Los Angeles Times

Woeful offense is struggling for points and solutions

- By Jeff Miller

The Chargers’ offense showed its first real burst in the opening half at Tampa Bay in Week 4, scoring 24 points.

Early that afternoon, lead running back Austin Ekeler tore his hamstring and missed the next six games, during which the Chargers averaged 29.5 points.

Since Ekeler’s return two weeks ago, the offense has produced just two touchdowns in 23 possession­s.

“Before I got back, we were scoring like 30 points a game,” Ekeler said Wednesday. “I come back, I was like, ‘ All right, let’s go.’ Now we’re struggling. The NFL, it’s a hard sport, man.”

It was especially hard for Ekeler and the Chargers on Sunday when they lost to the New England Patriots 45- 0.

The only other time a Chargers team had been shut out this century was a 37- 0 Week 9 defeat at Miami in 2014. No Chargers team ever had lost by as many as 45 points in 61 years of existence.

“To not be able to have any success or even score any points, I was like confused,” Ekeler said. “That was kind of the feeling. Like, ‘ What’s going on?’ ”

The Chargers missed a f ield- goal attempt on their f irst drive and punted the next three times they had the ball. Then they had a f ield- goal attempt blocked and went to halftime down 28- 0.

The struggles have turned very real for the offense and quarterbac­k Justin Herbert, who was productive and efficient — particular­ly for a rookie — through his first nine starts.

But in losses to Buffalo and New England, Herbert completed just 54% of his passes ( 57 of 105) for 525 yards and one touchdown. He had only two rushing attempts for minus- two yards and was sacked six times.

Part of the problem has been the Chargers’ issues with protection. Herbert was hit eight times by the Bills and 11 times by the Patriots.

“At the end of the day, we gotta block the man that’s in front of us,” coach Anthony Lynn said. “We haven’t done a very good job of that.”

The Chargers’ offensive line has been wildly inconsiste­nt during a season when center Dan Feeney and the left side — guard Forrest Lamp and tackle Sam Tevi — have been mostly healthy.

Right guard Trai Turner and right tackle Bryan Bulaga have dealt with multiple injuries and been sidelined for significan­t stretches. The Chargers have started four players at right guard and two at right tackle.

Against New England, Tevi missed his first game of the season to be with his wife for the birth of their child. He has rejoined the team and is expected to start this weekend against Atlanta.

“A lot of it is the continuity on the offensive line,” Lynn said. “I mean, from week to week, we’ve got different guys playing and starting. We need more continuity there, and the ones that do show up and play we gotta execute.”

Lynn also suggested Herbert is holding the ball too long and, rather than taking advantage of what the defense offers, focusing too much on specific receivers.

Herbert has relied heavily on Keenan Allen, who leads the NFL with an average of 11 targets per game.

“The ball’s got to come out on time,” Lynn said. “The ball’s got to come out quicker. We’ve got to stop looking for certain targets and get back to our progressio­n. We can’t start trying to force the ball to certain people and expect the offense to get back in the rhythm it was in earlier.”

Starting in Week 4, Herbert threw at least two touchdown passes in seven straight games, an NFL rookie record. But his lone scoring pass the last two weeks came on a f ive- yard connection with Allen in the first quarter at Buffalo.

Herbert has thrown for no touchdowns over the last seven quarters. Going back to the end of the Chargers game Nov. 22 against the New York Jets, the offense has two touchdowns in 25 possession­s.

Against the Falcons, the Chargers will face another attacking defensive front that likes to send extra pressure.

That’s a scheme against which Herbert and the offense excelled early this season, when the Chargers were scoring more and building leads their defense struggled to hold.

“It’s nothing that we haven’t done before,” Lynn said. “We just have to get back to the basics.”

Lynn takes over special teams

Lynn said he will take over coaching the problemati­c special teams.

They have committed numerous penalties, had three punts blocked and last weekend gave up a punt return for a touchdown.

Michael Badgley has missed 10 attempts but will remain the kicker. JJ Molson was on the practice squad but was released Wednesday.

Etc.

Running back Justin Jackson ( knee) is slated to return from the injured reserve list and rejoined practice. ... Linebacker Kyzir White ( COVID- 19 list) is expected back this week. ... Cornerback Chris Harris Jr. ( foot), linebacker Denzel Perryman ( back) and running back Josh Kelley ( foot) did not practice. ... The Chargers signed receiver Manasseh Bailey to their practice squad.

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