Al Davis vs. The NFL
- El episodio se transmitió el 4 feb 2021
- TV-G
Agrega una trama en tu idiomaAl Davis vs the NFL presents an intimate look inside one of the great rivalries in the history of the National Football League - Raiders legend Al Davis and former NFL commissioner Pete Roze... Leer todoAl Davis vs the NFL presents an intimate look inside one of the great rivalries in the history of the National Football League - Raiders legend Al Davis and former NFL commissioner Pete Rozelle. Their battle grew so intense that players, owners, franchises - even the League itsel... Leer todoAl Davis vs the NFL presents an intimate look inside one of the great rivalries in the history of the National Football League - Raiders legend Al Davis and former NFL commissioner Pete Rozelle. Their battle grew so intense that players, owners, franchises - even the League itself - became characters in a three-decade long Shakespearean feud that changed football fore... Leer todo
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Opiniones destacadas
Young, abrasive coach Al Davis joins AFL team the Oakland Raiders in 1963. He becomes AFL Commissioner in 1966 which sees him come to odds with NFL Commissioner Pete Rozelle for the first time. The AFL and NFL merged, and Davis returned to the Raiders. In 1980, disillusioned with the support of the Oakland legislative, Davis decides to move the team to Los Angeles. Rozelle, and the NFL oppose the move though and their internal rules require a successful vote from the owners ahead of relocation, which Davis does not have. Instead he takes the NFL to court, and (eventually) argues successfully that their rules break antitrust laws.
I found this documentary really interesting, and it told its story in a mostly compelling way. I can't speak to any biases that anyone else might have felt was present as, again, this is literally the only version of this story I know. But it's a crazy one, with some aspects, such as the collapse of the first trial being truly bizarre.
The only bit that lets the documentary down is the CGI element. Some people have used the term "deep fakes" but honestly, that is to give them too much credit. The are Playstation 3 era "Call of Duty" looking characters, without any genuine life to them. I am supposed to be thinking that Rozelle and Davis are back, and I'm hearing directly from them, but instead I'm thinking "Press X to pay my respects".
It's a shame, as these bits don't really add anything but leave a sour taste in the mouth of what is otherwise an interesting story, told in clear manner.
10 out of 10, and here's why.
The Story: Renegade vs. Empire
Al Davis wasn't just a team owner - he was a visionary, a maverick, a pain in the league's neck. He dressed in silver and black because that's how he saw the world - bold and unforgiving. He didn't bow to power; he fought it. And Rozelle, for all his intelligence and influence, was the perfect foil - the commissioner who believed the NFL needed order, control, and consistency.
The documentary captures their contrast perfectly: Davis, fiery and defiant, a man who believed football should be ruthless. Rozelle, cool and calculated, the bureaucrat who wanted to tame the chaos. Their battles weren't just about business - they were ideological. Every lawsuit, every relocation, every press conference became another round in their war.
The Visuals: Risky But Rewarding
One thing this documentary does that no other 30 for 30 has attempted is the use of deepfake-style recreations of Al Davis and Pete Rozelle. And while some may be put off by the CGI versions of these men narrating from beyond the grave, there's something uniquely haunting and theatrical about it. It turns the film into a kind of ghost story - two legends, locked in eternal combat.
It's a gamble - but it works. It elevates the tone, turning a sports documentary into something mythic.
Why It Matters: The Raiders Changed the Game
The film reminds us just how much Al Davis changed the game - literally. He moved the Raiders not once, but twice, challenging the NFL's monopoly over team relocation. He fought for diversity in coaching long before it was popular. And whether you loved him or hated him, he forced the NFL to reckon with its own hypocrisy.
The Raiders became more than a team - they were a brand, a culture, an attitude. They were punk rock in a league of businessmen. And it was all because of Davis.
Final Verdict
10 out of 10.
This is more than a story about football. It's about power, rebellion, legacy, and the cost of refusing to compromise.
Al Davis vs. The NFL shows what happens when a league that wants total control runs into a man who refuses to be controlled. And it doesn't blink.
If you love football, watch it.
If you love great stories about stubborn icons and the institutions they battle, watch it twice.
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- ConexionesFeatures NFL Monday Night Football (1970)