Mark Davis — just leave!

If I were forced to move to AZ, I’d insist on Flagstaff or Sedona.
That's north right?

A bit cooler, pine forests... it looks really cool there. I'd consider Arizona, friends tell me people stay in the air conditioning, people that work outside work very early to got out of the sun mid day, everyone has a pool etc...people cope.

Plus it's a dry heat right? :chuckle:
 
Arizona is probably the only state I'd leave California for, but it's still unlikely.

My wife hates the heat, I hate the cold, so we're pretty much stuck.

Arizona to me is like Florida for retired Californians. Hot is hot.
 

Raiders owner discusses busy offseason, new coach, Brady — EXCLUSIVE Q&A


By Vincent BonsignoreLas Vegas Review-Journal
May 20, 2025 - 2:48 pm

EAGAN, Minn. — It’s been a busy offseason for Raiders owner Mark Davis.

His team hired a new coach in Pete Carroll and general manager in John Spytek. There’s also a new dynamic to the club’s ownership group with Tom Brady, Tom Wagner, Egon Durban and Michael Meldman added to the mix.

On the field, the Raiders traded for a new quarterback in Geno Smith and drafted standout Boise State running back Ashton Jeanty with the sixth overall pick. It should give the team’s offense under new coordinator Chip Kelly a different dimension than the group that scored the fourth-fewest points in the NFL last year and finished 4-13.

Davis shared his thoughts on the Raiders’ offseason in a wide-ranging interview with the Las Vegas Review-Journal on Tuesday at the NFL’s spring owners meetings in Minnesota.

Here are some highlights from the conversation:

Review-Journal: It seems like people around the league and fans are confident in the changes you made this offseason. Do you feel that sentiment?

Davis: “I’m not hearing it so much, but maybe it’s because I’m not listening to what other people think. Because I never do. But, there is a sense of confidence around the building.”

Review-Journal: How has it been working with Carroll and Spytek?

Davis: “It’s been fun. It’s been fantastic. Again, I’ve grown up around football my whole life. And around people who understand football. I don’t want to go back into the whole (former coach) Jon Gruden thing, but again, Jon was somebody who understood football, and that’s where I tried to go. But it didn’t work. I haven’t gotten it right, and hopefully this time I will. I love Pete Carroll. I’ve watched him from afar for many, many years.

“John, I’ve just gotten to know. I think he’s a special person, somebody who can be here for a long, long time.”

Review-Journal: How was it watching their first draft together?

Davis: “I’ve been in a lot of draft rooms, and I’ve seen different ways of going about it. I’ve seen drafts that nobody really expected to be great that turned out to be really good. And I’ve seen guys who were drafted who were expected to be great, who weren’t. So, again, it’s results. But it is exciting. We’ve got some really, really interesting players. Young guys that I think can play. But until there are results, it’s just optimism.”

Review-Journal: What are your thoughts on Jeanty?

Davis: “I think he’s a wonderful young man. I really do. We’ll see how it goes, but I think he’s a special player.”

Review-Journal: Carroll said his interest in coaching the Raiders had a lot to do with the ownership additions you made, including bringing in Brady. Do you believe those additions are having a positive impact?

Davis: “Absolutely. And that’s why the changes were made. And it was a battle to get it done. It took four years to actually get Tom into the building and bring in that expertise and that confidence that we’re talking about. I think it started there. And obviously, the other additions that were made, and then getting someone like Chip Kelly. And I said, OK, there’s some stability here, we’re building something. There is a vision, and Tom does have vision. I don’t think there’s anybody more competitive, that I know of, than Tom Brady.”

Review-Journal: You also added Wagner, Durban and Meldman, three powerful business people, to the ownership group. Why?

Davis: “It was to bring infrastructure into the organization. Tom was brought in initially for the football side of the building. Somebody who is going to be there for a long, long time. Not as a president, but someone who’s got skin in the game. Egon, Meldman and Wagner were brought in for their business acumen off the field. They have ideas on the field as well, but off the field, they’re brilliant, brilliant businessmen. Our president, Sandra Douglass Morgan, is doing a phenomenal job, but we also needed to bring in people who understand the bigger picture.”

Review-Journal: You have a far-reaching fan base, but there’s also a local fan base in Las Vegas you’re trying to build. How is that going?

Davis: “Our fan base is very strong throughout the whole country and in particular the Bay Area and Southern California. We are a team that came to Las Vegas without that built-in fan base. Everybody here in Las Vegas is basically transplanted from somewhere else, and they have their team. And I respect team loyalty and all of that stuff. And as I say, you know, if you’re going to come over to the dark side, make sure you’re coming over, because once you’re a Raider, you’re always a Raider. You don’t get to switch back.

“But it’s going to take time to build the local fan base, and I think really what we need to do is get into the youth and the young kids and make the Raiders their team. And then in 10 to 20 years, we will be fully invested in the community.

“It just takes time and takes generations. And you have to understand that. And I’ve seen it. I saw the Raiders grow in Oakland, with the 49ers being across the (San Francisco) Bay, and how we were the stepchild. I saw how we went into (Los Angeles), and we were probably accepted better than most of the teams there. We were right up there with USC. But to build a fan base and build a culture and to build trust, it takes a lot of time.”

Review-Journal: The NFL has said it wants to bring the Super Bowl back to Las Vegas and the host site for 2029 could be announced this year. What are your thoughts on another Las Vegas Super Bowl?

Davis: “We’re excited about it. I don’t think that there’s a better place in the world to have the Super Bowl than in Las Vegas. We proved that. The big events that are coming here are proving it. We have the infrastructure, we have the hotels, we have the hospitality. We have everything you need for entertainment beyond just the game. You know, the game is an afterthought for a lot of people. For me, I enjoy the game part. But for all the events and the parties and everything else, you can’t have a better place than Las Vegas for all of it.”
 
We had a friend down in the Phoenix area back in the 80's, never will forget a conversation with him saying it's been over a hundred here for 30 straight days.. :eek:

When you've lived your entire life in Washington state that's some shit right there

Sacramento had 45 days (not consecutive) over 100 last year.
 
That's north right?

A bit cooler, pine forests... it looks really cool there. I'd consider Arizona, friends tell me people stay in the air conditioning, people that work outside work very early to got out of the sun mid day, everyone has a pool etc...people cope.

Plus it's a dry heat right? :chuckle:
Yes, those are further north. And much, much smaller cities than down south.
 
I hear the weather is mild there. Only 115 in the summer. Every fucking day. :woot:
That's a bit farther north in the Phoenix area. We're usually about 5-10 degrees cooler in the summer and 5-10 degrees warmer in the winter. If you want a night life or a huge cultural diversity, this isn't the place. It's a fairly quiet city overall and kind of a big small town, population of somewhere around 1M or so, but spread out over a large area. Transportation and city planning is an afterthought where people wait until there has been a problem there for years. Traffic isn't great for the reason that we get so many people from out of town trying to drive the same as they did back home and it doesn't work out well. Mexican food is easy to find naturally, but if you like whitey Mexican food, stay to the north and central parts of town (Authentic is more south and west parts).

@SSH401, As far as retiring here, a lot of it is going to come down to what are you looking for?

If you want mild or cooler temps, I suggest northern AZ, like Payson (southernmost), Prescott, Pinetop, Flagstaff (northernmost). The downsides of those is that they are MUCH smaller and can get a lot of snow during the winter. I know on one of our visits to Flagstaff years ago, we got hit by a "blizzard" (my wife disagrees and doesn't believe that snow moving horizontally with about 10-15 feet of visibility isn't a blizzard) that dumped 24 inches of snow overnight, which had us trapped there for a few days, due to the highways being shut down.

If you like the dry heat, Tucson and Phoenix are right for you. During summer, once the temps get over 110, it does feel like an oven, but I still think it's better than when I lived in Orlando FL or San Antonio TX, where the humidity was a killer at lower temps.

Phoenix is like any major metropolitan area, with all the amenities you need/want, but it is a lot more chaos and congestion. Tucson is a large city (we now have 2 suburb/attached towns in Marana and Vail), but it's not as tightly packed.
 
Stop for $50 in fuel. Leave with $300 in merch....and brisket sammiches....
The sandwiches were the only thing I liked when we hit one in TX. Everything else was just meh. It's basically a Walmart sized gas station store.
 
Yes. This dry heat bullshit cracks me up. It’s 115 degrees. That’s hot. Period.

As a California boy born and raised. And living in Sacramento for 20 years the dry heat thing is no joke.

Wife is from upstate NY. Humid there. Her dad moved to a place 30 miles or so from Myrtle Beach. Fuck me. We went 2 years ago. It was not fun. Walking out of the hotel before dawn and it's fucking dripping wet out there. If it doesn't cool off at night then what the fuck?

Even Santa Clarita was hot when we lived there but the high desert cools off at night. Fuck that humidity.
 
That's a bit farther north in the Phoenix area. We're usually about 5-10 degrees cooler in the summer and 5-10 degrees warmer in the winter. If you want a night life or a huge cultural diversity, this isn't the place. It's a fairly quiet city overall and kind of a big small town, population of somewhere around 1M or so, but spread out over a large area. Transportation and city planning is an afterthought where people wait until there has been a problem there for years. Traffic isn't great for the reason that we get so many people from out of town trying to drive the same as they did back home and it doesn't work out well. Mexican food is easy to find naturally, but if you like whitey Mexican food, stay to the north and central parts of town (Authentic is more south and west parts).

@SSH401, As far as retiring here, a lot of it is going to come down to what are you looking for?

If you want mild or cooler temps, I suggest northern AZ, like Payson (southernmost), Prescott, Pinetop, Flagstaff (northernmost). The downsides of those is that they are MUCH smaller and can get a lot of snow during the winter. I know on one of our visits to Flagstaff years ago, we got hit by a "blizzard" (my wife disagrees and doesn't believe that snow moving horizontally with about 10-15 feet of visibility isn't a blizzard) that dumped 24 inches of snow overnight, which had us trapped there for a few days, due to the highways being shut down.

If you like the dry heat, Tucson and Phoenix are right for you. During summer, once the temps get over 110, it does feel like an oven, but I still think it's better than when I lived in Orlando FL or San Antonio TX, where the humidity was a killer at lower temps.

Phoenix is like any major metropolitan area, with all the amenities you need/want, but it is a lot more chaos and congestion. Tucson is a large city (we now have 2 suburb/attached towns in Marana and Vail), but it's not as tightly packed.
Northern Arizona is beautiful (Flagstaff, Sedona etc) but fuck snow. I'm done with that crap and agreed with the humidity part too. I love the south, especially the coastal areas but the humidity is insane. I spent some time in Ft Lauderdale from July to August, I wasn't prepared for the humidity
 
I've been through Flagstaff a few times, all of them in the winter and two out of the three were blizzard conditions.
It sounds like Prescott might be OK, they don't get as hot as we do and probably not as cold either.

A cousin of mine moved to the Groom Creek area from Arkansas around 1870 prospecting for gold and struck it rich.
 
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