The Las Vegas Raiders have spent the offseason remaking their roster, but one of the biggest reasons this stretch still matters is Maxx Crosby. He’s back in the middle of everything for a team trying to turn a turbulent few months into something steadier heading into 2026.
That’s a sharp turn from how things looked at the end of last season. The Raiders held Crosby out of the final two games to protect him from further injury, a call he reportedly didn’t agree with.
What followed was an offseason saga that included Crosby publicly denying he wanted a trade even as multiple respected national reporters said otherwise. Las Vegas eventually reached an agreement with the Baltimore Ravens to send him there, only for the deal to fall apart when the Ravens backed out and signed Trey Hendrickson instead.
So Crosby stayed put, and now he’s part of what the Raiders believe is their best roster since he arrived.
That’s also why Sports Illustrated’s Justin Melo recently put Crosby at the top of his list of the biggest draft steals of the past 25 years. Melo named the Raiders edge rusher the biggest steal from the 2019 draft, a fitting nod for a player who was taken in the fourth round and has since become one of the league’s most feared pass rushers.
“No 2019 NFL Draft steal quite has the pedigree like fourth-rounder Maxx Crosby. A bunch of our honorable mentions were second-round picks. It feels extra special that Crosby went 106th overall,” Melo said.
“He's since developed into one of the most consistent and feared pass rushers in the NFL. He's a tier-one EDGE player alongside elites like Myles Garrett and T.J. Watt."
Crosby has already been back on the practice field briefly this offseason as he works through the injury that led to the Raiders’ decision late last year. For him, being around the team has been about more than appearances.
“I mean, I'm a leader by nature. The guys need to see me; I want to be out there and be a part of the team.
I just want to be one of the guys. I don't do it because it's me trying to be extra or anything like that, I just love what I do, and I love playing football,” Crosby said.
“I love just being on the field, like that's my whole world. And being able to do the stretches with the guys is something that I think is important, and just being around the dudes, just getting better. I feel like it helps the team in general and just bringing energy as we get the day rolling, but it's been really cool."
He also described the rehab process as the longest he’s been through, while stressing that he still isn’t all the way back yet.
“Every year is a different journey, and we've been through a lot of changes, a lot of adversity since I've been here, but this has been a long road to recovery. It's been probably the longest rehab I've been through, but ultimately it's probably been the best by far, to be completely honest, and we're not even to the finish line,” Crosby said.
“I love being out there with the guys, and I just love being out there on the field. I'm real close, but I'm at that point where it's like I forget.
I'm at the point where I'm like almost there, but I forget that I need to relax a little bit. So that's kind of been the biggest battle right now because I'm almost back to being out there."
Crosby’s path with the Raiders has already been full of strange twists, and the failed trade only added another one. Whether he’s in Las Vegas beyond 2026 or not, his value to the franchise is already set. From fourth-round pick to one of the league’s top defenders, the Raiders have gotten a massive return on both the draft slot and the money they’ve invested in him.
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