San Diego Union-Tribune

ARE BOLTS’ TENDENCIES ON DEFENSE TOO PREDICTABL­E?

- BY EMMANUEL MORGAN Morgan writes for the L.A. Times.

A frustrated Drue Tranquil took to Twitter on Sunday night to express his disappoint­ment.

Watching his team lose 31-30 to the Denver Broncos by relinquish­ing a doubledigi­t lead for the fourth time this season, the injured linebacker posted a widely used quote to his 21,000 followers:

“Insanity is doing the same thing over and over again and expecting different results.”

His teammates and coaches agree. After playing solid defense for much of their games, the Chargers have repeatedly collapsed, allowing opposing offenses to mount comebacks in the second half. Now, the players and staff are dissecting the problem.

“As a whole, each player needs to hold a little bit more accountabi­lity and go out there and make these plays,” said cornerback Casey Hayward.

An L.A. Times film review found that opposing offenses regularly attack the Chargers’ zone defensive secondary, gashing them for yards in the middle of the field or along the sideline en route to winning games.

The Chargers’ continued use of four-man rushes, which is considered the team’s streng th, fizzles late in games, allowing quarterbac­ks time to find open receivers in the zones’ soft spots.

Against the Broncos, New Orleans Saints and Tampa Bay Buccaneers — in games Los Angeles lost after leading by 17 points or more — the Chargers rushed more

than four players on approximat­ely 9 percent of pass plays when they were in the lead, according to film review.

During those sequences, the Chargers produced only three sacks. Hayward thinks the secondary can correct the coverages if they clean up their execution.

“Everybody every week is trying to beat us the same way, and we know that,” Hayward said. “We just have to try and be on our stuff.”

The Chargers have attributed their late-game meltdowns to mistakes such as blown assignment­s and missed tackles. After the 3831 loss to the Buccaneers, defensive coordinato­r Gus Bradley bluntly assessed his unit’s capabiliti­es if they don’t play soundly.

“When we’re not very precise, if we’re not on it, we can become very, very average,” he said.

Teams have capitalize­d on the schematic choices as well as those lapses.

For nearly two quarters, the Chargers held quarterbac­k Drew Brees to 43 passing yards and forced an intercepti­on, and the Saints trailed 20-3 after the twominute warning. But then, Brees orchestrat­ed a surgical drive, completing five consecutiv­e passes under the Chargers’ zone coverage for 50 yards, setting the Saints up at the 1-yard line.

He then scored on a quarterbac­k sneak, igniting their come-from-behind victory. The Chargers rushed four on every play that sequence.

Halfway through the fourth quarter on Sunday, Denver quarterbac­k Drew Lock faced a four-man rush, then found receiver DaeSean Hamilton on a post route in the middle of the field. Hamilton was open in the zone behind the linebacker­s and in front of the safeties. One of them slipped, and Hamilton raced to the end zone for a 40-yard touchdown, cutting Denver’s deficit to 27-24.

On the game’s final drive, Lock connected with running backs Melvin Gordon and Phillip Lindsay on three consecutiv­e short passes near the right sideline underneath the Chargers’ zone, including a pitch-andcatch with Gordon that converted a first down.

Five plays later, the Broncos scored a touchdown and won the game 31-30 on a walk-off extra point. Coach Anthony Lynn said that performanc­e might be the most discouragi­ng, especially after limiting the Broncos to 60 total yards before halftime.

“That team did not do anything different in the first half than in the second half,” Lynn said. “That’s what makes that so frustratin­g. In the first half, you look like the 1985 Bears. In the second half, you give up 27 points.”

The Chargers boast one of the most feared passrushin­g duos in the league in defensive ends Joey Bosa and Melvin Ingram. Bosa has been fighting through nagging injuries and was being evaluated for a concussion during the final drive against the Broncos. He remains in the concussion protocol. Ingram missed three games, including against the Buccaneers and the Saints, because of a knee injury.

Las Vegas Raiders coach Jon Gruden said those injuries, along with the absence of safety Derwin James, might have contribute­d to the Chargers’ struggles. He said Bradley’s scheme is “proven to go a long way in the playoffs” because Los Angeles used it in 2018 when they reached the AFC divisional round. Ahead of their Sunday matchup, Gruden said he won’t overlook them.

“They have an outstandin­g pass rush when everybody’s available,” Gruden said. “They’re still capable of making big plays and collapsing the pocket and getting after your quarterbac­k.”

Lynn said things may “speed up” for younger players late in games, causing miscommuni­cations. He’s confident the team can correct their shortcomin­gs, but suggested he and the staff could “dial back” on some of the more intricate concepts in the defense.

“There’s not a whole lot to change, but these guys do a heck of a job of getting these young men ready to be in these positions where they’re playing good ball,” Lynn said. “But to finish games like this, we have to communicat­e better.”

 ?? JUSTIN EDMONDS AP ?? The Chargers defense once again played well early, only to collapse again late, this time against the Broncos.
JUSTIN EDMONDS AP The Chargers defense once again played well early, only to collapse again late, this time against the Broncos.

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