Los Angeles Times

Passing attack can use tuneup

New Chargers starter Taylor will need time to build chemistry with his receivers.

- By Jeff Miller

The Chargers are trying to rebound from a 5-11 finish so underwhelm­ing that it helped end the 14-year reign of Philip Rivers as their starting quarterbac­k.

And they’re trying to do a whole lot more, all during a COVID-19 pandemic that has produced the most discombobu­lated offseason in NFL history.

“If it were like last year when it was basically the same team, it would be a little bit easier,” running back Austin Ekeler said Wednesday on a media conference call. “But it’s not.”

A year ago, the Chargers’ roster was largely unchanged from the previous season.

But, now, they’re trying to develop a rookie quarterbac­k in Justin Herbert, the No. 6 pick in the draft, while building chemistry in two places where it matters most: between quarterbac­k and receiver and among the offensive line.

Veteran Tyrod Taylor is expected to be the Week 1 starter, while Herbert is being groomed to eventually take over.

Though he spent last season with the Chargers, Taylor completed just four passes, not one of which went to top receivers Keenan Allen or Mike Williams or No. 1 tight end Hunter Henry.

He did connect with Ekeler — once — late in a five-touchdown victory in December in Jacksonvil­le. Each of Ekeler’s other 91 receptions came from Rivers.

“We have some new chemistry that we’re going to have to start building,” Ekeler said. “We’re going to have a little bit of time to get it in before the season actually starts, it seems.”

Taylor has been in Georgia, but Ekeler said he’s expected to return to Southern California in the next two weeks for some socially distanced throwing sessions with his teammates.

Video of Tom Brady and Ben Roethlisbe­rger working out with their respective Tampa Bay and Pittsburgh receivers surfaced this week as NFL teams attempt to navigate through mostly remote offseason programs.

Another recent social-media video showed Williams making an array of one-handed catches of passes fired by a JUGS machine he purchased before the pandemic.

“The connection and the chemistry is the main thing,” Williams said when asked about the importance of working with Taylor. “Knowing the plays, knowing the routes doesn’t really matter. At the end of the day, he’s got to know my speed. I gotta know how he throws the ball. It might take awhile. We just gotta get the timing of everything down.”

Ekeler said he anticipate­d it would require at least a month for players to be regular-season ready. Training camps are scheduled to open in late July, though nothing is guaranteed.

He also said adjusting to Taylor will take time and repetition. The same applies to Herbert, a former baseball pitcher who is known to still possess a fastball. Herbert already is in Orange County training with a local quarterbac­ks coach.

“Philip was more precision,” Ekeler said. “He’s not really going to zip it in there. Tyrod, man, he’s got some heat behind that ball. You need to get some reps with him just to understand how he’s throwing the ball, what to be ready for.”

The Chargers also rebuilt the right side of the offensive line, adding guard Trai Turner and tackle Bryan Bulaga and will have a new starting left tackle with Russell Okung gone.

Chargers re-sign offensive lineman

The Chargers re-signed veteran backup offensive lineman Ryan Groy. He appeared in nine games last season.

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