Raiders Fans Should Feel Better About Fernando Mendozas Development Path

Can Fernando Mendoza's experience under demanding coaches catapult him to NFL stardom with the Raiders?

Fernando Mendoza didn’t need long in Las Vegas to notice the pattern.

The Raiders’ new quarterback, the No. 1 overall pick in the 2026 NFL Draft, says head coach Klint Kubiak reminds him a lot of the man who pushed him at Indiana, Curt Cignetti. And for Mendoza, that kind of coaching has already paid off once.

At Indiana, Cignetti’s hard-edged approach forced Mendoza to obsess over the little things - mechanics, footwork, preparation, all of it. That grind helped Indiana win a national championship and helped Mendoza claim the 2025 Heisman Trophy.

Mendoza laid out the comparison while appearing on “The Rush with Maxx Crosby” podcast, pointing to the way both coaches zero in on details that most quarterbacks would rather celebrate and move past.

"I think the example of, you know, in practice you'll have a good play," Mendoza said, as transcribed by NFL.com. "For example, you make a big completion, and you're looking forward to seeing it on film, and then both of those guys would be like, 'Come on, really?

You took an extra hitch,' or 'Come on, instead of five yards you were at four and a half.' And you're like, 'What?

I literally took the perfect footwork, perfect read, perfect throw, awesome explosive play.' And you're like, 'Bro, you got to give me a break, what's this guy talking about?'

Then you see, especially with Cignetti, having spent a whole season with him, like when he's riding me on all these things in fall camp, I'm like, 'You've got to be kidding me,' and then the season you see it show up. And it's like OK, that pass was completed by this much because I was at the right depth or because I didn't take the extra hitch."

That’s the kind of coaching Mendoza believes can speed up his jump to the NFL. The league has plenty of quarterbacks with talent. The ones who last are usually the ones who keep getting sharpened, not just praised.

"You see the same similarities with coach Kubiak pushing and really making sure you're doing everything, rather than giving you a pat on the back, finding something to improve, because I have a lot to improve on," Mendoza continued.

For the Raiders, the setup makes sense. They’ve got their top pick, but they’re not forcing the issue. Veteran Kirk Cousins is in place, giving Mendoza room to learn without having to carry the offense from Day 1 while also keeping training camp competitive.

How fast Mendoza catches on to Kubiak’s system will likely decide when he gets the job for real.

For now, the signs are encouraging. Mendoza isn’t fighting the coaching - he’s leaning into it. And after what that same approach did for him at Indiana, the Raiders have to like where this is headed.

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