The Morning Journal (Lorain, OH)

NE Ohio native Staley right to work with Chargers

- By Joe Reedy

COSTA MESA, CALIF. » Brandon Staley’s first phone call after he accepted the Los Angeles Chargers head coaching job Jan. 17 was to his wife, Amy. His second was to franchise quarterbac­k Justin Herbert.

On Jan. 21, right before the Perry High School graduate and former John Carroll defensive coordinato­r was formally introduced as the 17th head coach in franchise history, Staley and his family video chatted with Herbert.

“You have to earn the players’ trust and there’s not a bigger person whose trust we need to earn than Justin’s,” Staley said.

The 38-year old Staley becomes a head coach after one season as the Los Angeles Rams defensive coordinato­r and only four years as an NFL assistant. He also fills what was considered by many to be the most attractive of the seven head coaching openings this offseason. There is plenty of talent on both sides of the ball, including Herbert, who is favored to win AP Offensive Rookie of the Year honors.

Staley replaces Anthony Lynn, who was fired on Jan. 4, two years after the Chargers reached the AFC’s divisional round. Los Angeles posted two straight losing years, including 7-9 this past season.

It is also not lost on Staley that his rapid rise from being a defensive coordinato­r at Division III John Carroll to leading an NFL franchise in five years is a surprise.

“It doesn’t make sense to a lot of people. I know that, but every day that I was coaching at John Carroll, James Madison, Hutchinson Junior College, I was envisionin­g going against Tom Brady or Aaron Rodgers or Russell Wilson,” he said. “I was studying the NFL and trying to become as as good as I could be to compete in this league, because that was always a dream of mine, and I think that those experience­s have uniquely shaped me.”

General manager Tom

Telesco said that even though Staley might be lighter compared to others in NFL experience, his strength in other areas more than made up for it. Even though Staley has coached defense for 15 years, including 11 in college, he did play quarterbac­k at the University of Dayton.

Telesco also said the one quality that stands out about Staley is his maturity.

“There were no buzzwords, no platitudes. It was just very to the point. A lot of substance was answered, so that really stood out,” Telesco said. “You would also like to have a high level teacher and communicat­or. You’re seeing the communicat­ion part right now.

You’ll see the teacher part more and when we get on the grass.”

Telesco added that Staley’s staff might include an assistant with head coaching experience to help in the transition.

When it comes to Staley’s on-field vision, he is looking to create an offense that plays to Herbert’s strengths. Herbert set a rookie record with 31 touchdown passes in 15 starts as well as having eight 300-yard games,

“We don’t want to impose a system on him, but create one for him that uniquely shapes to his skill set because he is unlike anybody in the NFL, you know he’s his own person,” Staley said.

 ?? LOS ANGELES CHARGERS ?? New Chargers coach Brandon Staley greets team owner Dean Spanos on Jan. 21.
LOS ANGELES CHARGERS New Chargers coach Brandon Staley greets team owner Dean Spanos on Jan. 21.

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