By: Raider Wil/ Silver and Black Radio Podcast
Date: January 12, 2026
As this season comes to a merciful end, Raiders fans are left with a familiar and exhausting feeling: frustration. Year after year, the franchise convinces us that rock bottom has been reached—only to find a new, deeper low shortly after. This isn’t just about one bad season. It’s about a pattern of reactionary decisions, philosophical whiplash, and a lack of long-term vision. The next coaching hire isn’t just important—it may define the direction of the Raiders for the next decade.
A Pattern of Extremes
We’ve seen this movie before. The Jon Gruden era was built on nostalgia and control, only to end in chaos. That was followed by Josh McDaniels, once labeled the “hottest coach on the market,” who arrived with a rigid system and a track record in Denver that should have raised red flags. Much like his previous stop, roster turnover came fast, cohesion disappeared, and the locker room unraveled.
After that failure, the organization pivoted hard in the opposite direction by promoting Antonio Pierce—a passionate, respected linebackers coach with no head coaching experience. While Pierce brought energy and buy-in from players, he also faced predictable growing pains. Those struggles were compounded by the hiring of Luke Getsy as offensive coordinator. Getsy’s resumé included a statistically strong rushing attack in Chicago, but context mattered: much of that production was driven by Justin Fields improvising under constant pressure. The offense never truly found an identity
The Pete Carroll Gamble
After moving on from Pierce, many believed the Raiders couldn’t possibly sink lower. Enter Pete Carroll—a move that felt, at the time, like a stabilizing force. Carroll brought championship pedigree, a culture of competition, and decades of experience. For many fans, this hire inspired genuine optimism.
Instead, the results told a different story. Rather than steadying the franchise, the Raiders once again regressed. Now the season is over, the Raiders are positioned to pick first overall in the draft, and the organization is staring down yet another rebuild.
Experience vs. Youth: The Coaching Debate
So where do the Raiders turn now? The current coaching conversation highlights a familiar dilemma: proven experience versus emerging innovation.
The Proven Winner
Names like John Harbaugh are often floated when teams with deep pockets and high expectations come calling—if such a coach were to become available. Harbaugh is a Super Bowl winner with a long history of playoff success and locker-room credibility. His teams are physical, disciplined, and resilient—traits the Raiders sorely lack. However, hiring a coach of that caliber would likely come with significant demands, including salary, staffing control, and roster influence. The question is whether ownership is willing—and able—to meet those expectations.
Offensive Innovators
The Raiders could also lean into offense, especially with the opportunity to draft a franchise quarterback at No. 1 overall. Young offensive minds like Klint Kubiak have generated buzz for their adaptability and quarterback-friendly systems. Coaches from this tree often emphasize play-action, rhythm passing, and maximizing skill-position talent—something that could pair well with the Raiders’ emerging weapons.
There has also been speculation league-wide about high-profile offensive coaches potentially becoming available in the future. If that were to happen, a coach with a modern, speed-based system could immediately reshape the Raiders’ offensive identity—but only if paired with patience and roster alignment.
Rising Coordinators
The candidate list doesn’t stop there. Coordinators such as Kliff Kingsbury, Ejiro Evero, Mike LaFleur, Chris Shula, Nathan Scheelhaase, and Jeff Hafley all bring different strengths. Kingsbury offers creativity and quarterback development, though his past head-coaching stint raises questions about adaptability. Evero and Shula would represent defensive-minded hires who could rebuild the Raiders’ toughness and identity on that side of the ball. LaFleur and Scheelhaase come from systems built on timing, motion, and versatility—concepts that could help modernize the offense.
Each option comes with upside—and risk. The key is alignment. Scheme, roster, and organizational patience must finally point in the same direction.
A Monumental Task Ahead
Whoever takes this job will inherit a massive challenge. Yes, the Raiders have the No. 1 overall pick and significant cap space, but this roster is far from complete. There are foundational pieces to build around, but also glaring holes across the depth chart. Talent alone won’t fix this. Execution, vision, and stability will.
And that leads to the most uncomfortable question of all.
The Real Question
Do we trust the people making the decisions?
The biggest uncertainty facing the Raiders isn’t which coach they hire or which quarterback they draft—it’s whether the organization can finally commit to a coherent plan and see it through. Will this next move re-energize a battered fan base and restore belief? Or are we simply lining up for another spin on the carousel?
Your Turn
Raiders fans, we want to hear from you.
Do you want a proven veteran coach, or is it time to roll the dice on a young innovator?
Which candidate fits this roster best—and why?
Drop your thoughts in the comments or join the conversation with us on social media. Raider Nation deserves better

