OAKLAND — Minutes after NFL owners approved the Raiders move to Las Vegas, Councilman Larry Reid, angered by the decision, said he wants the team out of Coliseum as early as next season.

Reid is consulting with city attorneys to see if there is a legal way to kick the Raiders out of the facility, forcing them to play the next two seasons elsewhere. The current lease gives the team the option of playing the 2017-18 and 2018-19 seasons in Oakland.

But Reid, a longtime fan, was having none of that.

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“I don’t want them here,” Reid said Monday morning. “They can go down to Santa Clara and play.”

The 31-1 NFL vote on Monday caps a stadium saga that dates back years in Oakland, with different attempts to move the team to Los Angeles, failed efforts to build a new stadium at the Coliseum site and a year of silence between owner Mark Davis and city officials.

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Focus on New Orleans: Why Raiders should be worried about how Saints won opener It isn’t the first time the Raiders have left fans heartbroken. Davis’ father Al Davis moved the team to Los Angeles in 1982 when his demand for luxury boxes at the Coliseum didn’t come to pass. The team returned to Oakland for the 1995 season, after millions of dollars in renovations were made to the stadium, debt that the city and county are still paying off.

At a press conference after the vote, Davis sharply criticized Oakland city and Alameda County leaders, saying he lost confidence in them before he tried to move his team to Los Angeles in 2015. Davis was also unhappy over an annual rent increase, from $925,000 to $3.5 million, approved in 2016.

Mayor Libby Schaaf at a somber press conference Monday said the city did all it could to try to keep the team in Oakland. Davis, she said, refused to discuss the deal.

“The manly thing for him to do is at least admit we had a viable plan,” Schaaf said in response to Davis’ criticism.

Check back for updates to this story.