Tim Brown Sees A Raiders QB Plan Fans Need To Hear

As the Raiders strategize for their quarterback future, Hall of Famer Tim Brown's insights underscore a calculated and evolving approach to navigating their current roster options.

The Las Vegas Raiders may have gone from quarterback desperation to quarterback overload, and that’s exactly what makes their 2026 situation so fascinating.

Fernando Mendoza looks like the future, even after a slow start. Kirk Cousins has grabbed early control of the starting job.

Aidan O'Connell, meanwhile, has been revived under Klint Kubiak. So while training camp is shaping up to be a real battle, the cleanest answer still seems to be Cousins for now.

That’s the read from franchise legend Tim Brown, and it carries a lot of weight. Brown joined The Jim Rome Show and said he sees a little of himself in Mendoza, but he also believes the Raiders will open with Cousins under center.

"I really believe they're going to start with Kirk and really ease this kid into it, which I think is a great plan," Brown said. "You don't have to play [Mendoza] because you have a guy like Kirk Cousins, who is obviously able to get this thing done. But I think once [Mendoza] gets in there, he's going to be the dynamic for this Raider organization."

That lines up with the way Las Vegas has handled the situation publicly. The team shifted its messaging from wanting a rookie to sit behind an adult and learn to “the best player will play,” but since signing Cousins, the short-term picture has always pointed in his direction.

Brown also laid out the path he thinks gets Mendoza onto the field. In his view, it won’t be a Week 1 decision. It’ll happen when Cousins struggles, and the rookie gets his opening late in a game.

"I just really believe that the way this thing is going to work, there's going to come a game where Kirk is not going to play as well, and they're going to put this kid in, maybe at the end of the game, and he's going to play well, and that's going to be the way this thing turns over," Brown said. "I don't think that it's going to be a day one thing, for sure, unless something happens with Kirk that we don't know about.

But I think they brought Kirk in so they can ease Fernando into this situation ... Who knows what can happen in training camp, right?

But right now, I think he's running third-team. Certainly, he'll be the backup by the time we get to game one, and we'll go from there."

It’s the kind of prediction that feels sturdy because it doesn’t overcomplicate things. Cousins starts.

If he plays poorly, Mendoza gets his shot. From there, the rookie’s story can take over.

That’s why so many people are trying to game out the details - the bye week, the opponent, the prep time Mendoza would have, the state of the rushing attack, the offensive line, all of it. But Brown’s version is simpler: let Cousins begin the year, and when the struggles come, hand the offense to Mendoza.

Maybe that’s exactly how it unfolds. Maybe it isn’t. But Brown’s take is as sensible as any, and for now, the Raiders’ quarterback picture remains one of the most interesting parts of their season ahead.

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