LAS VEGAS — The confetti from Super Bowl LX has been swept away, the parades have marched through the streets, and the NFL’s “second season” is officially open for business. With the Scouting Combine looming in Indianapolis, the draft board just got blown wide open.
While the mock draft industrial complex usually settles on a quarterback at the top, the Las Vegas Raiders are preparing to flip the script. In a move that will dominate sports talk radio from now until April, our latest intel suggests new head coach Klint Kubiak is ready to bypass the consensus QB1 for a defensive chess piece.
Here is the first post-Super Bowl look at how the Top 5 of the 2026 NFL Draft could shake out.
The Maxx Crosby Elephant in the Room
Before we get to the picks, we have to address the noise coming out of Vegas. The smoke surrounding a potential Maxx Crosby trade is turning into a five-alarm fire. The perennial Pro Bowler has been vocal about his desire to win now, and despite publicly cooling the jets on rumors, insiders know the frustration is real.
Kubiak wants to build around Crosby, but the draft capital a trade would return—likely multiple first-rounders—could fast-track the Raiders’ rebuild. If Vegas pulls the trigger on a deal, this entire board changes. For now, they hold the cards at No. 1.
1. Las Vegas Raiders: Arvell Reese, LB, Ohio State
The Shock: The card gets turned in, and it’s not a quarterback. It’s not even an edge rusher. It’s Arvell Reese.
Passing on Indiana’s Fernando Mendoza is a career-defining gamble for Kubiak and GM Tom Telesco. But Reese isn’t just a linebacker; he’s a defensive weapon who draws comparisons to Micah Parsons. After wrecking Big Ten game plans with 6.5 sacks and elite coverage range in 2025, Reese offers the kind of versatility Kubiak’s defensive scheme craves.
The message is clear: The Raiders don’t believe Mendoza is the franchise savior, or they have a veteran bridge plan in place (Kirk Cousins, anyone?). By taking Reese, they secure a cornerstone who sets the tone for the next decade of Raider defense.
2. New York Jets: Fernando Mendoza, QB, Indiana
The Steal: The Jets war room might break the sound barrier rushing this pick to the podium. After watching Sam Darnold hoist the Lombardi Trophy with Seattle, New York finally catches a break.
Fernando Mendoza falling to No. 2 is the best-case scenario for Gang Green. The Hoosier legend is fresh off a Heisman campaign where he threw for 3,500+ yards and willed Indiana to a national title over Miami. He’s a winner, plain and simple. While the Raiders overthought the position, the Jets land a polished, championship-ready passer to jumpstart their offense.
3. Arizona Cardinals: Francis Mauigoa, OT, Miami (FL)
The Trench King: New head coach Mike LaFleur has a Kyler Murray decision to make, but he can’t fix the offense if the quarterback is running for his life. The Cardinals’ line ranked 27th in pressure rate last season; that ends now.
At 6-foot-6, 315 pounds, Francis Mauigoa is a granite wall. The Miami tackle brings a rare blend of Polynesian power and nimble athleticism that anchors an offensive line instantly. Whether it’s Murray or a rookie under center in 2026, they’ll sleep better knowing Mauigoa is guarding the blindside.
4. Tennessee Titans: Rueben Bain Jr., ED, Miami (FL)
The Pass Rush: The Titans sprint to the podium for Rueben Bain Jr., making it back-to-back Hurricanes in the Top 5. Critics will point to his arm length, but turn on the tape and watch the quarterback hits pile up.
Bain Jr. is a disruptor. Pairing him with Jeffery Simmons on the interior gives Tennessee a defensive front that will terrify the AFC South. Robert Saleh knows defense, and in Bain, he gets a relentless motor that doesn’t stop until the whistle blows.
5. New York Giants: Caleb Downs, S, Ohio State
The Eraser: With Mauigoa off the board, the Giants pivot to the “Best Player Available” strategy. Caleb Downs is the safest pick in the draft. After a 2025 season where Jevon Holland and Tyler Nubin struggled to keep a lid on opposing offenses, New York desperately needs a playmaker in the secondary.
Downs is an elite safety who diagnoses plays before the snap. He hits like a linebacker and covers like a corner. For a John Harbaugh-led team, a stout defense starts up front but finishes on the back end. Downs is the finishing piece.
“We aren’t looking for guys who just put up stats. We’re looking for guys who tilt the field. You turn on the tape of Reese or Bain, and you see the field tilt.”
— Anonymous AFC Scout
What This Means for April
If the Raiders truly pass on a quarterback at No. 1, the trade market for the No. 2 pick will explode. Teams like the Giants or Titans might try to jump the Jets if they fall in love with Mendoza. But if the board falls this way, we are looking at a defensive-heavy top five that bucks the offensive trends of the last few years.

