Los Angeles Times

Joseph knows new home can be a spark

- By Jeff Miller

Most of the Chargers will experience something oncein-a-lifetime this season when they play at SoFi Stadium.

For Linval Joseph, it instead will be third-time-in-barely-a-decade.

Joseph was a member of the New York Giants when they moved into New Meadowland­s Stadium in 2010 and the Minnesota Vikings when they moved into U.S. Bank Stadium six years later.

The Chargers and Rams will share SoFi Stadium beginning next month, with the Chargers set to make their debut in the $5-billion facility Thursday with a scrimmage.

“When you have a new stadium … you want to protect it,” Joseph said. “You want to make sure it’s your home. You want to instill in all the guys, ‘We gotta win at home. We got to start off right.’ It’s like another urge to get the job done.”

After relocating to Los Angeles in 2017, the Chargers played three seasons at what is now called Dignity Health Sports Park. They lost their first three and final three games there, finishing 12-12 overall.

Now, they’re readying to upgrade into a venue coach Anthony Lynn called “the best place to play football in the world.”

“I’m excited to get there,” Joseph said. “See it, feel it and hopefully make some magic this year.”

The Chargers signed Joseph as a free agent in March, bringing in the veteran defensive tackle with hopes he can provide pressure up the middle to aid pass-rushing ends Joey Bosa and Melvin Ingram.

Joseph has 24 sacks and 525 tackles in a career that includes two Pro Bowl appearance­s. He also won a Super Bowl with the 2011 Giants.

At 6 feet 4, 329 pounds, Joseph began making an impression on his new teammates the moment he walked through the door of the Chargers’ training facility in Costa Mesa.

He did this by simply filling that doorway.

Safety Rayshawn Jenkins said Joseph is built “like a mobile home.” Cornerback Casey Hayward called him “a truck.” Left tackle Sam Tevi likened Joseph to “a walking refrigerat­or” and “a running Coke machine.”

“He’s literally like a house in there,” Jenkins said. “You have to throw it over a house, if you’re the quarterbac­k. We’re going to get a lot of batted balls and altered throws with him in there.”

At 31, Joseph is the oldest player on a defense that mixes experience with youth and features depth throughout.

The defense is expected to be the backbone of a team transition­ing to a new offensive scheme after being built around quarterbac­k Philip Rivers the last 14 years.

“We have some home-run hitters …” Joseph said. “Once they put everything together, it’s going to be scary. I’d say it that way. It will be scary if everything’s put together right.”

Taylor made

Among the many ways the Chargers offense will look different this season is the fact the quarterbac­k won’t be as animated.

Rivers was known for his demonstrat­ive leadership, often sprinting downfield to argue with an official or correct a teammate.

Tyrod Taylor is not nearly that obvious, but Lynn said his softer nature shouldn’t be mistaken for a lack of leadership.

“He’s a man that doesn’t say a whole lot,” Lynn explained. “But people respect the heck out of him because of what he does. If you just watch him, he leads by example. I think that’s very powerful.”

Etc.

Cornerback Chris Harris Jr. returned to practice Tuesday after missing several days because of an unspecifie­d leg injury. … The Chargers will be limited to a walk-through Wednesday in advance of their scrimmage, which is set to begin at 1 p.m. Thursday.

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