
For all the talk of patience from the Raiders, Klint Kubiak’s OTA comments made one thing clear: Kirk Cousins is still setting the standard.
Rookie Fernando Mendoza isn’t being asked to change that – he’s being asked to rise up to it. Kubiak called Cousins “a leader that we’re counting on right now,” and in late May, those words carry weight.
This doesn’t mean the rookie is out of the running. Instead, it shows how Las Vegas wants things set up while the competition plays out. The Raiders are focused on command, timing and efficiency above all else. Mendoza needs to show he can handle those basics before any bigger discussions can begin.
Kubiak said the quarterback decision will reveal itself through OTAs, minicamp, and training camp, but he also made it clear what he’s seeing from the veteran. Cousins is comfortable getting the offence off script, organising move-the-ball periods and showing the kind of competitive edge Kubiak wants the rest of the group to match.

Cousins is setting the benchmark Kubiak wants to see
That gives the staff a stable operating environment while the rest of the room develops. It also means Mendoza is not being compared to a placeholder. He is being compared to a veteran who already understands how to run this style of offence.
That matters even more in this system. Kubiak’s offence depends on timing, under-centre footwork, play-action rhythm and getting the ball out on schedule. Cousins already knows how to operate inside those details because of his previous experience with Kubiak concepts. Mendoza is still learning the mechanics that make it all work.
What stood out from Kubiak’s comments on Mendoza was the tone, not just the words. He sounded like a coach who trusts the process. Even in early May, he was telling reporters that Mendoza “attacks” new installs and makes visible improvements from one day to the next.
That approach suits what the Raiders need right now because Kubiak is not talking about reps just as a rookie getting acclimated to an NFL room. The position Mendoza is growing into comes with operational details that will take time and muscle memory.
Las Vegas is not going to shortcut that timeline no matter how excited they are about his skill set. They need him to work through those mechanics until they become automatic, so his decision-making speed catches up naturally over time.
Early on, the Raiders value structure over potential
That is the part people miss with spring quarterback battles. The first question is rarely who can create the biggest throw. It is who can let the offence function the way the coach drew it up. Cousins already knows how to do that. Mendoza is still proving he can do it consistently enough to force the timeline forward.
The way this roster was built also rewards that approach. Brock Bowers, Ashton Jeanty and Tre Tucker all put pressure on a quarterback to deliver quickly and accurately, so timing and rhythm matter more than arm strength or athletic ability right now.
Mendoza isn’t just fighting for snaps. He’s trying to show he can handle an offence that expects its quarterback to set the pace from behind centre before ever throwing a pass.
Kubiak doesn’t need to create any extra drama at this stage. The structure is already in place: Cousins offers a steady presence, while Mendoza has a clear target to aim for. If Mendoza starts closing that gap, it will become evident in how he performs.
What stands out is that the Raiders aren’t bending their system to speed up Mendoza’s development. They’re asking him to adapt to the demands of the offence, which often leads to a more prepared quarterback room come September.
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