Moss makes loud entrance at camp

Raiders learning to deal with newly acquired superstar receiver

? Randy Moss’ large, bright-purple SUV took the prime parking spot for Oakland’s first training-camp practice, nearly blocking the field entrance.

Yes, a vehicle in Minnesota Vikings colors mixed among all the silver and black of the Raiders was quite the sight.

The truck features 30-inch wheels with sparkling, spinning rims, tinted windows, no door handles and a front vanity plate reading “Tipp Drill 84” – a reference to the superstar receiver’s ability to tip the ball to himself while defenders fall at his feet. The plate is from Florida, where Moss has a home.

Moss certainly made his presence felt as his new team opened camp at its wine-country training facility Friday.

“I dig the color,” said backup quarterback Marques Tuiasosopo, who wore those colors at the University of Washington.

“I don’t think I could pull that off,” veteran quarterback Kerry Collins said.

After the walkthrough, Moss stayed to work on a pass-catch drill with 12-year-old George Atkinson III, the son of the former Raiders defensive back and an aspiring receiver.

Randy Moss' tricked-out truck

Then Moss made a quick exit, huge headphones covering his ears and his braids peeking out beneath a skull cap. When he checked in Thursday and hopped out of a limo to face a sea of cameras, he said, “Forget it, man.”

Moss joined the Raiders in a trade from Minnesota in March – and, as usual, the spotlight is on him and no one else.

“I talked to a lot of people who’ve coached him, people who have played with him and people who have had the opportunity to watch him play,” coach Norv Turner said. “And, really, the things we’ve seen … are the things people have said to me, a very smart guy, a guy who’s very attentive and wants to learn, a guy who’s going to help the young guys and a guy who steps on the practice field and knows how to go, knows how to work.”

The Raiders don’t care about any of the other stuff – like the SUV. They just want Moss to produce and help turn things around after the team went 9-23 the past two seasons following its 2003 Super Bowl loss to Tampa Bay.

Moss now is wearing No. 18, his old training-camp number from his rookie year, since Jerry Porter already had established himself with No. 84.

Moss has had his share of questionable antics.

He was fined $10,000 for pretending to pull down his pants and moon the Green Bay crowd during Minnesota’s playoff victory last season and also drew criticism for leaving the field with two seconds left in a regular-season loss against Washington.

Other transgressions include bumping a traffic-control officer with his car in 2002, verbally abusing corporate sponsors on a team bus in 2001 and squirting an official with a water bottle in 1999, in addition to his infamous “I play when I want to play” comments.

“Randy Moss is going to be himself, and that’s the bottom line,” Collins said. “Guys will respect that.”