The Raiders are heading into training camp with a clean slate under Klint Kubiak, and that matters most for the holdovers trying to reset their standing. At the top of that list is guard Jackson Powers-Johnson, who enters camp as the favorite to start at right guard and has a real chance to settle the question quickly.
That’s the hopeful version. The other version is much messier.
Moe Moton of Bleacher Report recently floated one trade each NFL team should consider before the 2026 season, and for the defending Super Bowl champion Seattle Seahawks, he suggested a deal for Powers-Johnson in exchange for a mid-round pick in 2027. Moton wrote, "If Powers-Johnson doesn't earn a starting job at guard, head coach Klint Kubiak may be willing to give his former team a parting gift. Powers-Johnson could play his natural position at center in Seattle, which won't happen in Las Vegas with three-time Pro Bowler Tyler Linderbaum in that spot."
The “parting gift” line reads like a joke, and it is. Kubiak’s job is in Las Vegas now, and the Raiders are not in the business of helping Seattle. But the scenario itself says plenty: if Powers-Johnson can’t lock down the right guard spot, something has gone badly wrong.
That could mean injury. It could mean he simply underwhelms in camp.
Either way, the Raiders would be staring at a problem, and any trade value would take a hit if he’s not showing he can play or stay healthy. There might still be teams around the league willing to talk themselves into a reclamation project, but that’s far from guaranteed.
Powers-Johnson’s path to this point has already been unusual. He was viewed as a possible first-round pick before sliding to the Raiders in the second round of the 2024 NFL Draft.
After a strong rookie season, it looked like Las Vegas had landed a steal. Since then, though, uncertainty has followed him.
He’s now working under his third coaching staff in as many seasons, and while Raider Nation isn’t going to blame last year’s mess on him, he still has to prove that was the outlier. At some point, the coaches stop being the whole story.
If the Raiders ever got to the point of trading him before he reaches the third year of his rookie contract, that would be a disappointment for everyone involved. A mid-round pick might be enough to give both sides a fresh start, but it would also mean camp went off the rails in a way Las Vegas would rather never see.
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