Former quarterback Derek Carr isn’t guarding his legacy with the Las Vegas Raiders like it’s a fragile heirloom. He is practically leaving the door open and the lights on for someone else to come in and rearrange the whole place.
As the franchise gets ready to hand the keys to presumed No. 1 overall pick Fernando Mendoza, Carr has made peace with what comes next. More than that, he’s rooting for it.
Derek Carr Ready to Pass the Torch to Fernando Mendoza
On his podcast, Carr said he hopes Mendoza breaks every record ever set in Silver and Black, a sentiment that feels less like polite humility and more like a quiet kind of conviction.
“I hope Fernando Mendoza breaks every Raider record,” Carr said. “As a former quarterback, if you feel any other way, there’s something wrong with you. Why wouldn’t you want the next generation to do better than you? Like, I want the best for everybody.”
The Raiders are standing at the edge of another reinvention, the kind that comes after things have fallen apart just enough to make change unavoidable. Since Carr’s departure following the 2022 season (when he recorded a score of 76.1 on PFSN’s QB Impact Metric), the team has been searching, not just for a man under center, but for a version of itself that makes sense again.
The 3-14 season led by Geno Smith did more than just sting. And when head coach Pete Carroll was shown the door after one season, it became apparent the Raiders weren’t tweaking; they were starting over.
This is where Mendoza comes in, with all the expectations that come wrapped around a name called first on draft night. He’s not just stepping into a roster spot; he’s stepping into a story already in progress. It is one that includes franchise records, some belonging to Carr, who built something lasting even when the ground beneath him kept shifting.
But here’s the thing: Carr sounds like someone who remembers what it felt like to be new, to be watched, to be measured before you’ve even had the chance to settle in. And maybe that’s why his support feels so genuine; it’s rooted in recognition, not obligation.
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Mendoza won’t be walking in alone, either. He’ll have weapons like Brock Bowers and Ashton Jeanty, players who can turn small moments into something huge.
But talent, as the NFL loves to remind everyone, is only part of the equation. The rest is timing, patience, and the kind of guidance that doesn’t always show up on stat sheets.

