HENDERSON, Nev. — The Las Vegas Raiders are not wasting time. Fresh off a Super Bowl LX victory as Seattle’s play-caller, new head coach Klint Kubiak is assembling his staff with aggressive intent. On Tuesday, the team officially tapped former Pittsburgh Steelers assistant Zach Azzanni as their new wide receivers coach. Azzanni steps into a ground-zero rebuild for a 3-14 franchise sitting on the No. 1 overall pick. The mission is clear: groom a reliable receiving corps for a highly anticipated rookie quarterback.
Building the Kubiak Foundation
The crisp desert air around the Henderson facility carries a different energy this February. The sting of a disastrous 2025 campaign is fading, replaced by the urgency of the upcoming NFL Draft Combine. Kubiak has his core brain trust locked in. He promoted Rob Leonard from within to run the defense, lured his trusted confidant Andrew Janocko away from Seattle to serve as offensive coordinator, and brought in 34-year veteran Joe DeCamillis to salvage the special teams. Azzanni is the final, critical puzzle piece for the passing attack.
As someone who has spent over a decade analyzing receiver footwork from the collegiate hashes to the pro turf, I can tell you Azzanni’s drill work is intense. He doesn’t just want crisp routes; he demands perfect hand placement and block-shedding at the line of scrimmage. He views himself as part coach, part psychologist. He figures out what makes a player tick and presses those buttons relentlessly.
Accountability in the Receiver Room
Azzanni carries a reputation as a demanding technician. He enters his 10th NFL season following a two-year stint with the Steelers. Pittsburgh’s passing attack looked disjointed at times last season, but insiders point to roster depletion rather than coaching failures. By Week 17 of the 2025 season, Azzanni was forced to trot out an emergency trio of Scotty Miller, Adam Thielen, and Marquez Valdes-Scantling due to a brutal wave of injuries and suspensions.
Despite the personnel nightmares, Azzanni enforces accountability. George Pickens flashed some of his highest in-game effort levels in 2024 under Azzanni’s watch. That exact psychological grip is what Las Vegas desperately needs.
“For all the flaws that George Pickens had in Pittsburgh, his in-game effort was much higher in 2024 when Azzanni took over as the WR coach. The Raiders will be looking to build their WR room from the ground up, so hiring a veteran coach who will get the most out of his players every day is a solid move.”
— Rob Gregson, A to Z Pittsburgh
Playoff Implications / What’s Next
The Raiders hold the golden ticket: the No. 1 overall pick in the 2026 NFL Draft. All signs point to a generational quarterback selection—widely presumed to be standout prospect Fernando Mendoza. But a rookie quarterback is only as good as his receiving options.
Right now, the Las Vegas perimeter needs a total overhaul. The offense lacked explosive separation last season. Azzanni’s immediate job in the coming weeks is evaluating combine prospects who can stretch the field. He will rip apart the college tape, looking for the exact blend of speed and catch-point aggression that Kubiak’s scheme demands.
If Azzanni can install his trademark discipline and get the young targets up to speed, Las Vegas could accelerate their rebuild drastically. The clock is ticking, and the Combine is just days away.

