Baltimore Sun

Ready for the next step

In 3rd season, Herbert aiming to lead Chargers to postseason

- By Joe Reedy

COSTA MESA, Calif. — Despite being the offensive rookie of the year in 2020 and then reaching the Pro Bowl last season, Chargers quarterbac­k Justin Herbert still has room to improve going into his third season.

Herbert is focused his footwork. He made it a major focus of his offseason program and has continued to hone in on it during training camp.

“I think all of the drops that tie into the routes — three-step, five-step, seven-step — and being smooth in progressio­ns and going through all of the reads,” said Herbert about what he wanted to improve.

“I’m still experienci­ng the young aspects of playing in the NFL. I have a lot to learn, but hopefully lots of room for improvemen­t.”

Footwork has been at the top of Herbert’s improvemen­t list going back to when he was preparing for the draft. He didn’t take any snaps under center during his four years at Oregon.

Honing in on footwork took a little bit of a backseat last season as Herbert was getting up to speed with coach Brandon Staley, offensive coordinato­r Joe Lombardi and quarterbac­k coach Shane Day.

Now that he’s more comfortabl­e in the offense, Herbert’s work on his footwork has become a bigger focus.

Day — also the Chargers passing game coordinato­r — has noticed improvemen­t from last year’s training camp to offseason workouts and to preseason practices.

“The evolution of that footwork is pretty cool,” Day said. “The second year, kind of once you have the offense down, then you can focus on the fundamenta­ls. It’s been working through that progressio­n of what’s best and me learning what his body does best too, because he’s a top quarterbac­k. And then figuring out how to implement all that stuff.”

Herbert’s learning curve of learning how to operate under center is part of a process that most QBs have to go through when they come into the NFL. With most high school and college programs running their offense out of the shotgun, the learning curve can be steep and often begins during the pre-draft process and the scouting combine.

Even with getting up to speed with a new offense, Herbert was one of the league’s top quarterbac­ks last season. He tied the Buccaneers’ Tom Brady for most 300-yard games (nine), was second in completion­s (443) and passing yards (5,104), and third in passing touchdowns with 38.

Herbert also has the most completion­s, passing yards, passing touchdowns and total TDs through the first two seasons of a career.

Center Corey Linsley and wide receiver Mike Williams said they have noticed Herbert being more vocal during the first week of camp.

“In the walkthroug­hs and out here in practice and everything, he is definitely in tune a little bit more with some of the suggestion­s that we’ve made,” Linsley added. “From an adjustment standpoint, that’s something that he’s shown in the early few days of camp and even in the offseason in OTAs and stuff. We’re like, ‘Hey, man, if you see it, call it. We’re good. As long as we’re on the same page, we’re good. Make the call.’ ”

Herbert’s biggest goal this season is to get the Chargers into the playoffs for the first time since 2018. They looked as if they were going to get there last year before dropping three of the final four.

“You just have to compete and you have to execute when it matters most. Unfortunat­ely,

we fell short of that, but I think we have the team, and definitely the pieces,” Herbert said.

“We’re miles ahead of where we were at this point last year, so now we’re focusing on things that are maybe a little more tough or challengin­g to tackle, but I think we’re where we need to be right now.”

Early in training camp, J.C. Jackson is proving to be a quick study of the Chargers defense.

The 26-year-old cornerback, one of the top defensive signings in the league during the offseason, has been making life difficult for wide receivers during practices. He came up with a big intercepti­on Friday during a two-minute drill near the end of practice.

Backup QB Easton Stick threw a pass over the middle intended for Trevon Bradford before Jackson tipped it and then came up with the ball before it hit the ground.

It’s the kind of play that has made Jackson one of the top defensive backs in the league and it was deserving of the nickname of Mr. INT that he gave himself during his four years with the Patriots.

“I’m getting the hang of it. Switching to a new team, you always have to adjust,” Jackson said. “I’m coming out here each and every day, getting to know my teammates and coaches and having fun competing.”

Jackson’s 25 intercepti­ons over the last four seasons are the most in the league. He led the league with 23 passes defensed and was second with eight picks as he made his first Pro Bowl last season.

The Patriots, however, didn’t place the franchise tag on Jackson. He wasn’t without a team for long as the Chargers signed him to a five-year, $82.5 million contract.

The $16.5 million average per year is tied for ninth-highest in the league among cornerback­s.

Mr. INT picking things up:

 ?? ASHLEY LANDIS/AP ?? As he prepares for this season, Chargers Pro Bowl QB Justin Herbert has placed an emphasis on improving his footwork.
ASHLEY LANDIS/AP As he prepares for this season, Chargers Pro Bowl QB Justin Herbert has placed an emphasis on improving his footwork.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States