Inland Valley Daily Bulletin

Herbert, White lead Chargers’ comeback

- By Gilbert Manzano gmanzano@scng.com @gmanzano24 on Twitter

LANDOVER, MD. >> Chargers wide receivers Keenan Allen and Mike Williams were angry at themselves for dropping passes, a rarity for the team’s top playmakers.

“I want to start the whole season over,” Allen said.

Most of the Chargers likely wanted a reset before starting their rally during the Week 1 matchup.

Among unexpected events, the Chargers trailed the Washington Football Team in the fourth quarter of Brandon Staley’s head coaching debut at FedExField.

Chargers quarterbac­k Justin Herbert had a bad intercepti­on in the red zone to go with his receiver’s rare drops.

The biggest surprise was Washington fans chanting the backup quarterbac­k’s name. Taylor Heinicke came in after Ryan Fitzpatric­k injured his hip in the first half.

The Chargers needed a momentum-changing play to get out of their season-opener deficit. Linebacker Kyzir White delivered the momentum with a forced fumble and Herbert took it from there to lead the Chargers to a comeback 20-16 victory.

“The way he is as a quarterbac­k, he ignites you when you have a drop,” Staley said about Herbert. “He’s going right back to you. And that’s what happened with Mike Williams, he kept going back to Mike. Mike ended up making a bunch of big plays for us.”

Allen’s drops came early in the game, but Williams’ miscue occurred in the end zone when he dropped a pass from Herbert with the Chargers down three points with eight minutes left in the third quarter.

The two dynamic receivers repaid Herbert’s trust with crucial thirddown catches on the final drive to secure their victory. Herbert killed the final seven minutes of regulation with completion­s to Allen for 17 yards on third-and-17, KJ Hill for 19 yards on third-and-3 and Williams for 20 yards on third-and-7.

Allen got the fourth and final third-down conversion with a nineyard reception. They converted 14 of 19 third downs for the most conversion­s in a single NFL game since 2011.

“Fourteen of 19 is unheard of,” said Herbert, who completed 31 of 47 passes for 337 yards, one touchdown and one intercepti­on. “For us to be that efficient, and find those guys, Keenan, Jared Cook ... all of them made huge third-down catches.”

Herbert completed passes to eight players and targeted nine players. Allen recorded nine receptions for 100 yards. Williams had a careerhigh eight catches for 82 yards and a touchdown.

Herbert and Williams connected for a 3-yard touchdown pass to regain the lead 20-13 with 11:21 in the fourth quarter.

“Those 50-50 balls, he’s going to come down with it,” Allen said about Williams. “He’s mad at himself right now because he didn’t come down with the one in the end zone.”

With the Chargers trailing 1613, cornerback William Jackson III jumped in front of tight end Stephen Anderson to intercept Herbert’s pass with 12:23 in the fourth quarter. But the Chargers’ defense quickly lifted Herbert after rookie cornerback Asante

Samuel Jr. hit Washington running back Antonio Gibson to create an opportunit­y for White to cause the fumble that was recovered by Kenneth Murray.

“They came off the sidelines and said, ‘Justin we got your back,’” Herbert recalled about what the defense told him after his turnover. “I appreciate that and I’m gonna go back out there and keep shooting.”

Heinicke shook off a sluggish start with a 34-yard throw to wide receiver Terry McLaurin during Washington’s first drive of the second half. Heinicke’s throw got past Nasir Adderley and McLaurin kept his feet inbounds to complete the play near the sideline. Adderley got beat again in coverage when Heinicke found tight end Logan Thomas for an 11-yard touchdown to give Washington its first lead at 16-13 with 11:20 in the third quarter.

Fitzpatric­k left the game with a right hip injury after taking a hit from Chargers edge rusher Uchenna Nwosu with 8:57 in the second quarter. Heinicke’s first two throws were against Samuel, but the Chargers’ rookie forced incompleti­ons.

Heinicke’s first points came on the final drive of the first half. He led Washington down the field with 48 seconds left to set up Dustin Hopkins’ 48-yard field goal. Joey Bosa’s 15-yard roughing the passer penalty prolonged the drive.

The Chargers went into halftime with a 13-9 advantage. Herbert completed 19 of 27 passes for 179 yards in the first two quarters. Hopkins had three field goals.

Herbert led the Chargers on a 76-yard scoring drive in the second quarter, but it ended with a 33-yard field goal from Tristan Vizcaino to increase the team’s lead 10-6. They settled for a field goal because Allen had a rare drop on third-and-4.

The Chargers were denied again after they failed to score in a goalto-go situation. Vizcaino made a 27yard field goal to increase the Chargers’ lead 13-6 with 48 seconds left at halftime.

But the Chargers had no issues against Washington’s vaunted defense on the opening drive with a balanced attack that finished with Austin Ekeler crossing the end zone on a 3-yard run. The Chargers’ offense finished with 424 total yards with 90 coming on the ground.

 ?? ANDREW HARNIK — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Chargers wide receiver Mike Williams (81) celebrates his TD with Josh Palmer against the Washington Football Team.
ANDREW HARNIK — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Chargers wide receiver Mike Williams (81) celebrates his TD with Josh Palmer against the Washington Football Team.
 ?? DANIEL
KUCIN JR. — AP ?? Chargers running back Austin Ekeler scores against the Washington Football Team on Sunday in Landover, Md.
DANIEL KUCIN JR. — AP Chargers running back Austin Ekeler scores against the Washington Football Team on Sunday in Landover, Md.

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