Los Angeles Times

They know Burrow and are about to get up-close look

- By Jeff Miller

The NFL is about to be introduced to Joe Burrow.

For the Chargers, the meeting Sunday will be more a case of getting reacquaint­ed.

With the preseason canceled because of the COVID-19 pandemic, Burrow’s first appearance for Cincinnati will come against the Chargers in the teams’ season opener.

While the Chargers can’t know for certain how the Bengals’ offense will look behind the quarterbac­king of Burrow, they do know exactly how the No. 1 NFL draft pick will look.

“We did a lot of work on him last year just like on all the quarterbac­ks,” general manager Tom Telesco said. “We saw a lot of him, as far as his skill set.”

Having the sixth pick in this year’s draft, the Chargers interviewe­d Burrow at the combine and had at least one video call with him.

Cincinnati, which held the top selection, was the obvious front-runner to take Burrow. But, in doing their pre-draft work, the Chargers studied him just in case.

After the Bengals drafted Burrow and the Miami Dolphins took Tua Tagovailoa at No. 5, the Chargers went with Justin Herbert, making him the third quarterbac­k selected.

“Joe’s a winner,” Chargers coach Anthony Lynn said. “People can say he only did it for one year [in college], but what he did in one year was unbelievab­le.”

Burrow began his career at Ohio State before transferri­ng to Louisiana State for his final two seasons. He burst into prominence last year, throwing for 5,671 yards and 60 touchdowns as the Tigers won the national championsh­ip.

Barring any late developmen­ts, he will be the lone rookie to start at quarterbac­k in Week 1.

“I don’t see him slowing down much in this league,” Lynn said of Burrow. “I think he’s just that type of quarterbac­k. Our hands are going to be full dealing with Joe.”

The Bengals finished 2-14 last season but had a better December record by one victory than the Chargers did.

“The opening game for everybody this year is very unique,” Telesco said. “As you put your advance scouting report together on these teams, there’s a lot of empty boxes and areas of the report where we just don’t know.”

Telesco pleased

The NFL reached Week 1 on schedule in a year clouded by a coronaviru­s that has disrupted almost every walk of life.

“I’m really pleased the way all 32 teams have handled this,” Telesco said. “I thought it could have been a lot worse . ... Everyone’s followed the protocols very well. As we stand here right now, I’m really confident for a full season.”

The Chargers are one of the teams that so far has not had to use the COVID-19/reserve list. Lynn and one member of the front office are the only publicly known positive cases within the organizati­on.

“I’ve been very pleased with the way the guys have handled the protocols,” Lynn said. “Their patience, their persistenc­e . ... We can’t get tired of these protocols. It’s just part of our lifestyle now. We have to embrace it.”

With no preseason, the one thing the Chargers haven’t done yet is travel to a game. That will change at the end of this week when they fly to Cincinnati.

New sensation

Depending on local guidelines, NFL stadiums will have few or no fans to start the season, with pipedin crowd noise expected to be the norm. That means football players are about to experience something their counterpar­ts in the other major sports have known for the past several weeks.

“You like it because now you feel like it’s you against the world,” Lynn said of walking into a hostile setting. “Now, I’m looking for a bunch of guys who are internally motivated that want to go out and execute and just play winning football. So we’re just worried about the Bengals between the white lines.”

Injury updates

Lynn said wide receiver Mike Williams (shoulder) could be a game-time decision Sunday. Williams was injured Aug. 23 during a scrimmage. Center Mike Pouncey’s status for the opener is in doubt because of an undisclose­d injury that has prevented him from practicing. In Pouncey’s absence, the Chargers likely would move Dan Feeney to center and start Forrest Lamp at left guard. Lynn indicated running back Justin Jackson (toe) will be ready to play against the Bengals.

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