National Football League
Glazer: Raiders tab Jackson as coach
National Football League

Glazer: Raiders tab Jackson as coach

Published Jan. 17, 2011 12:00 a.m. ET

Hue Jackson has been tabbed as the next Oakland Raiders head coach.

Jackson replaces Tom Cable, who was notified earlier this month that the team would not extend his contract. Jackson served as the team's offensive coordinator in 2010.

His promotion from offensive coordinator fills the final head-coaching vacancy in the league.

Jackson will be formally introduced at a news conference Tuesday.

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''The fire in Hue will set a flame that will burn for a long time in the hearts and minds of the Raider football team and the Raider Nation,'' owner Al Davis said in a statement.

Jackson was widely considered the leading contender to get the job as soon as the Raiders announced Cable's departure. This is Jackson's first head coaching job at any level.

Jackson was hired a year ago to take over the play-calling duties from Cable and oversaw a transformation on offense. Oakland scored more than twice as many points in 2010 as it did in '09 — and the Raiders won eight games and avoid an eighth straight losing season.

''I'm excited about Hue getting the head coaching job,'' Raiders tight end Zach Miller said in a phone interview with the Associated Press. ''I really like the direction our offense is going and how much we improved. This was the best offensive year we've had since I've been a Raider. I'm excited to have the continuity.''

Led by quarterback Jason Campbell, a breakout season from running back Darren McFadden and big plays from rookie receiver Jacoby Ford, the Raiders finished sixth in the league in scoring with 410 points.

''That's what I came here for,'' Jackson said late in the season. ''It would be different if there wasn't and then I'd be really upset but that's why I'm here. That's why I came to the Raiders, was to improve, but we didn't improve fast enough. ... We expect to be challenging for the playoffs, challenging for our division year in and year out and we're not getting that done, so to me, that's a disappointment. There's either first place or there's last place and there's no in between.''

That was a far different tone than the one expressed by Cable, who notably pronounced ''you can't call us losers anymore,'' after the Raiders capped an 8-8 season by beating AFC West champion Kansas City in the season finale.

The Raiders won all six division games, but only two of their other 10 games. They became the first team since the 1970 merger to have a perfect record in the division and not make the postseason.

Jackson will try to get the Raiders back to the playoffs for the first time since winning the 2002 AFC championship. Davis has let go of five coaches since then.

The latest was Cable, who had wide support from his players, who credited him with helping make the team a contender in the AFC West this season after a run of seven straight years of at least 11 losses.

But Cable's relationship with Davis was not as good and the owner decided not to exercise a two-year, $5 million option to keep him as head coach. Cable filed a grievance against the Raiders to recover $120,000 in fines that Davis withheld from Cable's paychecks in his last season. The two did not always see eye to eye on who should start at quarterback and other issues.

Jackson had a strong relationship with Campbell, the quarterback Davis acquired last offseason to lead the franchise. Campbell spoke glowingly of his relationship with Jackson. Despite being benched twice, Campbell had a solid debut season in Oakland, completing 59 percent of his passes with 13 touchdowns, eight interceptions and a passer rating of 84.5

Now he gets rare the opportunity to play in the same offense for a second straight season. He had four different offenses in four years at Auburn, then four more in six years in the NFL with Washington and Oakland.

Jackson has extensive experience as an assistant in the NFL, working in Washington, Cincinnati, Atlanta and Baltimore for nearly a decade before joining the Raiders. He has coached quarterbacks, receivers and running backs, along with serving three stints as an offensive coordinator.

His most successful was with the Raiders, who were one of the league's worst offenses when he arrived.

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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