Janocko Named Raiders Offensive Chief | Analysis by Brian Moineau

New Voice in the Silver and Black: Andrew Janocko Takes Over as Raiders Offensive Coordinator

An offseason shake-up just got a fresh headline: the Las Vegas Raiders have officially named Andrew Janocko their offensive coordinator. If you’re into coaching trees, quarterback development or the slow, careful work of rebuilding an offense, this hire deserves a close look — and not just because it continues Klint Kubiak’s habit of importing trusted collaborators.

Janocko arrives after a fast-moving climb through NFL offensive rooms, most recently serving as the Seattle Seahawks’ quarterbacks coach during their 2025 championship season. He brings more than a decade of coaching experience and a reputation for developing quarterbacks and installing detail-oriented, timing-based concepts. For a Raiders offense that finished near the bottom of the league in 2025, the timing feels deliberate.

Why this hire matters

  • Janocko is young but seasoned: his résumé includes stops with the Seahawks, Saints, Bears, Vikings and Buccaneers, plus college coaching early in his career.
  • He’s part of Klint Kubiak’s familiar circle — they’ve worked together at multiple stops — which suggests continuity of offensive philosophy even as the Raiders attempt to change results.
  • This will be Janocko’s first season as a full-time offensive coordinator, but he joins a staff where Kubiak is expected to call plays, which can ease the transition while allowing Janocko to focus on scheme details and quarterback coaching.

Where Janocko comes from

  • Seattle Seahawks (2025): Quarterbacks coach on a Super Bowl-winning staff. The Seahawks finished near the top of the league in scoring and offensive efficiency that season, and their QB play was a key ingredient.
  • New Orleans Saints (2024): Quarterbacks coach, helping veteran Derek Carr produce efficient numbers and a high third-down passer rating.
  • Chicago Bears (2022–23): Instrumental in the development of Justin Fields, working on the balance between Fields’ dynamic rushing ability and his passing growth.
  • Minnesota Vikings and earlier roles: Multiple offensive roles that exposed him to zone concepts, timing-based passing games and player-specific development work.

Those stops illustrate a consistent theme: Janocko has coached or worked alongside quarterbacks at several stages of their careers — young, mobile signal-callers and seasoned veterans alike. That versatility is a useful attribute for a Raiders roster that could blend young talent with experienced pieces.

What to expect schematically

  • Continuity with Kubiak’s offense: Expect West Coast elements, quick timing throws, and a willingness to use RPOs and run-pass complement concepts. Kubiak’s presence means playcalling continuity, with Janocko handling game-planning and QB preparation.
  • Emphasis on quarterback mechanics and decision-making: Janocko’s track record suggests attention to completion percentage, pre-snap reads and third-down efficiency.
  • Adaptability: Janocko has worked with both mobile and pocket passers, which should let the Raiders tailor their approach to the personnel they actually have — and the likely roster additions in the offseason and draft.

The roster fit and implications

  • Quarterback development: If the Raiders are leaning into a young QB (including any 2026 draft pick or recent acquisition), Janocko’s experience with young signal-callers will be central to their progression.
  • Offensive line and run game: The Raiders’ 2025 offense struggled in many areas. Janocko’s arrival won’t instantly fix line play or run-blocking, but his history of integrating passing concepts that help neutralize defensive pressure could buy time for the unit to improve.
  • Coaching continuity: Several members of Kubiak’s Seattle staff are joining Las Vegas, which suggests a cohesive installation process and a quicker ramp-up during spring and training camp.

Things to watch this season

  • How early Janocko’s concepts appear in offseason practices and whether the offense shows cleaner timing and fewer turnovers in the preseason.
  • Quarterback progress on completion rate, third-down conversion and decision-making under pressure — areas Janocko has influenced in prior stops.
  • Play-caller dynamics between Kubiak and Janocko in games: will Kubiak maintain playcalling control, or will Janocko have in-game autonomy on certain packages?

A few data-backed expectations: Seattle’s offense was top-10 in scoring during the Super Bowl season Janocko coached there; Derek Carr’s efficiency numbers under Janocko in New Orleans were notably strong; and Justin Fields’ growth while Janocko was on staff with the Bears showed an ability to coach both the pass and QB mobility into the offense.

Quick snapshot of why fans should care

  • This is a hire that blends familiarity with fresh authority: a trusted Kubiak aide stepping into a coordinator role.
  • The Raiders’ offense needs culture and structure; Janocko’s background suggests he brings both teaching chops and modern schematic ideas.
  • For fans hoping to see a turnaround, this hire raises legitimate optimism — not guaranteed, but sensible.

Immediate takeaways

  • Janocko’s hire signals a continuity-first rebuild under Klint Kubiak’s leadership.
  • He brings strong quarterback development credentials and experience from a recent championship staff.
  • Expect a West Coast/RPO-leaning offense with an emphasis on timing, third-down efficiency and quarterback mechanics.

My take

This is a smart, low-drama hire. The Raiders didn’t bring in a headline-grabbing, high-variance play-caller; they added a detailed-minded coach from a successful staff who knows how to teach quarterbacks and install structure. For a team that needs foundational upgrades more than flashy schematic changes, Janocko fits the checklist: familiar to the head coach, proven in player development roles, and experienced across multiple offensive systems. The bigger question remains the same — can the Raiders fix the offensive trenches and give Janocko a quarterback and line that let his concepts breathe? If they do, this hire could look very shrewd by season’s end.

Sources




Related update: We recently published an article that expands on this topic: read the latest post.


Related update: We recently published an article that expands on this topic: read the latest post.

Steelers’ Next Coach: Continuity or Reset | Analysis by Brian Moineau

The end of an era and the next play: who should the Steelers hire after Mike Tomlin?

The Rooney family just flipped the script on a franchise that has been startlingly stable for decades. Mike Tomlin’s decision to step down after 19 seasons — announced January 13, 2026 — suddenly makes the Pittsburgh Steelers one of the NFL’s rare open head-coaching jobs. If you love Steelers football, this feels like both a hinge moment and a déjà vu: rare, risky and full of possibility.

Why this matters: the Steelers haven’t hired a new head coach since 2007, and they’ve had only three head coaching transitions in nearly six decades. The choice now will say a lot about whether Pittsburgh wants continuity, a reset, or a blend of the two.

What follows is a readable guide to the candidate types being discussed, the priorities the front office should weigh, the hazards involved, and my take on the smartest direction for the franchise.

Quick snapshot of the situation

  • Mike Tomlin stepped down on January 13, 2026 after 19 seasons and a Super Bowl title; the Steelers begin their first coaching search since 2007. (reuters.com)
  • Because Tomlin resigned while still under contract, Pittsburgh retains his rights and could receive compensation if he returns to coaching before his contract ends. (reuters.com)
  • Early chatter around candidates centers on three broad types: young NFL assistants, seasoned coordinators and familiar AFC North names who know the division’s DNA. (steelersdepot.com)

Why this hires matters more than a typical offseason move

  • Stability is part of Pittsburgh’s brand. The Rooney family runs an organization that historically values continuity, identity and culture. Replacing a 19-year steward is not a cosmetic swap — it’s a cultural inflection point.
  • Roster reality will shape the pick. The Steelers have defensive stars, cap considerations, and quarterback uncertainty. Whoever gets the job must balance short-term competitiveness and the longer rebuild or retooling that might be necessary.
  • Optics and fit matter in Pittsburgh. Ownership wants a coach who matches the city’s gritty identity and can navigate a passionate fanbase and demanding regional media.

The categories of candidates you’ll hear about

  • Young assistants and rising coordinators

    • Why they appeal: energy, modern schemes, player relatability and long runway. Pittsburgh fans remember the impact of Cowher and Tomlin — both hires aimed at injecting youth and edge. Names like promising defensive coordinators or scheming NFL assistants fit this mold. (steelersdepot.com)
    • Upside: potential franchise-altering leadership, new ideas, ability to connect with younger players.
    • Risk: inexperience managing staff, game-day choices and heavy media scrutiny.
  • Established coordinators and former head coaches

    • Why they appeal: experience running game plans, staff management and in-season problem solving.
    • Upside: less of a learning curve and greater predictability in Year One.
    • Risk: potential lack of long-term ceiling or resistance to adapt to Pittsburgh’s specific roster needs.
  • AFC North or regional familiar faces

    • Why they appeal: knowledge of divisional rivals, familiarity with the terroir of the league’s toughest division and what it takes to win here.
    • Upside: hit-the-ground-running advantage and credibility in the rivalry-heavy environment.
    • Risk: baggage from previous rivalries, and sometimes lineage doesn’t translate to organizational chemistry.

What the Steelers should prioritize when they interview candidates

  • Vision for the quarterback position
    • The Steelers’ quarterback future is crucial. The coach must present a realistic plan for either developing a young QB or maximizing an experienced one — and be honest about timelines.
  • Defensive identity plus adaptability
    • Pittsburgh’s identity has been defense-first for decades. New leadership should preserve a hard-nosed approach while being flexible schematically to modern offenses.
  • Culture and player development
    • The Rooney family and front office like culture-fit hires. Priority should be placed on a coach who develops talent and communicates well with veterans and rookies alike.
  • Staff-building ability
    • Hiring the right assistants will be as important as the head coach. Look for candidates who can attract quality coordinators and retain key position coaches.
  • Ownership relationship and patience
    • This franchise historically allows its coach time to build. The ideal hire respects that timeline while promising progress and accountability.

Potential pitfalls the Steelers must avoid

  • Chasing a headline name over fit
    • It’s easy to get swept up in media favorites and betting odds. Fit matters more than flash.
  • Overvaluing short-term results
    • A hire made to “win now” without a sustainable plan could backfire, leaving the team in limbo for seasons.
  • Ignoring staff/room continuity
    • Wholesale staff turnover can destabilize roster development. Preserve useful institutional knowledge where possible.

Timeline and process realities

  • Expect a concentrated interview cycle. With Tomlin leaving mid-January, the Steelers and rival teams will move quickly during the coaching carousel, conducting multiple interviews and weighing college and NFL candidates alike. (reuters.com)
  • Because Tomlin is under contract, teams considering him would need to negotiate with Pittsburgh; for the Steelers, that preserves leverage and continuity options if Tomlin changes his mind.

Who’s being talked about (illustrative, not exhaustive)

  • Young defensive coordinators and assistants linked to modern, aggressive defenses.
  • Established coordinators with strong track records in run-defense and pass-rush scheming.
  • College coaches with ties to the region or a track record of developing pro-style systems.
  • Local and AFC North-connected names who know the division’s temper and rivalries. (steelersdepot.com)

My take

Pittsburgh should favor a coach who blends the best parts of Tomlin’s tenure — cultural steadiness, competitive toughness and player-first leadership — while bringing fresh schematic ideas. That means:

  • Prioritize candidates who can show both a clear plan for the quarterback situation and a defensively sound, flexible philosophy.
  • Lean toward a leader who has a record of developing coaches and players rather than someone who demands a roster makeover out of the gate.
  • Be unafraid to take a calculated risk on a younger coordinator if he shows concrete leadership experience, or choose a seasoned coordinator who embraces a multi-year building plan.

This is a rare kind of decision for a rare franchise. The right hire won’t just be about Xs and Os — it will define how the Steelers present themselves to a new era of NFL play and scrutiny.

Final thoughts

Change is uncomfortable, especially in a place where coaches become almost institutional. But transitions are also opportunities to sharpen identity and correct course. Whoever the Rooneys and Omar Khan pick will inherit a proud roster, a tough division and a fanbase that expects grit. The smartest hire will be the one that balances Pittsburgh’s legacy with a credible roadmap for the next five years.

Sources




Related update: We recently published an article that expands on this topic: read the latest post.