Bryan Cole Made An Honest Raiders Admission Fans Need To Hear

Discover why punter A.J. Cole, despite battling imposter syndrome, remains a cornerstone for the Raiders' special teams amid an offseason of significant roster upgrades.

The Raiders spent the offseason trying to patch just about every hole on the roster, but one spot never needed attention: punter. AJ Cole is already there, and he remains one of the league’s most reliable weapons.

That matters more than it sounds. Las Vegas came out of the 2025 season needing help everywhere, then attacked the problem with major free-agent spending and 10 draft picks.

The front office added at least one player to nearly every position group, and the coaching staff got a makeover too. Even with all that turnover, the Raiders are still going to count on a core group of returners when the season starts.

Cole sits right near the top of that list.

Since arriving in the league in 2019 as an undrafted player, he has built a résumé that puts him among the NFL’s elite punters. He has the second-most punts of 60 yards or more since 2019 with 70, trailing first place by just six. He also owns the league’s best average in that span at nearly 49 yards per punt.

Those numbers only tell part of the story. Cole has been a field-flipping tool for a Raiders team that has leaned on its punter plenty over the last few seasons. He enters his eighth season tied for the second-most games with multiple punts downed inside the opponent’s 20-yard line since 2019, and he is tied for the second-most punts downed inside the opponent’s 10-yard line since 2019.

His place in Raiders history is secure, too. Cole currently has the longest and fifth-longest punts in franchise history, and he is tied for the fifth-longest punt in the NFL since 2000.

The Raiders will ask him to work under a new special teams boss this year. Joe DeCamillis was hired after a rough 2025 season on that unit, one that included a midseason firing of the special teams coordinator. Cole has already enjoyed the change.

“I'm in my eighth season, and although I've had all these different head coaches, it's only my third special teams coordinator full-time. So yeah, it's been a blast to work with [Special Teams coordinator Joe DeCamillis].

I've really enjoyed it. I've really appreciated his insight into the things that he thinks I do well, the things he wants me to improve on, and the things that I think we can do together,” Cole said.

“He has such a unique approach. He's very creative.

Like you said, he's very energetic, and I think that for special teams at this level, I think that's very, very critical, because the reality is most people don't grow up wanting to play left tackle on punt team. They want to be the starting linebacker.

Most people don't grow up saying, 'Oh, I want to be the wing.'"

Even with all the production, Cole still talks like a player trying to prove he belongs. He described his mindset in blunt terms.

“Would say the biggest thing is I just have a violent case of imposter syndrome. I just don't think I stack up.

I kick with other guys in the offseason constantly, and I'm always only remembering their good punts and then deleting their bad punts. And then, when I look back at my own session, I only remember my bad punts, and I forget all the good ones,” Cole said.

“So, if I have one bad punt in a day, in a game, that's the only one I remember. And so, I think part of it is I just think that I have a little bit of that that I have to kind of work around, and that's something that can potentially affect your confidence if you don't know how to properly manage it."

“And the other thing is, I don't think there's anything special about me. I think the reason that I've produced on the field the way I've produced is because of the work I've put in. It's because of the processes I have in place, and it's not like I have something different in my genetics that makes me predisposed to be better at punting, because I remember what it looked like when I started.”

For a Raiders team trying to rebuild on the fly, that kind of consistency is valuable. No one wants to see the punter jogging onto the field, because it usually means the offense stalled. But punts happen, and when they do, Las Vegas knows it has a player who can change the field - and maybe even the game.

The Broncos game last season showed exactly that. The Raiders held Denver, which had been averaging nearly 30 points per game entering the Thursday night matchup, to just 10 points. Cole’s punting played a major role in keeping Las Vegas in a game it was otherwise overmatched in.

The Raiders may have added plenty this offseason, but they already had one of their best answers in place. Cole is one of the best players on the roster, and one of the best punters in the league.

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