BOLTS HAVE TOUGH DECISIONS
Salary-cap issues could dictate what happens in offseason
The offseason for the Chargers began sooner than they’d hoped and, certainly, sooner than anyone would have expected on the night of Jan. 14.
That Saturday in northern Florida, the Chargers opened a 27-0, second-quarter lead over Jacksonville in a wild-card playoff game before crumbling to a 31-30 loss.
Since then, coach Brandon Staley has shuffled his staff, moves headlined by hiring new offensive and defensive coordinators. The team has not yet announced all of its coaching changes, but the rebuilding will be evident.
And that is just the start of the significant alterations coming before next season.
Here are the areas to watch for the Chargers as the combine approaches this week in Indianapolis and every NFL team launches full speed into offseason mode:
Cap crunched
Only three teams — Minnesota, New Orleans and Tampa Bay — are in worse financial shape than the Chargers, who are $20.5 million over the salary cap, according to overthecap.com.
Teams must be cap compliant when the new league year begins March 15, meaning the Chargers have some serious moves pending in terms of cutting players and/or restructuring contracts.
From the outside, the three most obvious potential cap casualties are wide receiver Keenan Allen, left guard Matt Feiler and tight end Gerald Everett.
Cutting edge rusher Khalil Mack would bring cap relief but also further weaken an already thin position group.
Allen has been with the team for a decade and trails only Antonio Gates in several of the franchise’s all-time receiving records. His departure would reverberate among the fan base.
Feiler has started 33 of 34 regular-season games since signing in March 2021. The Chargers seem to have a ready replacement at left guard in Jamaree Salyer.
Everett is coming off the best statistical season of his six-year career, but he did have some costly lapses.
Internal choices
Nine Chargers who were major contributors last year are set to be unrestricted free agents.
The group includes four fulltime starters: right tackle Trey Pipkins III, linebacker Drue Tranquill, cornerback Bryce Callahan and safety Nasir Adderley, who was benched for one game last season.
Defensive lineman Morgan Fox, linebacker Kyle Van Noy and wide receiver/kick returner DeAndre Carter all played significant roles and also soon will be eligible to sign elsewhere.
Punter PK Scott and linebacker Troy Reeder — both key special teams players — round out the top tier of unrestricted free agents for the Chargers.
Pipkins would appear to be the most likely of the group to re-sign after he established himself last year and displayed an undeniable toughness in playing through a knee injury.
Tranquill led the Chargers in tackles and took over the inhuddle responsibilities of relaying the defensive signals during his breakout season. But linebacker is not a premier position in Staley’s scheme.
Free agency
A year ago, the Chargers were among the teams with the most salary-cap space, and Staley and General Manager Tom Telesco shopped accordingly.
They traded for the bigticket Mack and spent freely in restocking the defense with players more in line with Staley’s preferences. That included adding linemen
Sebastian Joseph-Day and
Austin Johnson and cornerback J.C. Jackson.
Those moves — along with several others — put the Chargers in their current cap position, leaving them hunting more for bargain deals this offseason.
There remains a need for help on the edge behind Mack and Joey Bosa. The Chargers have used a draft pick on an edge rusher only once — Chris Rumph II in the fourth round in 2021 — over the last three years.
This team also needs reinforcements along the interior defensive line, where stopping the run has become an annual misadventure of inconsistency. Bigger, stronger and tougher looks to be a must.
Other top areas of need: wide receiver, tight end and — Staley always will advocate — defensive back.
Draft doings
The Chargers will arrive at the combine still armed with their original seven picks — one in each round — in the upcoming draft. Their first three selections are Nos. 21, 54 and 85.
Most mock drafts have them selecting a wide receiver — the popular predictions: Jalin Hyatt (Tennessee), Zay Flowers (Boston College) and Jaxon Smith-Njigba (Ohio State) — in the first round.
For the second consecutive year, speed on the outside is an obvious need, one the Chargers did not address last offseason. The lack of a burner at receiver showed itself throughout last season.
“I do think that’s a big area of need,” said the NFL Network’s Daniel Jeremiah, who also is an analyst on Chargers radio broadcasts. “They need to get faster and more dynamic and more explosive.”
After Jalen Guyton suffered a season-ending knee injury in Week 3, quarterback Justin Herbert’s lone deep threat was Mike Williams, who uses size — not speed — to be a downfield target.
The four-plus games Williams sat out because of an ankle injury highlighted how much the Chargers lack someone who can run past defensive backs.
Big bucks for QB?
For the first time, Herbert is eligible for a contract extension, one that should challenge the parameters of what NFL quarterbacks can make.
A new deal for Herbert probably would average somewhere around $50 million per season and include the sort of weighty guarantees that are now the norm at the sport’s most important position.
There are five quarterbacks with contracts that fully guarantee them at least $100 million, according to overthecap.com. Of that group, the two youngest are Arizona’s Kyler Murray ($103.3 million) and Buffalo’s
Josh Allen ($100 million).
The most important number with NFL contracts is the money that’s fully guaranteed. Even though average annual values and total guarantees also are touted, the fully guaranteed figure is what teams have 100 percent committed to paying a player.
Herbert, who turns 25 in two weeks, opened his career with three seasons that collectively rank among the best in league history. He has shown he is a franchise cornerstone.
The X-factor: Cincinnati’s
Joe Burrow, who was drafted five spots ahead of Herbert in 2020, also is eligible for his first extension. The Bengals have expressed a desire to extend his contract in the coming months.
Waiting to see what Burrow receives might be Herbert’s best move.