The Las Vegas Raiders haven’t made their pick yet, but the quarterback conversation is already heating up and not entirely in the way the franchise may have expected.
With growing belief that the Raiders will select Fernando Mendoza first overall in the 2026 NFL Draft, the addition of veteran Kirk Cousins was widely viewed as a stabilising move. A proven presence to guide a rookie, steady the offense and, when the time came, step aside.
But recent comments from Cousins, and the reaction from Skip Bayless, might suggest the situation may not be so straightforward. Cousins, speaking earlier this week, insisted he has no interest in playing unless he earns it outright.
“If that’s not me, I don’t want to be out there,” Cousins said. “I don’t think that’s the best thing for the team.”
It sounded like a team-first mentality. Bayless heard something else.
“He’s a shrewd operator,” Bayless said on The Arena: Gridiron. “That was a humble brag. What he’s really telling you is he doesn’t want to be a bridge quarterback.”
For Las Vegas, the blueprint appears clear on paper. Draft Mendoza, allow him to develop behind an experienced starter, then transition when the rookie is ready to lead the franchise. But Cousins‘ stance introduces uncertainty into that timeline.
The veteran quarterback is not arriving as a placeholder. He’s arriving to compete and, in his own view, to win the job outright. Bayless believes that mindset could complicate matters if Cousins performs at a high level early in the season.
“The way the Raiders see it, they need a bridge,” Bayless explained. “Kirk is saying, ‘I’m ready now. I’ll show you I’m better, not just today, but next year too.'”
That confidence isn’t unfounded. Even in a reduced role last season, Cousins posted strong accuracy numbers, reinforcing the idea that he still has starting-calibre play left.
Mentorship and competition collide
Publicly, Cousins has embraced the idea of working alongside Mendoza, even speaking as though the rookie’s arrival is inevitable.
“I do think Fernando is going to be a great addition to our team,” Cousins said. “He’s going to have a great future in the league.”
Behind the scenes, reports suggest he has already begun taking a proactive approach in the locker room, building relationships, offering guidance and positioning himself as a leader for a young roster. But mentorship and competition are rarely cleanly separated in the NFL.
If Cousins plays well, the pressure to keep him on the field will mount. If Mendoza develops quickly, calls for a transition could come sooner than planned. Either way, the dynamic becomes more complex than a typical veteran-rookie pairing.
A defining decision for the Raiders
Head coach Klint Kubiak now faces a delicate balancing act: maximising short-term results while protecting the long-term investment in a potential franchise quarterback. That decision won’t just shape the depth chart, it could define the direction of the organisation.
Quarterback competitions often resolve themselves quickly. This one may not. Cousins‘ experience, confidence and recent performance suggest he won’t relinquish the role easily. Mendoza‘s upside makes him impossible to ignore.
If both players meet expectations, the Raiders could find themselves with a good problem, but a complicated one. And as Bayless has already pointed out, the message from Cousins is clear: he didn’t come to Las Vegas to wait his turn.









