The Oakland Raiders’ impending move to Las Vegas may not sit well with local officials, but the fans don’t seem to be holding it against them — season tickets for the 2017 campaign have sold out.

Fans’ stampede to shell out for a lame-duck team comes as Raiders owner Mark Davis is hinting he’ll ask to stick around the Oakland Coliseum for an extra season while Nevada builds his Vegas palace. The team’s lease in Oakland runs through the 2018 season, but Davis’ desert dome may not be ready until 2020.

“We haven’t heard anything official, but that’s what we are hearing through the NFL blogs,” said Scott McKibben, executive director of the Oakland Coliseum Authority.

Members of the authority, run by Oakland and Alameda County, have been lukewarm to the idea of the Raiders playing in the Coliseum in 2019. They say the stadium loses $1 million a year on Raider games, but “keeping the team here means jobs” for Coliseum workers, board member Chris Dobbins noted.

County Supervisor Scott Haggerty, another board member, said the lease would have to be changed before he would consider an extension. “It can’t cost the taxpayers a single cent,” he said.

Board member Larry Reid, an Oakland City Council member who has called on fans to boycott the Raiders, said, “No, no and no,” when asked about extending the team’s lease.

“But then I’m only one vote,” Reid said.

And Dobbins, who’s also got one vote, is open to the idea of a lease extension.

And what’s more, he said, “I renewed my season tickets.”