Los Angeles Times

NO HOLDING BACK Urgency won’t be a problem in this meeting

- By Mike DiGiovanna WILD-CARD ROUND

Nick Hardwick spent 11 years as the Chargers’ center from 2004 to 2014, sharing the huddle with quarterbac­k Philip Rivers and tight end Antonio Gates for most of that time, and after retirement three more years as a radio broadcaste­r for the team.

He was not on the sideline or in the booth for the Chargers’ 22-10 loss to the Baltimore Ravens on Dec. 22, but, as he watched on television through the eyes of an NFL veteran, he sensed a subtle difference in the intensity levels of the teams.

The Chargers had clinched an AFC playoff berth with a dramatic comeback victory at Kansas City the week before, and they were still in the hunt for a No. 1 seed and bye through the wild-card round of the playoffs.

the hostile setting they call home, where visiting teams’ fans continued to dominate the atmosphere at Dignity Health Sports Park in number and in noise.

The Chargers backed their words with their performanc­es. They won seven of eight road games and in London too, as a leaguelead­ing seven Pro Bowl picks carried them to their sixth 12-win season in franchise history and to the playoffs for the first time since 2013.

On Sunday, in their AFC wild-card matchup against the Ravens in Baltimore, the Chargers must show if they’re as exceptiona­l as they’ve been saying all along.

It’s put up or shut up. Be special or be gone.

“Exactly,” offensive lineman Michael Schofield said. “We went 12-4, but none of that really matters in the playoffs. It’s level, 0-0. You’re playing for your season. It’s time for us to prove it.”

They will have to do that against a staunch defensive team that ranks first in the NFL in total defense, fourth in rush defense, fifth in pass defense and second with 4.81 yards allowed per play. The Chargers, of course, know about the Ravens’ stifling defense from recent and painful first-hand experience.

Quarterbac­k Philip Rivers’ streak of 27 games with a touchdown pass ended against the Ravens on Dec. 22, in a 22-10 Baltimore victory in Carson. He was held to 181 yards on 23-for-37 passing and was sacked four times, a stark contrast to mobile Ravens rookie quarterbac­k Lamar Jackson’s 12-for-22 performanc­e with one touchdown and 204 yards passing, the first 200-yard passing performanc­e of Jackson’s promising career.

Asked this week to evaluate Jackson’s running ability — the Chargers did well to hold Jackson to 39 of the 695 yards rushing he gained this season — Rivers smiled.

“I certainly don’t know from personal experience,” he said. “It’s certainly fun to watch. When I’m moving around, it’s moving around hoping somebody comes open in a hurry.”

That victory sustained the playoff drive for the Ravens, who were 4-5 before Jackson took over for the injured Joe Flacco. They won six of their last seven games to grab the AFC North title and they’re the slight favorites Sunday, the day before Jackson’s 22nd birthday.

“Two weeks ago we were the hottest team in football and front-runners and now it seems like the scenario has flipped,” Rivers mused. “We’ve got a tough road ahead and this is the new favorite, so who knows? We’ll find out.”

The Chargers never got any rhythm to their running game two weeks ago against the Ravens, gaining only 51 yards in 16 carries. But this time, the Chargers will have a vital option in running back Austin Ekeler, who missed the first meeting because of a neck injury.

“Finally we’re somewhat to the point where we’re all healthy, and that’s awesome, especially this late in the year,” said Ekeler, who gained 58 yards in eight carries in the Chargers’ regular-season finale at Denver. “We’ve got a lot of different things to throw at them.”

And a lot of things to prove.

“We set ourselves up and put ourselves in an opportunit­y where we have something to go forward to,” Ekeler said. “Some teams aren’t like that. There’s 12 left right now so we’ve got to take advantage of what we have right now.”

The playoffs will be a strange, new world for many of the Chargers, who will look to veterans such as Rivers for leadership.

“I think it’s important for us, the guys who have been there, not make it something frightenin­g or anything crazy,” he said. “It’s what you dream about in the offseason and spring and training camp. You’re excited about this time.”

The time to be special … or be gone.

“The last 12 teams all have good team camaraderi­e and are all together and play well together, and it all comes down to who plays a little bit better that day,” rookie running back Justin Jackson said. “We have all the tools in this locker room. We’ve just got to go out and do it.”

 ?? Robert Gauthier Los Angeles Times ?? PHILIP RIVERS AND the Chargers couldn’t get much going against the Ravens and linebacker Patrick Onwuasor when they squared off in Carson on Dec. 22. If the Chargers had won that game, they wouldn’t be opening the postseason in Baltimore on Sunday.
Robert Gauthier Los Angeles Times PHILIP RIVERS AND the Chargers couldn’t get much going against the Ravens and linebacker Patrick Onwuasor when they squared off in Carson on Dec. 22. If the Chargers had won that game, they wouldn’t be opening the postseason in Baltimore on Sunday.

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