland Athletics manager Bob Melvin, who grew up in the Bay Area, found his way inside. A big screen backdrop played highlights of Gruden’s career. Television cameras and reporters — 112 of them, more than had been at any Raiders press conference before — crammed their way into the spacious Performance Center.
Not far away, lining both sides of the long driveway leading to the back of the team’s facilities, were about 100 or so fans holding signs and Chucky dolls, waving and cheering while trying to peer into each car that drove up.
Then there was the man himself, taking the hero’s welcome and soaking it all in.
Gruden is back in black and ready, he said, to take care of unfinished business.
“I never thought I’d be back, but here I am and I’m ready to get to work,” a beaming Gruden said as he sat between Davis and general manager Reggie McKenzie. “I’m so thrilled to be back here. I hope people understand the emotion inside of me. I feel unfinished business.
“I also feel a lot of loyalty and I feel a lot of responsibility to get the Raiders going again and it’s been a while since we’ve consistently performed at a high level, and that’s really all I care about. I’m going to do everything I can to get this team right again.”
The press conference capped a wild two weeks in which rumor swirled about Gruden’s return, even as he continued to work in the broadcast booth for ESPN.
Once all the pomp and circumstance died down, though, it became all about football. Which is exactly how Gruden wants 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.
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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
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