Aidan O’Connell has done enough over his first two seasons to earn real respect in Las Vegas, but that hasn’t protected him from the numbers game the Raiders have built this offseason. With Kirk Cousins in place on what amounts to a one-year, $11.3 million fully guaranteed deal and No. 1 overall pick Fernando Mendoza being eased in, O’Connell suddenly looks like the odd man out in a quarterback room that has been completely reshaped.
The setup in Las Vegas points in a pretty clear direction. According to The Athletic’s Sam Warren, Cousins handled all of the first-team reps during the spring and looks like the favorite to start in Week 1.
Warren also reported that Mendoza spent most of his work with the second- and third-team offenses as the Raiders take a gradual approach to his transition to the NFL. That leaves O’Connell in a strange spot: not the starter, not the future, and not obviously part of the long-term plan.
That reality clashes with O’Connell’s own goals. During mandatory minicamp, he made it plain that he wants to be a starter in this league.
"Really, my goal is to find my way in the league and hopefully be a long-time starter. That's what I'm working for.
It's what I'm trying to do. Who knows what'll happen?
Who knows where it'll be? But that's the goal."
The problem for O’Connell is that the Raiders’ quarterback blueprint doesn’t seem to have much room for him. Warren described Mendoza as the eventual replacement for Cousins and the franchise quarterback the team wants to build around, with the hope of a smooth handoff whenever that time comes. In that scenario, O’Connell doesn’t get a turn in between.
" Mendoza will eventually replace Cousins and be given the reins as the franchise quarterback. The timing of his promotion is unclear, but the team hopes for a seamless transition between the veteran and the rookie when it does come, with no reps for O’Connell in between. O’Connell has stated that his goal is to 'hopefully be a long-time starter,' but if all goes accordingly for the Raiders, he’ll never start a game for the franchise again."
That’s why a trade makes sense on paper. O’Connell is heading toward free agency next offseason, and if he’s going to pick his next stop, it’s fair to assume he’ll want a place where he can at least compete for a starting job.
If Las Vegas believes his future is elsewhere, it can try to get ahead of that and move him for the best offer available. The Raiders also have time to wait, with the trade deadline set for November 10.
Still, there’s a strong argument for keeping him around, and it starts with the state of the roster around the quarterbacks. The Raiders do not want to rush Mendoza before he’s ready, and they also don’t want to drop him into a situation that isn’t built to support him. The offensive line remains unsettled, with both guard spots open heading into camp, and right tackle DJ Glaze is coming off a rough season in which he allowed 10 sacks, per Pro Football Focus.
The receiving corps doesn’t offer a clean answer either. Las Vegas does not have a clear No. 1 wideout, and the line is still a work in progress. That’s not exactly the kind of environment you want for a rookie quarterback trying to settle in.
There’s also the Cousins factor. He turns 38 in August, and while he is the likely Week 1 starter, the Raiders need a veteran insurance policy behind him.
Cousins opened the 2024 season as Atlanta’s starter, played 14 games, and was eventually benched for Michael Penix Jr. He later said shoulder and elbow injuries affected his play that year.
O’Connell would give Las Vegas a fallback option behind a 15th-year veteran who hasn’t played a full season since 2022.
In the end, the Raiders’ decision on O’Connell will come down to how quickly Mendoza develops and how much progress the offensive line makes this summer. If the rookie looks ready and the trenches hold up, O’Connell becomes more movable.
If Mendoza still needs time or the line remains shaky, keeping O’Connell as quarterback insurance may be the smarter play. The coaching staff’s public tone will be worth watching too, because it could also be part of a push to boost his trade value.
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One idea floating around would be to chase a low-cost fix in Cincinnati, where Kris Jenkins Jr. has been mentioned as a possible trade target. The appeal is easy to understand for a Raiders team trying to patch a real hole without spending heavily, but the fit is not seamless. Jenkins has only limited work at nose tackle and would still need to prove he can handle the kind of interior role Las Vegas needs most. [Read more 🡒]
