California. The team originated in Oakland in 1960, but briefly moved to Los Angeles from 1982-1994. They returned to Oakland in 1995
The home field for the Oakland Raiders football team is Oakland-Alameda County Coliseum. The field is located at 7000 Coliseum Way in Oakland.
O.co Coliseum
The Oakland Raiders play their home games at the Oakland Coliseum which is also home to the Oakland Athletics major league baseball team. The Coliseum is not a baseball field, it's a multiuse stadium, which is used for both football and baseball when these seasons overlap (September to early October, unless of course, the A's make the playoffs). Once the baseball season is over they will fill in the dirt basepaths with sod and it will look more like a football field then.
The Oakland Raiders were last shutout on October 23, 2011. They lost to the Kansas City Chiefs at home, 28-0.
No, they did not. The 1980 Oakland Raiders came the closest. The Raiders defeated the Houston Oilers 27-7 at home in the Wild card game. Then the Raiders won on the road in Cleveland 14-12 and San Diego 34-27. They won Super Bowl XV by defeating the Eagles 27-10.
The Oracle Arena is an indoor arena located in Oakland sports complex in Oakland California. They are home to the Oakland Raiders, Oakland Athletics and Golden State Warriors.
Without some number before the word "degrees", the question has no unique answer.
Yes. The Steelers played the Raiders at home on Sunday, December 6 in the 2009 season. The Raiders won the game 27-24.
The Cowboys and the Raiders have played four games in Dallas -- three at Texas Stadium and one at Cowboys Stadium. The Raiders are 3-and-1 in games in which Dallas was the home team. Here are the results: + Oct. 23, 1983 -- Los Angeles Raiders 40, Dallas 38 (Texas Stadium). + Nov. 9, 1986 -- Los Angeles Raiders 17, Dallas 13 (Texas Stadium). + Sept. 27, 1998 -- Oakland Raiders 13, Dallas 12 (Texas Stadium). + Nov. 26, 2009 -- Dallas 24, Oakland Raiders 7 (Cowboys Stadium The Raiders lead the overall series 6-4.
No, they play in Oakland, Caliornia.
Originally, the Al Davis moved the Oakland Raiders to Los Angeles in 1982 for a much larger venue for the team. The team was so popular in Oakland during the 70's and the Oakland Coliseum held at about 46000 to 49000 at the time and was at capacity most of the time. The Raiders moved to Los Angeles on the promise of a much larger state of the art stadium and for a larger market for the team. They played 13 seasons in the Memorial Coliseum in Los Angeles that held 92000. The stadium was typically half vacant during home games even during their 1983 Super Bowl run. I remember in 1990 when they were in AFC Divisional playoffs at home versus Cincinnati and by Friday night before the game they still had 9000 tickets available for a PLAYOFF GAME!!! Bo Jackson bought the remaining tickets himself told people to come to the game. Starting in the late 80's, they were doing preseason games in Oakland to see how the loyality was Oakland and it was awesome as ever. There was an actual push for them to move to Sacramento. Well, in the end, they never got their new stadium in Los Angeles. The fan support was the same as it was in Oakland except you have 45000 people in a 92000 seat stadium so the crowd was hardly a factor at home games. In the June of 1995, a sudden decision was made that the Raiders were coming back home. The Oakland Coliseum got $200M in renovations in 1996 and now the stadium holds 63000 for football. If you haven't been to a game, you need to go.