When Tom Brady agreed to become a minority owner of the Las Vegas Raiders, he didn’t come to Nevada to watch another lost season unravel.
Yet that is exactly what happened.
The bold hiring of Pete Carroll was meant to be the franchise’s rebirth. Instead, it collapsed into a 3–14 nightmare that exposed every crack in the Raiders’ foundation — from shaky quarterback decisions to an offense that never found its pulse. Now Carroll is gone, and the gloves are officially off.
Brady and owner Mark Davis are no longer chasing stability. They want transformation.
A Rebuild with Teeth
Las Vegas enters the 2026 offseason holding the most powerful weapon in football: the No. 1 overall draft pick. After years of wandering through quarterback purgatory, the Raiders finally have a chance to secure a true franchise leader — a name already whispered in the building: Fernando Mendoza.
But even the right quarterback can’t save a broken system.
That’s why the Raiders are targeting not just a coach, but a culture-changer.
The Chiefs Connection That Could Sting Kansas City
On January 8, insider Adam Schefter confirmed the Raiders will interview Kansas City Chiefs offensive coordinator Matt Nagy — a move that could send shockwaves across the AFC West.
For Brady, it’s more than a hire. It’s a strike.
Nagy isn’t just another candidate. He’s a former NFL Coach of the Year who once led the Chicago Bears to multiple playoff appearances, and in recent seasons has helped shape Patrick Mahomes’ offensive engine in Kansas City.
Luring him to Las Vegas would mean weakening the Chiefs from the inside — and arming a bitter rival with insider DNA.
The Defensive Wild Card
Nagy isn’t the only name on Brady’s board.
The Raiders are also set to interview Vance Joseph, the Denver Broncos’ defensive coordinator who has rebuilt his reputation under Sean Payton. Joseph would bring toughness, discipline and defensive credibility — but not the quarterback-centric vision Brady seems determined to install.
Brady’s Real Test Begins Now
This coaching decision may become the defining moment of Tom Brady’s ownership era.
The Raiders don’t just need a play-caller. They need a leader capable of molding a rookie quarterback, reshaping a broken locker room and dragging a once-proud franchise back into relevance.
Sin City has waited long enough.
And Brady? He didn’t leave the field to play it safe.
