The Raiders’ offensive line is coming off a mess that still hangs over the building, and now the attention shifts to 2026 and what Klint Kubiak’s staff can do to clean it up. Kolton Miller and Tyler Linderbaum are set as starters, but both guard spots and right tackle remain open questions.
That uncertainty is exactly why Lincoln Kennedy wants to see more from a couple of younger linemen before anyone hands out jobs. On the Locked on Raiders Squad Show podcast, the former Raider made it clear he wants live reps for Caleb Rogers and Charles Grant.
“As far as rookies or second year players… I’m expecting a lot of Caleb Rogers. I’m expecting to find a place for Charles Grant.
I think he can play in this league. I just need to see it and the only way that we get to see it is live reps,” Kennedy said on the Locked on Raiders Squad Show podcast.
Kennedy went further when the conversation turned to preseason usage, arguing there’s no reason to hold those players back if the goal is to figure out what they can really do.
“That’s where we go back to the conversation we had before the break about preseason. Do you play these guys all preseason?
I would. What are you saving them for?
You got to see if they can play. Put them out there in a game situation.
See how they handle things. One of the biggest ones that I’m looking for is Caleb Rogers.
I’m hoping… expecting him to be out there and possibly challenge for a starting spot.”
That kind of optimism comes with a caveat: Rogers and Grant were rookies last year, and after the season the Raiders just had, there’s no clean read yet on what either one will become. Still, both had stretches where they flashed.
The bigger backdrop is how bad things got up front in 2025. During the season, Vinny Bonsignore relayed a blunt assessment from someone around the organization, saying the offensive line coaching was as bad as anything the league has seen.
“I’m going to throw this at you, talking to some people in the Raider organization as they assessed, actually it was during the season, late in the season. I was told that the coaching along the offensive line last year, and this is by somebody that’s been around the NFL for a long time, it was the worst he’s ever seen,” Bonsignore said on Raider Nation Radio’s Morning Tailgate.
Kennedy also weighed in during the season on Pete Carroll’s choice to keep his son in place as the Raiders’ offensive coordinator in 2025. His point was that something had to change, even if he wasn’t interested in calling for people to get fired.
“He’s the coach’s son. I mean, look, I’m not one who wants to mix business with family.
Okay. Trust me… I don’t do that.
But at the same point, at this position, something’s got to happen,” Kennedy said on the Locked on Raiders Squad Show podcast in November.
“I’m not that fire guy. I’ve never been that… because look, I don’t want to get into coaching because I don’t want to live with my bags packed, but also because of reasons like this.
The fact that the players are out there not doing well, sometimes they’re in the wrong position. That does have something to do with coaching.
At the same point, it also has to do with execution.”
At least now, the Raiders can point to a new voice in Rick Dennison, who is regarded as one of the NFL’s most respected offensive coaches and already knows Kubiak’s system. That’s a much better starting point than where the team was a year ago.
And if there’s one player who could stand to gain the most from that reset, it might be second-year running back Ashton Jeanty.
In Other News...
This Overlooked Raiders Pass Rusher Could Crash The 53-Man Roster
With Tyree Wilson and Charles Snowden no longer in the mix, the Raiders have a little more mystery than usual at the back end of their edge-rusher group. One undrafted rookie has quietly made the most of offseason practices, drawing attention as a potential answer for the fifth spot on the depth chart and putting himself on the radar as someone who could stick when roster cuts arrive.
His case is built on more than just pass-rush flashes. The path to a 53-man job may come down to whether he can help on special teams, where extra value often decides the final places on the roster. Brennan Jackson and Jahfari Harvey are still in the fight for that same spot, so this remains a true camp battle, but the rookie has already done enough to make the conversation interesting. [Read more 🡒]
Raiders Just Sent A Strong Message Amid Maxx Crosby Trade Buzz
Trade chatter around Maxx Crosby has grown louder, but the Raiders stance has been pretty clear even as the noise picks up. The Eagles and 49ers have emerged as the teams most often tied to a possible swing at the pass rusher, and insiders Vinny Bonsignore and Hondo Carpenter have both weighed in on what kind of move would even get Las Vegas to listen. For now, the Raiders are not actively shopping Crosby, and Crosby is not pushing for an exit, which only adds to the intrigue around a situation that has plenty of outside interest without a public trigger.
What makes this one worth watching is how carefully the Raiders appear to be handling the market. There is no indication they are eager to move one of the leagues most disruptive edge players, but the buzz around him has reached the point where any serious offer will be scrutinized closely. If another team decides to make a real push, Las Vegas has already shown it will not treat this as a simple salary dump, and that is exactly why the next step in this saga still feels wide open. [Read more 🡒]
Maxx Crosby Just Gave Raiders Fans The Update They Needed
Maxx Crosbys offseason update should ease plenty of nerves around Henderson. The Raiders defensive end said his recovery from the knee issue that bothered him during the 2025 season is moving faster than expected, and he believes he is on track to be cleared when training camp opens in late July. Coming off a year in which he had to manage the injury while still carrying the defense, Crosby said the biggest sign of progress has been how much stronger and more like himself he feels as the rehab has gone on.
For a Raiders team that leans on Crosby as the tone-setter up front, the timing matters almost as much as the news itself. He has been working through strength and conditioning gains and sounds confident he can be ready for a full return to play once camp arrives, which is exactly the kind of update the organization and its fans wanted to hear after a season of uncertainty. The next step is simply getting to that clearing point and seeing how seamless the transition back to football actually is. [Read more 🡒]
