LAS VEGAS — The Pete Carroll experiment is officially over, and the wreckage is ugly: a 2-15 record, a Geno Smith trade that imploded, and a locker room searching for answers. But with rock bottom comes a golden ticket the No. 1 overall pick in the 2026 NFL Draft. Newly hired head coach Klint Kubiak isn’t wasting time feeling sorry for the franchise; he’s reportedly already hunting for a weapon to pair with his presumptive franchise quarterback.
The Mendoza Line: A New Hope
Let’s be real the draft card might as well be filled out already. Indiana quarterback Fernando Mendoza, fresh off a Heisman Trophy campaign and a miraculous run to the National Championship, is the consensus top pick. After transferring from Cal, Mendoza threw for over 3,500 yards and 41 touchdowns for the Hoosiers, proving he can elevate a roster.
But a rookie quarterback even a Heisman winner needs a safety blanket. The Raiders’ receiving corps was abysmal in 2025, dropping passes at a league-high rate. That’s where the disgruntled superstar in Philadelphia enters the chat.
The Rumor Mill: A.J. Brown to Sin City?
Tyler Sullivan of CBS Sports ignited the firestorm this week, pinpointing Las Vegas as the prime landing spot for Eagles wide receiver A.J. Brown. The proposal? A third and a fifth-round pick. It sounds cheap for a player of Brown’s caliber, but the context matters.
Brown is 28, expensive, and coming off a down year where he looked human for the first time in ages. The drops in the Eagles’ playoff loss to San Francisco were glaring. Yet, for a Raiders team desperate to accelerate Mendoza’s development, Brown offers exactly what a rookie needs: a physical bully who wins 50/50 balls and commands double teams.
Financially, it’s a gamble. Brown is due $29 million in guarantees next season and is signed through 2029. But Vegas has the cap space, and Kubiak—fresh off orchestrating a Super Bowl offense in Seattle—knows that veteran receivers are the best friends of young quarterbacks.
“We aren’t here to look at the past two wins. We are here to build a customized offense for the guy we bring in. If that means being aggressive in the trade market to get him help, then we’re going to be aggressive. No options are off the table.” — Klint Kubiak, Raiders Head Coach (Introductory Press Conference)
Playoff Implications / What’s Next
If General Manager Tom Telesco pulls the trigger on this trade, the expectations for 2026 shift from “rebuild” to “compete immediately.” Pairing Mendoza with A.J. Brown (and likely Davante Adams, if he stays) would give the Raiders one of the most dangerous WR duos in the AFC West.
The Chiefs and Chargers aren’t going anywhere, but a Mendoza-Brown connection gives Las Vegas a puncher’s chance. The clock is ticking toward April’s draft, and if Brown is truly on the block, the Raiders need to move before a contender like the Bills or Ravens swoops in.

