Raiders QB Derek Carr on Monday night’s casino-rooftop halftime show: ‘Welcome to Las Vegas’

The Raiders play their first game in Las Vegas on Monday, and though there will be no fans, there will be a casino-rooftop halftime show.

Monday Night Football is always a big deal in the NFL. But Monday Night Football in Las Vegas? With the new Las Vegas Raiders making their debut? That’s something else altogether.

Unfortunately, fans aren’t allowed inside Allegiant Stadium to watch the home team take on the Saints. But the Raiders and their new city are putting on a halftime show fit for a high-roller. Internationally-known rock ‘n’ roll group, The Killers, will play a set from the Caesars Palace rooftop. The show will be televised by ESPN and ABC.

“Welcome to Las Vegas, right?” said quarterback Derek Carr with a chuckle, when told about the show during his conference call with reporters on Wednesday. 

The Raiders’ first game in Las Vegas is a huge deal, no matter the date. But Monday Night Football makes the game even more special for all involved.

Carr explained that watching football on Mondays was an important part of growing up, and the primetime game still carries weight as he prepares for this week’s contest. 

“I don’t know how many Monday night games I’ve played, but it never gets old. It never loses how cool it is,” he said. “And we wish our city here, Las Vegas, we wish they could experience it with us. I’m sure they will be around somewhere. I’m sure there is a certain street or strip that they’ll be on that our fans will be at. Hopefully, it still feels the same energy.” 

There certainly is a strip for fans, both new and old, to meet up at—the world-famous Las Vegas Strip. And they’ll undoubtedly be in the area to watch the game and concert. Carr says the city is already Raiders-crazed, even if fans can’t attend the game.

“There is still a feel around town, ‘Oh, the Raiders are playing in town,’” Carr said. “So, it’s still exciting and I got people driving up next to my car and waiving and going nuts and stuff.”

If fans are going berserk early in the week, Monday night should be a celebration to remember in Las Vegas, especially if the Raiders beat the Saints. And with a halftime show on a casino rooftop, it’s obvious that the Raiders’ tenure in the entertainment capital of the world is off and running.

Raiders coach Jon Gruden’s favorite part about Allegiant Stadium so far? Vegas, baby

There’s presumably a lot to like about the Las Vegas Raiders’ new Allegiant Stadium, but so far, coach Jon Gruden digs the location most.

At long last, the Raiders christened Allegiant Stadium on Friday, and there’s clearly much to like about the place. A grass field in an enclosed structure, black seats, new locker rooms and more.

Players gushed about their brand-new Las Vegas home after the Raiders’ first practice session inside the friendly confines. Coach Jon Gruden was impressed as well, but so far, his favorite part of Allegiant is its location.

“My favorite thing is just driving in there,” Gruden said after training camp practice on Friday. “Just driving down the strip, looking across the street, seeing the beautiful casinos. And then seeing this facility that we get a chance to play in.”

The Raiders are indeed in the entertainment capital of the world, near the world-famous Las Vegas Strip, and Gruden seems to love it. Incredibly, it wasn’t long ago that having an NFL team in fabulous Las Vegas, with all its glitz and glamour, was unthinkable due in part to the city’s legal gambling.

For years, the NFL maintained a safe distance from grand casinos and their sportsbooks, which have the potential to threaten the integrity of any professional sport. If a player, coach, official or anyone associated with the NFL wagers on league games, that’s a huge potential problem.

Just last year, for example, the NFL suspended Cardinals cornerback Josh Shaw indefinitely for betting on league games, which is against official NFL policy.

Elsewhere, Major League Baseball legend Pete Rose earned a lifetime ban from his sport after the league determined Rose wagered on games he managed. In the NBA, former referee Tim Donaghy colluded with gamblers in games he worked. Donaghy served 15 months in federal prison for his numerous offenses.

Not one of them needed Las Vegas as home base to make those poor decisions, however. But the NFL’s theory appeared to involve keeping the city of Las Vegas at an arm’s length. Ironically, increased legal gambling on the internet, including fantasy football, has changed the perception of the industry, which only helped the Raiders’ cause.

But it’s still quite a sight to see a $2 billion NFL-ready stadium next to Las Vegas casinos. Coach Gruden is enjoying the view, and the NFL soon will as well. Hopefully for the Raiders, even more reasons to love Allegiant Stadium arise as the franchise gets to know its new home.

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