The 2026 NFL Draft in Green Bay is only days away, but the real earthquakes happened months ago in team meeting rooms. While the scouting world obsesses over 40-times and hand sizes, the smart money is tracking the clipboard. Seven franchises overhauled their coaching staffs this winter, and those philosophical shifts have sent the consensus draft big board into a blender.
You can feel the electricity in the air around the league. Scouts are frantic. One veteran evaluator told me over coffee this week that he’s had to scrap two years of notes because “the new guys want totally different body types.” It isn’t just about talent anymore; it’s about the fit in these new, specific systems.
The most dramatic shift sits at the very top of the order. The Las Vegas Raiders, fresh off hiring Klint Kubiak, are no longer looking for the traditional vertical-threat offense that defined the late Pete Carroll era. Kubiak is bringing the Seattle wide-zone scheme to the desert, and that makes Indiana quarterback Fernando Mendoza the undisputed favorite for the No. 1 overall pick. Mendoza’s ability to process on the move and his elite accuracy at the intermediate level align perfectly with Kubiak’s vision.
| Team | New Head Coach | Key Scheme Change | Draft Priority |
|---|---|---|---|
| Las Vegas Raiders | Klint Kubiak | Wide-Zone / Outside Run | QB (Mendoza), Mobile OL |
| Tennessee Titans | Robert Saleh | 4-3 Base / Aggressive Front | Edge Rusher, LB (Reese) |
| New York Giants | John Harbaugh | Power Run / 12 Personnel | OT (Mauigoa), Interior DL |
| Miami Dolphins | Jeff Hafley | Aggressive Press-Man | CB, Physical Safety |
In New York, John Harbaugh isn’t just changing the playbook; he’s changing the DNA of the Giants. The trade of Dexter Lawrence to the Bengals for the No. 10 pick was a clear signal. Harbaugh wants a more balanced, physical roster that can withstand the grind of December football. The signings of Isaiah Likely and Patrick Ricard suggest a move toward heavy personnel packages rarely seen in the modern NFL.
Because of this, don’t expect the Giants to chase a flashy wideout at No. 5. Instead, watch for Miami tackle Francis Mauigoa. Harbaugh needs road-graders to make his power-run game work. The stadium will likely echo with “boos” if they pass on a receiver, but the coaching logic is sound: you can’t run the Ravens’ old “bully ball” without the right hammers upfront.
The Tennessee Titans are undergoing a total defensive renovation. Robert Saleh and Gus Bradley are ditching the light-box, dime-heavy philosophy of the previous regime. They want speed and violence in a 4-3 base. This puts Ohio State linebacker Arvell Reese directly in their crosshairs at No. 4. Reese has the range to play side-to-side and the pass-rushing chops to stay on the field in nickel situations.
“Saleh doesn’t just want athletes; he wants hunters who can fly to the ball,” says a source close to the Titans’ front office. “The board has been narrowed to guys who can win with a first step.”
The ripple effects are everywhere. In Miami, Jeff Hafley is hunting for corners who can play physical press-man coverage, potentially making LSU’s Mansoor Delane a surprise riser. These aren’t just “under-the-radar” hires; they are the architects of the 2026 season. When the clock starts on Thursday night, remember that the picks aren’t just names—they are the missing pieces for these new coaching puzzles.