The Raiders have spent the offseason trying to fix what went wrong, and now the real work begins. Las Vegas enters training camp with a roster that looks better than the one that stumbled to a 3-14 record last season, but the bigger test is whether all those new pieces can actually start fitting together on the field.
That starts with Klint Kubiak, who was brought in to reshape the operation from the top down. The Raiders didn’t just patch holes on the roster; they rebuilt the coaching staff with a group of experienced voices, and the hope is that this group can do more than just look better on paper. For a team that has dropped nearly 30 games over the last two seasons combined, even that kind of internal upgrade matters.
Training camp is where that progress has to turn real. The offseason brought movement, but camp is where the Raiders get their best chance to build continuity, install new systems on both sides of the ball and establish the way things are going to be done under Kubiak. Once the pads come on and the tempo rises, Las Vegas will finally get a chance to see whether this new structure holds up under pressure.
Assistant coach Mike McCoy said Kubiak has already set the tone.
"Well, give Coach [Klint Kubiak] all the credit in the world for establishing a standard that's very high. He's very demanding.
He's not going to hold back on anybody in the meetings, team meetings. He's not afraid to point anybody out at practice,” McCoy said.
“It doesn't matter who you are, he's going to coach you hard. There's a standard, and that's the standard he set, and if you want to be great in this league, there's a way to prepare, a way to practice, a way to work, a way to be connected as a team. The things we've done, it's been outstanding, but everything starts with Klint's leadership and the way he treats the players."
That kind of message fits where the Raiders are right now. The roster and the staff have both been addressed, but the rebuild is about more than personnel. Las Vegas has spent much of the past half-decade dealing with a losing culture, and changing that means changing the standard long before the season opener arrives.
Kubiak said his experience in previous year-one situations has shaped how he wants to handle this one.
“Being a part of many year ones, you learn from your mistakes, you learn what works, how to best bring the players along, how not to load them up too much, and kind of give them things in the install piecemeal, and then there's days where you go out there and just stress the heck out of them mentally and see what they can retain,” Kubiak said.
“But I think it kind of goes back to the people that you're around, and I've been lucky in those two spots to be around some other coaches, some familiarity where you don't have to spend that much time with the offensive line, with the quarterbacks with guys like Rick [Dennison] and Andrew [Janocko]."
The Raiders have been quiet in recent weeks, but not idle. Their offseason has already brought meaningful change, and training camp is the next checkpoint in a process that still has a long way to go. There are plenty of unknowns around the 2026 team, and after years of predictability, that may not be a bad thing.
What comes next will help define the rebuild. Las Vegas has taken the first steps, but the way this camp unfolds will tell a lot about whether the Raiders are finally moving toward something sturdier than what came before.
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