Los Angeles Times

Bosa is expected to report to Chargers

General manager Telesco says he hasn’t received indication star end will hold out.

- By Jeff Miller

The Chargers’ veterans are scheduled to report Tuesday and general manager Tom Telesco said he has been given no reason to think Joey Bosa won’t be among them.

A two-time Pro Bowl selection entering the final season of his rookie contract, Bosa could be a candidate to hold out in search of a new deal.

“Nobody’s called me about anything,” Telesco answered Monday when asked whether he’s heard from Bosa’s agent.

Per the NFL’s latest plan, the Chargers will begin to test veterans for the coronaviru­s in preparatio­n for beginning on-field work.

Telesco said the team so far has had zero positive tests among its rookies, a group that reported last week. He also said he has heard from no players about opting out this season.

“My hope right now,” he said of the roster, “is we have all 86 healthy and ready to go by the end of the week.”

Bosa, who turned 25 this month, is coming off a season in which he started all 16 games and finished with 111⁄2 sacks. He is scheduled to make $14.36 million in 2020.

The latest market for top pass rushers was establishe­d two weeks ago when Cleveland end Myles Garrett agreed to a five-year, $125-million extension that includes $100 million in guarantees.

Garrett was taken No. 1 in the 2017 draft, a year after the Chargers selected Bosa with the third pick. Bosa’s statistics compare favorably to the ones Garrett has compiled. Bosa held out before his rookie season and didn’t report until late August because of a dispute involving his signing bonus and the offset language in his contract. He is a client of the same firm — Creative Artists Agency — that represents Aaron Donald, who has held out twice.

The Rams’ star lineman held out in consecutiv­e seasons, 2017 and 2018, to seek an extension while on his rookie contract.

The NFL’s new collective bargaining agreement has made holdouts more difficult because of potential heftier fines and the loss of an accrued season that could affect a player’s free agency. Bosa’s situation also is made somewhat cloudier by the uncertaint­y surroundin­g the NFL’s economics during the COVID-19 pandemic.

Given the projection­s of lost revenue in 2020, the salary cap is expected to go down next year, from about $198 million to closer to $175 million.

Still, the Chargers appear to be well positioned financiall­y. At the moment, they would have the secondmost cap space — an estimated $73.7 million — next year, according to overthecap.com.

“We’re set up pretty well for 2021 no matter what happens,” Telesco said. “So I feel pretty good about that. That’s not a concern right now.”

Instead, pending an appearance by Bosa this week, the Chargers are focused on prepping for the 2020 season and doing so safely.

“I’m optimistic as a league that we can do this,” Telesco said. “But I know for us here, for everybody, we can not get complacent. … We have two opponents really. We have to fight this virus and then whoever our opponent is on Sunday.”

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