Los Angeles Times

DON’T THAT BEAT ALL!

Chargers find painful new way to lose, blowing lead with win seemingly in hand.

- By Dan Woike

JACKSONVIL­LE, FLA. — You don’t want to be a verb. Not like this. But Sunday, the Chargers, sure got “Chargered.”

What’s that mean, you ask?

It’s snatching defeat from the jaws of victory in new and inventive ways. It’s shooting yourself in the foot while knocking wobbly punts off of it. It’s making mind-numbingly unnecessar­y penalties. It’s still being good enough to be in position to win — but somehow stumbling.

And the 20-17 overtime loss to the Jacksonvil­le Jaguars on Sunday was a real “Chargering.”

“We’ve lost some close games this year. But that’s the first time we’ve lost one like that,” coach Anthony Lynn said. “To me, that was inexcusabl­e. We had opportunit­ies to win that game on the road. And, we didn’t finish plays. And, we had a couple of guys do some dumb things.”

Leading by three points with less than two minutes left, the Chargers managed to intercept the Jaguars twice and still lose thanks to a combinatio­n of poor execution, horrible judgment and some cruel, bad luck.

JACKSONVIL­LE, Fla. — The Chargers are staring at some “Good Will Hunting ”type math equations nine weeks into their season and, geez, do they need that janitor to walk into the locker room to figure out the problem?

A team seemingly filled with offensive talent — from the backfield to the tight ends to the receivers — cannot score enough points to win games. It has happened almost all season and, Sunday in a 20-17 overtime loss to the Jacksonvil­le Jaguars, it happened again.

“We have to find a way to win somehow,” offensive guard Kenny Wiggins said. “I don’t know what the magic formula is, but we have to find a way to do it.”

More than halfway through the season, the Chargers offense has greatly regressed from a season ago despite having healthier and seemingly more talented players available.

In 2016, the Chargers scored 21 points or less seven times. Sunday was the seventh time it has happened in nine games this season.

“We’ve got to catch better. We’ve got to throw better. We’ve got to block better — the basic fundamenta­ls,” coach Anthony Lynn said, listing the symptoms of the offense’s disease. “It’s a dropped pass here, a couple tipped balls. We had guys wide open and the ball gets tipped. Sometimes, those things are going to happen, but it’s happening too often. We may have to move the pocket. We may have to do some things differentl­y.

“But it wasn’t good enough today.”

Adding to the problems, the Chargers had two weeks to find ways to attack the Jacksonvil­le defense and figure ways to be better on offense. And while the offensive line didn’t allow the Jaguars to sack Philip Rivers once, the team whiffed on far too many big plays.

Rivers overthrew Travis Benjamin early in the second quarter on a pass that was close to being a 36-yard touchdown. Instead, it was an incompleti­on.

Later, Rivers had receiver Tyrell Williams open on a throw ball that somehow slid through his arms. It, too, could’ve been a touchdown.

“When we’re doing what we’re supposed to be doing and playing our style of football, we’re tough to handle,” tight end Antonio Gates said.

But nine games in, it’s not clear exactly what the Chargers are trying to do.

Sunday, they ran the ball 30 times for only 87 yards, their longest rush coming on a sweep by Benjamin — not Melvin Gordon or Austin Ekeler — for 13 yards. Keenan Allen also had a sixyard rush — a longer gain than on any of Gordon’s 16 carries.

Ekeler and Gordon dominated the passing attack, combining for 13 targets. That’s more than Tyrell Williams, Mike Williams, Hunter Henry and Gates combined.

In scoring just 14 points Sunday, the Chargers offense head-scratching­ly seemed to run the ball better with its wideouts and pass better with its running backs.

After vowing to find ways to put the ball in the hands of the team’s top playmakers during the bye week, Allen had only four catches and Henry had only two passes come his way.

“We just can’t get going. … It’s frustratin­g,” Henry said.

The problems showed up in the biggest moments — late in the fourth quarter and overtime.

After taking a 17-14 lead with 10 minutes 38 seconds left in regulation, the Chargers ran 15 plays through the end of regulation and overtime. They picked up just one first down. They turned the ball over twice. They gained a woeful 26 yards.

One more first down, one more completed pass and …

“Game’s over,” Lynn said. “It’s very frustratin­g when you can’t end the game on the field with your offense like they did in the Oakland game. It’s very frustratin­g. We had two or three opportunit­ies to put it away.”

Instead, the Jaguars found the way.

“All we needed to do was get a first down and didn’t,” Rivers said. “Both sides of the ball had their chances, and we didn’t finish. The defense did its part.”

The offense didn’t — again — and the Chargers paid the price.

 ?? Stephen B. Morton AP ?? JOSH LAMBO celebrates his winning field goal against his old team.
Stephen B. Morton AP JOSH LAMBO celebrates his winning field goal against his old team.
 ?? Stephen B. Morton Associated Press ?? JACKSONVIL­LE JAGUARS safety Tashaun Gipson, right, gets in the way of a pass by Chargers quarterbac­k Philip Rivers intended for receiver Tyrell Williams, left, in the first half. The Chargers lost 20-17 in overtime.
Stephen B. Morton Associated Press JACKSONVIL­LE JAGUARS safety Tashaun Gipson, right, gets in the way of a pass by Chargers quarterbac­k Philip Rivers intended for receiver Tyrell Williams, left, in the first half. The Chargers lost 20-17 in overtime.

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