The Oakland Raiders aren't kidding around when they say private funding won't get in the way of their pending relocation to Las Vegas.

According to Jason Cole of Bleacher Report, Raiders president Marc Badain told the NFL that the team already has two banks ready to loan the $650 million needed to move forward with the $1.9 billion stadium deal in Las Vegas.

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Originally, Las Vegas Sands CEO Sheldon Adelson was expected to be the main financier for the project. Then, multinational investment bank Goldman Sachs came into the picture as a potential backup plan. Shortly after that, Adelson pulled out of the deal. Goldman Sachs followed Adelson one day later.

Since then, the funding for an NFL stadium in Las Vegas has been in question. Without the $650 million in private funds secured, Raiders owner Mark Davis will never get the 24 affirmative votes needed to approve the relocation attempt at the next league meetings.

If this latest report is true, however, the roadblocks between Oakland and Las Vegas may be fewer than they currently appear. A whopping total of $750 million in public funding has been secured to build a 65,000-seat, domed stadium in Las Vegas, dwarfing the offers Oakland has made to keep the Raiders in town.

Even if the money is in place, though, that doesn't mean all the owners will be on board with putting an NFL team in Las Vegas. No one knows for certain whether it is a viable market. The Raiders may struggle to sell enough season tickets, and they'll be playing their home games in the gambling capital of the country. On top of that, they will be leaving the nation's sixth largest media market in the Bay Area for the 40th largest.

The Raiders look like they're fumbling through this relocation right now, but it will be pretty impressive if they actually pull this project together and convince the NFL owners to let them make the move.

Follow Kevin Boilard on Twitter: @247KevinBoilard