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Klint Kubiak’s Oil Fields Wake-Up: Journey to Raiders’ Top Job

By Matthias Binder February 4, 2026
How Klint Kubiak found his way to the Raiders after oil fields detour
How Klint Kubiak found his way to the Raiders after oil fields detour (Featured Image)
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How Klint Kubiak found his way to the Raiders after oil fields detour

Contents
A Graduate Assistant’s Financial StruggleThe Phone Call That Changed EverythingFootball Roots Run DeepSeahawks Success and Raiders Bound

A Graduate Assistant’s Financial Struggle (Image Credits: Unsplash)

Las Vegas — Klint Kubiak once traded football sidelines for the rugged oil fields of East Texas, only to discover his true calling through an unexpected conversation.

A Graduate Assistant’s Financial Struggle

Klint Kubiak faced a stark reality in his early 20s. As a graduate assistant at Texas A&M, he earned just $17,000 annually. Newly married, he worried about supporting his household while his father, Gary Kubiak, led the Houston Texans.

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He sought stability outside coaching. A cousin connected him with an oil company job inventorying pipe. The pay improved, and the work proved tolerable at first. Kubiak later reflected that he simply wanted to test life beyond football.

Two weeks in, doubts surfaced. The daily grind lacked the passion he knew from coaching. He described feeling out of place amid the pipes and isolation.

The Phone Call That Changed Everything

One evening, during his long drive home, Kubiak’s phone rang. Uzoma Nwachukwu, a receiver he had coached intensely at Texas A&M, called to thank him for pushing him to improve.

Kubiak had assumed their relationship ended on tense terms. Instead, the gratitude hit hard. He quit the oil job the next day and recommitted to coaching.

“That phone call was the realization that these relationships are what it’s about,” Kubiak said. He likened coaching to teaching, where bonds and growth matter most.

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Football Roots Run Deep

Coaching came naturally to Kubiak, born into a football family. His father won Super Bowl 50 with the Denver Broncos. Brothers Klay and Klein also coach in the NFL.

Growing up, Kubiak visited team facilities and hosted coaches at home. Adversity bonded the family, he noted. Early on, pressure to match his father’s success weighed heavy.

Now 38, he embraces independence. “As you get older, you just realize you have to be your own man,” he said. His father’s staff provided entry, but performance earned respect.

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Seahawks Success and Raiders Bound

Kubiak rose quickly after returning to coaching. As Seattle Seahawks offensive coordinator, he built one of the NFL’s top units, emphasizing run game foundations and explosive plays.

Peers praise his character. Seahawks coach Mike Macdonald called his expected departure “a little bittersweet,” highlighting Kubiak’s dual strengths as coach and person. Receiver Cooper Kupp admired his self-accountability.

The Las Vegas Raiders view him as their next head coach. Kubiak cannot confirm until after the Super Bowl but credits early hardships for his drive. He prioritizes quarterback protection and player success.

Key Takeaways

  • Kubiak quit oil fields after two weeks due to a former player’s thankful call.
  • Family legacy from father Gary fueled his NFL entry, but personal grit sustained it.
  • His philosophy: Establish the run, protect the passer, create big plays.

Klint Kubiak’s brief oil fields chapter proved football’s pull was unbreakable. What do you think of his story? Share in the comments.

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