HENDERSON, Nev. — The Las Vegas Raiders signed four-time Pro Bowler Kirk Cousins to a one-year, $20 million guaranteed deal in early April free agency. The move gives the team a battle-tested starter while they hold the No. 1 overall pick and prepare to draft Heisman Trophy winner Fernando Mendoza from national champion Indiana.
Why This Veteran Addition Fits the Raiders Blueprint
Cousins didn’t just show up with a suitcase. He walked into the facility and got to work right away. The 37-year-old enters his 15th NFL season after two up-and-down years in Atlanta, where the Falcons drafted Michael Penix Jr. in the first round just weeks after handing Cousins a big contract. He felt a little misled back then. Now he gets a fresh start in Las Vegas.
The Raiders own the top pick in the 2026 NFL Draft. Every scout and insider expects them to take Mendoza, the 6-foot-5 signal-caller who just led Indiana to the national title. Cousins knows the score. He will fight for every snap, but he also understands his bigger role: show the rookie exactly what it takes to survive in this league.
Cousins brings 4-time Pro Bowl experience and a track record of steady play. He reunites with head coach Klint Kubiak, who called plays for him during some of his best seasons in Minnesota. That familiarity matters. Throw in a young tight end like Brock Bowers and a defense that finally looks improved, and the pieces start to click.
You could feel the energy shift the moment Cousins stepped on the field. The chilly morning wind cut across the practice complex, yet players locked in harder. No one needed to say it out loud. This veteran just raised the standard.
“He’s put a lot of time in to get better at his craft and he’s at the facility, he’s learning this new offense. He’s a guy that’s going to be totally committed.” — Rich Gannon, former Raiders quarterback and NFL MVP
What It Means for the Raiders’ Future
This isn’t a splashy headline grab. It’s calculated. Gannon nailed it when he called the signing a clear blueprint for success. Cousins can win games if Mendoza needs more time. More importantly, he can teach the young quarterback how to study film, handle the media storm in a big market, and stay locked in when the lights get bright.
The Raiders missed the playoffs last season and earned that No. 1 pick the hard way. Now they pair one of the most prepared veterans in the game with a rookie who just won it all in college. If Mendoza isn’t quite ready by Week 1, Cousins steps in and keeps the offense afloat. If the kid flashes early, Cousins slides into a mentor role that could shape the franchise for the next decade.
Either way, Las Vegas wins. The stands will fill with Silver and Black this fall, and fans already sense something different. A veteran who refuses to mail it in. A future star waiting in the wings. And a coaching staff that finally looks like it has a real plan at quarterback.

