Wrong number

Raider Nation Calling

September 12, 2007

Sterling Kelley Jr. is not an Oakland Raiders fan. He prefers the 49ers, which is a shame, given that he gets so many calls from Raiders fans, some late at night, some drunken, always about tickets.

Related Stories: Oakland Raiders
Article Tools

That's because the Pinole resident's telephone number, which he and his wife have had for more than fifty years, is 510-724-3377. Please don't call him. Seriously. He doesn't want to hear from you.

I must admit, however, that I'm one of the morons who called him.

As it turns out, 724-3377 spells "RAIDERS" on a telephone keypad. I'm part of a season ticket package, and I wanted to buy tickets for a couple of extra games. The team's promotional materials said to call 1-800-RAIDERS (724-3377), and for some reason I figured RAIDERS was the local number. And so I called it — to Kelley's distress.

I was not the first. Scores of others have been calling the house for more than a decade. "It started when Al Davis moved them to Oakland" in 1995, Kelley says.

What does this patient gentleman tell errant callers? "I tell them to call 1-800-RAIDERS," he says. "I'm gonna send Al Davis a bill one of these days." The real problem is after dark, "particularly with drunks at eleven o'clock at night."

Even though he prefers the Niners — "If both of them play, I root for the 49ers" — Kelley still has an opinion on the East Bay team. "I think they should be better this year, but I don't know how to read all this stuff about their quarterback," he says, referring to No. 1 draft pick JaMarcus Russell.

Well, neither do the rest of us in Raider Nation.

So, Mr. Kelley, thanks for answering our misguided calls. But after more than fifty years, it might be time to change your number.

YOUR COMMENT


ARCHIVE SEARCH

Select One or More Criteria

NEWS BLOGS

THIS WEEK IN NEWS

The first post-strike Bollywood film to show at Naz 8.
Readers sound off on EBMUD, lobbying, the anti gold digger, and illegal garage sales.
Bicyclists hold East Bay cities accountable for keeping roads clear of debris and other hazards.
When religion claims to have a mandate to lead based on a moral authority, it deserves special scrutiny.
Plus, the state is about to start issuing IOUs, sales tax receipts are up in Berkeley, BART workers ask for a raise, and Jerry Brown sues Pleasanton.
As both Berkeley and Oakland debate their downtown plans, there is growing recognition that the fight against global warming requires greater urban density.

MOST POPULAR NEWS STORIES

VIEWED E-MAILED COMMENTED
As both Berkeley and Oakland debate their downtown plans, there is growing recognition that the fight against global warming requires greater urban density.
Local business owners say Yelp offers to hide negative customer reviews of their businesses on its web site ... for a price.
After losing big to a Filipina swindler posing as a travel agent, her East Bay compatriots took matters into their own hands.
Cal Professor John Ogbu thinks he knows why rich black kids are failing in school. Nobody wants to hear it.
Two middle-aged women discover that casual sex is anything but casual.

THIS WEEK'S FEATURE


An unscrupulous mortgage-collection firm sold Jim Hultman's Berkeley home out from under him, leaving behind a feud and an eyesore.

SPECIAL REPORTS

Scavenging, swapping, sharing, sponsoring, recycling, and garage sale-ing.
Out & About, Home & Garden, Food & Drink, and Summer Arts
Cougars, porn, and disastrous dates.

RECENT ISSUES


Jul 1, 2009

Jun 24, 2009

Jun 17, 2009

Jun 10, 2009

Jun 3, 2009

May 27, 2009