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The Raiders' draft has generated buzz, especially with the acquisition of franchise quarterback Fernando Mendoza. Day 2 revealed mixed results from GM John Spytek's decisions.
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Two Days In, The Raidersā Draft Is a Mixed Bag Worth Watching
Everyone was talking about Fernando Mendoza Thursday night, and rightfully so. The Raiders finally have their franchise quarterback, and that story is going to dominate the conversation for years. But Day 2 is where front offices reveal who they actually are ā and in Las Vegas, GM John Spytek gave us some things to like and at least one decision to push back on.
Also Read:: Fernando Mendoza Is Exactly What the Raiders Have Been Missing
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Letās start with the one that stuck in my craw.
When the Raiders and Texans made their trade ā Las Vegas sent picks 36 and 117 to Houston in exchange for picks 38 and 91 ā I get the logic on paper. You drop two spots, pick up a third-rounder, and youāre still getting your guy. But hereās the problem: the guy Houston wanted was , and . McDonald absolutely could have gone in the first round ā a rare playmaker at nose tackle weighing in at 330 pounds with elite production. Thatās not hyperbole. Thatās a generational interior defender, and the Raiders let him slide two spots down the board so they could pocket an extra pick.
Fernando Mendoza is the Raiders' new franchise quarterback, and his addition is expected to significantly impact the team's future.
GM John Spytek made several notable picks on Day 2, showcasing both promising choices and at least one controversial decision.
The Raiders' draft performance is considered a mixed bag, with some analysts praising their picks while others question certain decisions.
The decisions made on Day 2 could influence the team's competitiveness in the upcoming season and shape their roster for years to come.
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I understand the draft-capital argument. I do. But thereās a version of this where you stay at 36, take McDonald, and your defensive line looks completely different heading into 2026. You donāt always get those players. Spytek called it a great move, saying they were confident Stukes would still be there and needed to survive only two picks to get their guy. Fine. But āour guyā at 36 could have been a Pro Bowl-caliber nose tackle. Instead, McDonald is in Houston.
Now, to be fair, what the Raiders did with those picks isnāt without merit.
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Treydan Stukes at 38 addresses a real need. The Raidersā secondary entered the draft thin at safety and nickelback, and Stukes can do both. He played free safety for three years at Arizona before transitioning to primarily covering the slot, and he recorded four interceptions last season. The concern is age ā heās an older prospect and might be capped in terms of ceiling ā and thatās a legitimate knock. But the Raiders werenāt picking in a vacuum. They needed athletes back there, and Stukes fits a real hole.
At 67, they added edge rusher Keyron Crawford out of Auburn, who is a former basketball player with good athleticism that could use development, but can contribute as a pass-rusher right away. With Maxx Crosby still anchoring that line, Crawford doesnāt have to be an immediate impact guy. He just has to develop, and thereās a reasonable path there.
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Then came the pick I actually liked the most on Day 2. With the 91st pick ā that third-rounder they got from Houston ā the Raiders took Texas A&M guard Trey Zuhn III, who adds versatility to the offensive line, having played multiple positions in the trenches in college. If Fernando Mendoza is the future, protecting him is the present. Zuhn fits that priority. After spending two 3rd-rounders on offensive linemen last year in Caleb Rogers and Charles Grant, the Raiders are loading up on young talent up front, which is exactly the right approach when youāve just handed your offense to a 22-year-old quarterback making his first NFL start.
So where does that leave us after two days? The Raiders have their cornerstone in Mendoza. Theyāve added secondary help, depth on the edge, and another piece for the offensive line. Thatās a functional draft by most measures. The Stukes pick is a reasonable one even if it doesnāt excite you. Crawford is a project with upside. Zuhn was genuinely good value.
But I keep coming back to Kayden McDonald. Getting a 330-pound nose tackle with that kind of production for this price doesnāt come around often, and the Raiders had first crack at him. They chose the trade instead. Maybe Spytekās board told him Stukes and an extra pick was the better play. Maybe it was. We wonāt know for three years.
What we do know is that after a decade of wandering in the desert, the Raiders have a plan, a quarterback, and a draft class that, at minimum, doesnāt blow it up before it starts. That counts for more than it used to in Las Vegas.
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