Klint Kubiak arrives in Las Vegas with a big job and an even bigger chess piece in Brock Bowers.
The Raiders brought in Kubiak to lift an offense that has sputtered for years, and his résumé suggests he can do it. As an offensive coordinator, his units have been highly productive, capped by a Super Bowl win with the Seattle Seahawks last season. Now the assignment shifts from broad offensive revival to something more specific: getting the most out of one of the league’s most dangerous tight ends.
Bowers is the centerpiece of that plan. Even while dealing with injuries last year, he still managed a career-high in touchdowns.
The two-time Pro Bowler is healthy again and positioned to chase the title of best tight end in football. Kubiak already made clear he understands the talent he has, calling Bowers a "football robot from heaven."
The challenge is that Kubiak’s past doesn’t offer a clear blueprint for this kind of player. Across three separate stints as an offensive coordinator, he has never had a tight end top 600 receiving yards. That makes Bowers something new for him - a rare weapon who may force the play-caller to stretch beyond his usual habits.
What makes Bowers so difficult to scheme against is how many places he can line up. In his first two NFL seasons, he has spent 52% of his snaps in the slot, 18% out wide and 29% inline, according to PFF. That kind of versatility gives defenses problems before the ball is even snapped, because he can create a mismatch from just about anywhere.
Under Kubiak, there’s a real chance Bowers spends even more time inline. Seahawks tight end AJ Barner was inline for 80% of his snaps last season and still found the end zone seven times. Bowers brings a much higher ceiling than Barner, which only raises the possibilities if Kubiak leans that way.
Still, Kubiak has shown he can build around what his players do best, and that could keep Bowers moving around the formation. He may continue to work from the slot and out wide, where he is especially tough to handle. From there, the Raiders can hunt favorable matchups against safeties and linebackers, and Bowers becomes even harder to contain.
There’s also a natural fit between Bowers and the structure of this offense. With play-action passing expected to be a major part of the attack, the West Coast concepts in Kubiak’s system should give the tight end plenty of chances to thrive. Bowers should be in line for a major boost if that part of the offense takes hold.
Kubiak has the background to put his best players in the right spots, and Bowers is clearly one of them. If the pairing works the way the Raiders hope, 2026 could bring plenty of fireworks in Las Vegas when the former Georgia star takes the field.
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