AFC West Offseason Grades: Raiders Pull Ahead in Competitive Division

By Matthias Binder
Grading the offseason for the Raiders and their AFC West rivals (Featured Image)

Raiders Land Top Marks for Front-Loaded Investments (Image Credits: Pexels)

Las Vegas – The AFC West entered the 2026 offseason with high expectations after a tight race in 2025. Teams addressed key needs through free agency signings, re-signings, and trades as the legal tampering period unfolded in mid-March. The Raiders made waves with aggressive additions, while rivals focused on retention and targeted upgrades amid cap constraints and injury recoveries.[1][2]

Raiders Land Top Marks for Front-Loaded Investments

The Las Vegas Raiders received widespread praise for their proactive approach. Analysts handed out A- grades across multiple outlets, highlighting a spending spree totaling over $280 million on mid-career talent.[3]

General manager John Spytek targeted the trenches and defense. The team signed elite center Tyler Linderbaum to a record-breaking three-year, $81 million deal, bolstering protection for quarterback Ashton Jeanty. Edge rusher Kwity Paye joined on three years, $48 million, adding run defense strength despite pass-rush questions. Linebackers Nakobe Dean and Quay Walker arrived to deepen the front seven, while a trade netted cornerback Taron Johnson from Buffalo.

Re-signings kept momentum: CB Eric Stokes (73.6 PFF grade in 2025) and EDGE Malcolm Koonce returned. A potential Maxx Crosby trade to Baltimore fell through after a physical issue, preserving pass-rush continuity. These moves position Las Vegas for contention, though the draft looms large for skill-position depth.[1][4]

Chiefs Tilt Toward Offense After Defensive Losses

Kansas City aimed to refresh around Patrick Mahomes, who recovers from an ACL tear. Grades ranged from A down to D+, averaging a solid B as the Chiefs traded cornerback Trent McDuffie for draft capital and lost several secondary pieces.[2]

Running back Kenneth Walker III headlined additions on three years, $43 million, bringing explosive runs (91.4 PFF grade) to replace Isiah Pacheco. Safety Alohi Gilman (three years, $24.75 million) and DT Khyiris Tonga filled gaps, while re-signing TE Travis Kelce (one year, $12 million) ensures continuity. WR Tyquan Thornton returned for speed.

  • Key strength: Backfield upgrade pairs power with Mahomes’ scheme.
  • Concern: Secondary rebuild via draft after trading McDuffie, Jaylen Watson, and others.
  • Backup plan: Acquired QB Justin Fields amid Mahomes’ timeline.

The shift emphasizes offense, but defensive youth must step up.[1]

Chargers Opt for Depth Over Splash in Steady Rebuild

Los Angeles earned middling marks, mostly C to B, for pragmatic moves under Jim Harbaugh. The Chargers prioritized the interior line but missed on premium targets like Linderbaum.[3]

Center Tyler Biadasz signed for three years, $30 million, alongside guard Cole Strange (two years, $13 million) and TE Charlie Kolar (three years, $24.3 million). EDGE Khalil Mack re-upped for one year, $18 million, maintaining pass rush. RB Keaton Mitchell added backfield versatility.

Losses hurt: EDGE Odafe Oweh departed, thinning the front. With cap space untapped for stars, expectations fall to the draft for receivers and secondary help. Harbaugh’s run-heavy identity takes shape, but contention requires more firepower.[5]

Broncos Stay Cautious Amid Quiet Window

Denver drew criticism for passivity, posting C to D grades. No external free agents joined, relying on re-signings like RB J.K. Dobbins (two years, $20 million) and LBs Alex Singleton, Justin Strnad.[3]

A trade for WR Jaylen Waddle cost a first-round pick, aiming to spark Bo Nix’s offense. Losses included DL John Franklin-Myers. Retention stabilized the roster, but analysts called the inactivity arrogant given Nix’s rookie deal and near-playoff success.

Team Avg. Grade Key Move
Raiders A- Linderbaum signing
Chiefs B Walker III addition
Chargers C+ Biadasz/Biadasz
Broncos C- Waddle trade

Division Outlook: Raiders in Pole Position

Raiders top most rankings, followed closely by Chiefs. Chargers and Broncos lag, banking on drafts. Free agency sets the table, but April’s selections will define contenders.[2]

Key Takeaways

  • Raiders’ A- average signals strongest start, fortifying lines and defense.
  • Chiefs’ RB boost aids Mahomes, but secondary rebuild poses risks.
  • Chargers need draft hits to elevate C-range haul.
  • Broncos’ restraint could backfire without external talent.

The AFC West remains a gauntlet. Raiders fans see a path to the top – will the draft seal it? Share your take in the comments.

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