HENDERSON, Nev. — The Las Vegas Raiders continued their housecleaning Thursday, firing general manager Tom Telesco just two days after dismissing coach Antonio Pierce.
The moves took place after the Raiders went 4-13 this season.
''We appreciate his efforts in helping build a foundation for the future,'' the club said in a statement. ''We wish Tom and his family all the best.''
The Raiders will become just the second franchise in the Super Bowl era to enter a season three years in a row with a new GM and coach. Coach Josh McDaniels and general manager Dave Ziegler were in charge to open the 2023 season. The Cleveland Browns in 2012-14 are the other club to hold such a distinction.
Owner Mark Davis had said Telesco and Pierce would be evaluated separately, and the GM's firing was the more surprising of the two. Telesco had a strong draft last April in which he landed in the first three rounds an AP Offensive Rookie of the Year candidate in Brock Bowers and two starting offensive linemen.
But Telesco didn't draft or sign the franchise-changing quarterback the Raiders so badly need. He instead signed journeyman Gardner Minshew to a two-year, $25 million contract. Minshew won the starting job in training camp, but then lost it to Aidan O'Connell after five weeks.
How much of that was Telesco's fault is questionable. The top six quarterbacks in the draft went off the board by the time Las Vegas selected at No. 13, and there were no guarantees on the free-agent market. But Telesco also doesn't have a history of being aggressive with draft-day trades, so the Raiders never budged from their pecking order.
This year, minority owner Tom Brady is expected to have more of a say in operations.