The trade speculation surrounding Maxx Crosby has already worn out Las Vegas Raiders fans. Nonetheless, a voice familiar with the Silver and Black recently weighed in on the matter.
Tim Kawakami’s scenario is provocative, but it overstates how “gettable” Crosby should be for either side, given Crosby’s contract and value.
“Maxx Crosby has got to be right in [the 49ers’] sights. I think he’s gettable. I mean, I think they could get him,” Kawakami said, via The TK Show: A Show about Sports in the Bay Area. “They’ve thought about him for a long time. They’ve admired him for a long time. He’s the perfect bookend with Nick Bosa. I think the Raiders are going to trade him based on everything that happened at the end of the year.”
Would the Raiders really trade Maxx Crosby to the 49ers?
Start with Las Vegas. The Raiders are about to hire a head coach and add a quarterback. In that moment, you do not trade away the player who sets the weekly standard. Crosby is the defense’s engine: the pressure that changes protections, the edge that keeps games within reach when the offense is learning. Trading him would remove production and identity on the side of the ball that can protect a rookie quarterback from having to win every week. Draft picks can help a rebuild, but they are not a guarantee, and elite edges are hard to replace on schedule.
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The “move him because there’s friction” argument is also thin. Losing seasons create noise. Coaching changes create resets. A new staff can clarify Crosby’s role, workload and leadership voice inside a defined process, then sell a plan that includes him instead of working around his absence.
Now consider San Francisco. A Crosby-Bosa pairing is real football. So is the bill. The cost is not only premium picks; it is money and opportunity cost. The 49ers already pay for top-end stars and rely on depth and a pipeline of young, cost-controlled starters. A blockbuster trade strips that pipeline and adds another premium edge contract, forcing compromises elsewhere—offensive line depth, secondary flexibility, and the supporting cast that keeps a contender functional over 17 games. It also assumes immediate payoff in a league where injuries punish thin rosters.
There is also leverage and politics. Mark Davis previously refused to trade Khalil Mack to San Francisco. Even if Las Vegas ever decides to move Crosby, it can shop him broadly and extract a cleaner package.
If this offseason is about building a foundation, the counterargument is simple: keep the cornerstone, then fix the structure around him.
*Top Photo: USA Today Sports

