May 11, 2016; Las Vegas, NV, USA; General view of Oakland Raiders helmet and slot machines at the McCarran International Airport. Raiders owner Mark Davis (not pictured) has pledged $500 million toward building a 65,000-seat domed stadium in Las Vegas at a total cost of $1.4 billion. NFL commissioner Roger Goodell (not pictured) said Davis can explore his options in Las Vegas but would require 24 of 32 owners to approve the move. Mandatory Credit: Kirby Lee-USA TODAY Sports

Oakland Raiders President Marc Badain has said the franchise is disappointed with the SNITC’s ruling to cut taxpayer funding for a Las Vegas stadium.

Thursday was a good day for the City of Oakland’s fight to keep the Oakland Raiders as the franchise came out of a ruling from the Southern Nevada Infrastructure Committee disappointed with a reduction of public funding to $550 million. Something that could potentially sour owner Mark Davis on the idea of relocating the franchise to Las Vegas.

Raiders President Marc Badain publicly commented on the ruling to decrease the public contribution from what was hoped to be $750 million to $550 million. Badain stating that the franchise is disappointed by what they heard on Thursday, going as far as to say that the NFL will look negatively at the decreased taxpayer contribution to build a potential 62,000 seat domed stadium in Vegas.

As expected, new public contribution on #Raiders LV stadium has been reduced to $550 million by SNTIC — Vincent Bonsignore (@DailyNewsVinny) June 23, 2016

Mark Baidain tells SNTIC: #Raiders are disappointed by what they've heard today" — Vincent Bonsignore (@DailyNewsVinny) June 23, 2016

Badain: "The signal of the $750m to $550m will be looked at as a negative by the #NFL" — Vincent Bonsignore (@DailyNewsVinny) June 23, 2016

Regardless of the Raiders disappointment with today’s decrease of public funds in Vegas, the question will be if the $550 million that was approved will be enough to warrant a relocation. With Davis still waiting for progress in Oakland, there is a good chance that Vegas could still be a major player in the Raiders stadium saga even after decreasing $200 million from the pot. Time will tell, but as of Thursday it is looking like the love affair between the Raiders and Las Vegas is headed on the rocks for a little while.