1-Man’s Opinion on Sports-Friday ‘CHARGERS–HOW GOOD ARE THEY?”

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“CHARGERS–HOW GOOD ARE THEY?”
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The Chargers open their preseason schedule on Saturday night against the Rams.

How good are they going to be?
Probably great on offense.
How week are they going to be?
The defense has lots to prove and to battle back from injuries.

I think the Justin Herbert led offense might be as good (explosive) as the Philip Rivers-Ladanian Tomlinson-Antonio Gates era.

The defense left us with a bad taste in their mouth, blowing that 27-0 playoff lead to the Jaguars.  They are still not healthy at defensive tackle.  They have open positions for young athletes to claim in the secondary.  The linebacking coverage must stay healthy and be able to cover.

I don’t think it is a make or break season for coach Brandon Staley heading into Year 3.  Eventhough they are still sub .500-GM Tom Telesco and President John Spanos jobs seem safe.

But if the Chargers are to capture the LA market, and replace the rebuilding Rams, the wins have to come this year because they may have to break up the roster next year with salary cap issues..

A different look at the Bolts-courtesy of NFL Rumors.com website
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Only the 1992 Oilers and 2013 Chiefs surpass the Chargers’ 27-point collapse in Jacksonville. While Sean Payton loomed as a potential HC candidate, GM Tom Telesco elected to give Brandon Staley a third season. The Bolts did overcome more major injury trouble to return to the postseason.

The offseason buzz that annually follows the Chargers has been somewhat muted this year, but once again, the oft-hyped team promises to be a factor in a deep AFC. The Bolts have two new coordinators and made a splashy addition to their skill-position corps in the draft. They also completed a long-rumored extension for their latest star quarterback — this one moving into a new NFL salary bracket compared to the deals handed out to Philip Rivers.

Extensions and restructures:
Reached five-year, $262.5MM ($134MM guaranteed) extension agreement with QB Justin Herbert
Agreed on $1.6MM incentive package with RB Austin Ekeler
Restructured contracts of WRs Keenan Allen, Mike Williams, OLBs Joey Bosa, Khalil Mack, creating $40.37MM in cap space
A longtime Colts exec, Telesco was on-hand to observe how Indianapolis built its rosters aroundPeyton Manning‘s 2004 extension. Whereas that deal checked in at seven years and $98MM and the Telesco-constructed Rivers extension at four years and $84MM (2015), Herbert’s reflected the cap spikes and the swiftly shifting QB market. Herbert followed Jalen Hurts and Lamar Jackson by agreeing to a deal with a record-setting AAV this offseason.

The Packers have received the most attention for forming a transition between two Hall of Fame-caliber passers, with the Brett Favre–Aaron Rodgers run lasting 31 seasons. But the Chargers have rostered three such QBs since 2001. Unlike Drew Brees, Rivers may not be a lock to enter Canton. But he gave the Bolts upper-echelon play during most of his 14 seasons as their starter. Without any gap years, the Chargers have gone from Brees to Rivers to Herbert. That has not resulted in MVPs like the Packers duo brought (seven) or Super Bowl berths (three), but Herbert still has plenty of time on these fronts. And the Bolts now have their latest set-it/forget-it QB signed through 2029.

Jackson’s long-running Ravens talks, which began back in 2021, produced a true five-year deal. With Hurts’ second-round rookie contract not including a fifth-year option, the Eagles’ latest QB extension gives them control for six seasons. Herbert signed off on the Chargers having seven, signing a five-year extension after the team made the automatic call to exercise his option. Only Patrick Mahomes (through 2031) has a contract that extends farther into the future. This structure will help the Chargers build around the $52.5MM AAV, minimizing cap hits along the way.

The Chargers could not accomplish much during Herbert’s three rookie-deal seasons, advancing to one playoff bracket and enduring a brutal loss when there. But the strong-armed passer presented immediate franchise-QB signs and, other than a dip following a September 2022 rib fracture, has charted a historic course. Only Dan Marino‘s 98 touchdown passes better Herbert’s through-three-years number (94), illustrating how prodigious the Dolphins legend was for his era; no one tops Herbert’s 14,089 passing yards through Year 3. Herbert followed his Offensive Rookie of the Year campaign with a Pro Bowl starting nod. His numbers took a hit last season, as the rib issue and both his top receivers (and left tackle Rashawn Slater) missing extended time hurt the Bolts’ cause. But this extension was always on the team’s docket.

The Chargers did not attach any void years to this contract (yet), but running it through 2029 will keep Herbert’s cap numbers south of $38MM until 2026. As the Chiefs have done on multiple occasions with Mahomes’ deal, the Chargers can go to the restructure well once faced with a $46.35MM cap hit in 2026. The team managed to give Herbert that record-setting AAV while keeping the cap hits low enough that rostering two $20MM-per-year receivers (Keenan Allen, Mike Williams) along with two $23MM-plus edge rushers (Joey Bosa, Khalil Mack) is manageable.

Herbert’s $133.7MM guarantee number trails only Deshaun Watson‘s deal — a contract this year’s QB extension candidates helped cement as an outlier — and Jackson’s $135MM number. For total guarantees, Herbert’s $193.7MM figure leads the non-Watson field by more than $12MM.

Doubling as one of the many flashpoint moments at the running back position this offseason, the Chargers refused to give Ekeler a raise more in line with his contributions. The dual-threat back led the league in touchdowns in 2021 and ’22, totaling 38. Ekeler offers top-shelf receiving ability which helped compensate for the injuries elsewhere on offense last season. The Chargers let their UDFA find seek a trade, but as RB value decreased yet again, no serious talks commenced. Ekeler remains tied to the four-year, $24.5MM contract — one given in 2020, as the Bolts said goodbye to Melvin Gordon — he has outplayed.

Ekeler, 28, has not been shy about addressing the value of the modern running back. Unlike some of the other backs to voice frustration about where the market has gone, Ekeler provides a clear passing-game dimension that has made his $6.13MM-per-year deal age incredibly well for the Bolts. Los Angeles was able to ink Ekeler to that extension due in large part to finding him as a UDFA out of a Division II school. Even after this year’s market shakeup — which included high-profile releases, two notable pay-cut moves, no free agency deal topping $6.5MM AAV and three franchise-tagged backs not being extended — Ekeler’s AAV sits 11th at the position.

The Chargers threw Ekeler a bone in the form of the $1.6MM incentive package, which is based on his scrimmage yards, touchdowns and the elusive Pro Bowl berth. The yardage incentive begins at 1,125 and tops out at 1,639. The TD section ranges from 10-16. He can earn up to $600K in this area. While Ekeler stands to generate interest on next year’s market, he is set to join Saquon Barkley, Josh Jacobs, Tony Pollard, Derrick Henry, D’Andre Swift, J.K. Dobbins and Antonio Gibson as free agents-to-be. Another crowded market will likely suppress backs’ value once again, and the Bolts will also have the franchise tag available.

Free agency additions:
Eric Kendricks, LB: Two years, $13.25MM ($6.75MM guaranteed)
Nick Williams, DL: One year, $1.23MM ($25K guaranteed)
The Vikings reached agreements to keep their other two remaining Mike Zimmer-era defensive cornerstones — Harrison Smith, Danielle Hunter — this offseason, but Kendricks was an early cap casualty. Taking advantage of what became — beyond the Tremaine Edmunds and Bobby Okereke deals — a buyer’s off-ball linebacker market, the Chargers will give the ninth-year veteran a chance to bounce back. A UCLA alum, Kendricks has 113 starts under his belt and will provide considerable experience from a Bolts team that has not been able to rely on 2020 first-rounder Kenneth Murray.

A former second-round pick, Kendricks ascended to the All-Pro level in the late 2010s. Pro Football Focus rated the ex-Minnesota middle ‘backer as a top-three off-ball LB in 2019 and ’20 but viewed the veteran as sliding a bit over the past two seasons. PFF slotted him 50th at the position in 2022. Still, Kendricks totaled 16 tackles for loss from 2021-22 and topped 135 total stops in each of those seasons. He also finished with 10 passes defensed and six sacks, providing some versatility, in that span.

Re-signings:
Trey Pipkins, T: Three years, $21.75MM ($13.25MM guaranteed)
Morgan Fox, DL: Two years, $7.25MM ($3.75MM guaranteed)
Easton Stick, QB: One year, $1.8MM ($1.2MM guaranteed)
JK Scott, P: Two years, $4MM ($820K guaranteed)
Donald Parham, TE: Two years, $2.57MM ($400K guaranteed)
Jalen Guyton, WR: One year, $1.32MM ($76K guaranteed)
The Chargers’ Bryan Bulaga bet backfired, and Storm Norton proved a substandard option in 2021. While Pipkins did not impress early in his career, either, he made some well-timed improvements and landed a nice mid-tier contract as a result. PFF still did not think too much of Pipkins’ performance — particularly as a run blocker — slotting him outside the top 60 at tackle last season, but the Bolts disagreed. After seeing the former third-round pick make strides during the ’22 offseason, the team’s above-referenced restructures cleared cap space to keep the young right tackle off the market.

Heading into his age-27 season, Pipkins presents the Chargers with rare RT continuity. The team has not deployed the same primary right tackle since Sam Tevimanned the spot during the 2018 and ’19 seasons. Pipkins’ return also gives the Bolts the potential to deploy one of the NFL’s best O-lines. Pro Bowlers Slater and Corey Linsley anchor the group, with 2022 first-rounder Zion Johnson set to move from right to left guard to make room for converted tackle Jamaree Salyer, who fared well as Slater’s injury substitute last season. With Pipkins now re-signed, each of L.A.’s starters is signed for at least two more seasons. Slater’s rookie deal can (and almost certainly will) be extended through 2025 via the fifth-year option.

The role of Herbert’s backup has not come into play much, despite last season’s injury. Since the Tyrod Taylor injection controversy brought Herbert into the Bolts’ lineup in Week 2 of the 2020 season, the former No. 6 overall pick has not missed a start. But the team will transition from one of the most experienced backups in recent memory (Chase Daniel) to Stick, a career third-stringer. The North Dakota State starter between Carson Wentz and Trey Lance, Stick went a cool 49-3 as the Bison’s QB1, leading the Division I-FCS dynasty to two national championships. As a pro, however, Stick has appeared in one game in four seasons. Still, the Bolts groomed the 27-year-old QB for this roleduring Daniel’s tenure.

The maladies afflicting Herbert, Allen and Williams received more attention, but Guyton going down with an ACL tear in Week 3 hindered the Bolts’ deep-passing game. The former UDFA averaged 18.3 yards per catch in 2020 and totaled 448 receiving yards in 2021, scoring six touchdowns — including this rather memorable air strike — in that span. He has yet to come off the active/PUP list, however.

A former Rams cog, Fox is now 2-for-2 in six-sack seasons when playing in Staley’s scheme. After a six-sack season under Staley for the Rams in 2020, he produced 6.5 for a team that spent most of last season without Bosa. Last season marked his career high for QB hits (11) as well. Fox also aided a Bolts team that lost Austin Johnson and Otito Ogbonnia for the season. Given the Chargers’ injury issues, Fox (no missed games in five seasons) represents important depth up front.

Notable losses:
Nasir Adderley, S (retired)
Bryce Callahan, CB
DeAndre Carter, WR
Christian Covington, DL
Chase Daniel, QB
Tyeler Davison, DL
Matt Feiler, G (released)
Joe Gaziano
Storm Norton, T
Troy Reeder, LB
Richard Rodgers, TE
Kyle Van Noy, LB
Drue Tranquill, LB
Joining the team during the offseason in which the Chargers added fellow starters Slater and Linsley, Feiler worked alongside them for two seasons. The Bolts decided to cut costs at guard, shifting money to right tackle. Feiler caught on with the Buccaneers, fetching a lower-cost deal compared to the three-year, $21MM pact the Bolts gave him in 2021. The Chargers saved $6.5MM by cutting Feiler, who joined the rest of this departure contingent in not finding green pastures in free agency.

Despite a 146-tackle, five-sack season that undoubtedly thrilled his set of IDP fantasy GMs, Tranquill only received a one-year, $3MM deal from the Chiefs. Carter also relocated to a division rival, signing with the Raiders (one year, $1.5MM). The Chargers are all set to make fourth-round speedster Derius Davis their primary return man. The 5-foot-8 rookie totaled an eye-catching six return TDs at TCU, finishing his career as an All-American for the national championship-bound Horned Frogs.

Callahan and Van Noy joined the Chargers after the 2022 draft and made key contributions. Although injuries marred Callahan’s Broncos tenure, the veteran stayed mostly healthy in L.A. Missing only two games, Callahan, 32, patrolled the slot for the Chargers. The Bolts are holding a competition betweenAsante Samuel Jr. and second-year safety Ja’Sir Taylor to succeed Callahan inside. Samuel has experience at both the slot and outside corner positions, but the team is concerned about the second-generation pro’s tackling. Van Noy, 32, stepped into a regular pass-rushing role after Bosa’s groin injury. The multi-stint Patriot finished with his fifth five-plus-sack season in six years. Both Callahan and Van Noy are unsigned.

Of the Charger losses, Adderley saw the most playing time. The former second-round pick started 44 games over the course of his rookie contract. The Delaware alum certainly could have scored a decent contract in free agency, making this retirement timing interesting. Considering Derwin James‘ shaky health history, the Chargers losing Adderley could be somewhat costly. They have former sixth-round pick Alohi Gilman (nine career starts) and 2022 third-rounder JT Woods as the top options alongside the All-Pro.

Draft:
Round 1, No. 21: Quentin Johnston, WR (TCU) (signed)
Round 2, No. 54: Tuli Tuipulotu, OLB (USC) (signed)
Round 3, No. 85: Daiyan Henley, LB (Washington State) (signed)
Round 4, No. 125: Derius Davis, WR (TCU) (signed)
Round 5, No. 156: Jordan McFadden, G (Clemson) (signed)
Round 6, No. 200: Scott Matlock, DT (Boise State) (signed)
Round 7, No. 239: Max Duggan, QB (TCU) (signed)
Linked to making an early-round pass-catching upgrade for a while ahead of the draft, the Chargers pounced and made Johnston the second wide receiver off the board. The Bolts passed on Zay Flowers and Jordan Addison to go with Johnston, the biggest of the first-round receiver batch — at 6-foot-2. The addition of the TCU product gives the Chargers a deep cast of receivers, with Guyton back and 2021 third-rounder Josh Palmer having shown improvement both last season and during this year’s offseason.

The Ravens expected the Chargers to go with the size-speed performer, waiting rather than trade up for Flowers. Telesco did not disappoint, adding Johnston to a receiving corps already the 6-4 Williams. Johnston struggled with drops in college, and the Horned Frogs’ recent run of first-round wideouts — Jalen Reagor, Josh Doctson — has disappointed. But the latest high-end talent played a key role in elevating the Big 12 program to a stunning national championship game appearance. Johnston averaged at least 17.8 yards per catch in each of his three seasons in Fort Worth, finishing with 1,069 yards as a junior.

One of the best skill players in Chargers history, Allen is going into his age-31 season. Telesco shut down the idea of trading the route-running extraordinaire to create cap space, but the steady option is on the back nine. Williams has long offered a boom-or-bust profile, which makes the Johnston pick interesting due to the variance this tools-heavy prospect presents. But having this trio and Palmer in the fold could certainly make the Bolts a handful — when at full strength. When Allen or Williams goes down, Johnston will provide important depth as well. The Chargers sank some investments into TCU’s operation, grabbing a Johnston receiver mate and his college QB on Day 3.

Mack is a year older than Allen, turning 32 this offseason. Two seasons remain on the former Defensive Player of the Year’s Bears-built contract, but he is tied to a $38.5MM cap hit for 2024. Moving on from Van Noy, the Chargers have a younger OLB3 option in Tuipulotu. The L.A. native broke through for a 13.5-sack, 22-TFL season in 2022, earning Pac-12 Defensive Player of the Year acclaim.

Tuipulotu offers an intriguing option behind Bosa and Mack, who have each battled injuries in recent years. Mack missed 10 games due to a foot injury in 2021; Bosa missed 12 last year, four in 2020 and nine in 2018. As is the case at receiver, the Chargers needed a quality top backup now and a potential long-term starter later.

Scouts Inc. rated Henley as this year’s No. 75 overall prospect. With Murray far from certain to be back in 2024 and Kendricks in his early 30s, the Bolts need more answers on their defensive second level. A former Nevada wide receiver recruit, Henley made the rare transition to linebacker during his college career. He posted a four-INT, 94-tackle season with the Wolf Pack in 2021 and, showing some upside as a pass rusher, made 106 stops (12 for loss) and four sacks during his one-season Washington State stay. Henley may not be needed as a regular this season; that could change by 2024.

Other:
Fired offensive coordinator Joe Lombardi; added Kellen Moore as replacement
Defensive coordinator Renaldo Hill joined Dolphins’ staff; Derrick Ansley promoted as replacement
Hired Doug Nussmeier as quarterbacks coach, promoted Tommy Donatell to defensive pass-game coordinator
Declined LB Kenneth Murray‘s $12.7MM fifth-year option
Signed 18 undrafted free agents; added WR Milton Wright following supplemental draft
The Chargers dropped from fourth in offensive DVOA in 2021 to 19th in 2022, and as the heat turns up on Staley, he made the common move — for coaches in this position — of firing his top lieutenant. Lombardi received frequent criticism for conservative game plans, despite having one of the game’s best talents leading the offense. But the two-year Chargers play-caller elevated Herbert’s play in 2021. The Oregon-developed superstar threw 38 touchdown passes and topped 5,000 passing yards that year. Last season, injuries to Herbert, Allen, Williams (at a rather inopportune time) and Slater limited the Bolts’ attack.

Staley’s refusal to yank starters in a meaningless Week 18 game against the Broncos — a decision Telesco belatedly endorsed — led to the injury-prone Williams going down and missing the Jaguars tilt. Stripped of a key playmaker, Lombardi’s offense sputtered during the historic collapse. Although Lombardi landed on his feet by becoming Sean Payton‘s Broncos OC, it is worth wondering if the Chargers still make this move had Williams been available in Jacksonville. Nevertheless, Herbert will have a third OC in four seasons.

Less than a day after the Cowboys jettisoned Moore, reports of a Chargers hire emerged. Mike McCarthy had retained the ex-QB as OC and play-caller over his first three seasons, and the Cowboys ranked first and fourth in points scored during the seasons Dak Prescott finished in this timeframe. Dallas’ offense did drop from sixth to 15th in DVOA from 2021 to ’22, but the team also operated without Prescott for a stretch and missed Amari Cooper‘s presence. Moore, 34, still unleashed Tony Pollard and played a lead role in the Cowboys posting back-to-back 12-5 seasons.

McCarthy made scrutinized comments regarding an intent to run more often this season, and Moore went from HC candidate — five teams interviewed him from 2022-23 — to unemployed after the Cowboys’ second-round loss. McCarthy’s decision to take over Dallas’ play-calling duties will lead to a fascinating Moore-Herbert partnership. Rumblings of Herbert taking more downfield shots have circulated during Chargers camp, and Moore could represent one of the top coaching variables in what looks like an AFC gauntlet. Herbert will be entirely directed by ex-Prescott coaches, with Nussmeier — a Jason Garrett hire in Dallas — following Moore after five seasons as a Dallas assistant.

Staley leads the Chargers’ defense, but Hill leaving a defensive coordinator post to return to a role under Fangio may not have received enough attention. Hill, a former Broncos defensive backs coach, followed Fangio to Miami. Considering the Dolphins gave Fangio upwards of $4.5MM to elevate their defense, it is possible they dangled a better offer for Hill.

Staley has not generated the defensive improvement his reputation would have suggested. The Bolts have ranked 29th and 21st, respectively, in scoring defense since his arrival. Excepting a one-year stay as the Raiders’ DBs coach (2018), most of Ansley’s pre-Chargers experience came at the college level. But Staley promoted the DBs coach and gave Tommy Donatell, the son of Ed Donatell, a better gig. The Dolphins are believed to have requested an interview with Tommy Donatell, whose father has worked extensively with Fangio, but the Bolts made retaining him a priority.

Murray staying beyond 2023 may not be a Charger priority. While Murray has offered inconsistent play over three seasons, none of the 2020 first-round linebackers’ options were picked up. Rather than see their $12.7MM options exercised, Isaiah Simmons, Patrick Queen and Jordyn Brooksjoin Murray in contract years. Due to his lower snap count, Murray’s option checked in on the lowest LB rung ($11.73MM). Although Murray’s playing time ticked up after Staley benched him in 2021, PFF viewed the Oklahoma alum as the NFL’s worst run-defending linebacker last season. Of the four linebackers to see their options declined, the Chargers had the easiest call.

Top 10 cap charges for 2023:
J.C. Jackson, CB: $17MM
Khalil Mack, OLB: $16.63MM
Joey Bosa, OLB: $15.78MM
Mike Williams, WR: $13.54MM
Corey Linsley, C: $13.1MM
Keenan Allen, WR: $12.78MM
Austin Johnson, DL: $9.5MM
Michael Davis, CB: $9.4MM
Derwin James, S: $9.11MM
Sebastian Joseph-Day, DL: $9MM
Rather than lose his offensive coordinator to an HC job, Herbert saw his second NFL play-caller canned. With the Chargers among the NFL’s underachievement hubs in recent years, Staley’s seat should be considered one of the hottest. The Bolts gave Anthony Lynn four years, but after the Jacksonville meltdown and the coordinator shakeups, Staley will almost definitely be coaching for his job this season.

Offseason hype has followed the Chargers for years, but as the Chiefs’ second Mahomes-era Super Bowl win created more distance between they and their top AFC West competitors, it feels like expectations have been adjusted. With healthy cornerstones and Moore now calling the shots on offense, are the Chargers live underdogs to challenge the defending champions’ seven-year AFC West streak? Even if the Bolts cannot mount a serious push there, it would be shocking if they were not in the wild-card mix. Herbert’s presence should ensure that.

Herbert’s talent and the contract he agreed to will put pressure on the Chargers to parlay their latest franchise QB into legitimate championship pursuits, seeing as their Brees-Rivers period produced just one AFC championship game berth. What could be the final season with the Allen-Williams-Bosa-Mack quartet in place together will double as one of the more important Charger campaigns this century.

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1-Man’s Opinion on Sports–Thursday “CHARGERS-RAMS-BRING ON PRESEASON”

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“CHARGERS-RAMS”
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They open the NFL preseason schedule Saturday night, the battle of LA, if you will.

The Chargers play the Rams, in a matchup of two teams possibly headed in different directions.

The Rams, two years removed from their Super Bowl celebration, caved in with a combination of age and injuries causing a miserable (5-12) season.

The Bolts got to the playoffs and lost a horrid game to Jacksonville, a terrible but possibly painful learning experience.

Now they open the summer schedule against each other, with the Chargers loaded on offense to try and chase down Kansas City.  The Rams are facing a massive rebuild under coach Sean McVay who did not like what experienced last year.

You draft players, you sign free agents, you grow young talent.  Lots of ways to build a roster.

The biggest intangible might be what Brandon Staley did, changed out all 3-coordinators.  In fact the biggest acquisition might be the new Offensive Coordinator Kellen Moore, coming in from the Dallas Cowboys.

A bright light guy who did lots of things to help Dallas put up big offensive numbers.  Now he takes over, inheriting Justin Herbert, Austin Ekeler, a loaded wideout group and a talent filled young offensive line.

Moore wrapped up his preparation week talking about what he wants to see on Saturday night vs the other team from LA.
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OFFENSIVE COORDINATOR KELLEN MOORE

 

On ‘walking the line of being aggressive and taking care of the ball’:

“I think the biggest thing is that it’s just a constant conversation. It’s assessing different situations, different circumstances, different plays. We want to be aggressive. I don’t think that any offense doesn’t want to be aggressive. We want to present opportunities to take a deep shot or take a bigger play, but at the same time, make good decisions. If they’re not there, move on, and that gives us opportunities to keep going. [QB] Justin [Herbert] has done that throughout his career in such a phenomenal way, so we’re really excited about it.”

 

On Herbert’s ‘risk versus taking care of the ball’:

“I think that he has done a nice job. Every game is different, right? There are different circumstances, whether it’s on your team or the other team. I think that he has really done a phenomenal job of taking care of the football. Obviously, everyone knows his statistics through his first three years. He has taken care of the ball extremely well. He’ll continue to do that. Hopefully, we get a few more opportunities. Certainly, these receivers have tremendous talent to get down the field, so we’re really excited about that.”

 

On ‘trying to convince’ Herbert ‘to take more chances’:

“I haven’t sensed that. I think that he has, certainly, done a phenomenal job so far in this camp. Camp is about evaluating yourself and testing yourself in different ways. Justin has, I think, done that in a really good way.”

 

On his takeaways from the scrimmage:

“The scrimmage was a day in this process. It didn’t start great, certainly had some sacks in that game and just some lack of flow. I think that our guys settled in. We got into some situational ball, which was good. Hopefully, you learn from that thing and keep building.”

 

On if he is ‘looking forward to seeing the running backs in a game situation’:

“Yes. Preseason games are so phenomenal for running backs, just because it’s finally their chance to really show, ultimately, what they are able to do. We have such a great group here that is going to have these awesome opportunities to hop in there, get some rushing attempts, make the plays out in space, make great decisions out in space. I’m really excited for those guys.”

 

On what he is ‘looking for’ out of the offense on Saturday night:

“Number one is operation, just a clean operation and that our guys are on the same page, communicating really well. Certainly, as preseason games progress, a lot of the younger guys will get a lot of opportunities. We’re really excited about those guys, just getting a chance to go play free, play football, trust yourself — you’re here for a reason — and go for it.”

 

On ‘working the Middle 8 today’ and that particular situation:

“I think that a really cool part of this training camp process that [Head Coach] Brandon [Staley] has really emphasized is just all of the situational football. Yesterday, we talked about starting the game fast and emphasizing the start of the game. We talked about the Middle 8 today, spent a lot of time about how you can play off of each other and how critical those can flip games when you steal points before the half, and then get an opportunity to take the ball in the second half. Those are big, big game-changing moments. We have to emphasize it, be aware of it, that these are critical things that influence games.”

 

On if there is a ‘plan’ for how much each player will play on Saturday night:

“No, no plan yet. We’ll get there probably in the next day or two.”

 

On Herbert ‘through the eyes of a former quarterback’:

“Justin [Herbert] has, certainly, the physical things that we all see and recognize, but I think that his preparation, the way that he sees the game, the way that he processes the game, is at a really special level. I’m really excited to see him continue to grow in that way.”

 

On what ‘stands out physically’ about Herbert:

“Certainly, he has the size, he has a very talented arm that we all see. I think that he moves really well. He has made some plays with his legs, I think that has been a really exciting part about this process, that he is going to be able to explore and take advantage of.”

 

On WR Quentin Johnston:

“Quentin [Johnston] has done a nice job. The other three guys have, certainly, been here for a number of years, so it has been awesome for him to have those guys there, to lean on and to grow, while watching those guys, and then hopping in there. He’s taking advantage of each and every opportunity. We’re excited to keep building it.”

 

On Johnston and ‘making sure that the team isn’t putting too much on his plate’:

“It’s just a process where you expose it to him. Like any player on our team, we expose him to a lot of football during training camp. Every day, there is something new. The wheels are always turning. As we get closer to games and, certainly, the regular season, we start building out roles and packages that they can focus on, that allow them to still play fast and play with all of the talent that they have.”

 

1-Man’s Opinion on Sports-Wednesday “Aztecs Baseball-New Coach-New Era”

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“Aztecs Baseball-a New Era Needed”

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San Diego State baseball has a history of achievement.

The legendary Jim Dietz built it and put alot of players in the major leagues, with very little resources.

Tony Gwyne arrived, and the Hall of Famer, gave it direction, scheduled big time, then sadly passed away.

Mark Martinez came on board, some success, but then it faltered, and did not recover.

San Diego State baseball is in a non-descript baseball conference, that plays in some of the strangest environments in the nation, in a hodge-podge Mountain West Conference.

They are in the shadows of some pretty good college programs, USC-UCLA-Fullerton and even Cal-Irvine.

But those schools have been where San Diego State has never been.  Deep into the regional playoffs.  To the College World Series in Omaha.

It’s mind-boggling that the Aztecs, with a nice tradition, a decent stadium, fine weather, and in the heartland of baseball recruiting territory in the Southland, never became a big time player in college baseball.

There are so many players to recruit from; so many transfers you’d think could come here, mold their careers and make a difference.  But aside from Stephen Strasburg, Gwynn himself, and long ago names like Bud Black,  not much has ever been accomplished.

Enter a new leader, with impressive credentials, and a real different cross section of experience, Shaun Cole, elevated to the job having worked for the Padres at an the Uniersity of Arizona.

He won his lst press conference.  Now we see if he can win games, and make this program ‘Omaha-worthy’.
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1-Man’s Opinion on Sports–Tuesday “Hot Topics-Hot Under the Collar”

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“Hot Topics-Hot Under the Collar”

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DODGERS….So that’s what a first place team looks like….Dodgers take 3-of-4, could’ve won all four, in pasting the Padres at Petco Park….alot of Dodgers fans in the house, cheering as LA scored 8-runs in the 4th inning and 13-runs in all in the Monday win.

Rivalry?  What rivalry?  LA now (8-2) vs the Friars this year.  LA has won 40-of-last 57-games played between the two teams in the regular season dating back to 2020.  And the Blue have 2on 15-of-18-series played between the two teams since 2020

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PADRES…They look fatigued.  Manny Machado has a minor hamstring issue.  Fernando Tatis looks fatigued and was hitting (.109) in 13-game span.  Louis Campusano hit two bombs, had 4-hits, all  for naught in the loss.

Padres now with 49-sellouts on the season, though Padres fans obviously sold alot of their tickets to LA fans on Saturday-Sunday-Monday.  Oh by the way, wonder about the letter in the mail from Petco Park, that ticket prices were going up 13-to-15% next year, this after raises of 18-and-20% the two prior years.

Cost of doing business baseball.  You wanted a 253M-payroll, you got it but it cost you at the ticket window.  If this turns out to be a non playoff season, wonder how many of these fans will be coming back.

Hey somebody has to pay for Matt Carpenter and Drew Pomeranz’s contracts.

WILDCARD UPDATE…The Friars are still in the race, but so many others are in the National League.  Starting play on Monday…the Giants had won 7-of-11 to hold the first wildcard spot.  The Phillies were right there with San Francisco, having won 9-of-13.  Explain the Cubs, with 14-wins in 18-games to sit in the 3rd wildcard slot.

The Reds had skidded, losing 6-in a row.  Miami had lost 6-of-7, and Arizona’s collapse in the summer heat, 14-losses in 17-games.  The Padres could fall 4-games off the pace for the last wildcard spot.  Yes still time to catch up for the final slot.  Yes, they have to go thru 4-teams to make that happen.

 

ANGELS…Awful stretch after the trade deadline.  So many injuries, and now 6-losses in a row and a wildcard spot slipping away, even with Superstar Ohtani doing what Superman does.

 

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1-Man’s Opinion on Spoirts–Monday “PAC 12-CONFERENCE DEATH NOTICE”

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“Pac 12–Death Notice”
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It was a Black Friday in college football.
By Saturday, the patient was dead.
All that is left is the autopsy and Memorial Service notices.

In a 24-hour span, the Conference of Champions died.  Cause of death Greed.  Contributing factor-horrible leadership.  Next of Kin-what’s left now known as the Pac 4.

On Friday morning the PAC 12-did a Zoom call, thinking the 10-remaining schools would vote to approve the ‘Deed of Rights’, the first step towards accepting a new TV deal.

The Commissioner George Kliavkoff presented what he believed was the best TV deal he could put together.  Within moments his idea of turning over the TV rights to Apple TV-for complete streaming of the conference games, had been rejected.

His attempts to lure ESPN-Disney back into a special Friday night package failed.
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His effort to introduce Nexstar-CW to college football went nowhere.
Talks with TBS-TNT stalled.

He ran out of money offers, ran out of options.

Oregon-Washington ran out of patience, and the death knell sounded for a once proud league   They were not going to accept  a pay plan from Apple that would start at 20M a year, down from the Pac 12-Network payday of 25M per season. They said no to a Bonus plan that would bump up the yearly Apple TV fee based on subscription numbers.

The Ducks and Huskies rationalized that if the Big 10-was paying each school, USC-and-UCLA included, 60M, they should not have to operate at such a low fee.  The SEC payday is 50M a year.  The Big 12 will pay schools 37M per season in their new deals.

3-hours later the other dominoes fell.  It was not just USC-UCLA a year ago, or Colorado last week.  It was Oregon and Washngton.  and then the Big 12 raided the remnants of the conference.

By Friday night, Arizona, Arizona State and Utah, the corner state schools voted to leave, joining Colorado in the Big 12.

By midnight, Apple TV ended all talks with what used to be the Conference of Champions.

Left standing were California, Stanford, Oregon State and Washington.  The rubble now was known as the Pac 4.

No TV contract effective in 2024.  No cornerstone football programs left either.

The condemnation was universal.

Horrible leadership from since fired Commissioner Larry Scott, who created the Pac 12-network, then failed to get distribution.  The man who took on great expense, was paid a great salary, and then was removed.  Kliavkoff took heat for failing to have a vision to move quickly on new deals while he still had 10-schools left, failing to realize without USC-UCLA his leverage was weakened.

The Pac 12-Presidents share blame too, sitting atop their Ivy Towers of academia failing to see the landscape shifts in the media markets below.  The  network deals were taken up by the other conferences.  All the marquee broadcast windows were filled too by every other conference.

What’s left now will be the question, who goes where?  The Mountain West, which held onto San Diego State and others is a strong Group of 5-league, but they pay out just 4M-per team per year on a limited TV contract.

Do you really think Oregon State-Washington State are going to move down to be Group of 5-for no money?

Do you really think Cal and Stanford can survive as an independent with bad teams and virtually no TV money coming in as they rebuild?  Nobody can be Notre Dame.

Do you really believe the MWC will not remind it’s schools, if you try to exit to go elsewhere, you owe us (34M) exit fees.  Even they want money on any future deals.

Where else do you go to find teams to join the league?

It’s a nightmare, triggered by greed and nothing more.  And are these TV deals a one time thing, slated to drown in red ink after the next 4-to-6 year contact expires?

Speaking of money, we are two years into the NIL and Transfer Portal projects, so distasteful now that the NCAA and Congress are talking about governmental intervention to change that mess.

I understand the financial crush hitting college programs.  I don’t understand how you can leave a conference that made your schools and its athletic programs special for generations.

The historical fallout is significant.  No Pac 12, therefore no Rose Bowl heritage we used to have.  What happens to USC-UCLA…The Big Game in Palo Alto-Berkley, the Apple Cup, or the old Civil War?

I close my eyes and I flashback to John McKay, Mike Garrett, OJ Simpson, Charles White, Pete Carroll at USC.  The grittiness of Terry Donahue and all things that were John Wooden, Lew Alcindor and Bill Walton.

Go to every campus and you get the same flashbacks whether you are in the tiny mill town that is Corvallis, on the Palouse in Washington, or at Sun Devil Stadium or down Tucson Old Pueblo Way.

How could these schools turn their back on its history, legacy, loyalty that went all the way back to 1915.  A Conference that survived World War 1…Pearl Harbor, earthquakes and fires?

They did and they leave behind the most special times you could ever remember from the LA Coliseum, to Pasadena, to Autzen Stadium and Seattle.

But they could ot survive the greed and the spending sprees that suddenly showed up.  And they could not survive the incompetence of its ownership to not understand what was happening.

This does not feel right, does not look right, but not much can be done now.  Funeral services for the Conference of Champions are pending.

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