The 5 Most Devastating Moments in Raiders History! (Told From Oakland’s Perspective)

Tuesday, September 16, 2025  Read time2 min

The Raiders franchise has delivered unforgettable highs — and some brutal, career-defining lows. From controversial officiating to self-inflicted drama and painful relocations, these are the moments Raider Nation would rather forget.

The 5 Most Devastating Moments in Raiders History! (Told From Oakland’s Perspective)

5. The Immaculate Reception (1972)

What the NFL Films calls the most controversial call in league history still stings in Raider Nation. Trailing Pittsburgh 7–6 with 22 seconds left in the 1972 AFC divisional playoff, Oakland appeared to stop the Steelers on fourth-and-10. Terry Bradshaw’s pass fluttered between running back John Fuqua and safety Jack Tatum before landing in Franco Harris’ hands for a 40-yard game-winning touchdown. Under the rules at the time, had the ball touched Fuqua alone the play would have been dead; instead the officials ruled the catch legal and the rest is infamy.

4. Tony Siragusa’s hit on Rich Gannon (2001 AFC Championship)

One moment changed the Raiders’ 2000–01 title run. Early in the AFC championship game, Ravens defensive tackle Tony Siragusa fell onto MVP candidate Rich Gannon, breaking his shoulder. Siragusa was flagged for roughing the passer and later fined $10,000, but the damage was done: backup Bobby Hoying replaced Gannon, the offense faltered against Baltimore’s ferocious defense, and the Raiders lost 16–3 to the eventual Super Bowl champions.

3. Barret Robbins’ absence before Super Bowl XXXVII (2003)

Mental health struggles derailed what might have been the Raiders’ greatest night. Center Barret Robbins — a key part of the offense — went AWOL the day before Super Bowl XXXVII and later returned incoherent. Coach Bill Callahan left him off the roster; without its starting center, the Raiders’ line struggled and Rich Gannon threw a Super Bowl record five interceptions in a lopsided loss to the Tampa Bay Buccaneers. The episode left lingering questions about how the team might have helped Robbins and whether his absence cost the Raiders a championship.

2. The Tuck Rule Game (2002)

Few rule reversals have stung NFL fans like the tuck-rule decision in the 2001 AFC divisional round. With seconds remaining and the Raiders leading 13–10, Charles Woodson’s sack forced what appeared to be a game-sealing fumble by Tom Brady. Officials overturned the call under the little-used “tuck rule,” ruling that Brady’s arm was moving forward and therefore it was an incomplete pass. Adam Vinatieri tied the game with a field goal and won it in overtime. The tuck rule was eventually repealed in 2013, but the memory never left Oakland.

1. Leaving Oakland — twice (1982 and 2017)

No single event has wounded Raider Nation more than the team’s departures from its home city. Al Davis’ 1982 move to Los Angeles felt like a betrayal to longtime Oakland fans; the team returned in 1995, and forgiveness followed. But the 2017 agreement to relocate to Las Vegas reopened fresh wounds. For many Oakland supporters, the team’s final stint in the Bay Area felt like a bittersweet farewell — a franchise with deep local roots packing up for a shiny new stadium and a new fan base in the desert. The move split loyalties, emptied local traditions, and remains the franchise’s most painful chapter.