Los Angeles Times

Injured Williams makes cut for Chargers

Team hopes rookie can play this season. Undrafted Koo beats out Lambo as kicker.

- By Dan Woike dan.woike@latimes.com Twitter: @DanWoikeSp­orts

There was a time this offseason when the Chargers were worried that their firstround draft pick, wide receiver Mike Williams, would be cut — by a surgeon.

Season-ending back surgery could have kept the team from seeing their prized rookie play in their first season in Los Angeles, but a hope persisted that he’d be able to work his way back onto the field.

When the Chargers went through their roster Saturday, doing cutting of their own, they decided that Williams, who missed all but the first day of training camp because of a back injury, had shown them enough to keep him on their 53-man roster.

The decision was one of a handful of moderate surprises made by general manager Tom Telesco and the organizati­on that included jettisonin­g starting safety Dwight Lowery, incumbent kicker Josh Lambo and quarterbac­k Kellen Clemens.

Tight end Jeff Cumberland, cornerback Trovon Reed, defensive end Caraun Reid and linebacker Joshua Perry, the team’s fourthroun­d pick last year, were also left off the roster.

After trimming from 90 to 53 players, the Chargers now have until late Sunday morning to make waiver claims before they fill out their 10-man practice squad, meaning players who survived the bubble today could be without work tomorrow.

In the case of Clemens, the Chargers, according to a team source, plan on bringing back the veteran quarterbac­k later this week — a move that probably means the team wants to try to sneak a young player through waivers so he can be added to the practice squad.

Williams seemed like a logical candidate to begin the season on the physically unable to perform list, which would have kept him out the first six weeks of the regular season.

But the Chargers’ rookie, who participat­ed only in the first day of rookie minicamp before being sidelined with lower back problems, showed signs of improvemen­t in recent weeks.

He has been running at full speed and, last week, began doing change-of-direction drills. By keeping him on the active roster, it appears there have been no setbacks. Chargers coach Anthony Lynn said Williams could play as soon as Week 4 against the Philadelph­ia Eagles.

By releasing Lowery, a nine-year veteran, the Chargers save $2 million and turn over the free safety duties to Tre Boston, whom the team signed after he was released by Carolina early in the offseason. Lowery started all 16 games for the Chargers last season.

The team also made a big switch on special teams with undrafted rookie Younghoe Koo beating out Lambo for the kicking job. The two players were nearly even throughout camp, with Koo maybe separating himself with his directiona­l kicking on kickoffs.

Born in South Korea, Koo earned some fame in college after a video of him back-flipping after making a kick went viral.

He wasn’t the only undrafted player to earn a spot on the team. Running back Austin Ekeler, the breakout star of the team’s fourth preseason game, outlasted veteran Kenjon Barner and Andre Williams to win the No. 3 running back job.

Tight end Sean Culkin and linebacker­s Nigel Harris and James Onwualu also made the team, providing depth and athleticis­m on special teams. The team also elected to keep linebacker Denzel Perryman on the active roster despite his ankle surgery during training camp. Though he’s starting on the active roster, the plan is for Perryman to start the season on the injured reserve list with the hope he’ll be able to return.

Undrafted cornerback and former Glendale High star Michael Davis, who received a lot of reps during the preseason, didn’t make the team but could be a candidate for the practice squad.

Each of the Chargers’ draft picks, with the exception of second-round pick Forrest Lamp, who is on injured reserve, made the initial 53-man roster.

The Chargers open the season Sept. 11 in Denver.

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