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Raiders finally fire Kiffin, consider promoting assistants

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  • Raiders finally fire Kiffin, consider promoting assistants

    The inevitable became reality Tuesday when Lane Kiffin was fired by Oakland Raiders owner Al Davis on Tuesday.

    In a one-paragraph release, the team said "Lane Kiffin has been released as head coach of the Oakland Raiders for cause. "

    Sources told ESPN that Kiffin was fired via the telephone and without pay.

    Tom Cable, the team's offensive line coach, was emerging as the leading candidate to replace Kiffin, a source said. Cable was among three coaches interviewed by Davis on Monday night; the others were offensive coordinator Greg Knapp and special consultant Paul Hackett.

    The team was planning to address the media at 5 p.m. ET Tuesday at its facility in Alameda, Calif., to discuss its decision.

    Unlike the St. Louis Rams, who fired coach Scott Linehan on Monday, the news was not delivered by Davis in a face-to-face meeting. Kiffin was notified by a team executive Tuesday morning that Davis would call him at 9:15 a.m. PT to relieve the coach of his duties. The call came shortly after that time.

    Linehan also was allowed to speak briefly with his players on Monday. Kiffin will not be afforded the same opportunity, a source said.

    The news did not blindside Kiffin, who was informed by a team executive that he would be fired after the Raiders 24-23 loss to the Buffalo Bills in week three. Even though Davis didn't act a week ago, as Kiffin was told, many team insiders expected the Oakland owner to fire the coach during this bye week.

    The Raiders are 1-3, having blown leads in the fourth quarter to the Bills and the San Diego Chargers. During Kiffin's 20-game tenure, in which the team was 5-15, the Raiders took leads into the fourth quarter of 11 games.

    Davis hired Kiffin, who was USC's offensive coordinator at the time, as the NFL's youngest coach at 31 years old in February 2007. Even though many observers questioned the hiring, Kiffin ultimately gained respect around the league for fielding a significantly more competitive team than the Raiders had displayed before he was hired.

    Despite being competitive in the majority of games, Kiffin and Davis had a falling out on several fronts, starting when Davis believed Kiffin expressed private interest in the head coaching position at the University of Arkansas during the 2007 season.

    However, it was well-documented that their relationship disintegrated when Kiffin attempted to fire defensive coordinator Rob Ryan after the 2007 season. A source said Kiffin suggested to Davis that the owner had reneged on an agreement that the coach would have control over his own staff. Shortly thereafter, Davis sent a letter of resignation for Kiffin to sign, sources said. Kiffin declined.

    Kiffin also opposed some of Davis' big free-agent signings such as wide receiver Javon Walker and, to a lesser degree, cornerback DeAngelo Hall, sources said. Kiffin also expressed public frustration that the team was not more aggressive in claiming other team's released players via the waiver process to strengthen the bottom of the roster.

    However, a Raiders source said that Davis privately sent a letter to Kiffin after the season's opening-game loss to the Broncos, attempting to "document" that the coach approved of the offseason acquisitions. A source close to Kiffin described that claim as "fiction."

    Source: AP

  • #2
    Raiders' owner describes in great detail firing of Kiffin

    In an unprecedented news conference, Oakland Raiders owner Al Davis explained the firing of coach Lane Kiffin in great detail on Tuesday.

    At one point, Davis read a letter that he sent to his former coach that detailed mistakes made on and off the field by Kiffin. Davis finally concluded that he fired the coach for cause because he "disgraced" the organization, citing everything from conflicts over personnel moves to outright lies to the media.

    "I don't think it was any one thing," Davis said. "It was a cumulative thing. I think the pattern just disturbed me."

    Davis said that Kiffin objected to drafting quarterback JaMarcus Russell and complained about other personnel decisions. The owner finally told the coach to stop complaining all the time and coach the team on the field.

    Despite the conflicts dating back to last season, Kiffin's first, Davis didn't fire the coach in the offseason.

    "Maybe I didn't want to admit that I made a mistake," Davis said.

    If firing Kiffin for cause is upheld by the league, Davis will not have the pay the remainder of the coach's salary. He was asked if he thought he could win that battle.

    "I wouldn't do it unless I was going to prevail," Davis said.

    Davis denied a report that Kiffin was sent a resignation letter in the past but refused to sign it. The owner said that Kiffin was responsible for getting that false claim into the media. That was one of the examples Davis cited for describing Kiffin as a "flat-out liar."

    On Tuesday, Davis was asked if Kiffin was trying to get fired so that he would receive the remainder of his salary.

    "I don't know what he was doing, but he got me to fire him," Davis said.

    The Raiders now move on to their fifth coach in seven years. After taking a break during his news conference, Davis named Raiders offensive line coach Tom Cable as the interim coach.

    Davis had been asked if he felt responsible for the instability in the organization.

    "I bear the responsibility," he said. "It takes a toll on me. It sure does."

    Source: AP

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