The Las Vegas Raiders can take plenty of criticism for what they’ve put on the field over the last two decades. The franchise has been unsuccessful, disjointed and poorly coached, and the lack of direction has been hard to miss for longtime fans.
But there’s one thing that has always been bigger than the results: the look. The Shield is recognizable everywhere, and the Silver and Black still carry real weight in the NFL and across sports. That’s why Sports Illustrated’s Mike Kadlick ranking the Raiders 14th among all 32 teams for uniform combinations lands like a miss.
Kadlick wrote: "Raiders quarterback Kirk Cousins called his new team’s jerseys the best in pro sports upon signing with the club this past March. Las Vegas’s look-silver and black across the board, with not much room for error-is certainly sharp and will likely remain untouched as long as they’re still the Raiders, but at what point does it become too old?
Only time will tell. For now, their occasional switch from black to silver numbers on their white jerseys is the most change we’re going to get on the Strip."
That logic doesn’t hold up. The Raiders’ uniforms are classic, clean and timeless.
They’ve lasted because they work, and they’ve become the kind of look other teams chase instead of replace. In a league where plenty of clubs have leaned into black alternates or outright copied the formula, Las Vegas still owns the original.
The part that makes the ranking even harder to buy is that every AFC West rival was placed ahead of the Raiders. The Kansas City Chiefs came in at No. 11, the Denver Broncos at No. 10 and the Los Angeles Chargers at No. 1.
Denver at No. 10 is a stretch in itself. The old-school John Elway-era jerseys are strong, but the modern look has been a miss for a long time. Kansas City at least has classic threads, but the red is rough and the yellow is barely there, which says plenty on its own.
And the Chargers? Their powder blue is a good uniform, and the navy set is fine too. But calling them the best in the NFL with the Raiders, New Orleans Saints and Dallas Cowboys in the mix is a reach.
The Raiders can be knocked for a lot. Their play, their instability, their coaching - all fair game.
But the logo, the colors and the uniforms are not up for debate. On that front, Las Vegas deserved better than 14th.
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For a Raiders team that leans on Crosby as the tone-setter up front, the timing matters almost as much as the news itself. He has been working through strength and conditioning gains and sounds confident he can be ready for a full return to play once camp arrives, which is exactly the kind of update the organization and its fans wanted to hear after a season of uncertainty. The next step is simply getting to that clearing point and seeing how seamless the transition back to football actually is. [Read more 🡒]
