Al Davis’ Raiders Forever Linked in Controversy With Patriots by Tuck Rule, Randy Moss, Ben Dreith

The Raiders held a moment of silence for Myra Kraft prior to Sunday's game against the Patriots in Oakland. It was the last tangible connection between Raiders owner Al Davis and a Patriots organization with which he has been linked for nearly a half century.

Davis, 82, died Saturday, just six days after honoring the late wife of New England owner Robert Kraft. That sign of respect embodied a connection that has taken many twists and turns since the 1960s.

Davis was the AFL commissioner in the late 1960s, when he spearheaded the union between his league and the NFL, helping his Raiders and nine AFL teams, including the Patriots, merge with the NFL.
From there, it's been a heck of a ride, baby.

It's interesting to think of the chain of events that ensued after Belichick's interview with the Raiders. He was then given a raise by the Jets, who also deemed him the coach-in-waiting for when Bill Parcells stepped down. When Belichick declined the job in 2000 to take over the Patriots, all hell broke loose. The Patriots had to surrender a first-round draft pick in 2000 in their agreement to pry Belichick from the Jets, who used that pick as an asset to trade up and select defensive lineman Shaun Ellis. A year later, Ellis chased Drew Bledsoe from the pocket before he was badly injured by a Mo Lewis hit. That soon led to…