Maxx Crosby has spent plenty of time collecting reasons to be annoyed, and ESPN just handed him another one.
The Raiders edge rusher is already heading into the 2026 NFL season with a chip on his shoulder after the Raiders actually trading him, the Baltimore Ravens backing out of the deal after Crosby publicly said goodbye to this fanbase, and the lingering assumption that his knee isn't what it used to be. He is set to be ready for training camp, and he’s excited about the chance to play for Klint Kubiak and Rob Leonard and to wear the Silver and Black again. But make no mistake: this is a revenge year for Crosby.
ESPN’s Jeremy Fowler recently polled NFL executives, scouts and coaches anonymously to rank the league’s best defensive ends, and Crosby landed at No. 4.
He finished behind Myles Garrett, Micah Parsons and Will Anderson Jr. It’s the same spot Crosby held last year, but there are still a few details in that ranking that should bother him.
Anderson Jr. jumped him, Crosby didn’t move up, and one personnel member had him all the way down at No. 8.
Crosby didn’t wait long to react. Just hours after the list came out and Raider Nation started picking it apart on social media, he posted on July 8, 2026.
- Maxx Crosby (@CrosbyMaxx) July 8, 2026
That kind of response fits Crosby. He’s not chasing empty praise.
He wants to be viewed as the best of the best, the kind of player who ends up with a gold jacket and stands in a class by himself. He wants to help the Raiders win, sure, but he also has a personal standard that goes well beyond being merely excellent.
Given the season he just came off, plus the way Garrett reset the market and the rise of Parsons and Anderson Jr., it would have been hard for Crosby to climb to No. 1 in this poll. He’s 30, he dealt with an injury-shortened season, and the knee concerns are still hanging around.
Still, Crosby isn’t thinking small. He believes being the league’s top edge player is not only possible, but the expectation.
The poll also came with some strong praise from NFL personnel. One NFC executive called him, "He's a bad motherf---er," adding, "Versus the run, the pass, whatever. He's a pain in the ass all game."
An AFC executive was just as glowing: "You're getting a complete body of work with Maxx; he does everything well," the executive said. "Pass rush, splash plays, great against the run, high motor, tackles in the backfield."
Compliments are nice, but Crosby has never been driven by them. Results matter more.
Perception matters more. And after an offseason that’s already thrown plenty at him, ESPN just gave him one more thing to put on the wall.
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