San Diego Union-Tribune (Sunday)

DO BOLTS HAVE ANSWERS?

Chargers open at Cincinnati with a lot of questions in 2020

- BY JEFF MILLER Miller writes for the L.A. Times.

The Chargers have had six weeks to figure out themselves.

Six weeks of testing, conditioni­ng and then practicing. Over and over. Day after day. Six weeks of pretty much everything but the one thing that matters most: playing football.

“You can speculate all you want,” coach Anthony Lynn said.

“But you really don’t know until you get in live situations . ... We’ll see exactly what type of team we are on Sunday. If it’s the team I think we’re going to be, we’ll be all right.”

And if not? Lynn and the Chargers harbored lofty expectatio­ns one year ago, too, and they ended up 5-11.

The 2020 Chargers have a new quarterbac­k, a new offense, a new stadium and even new uniforms.

But the goal they have is as old as the organizati­on itself, the Chargers being one of 12 NFL franchises to never win a Super Bowl. Ending that streak this season is a

Today: 1:05 p.m., Paul Brown Stadium, Cincinnati Line: Chargers by 3

On the air: Ch. 8; 600-AM

particular­ly daunting challenge coming off a year in which the Chargers failed to win as much as one game in their own division.

And the AFC West is still home to the Kansas City Chiefs, the reigning Super Bowl champions.

“I like this football team,” Lynn said. “I like the personalit­ies that we have. I like the character that we have on this team. I’m excited about this team.”

Because of the COVID-19 pandemic, the NFL canceled all preseason games and joint practices. The Chargers conducted only a single scrimmage, which lasted roughly 75 minutes.

What they gained from that intensifie­d workout late last month will be on display today when they open at Cincinnati.

What they lost also will be in plain view: All-pro safety Derwin James, who is out for the season because of a knee injury suffered near the end of the scrimmage.

Also missing against the Bengals will be four-time Pro Bowl center Mike Pouncey, who again is dealing with a chronic hip problem. Failing health limited James and Pouncey to five starts apiece in 2019, and those significan­t absences were factors in everything the Chargers failed to accomplish.

Now, they’re being forced to overcome the same two losses while transition­ing at quarterbac­k from Philip Rivers to Tyrod Taylor, a move expected to emphasize Taylor’s mobility in both the run and pass games.

“Definitely different from what you guys have seen in the past,” tight end Hunter Henry promised of the offense’s new look. “It’s different. But it’s a good different.”

Taylor will be the first player other than Rivers to start at quarterbac­k for this franchise since Week 1 of 2006, a streak of 224 regularsea­son games.

To illustrate how monumental that is, consider that of Keenan Allen’s 524 career receptions, 520 have come from Rivers. The other four occurred on one 2015 drive led by reserve Kellen Clemens.

“It definitely will be different,” Allen said of not seeing

Rivers in the huddle. “But we’ve been working all offseason.”

This game against the Bengals will be odd in another obvious way. Paul Brown Stadium has slightly more than 65,000 seats and none will be occupied by human beings.

Instead, there will be only cardboard cutouts of Cincinnati fans, mixed with piped-in crowd noise, another concession to the pandemic.

“We’ve got to make our own noise throughout the game,” cornerback Casey Hayward said.

While the Chargers can’t be certain what to expect from themselves, they know even less about the Bengals, who were 2-14 in 2019 and made the changes that typically follow such a finish.

Cincinnati will start rookie quarterbac­k Joe Burrow, the No. 1 overall pick in April. With no preseason, the Chargers have been searching for clues by watching tape of Burrow at LSU.

So, this matchup will be something of a mystery, a collision of question marks in a league where so little usually separates teams by the time the answers are found. was down about 10 percent. Don’t laugh. There was more sports TV competitio­n than usual and it still won the night — by four touchdowns . ...

Anthony Lynn prepared his Judases for today’s opener in Cincinnati by piping silence into practice. Not only that, he didn’t allow his players to speak to one another on the plane ride . ...

Great to see L.A. Lodger Fredo Spanos at best mate Stan Kroenke’s new Inglewood stadium ribbon-cutting ceremony. Ricky Ricardo handing Fred Mertz the first one-dollar rental check. …

Word is Rams boss Kroenke gave Jalen Ramsey a $105 million contract extension because he wanted Jalen to move ahead of Fredo on the Forbes 400 list . ...

A.J. Smith said it many times. If you don’t hold up the Lombardi Trophy, you ain’t done squat. …

Hard to believe now, but when I went to K.C. during the Chiefs’ long playoff drought before Marty Schottenhe­imer got there, Arrowhead was so quiet you could hear a barbecued rib drop. …

Andy Reid’s fogged-up mask looked like a car windshield at a 1960s drive-in theater. …

To retain a “competitiv­e advantage” Lincoln Riley says Oklahoma will not provide COVID test results during the regular season. Just as it doesn’t provide the opposition with defense. …

I love college football. There should be no season . ...

The first 10,000 books on the subject of paranoia either focused on or were written by football coaches. …

Does Chris Paddack tip his pitches? If he does, simple. Don’t tip them. …

Memo to those complainin­g folks are jumping too soon on the Padres’ bandwagon: Can’t we just get entertainm­ent from a movie even if it doesn’t win the Oscar? Can we never enjoy the moment? …

Mike Clevinger must buy a home in OB . ...

The Braves scored 29 runs in a game. They violated every one of baseball’s 1,212 unwritten rules . ...

Pro Football Focus gave Deshaun Watson a higher QB game rating than Patrick Mahomes. You

can get PFF Elite for $199.99 a year. You can get me for much less . ...

As bad ideas go, to what can we compare a 350-school NCAA Basketball Tournament (ACC’S selfish idea since nixed)? The Shift? AB-5? MLB interviewi­ng

Fernando Tatis Jr. during play?...

Reggie Miller says that, given today’s NBA rules, he’d average 45 points a game. Probably. There are no rules. …

Strange, actually hearing horses hooves hit the dirt during the Derby . ...

Lou Brock was a terrific, dangerous player who was great in big moments. RIP. …

Phillies pitcher Zack Wheeler damaged a fingernail putting on his pants. Not a problem for me these days. …

Is it still permissibl­e to tell a veteran/current member of the military, “Thanks for your service.”? ...

Some 2.2 million men were drafted during the Vietnam War. So how were they suckers? …

Confucius said it: “If you are the smartest person in the room, then you’re in the wrong room.” No wonder I’m welcome in every room. …

“Keeping Up With the Kardashian­s” is going away. Silly me. I thought their talents never would be exhausted . ...

Think there’s any chance for a renewal of the Blue-gray Football Classic? …

There is an airline called Wizz Air. All the beer you can drink . ...

FIFA wants Italy to allow fans into soccer stadiums. Italy’s PM says no. Being Italian is … great! ...

The residue of not voting? Bitching. …

Some fans booed the pregame player unity moment in Kansas City. Sure. It’s all changing. …

If it’s not OK for athletes to express their views, why is it OK for the rest of us? ...

Used to be there’s no fool like an old fool. Not anymore . ...

Fire fighters, first responders and line workers: Bless you. Fire starters: Go to hell.

sezme.godfather@gmail.com Twitter: @sdutcanepa

 ?? JOE SCARNICI GETTY IMAGES ?? Chargers head coach Anthony Lynn says about the start of the 2020 season, “I like this football team.”
JOE SCARNICI GETTY IMAGES Chargers head coach Anthony Lynn says about the start of the 2020 season, “I like this football team.”

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