Los Angeles Times

Swinton brings a special know-how to Chargers

The new special-teams coordinato­r will also help to solve the team’s issues with game management.

- By Jeff Miller

A lot of things didn’t go well for the Chargers in 2020.

Except on special teams, where pretty much nothing went well.

By every measure available, the Chargers this season got kicked in the kicking game.

“I’m not here because I’m some guru,” Derius Swinton II said Thursday. “I’m here because of the relationsh­ips I’ve had with the players and the performanc­es they put on the field.”

Improved special-teams performanc­es in 2021 certainly would be welcomed by the Chargers and new head coach Brandon Staley, who hired Swinton to coordinate his team’s third phase.

The Chargers missed too many kicks, had too many punts blocked and too frequently failed to set up the offense or defense on changes of possession.

The production was so poor that veteran coach George Stewart was removed as coordinato­r in late November. When that change didn’t help, former head coach Anthony Lynn took over special teams to finish the season.

After Lynn was fired on Jan. 4, general manager Tom Telesco praised Stewart’s efforts and admitted the kicking game failures were because of inadequate roster building.

“I didn’t do a good enough job getting him the players that he needs,” Telesco said. “I need to do a better job stacking that group. And I will. From top to bottom, it just wasn’t nearly good enough.”

Now the Chargers turn to Swinton, 35, who has spent more than a decade in the NFL and was the special-teams coordinato­r for the 2016 San Francisco 49ers. He was an assistant with Arizona this season.

Asked to identify his philosophy in building productive special teams, Swinton referenced the “three Fs of football.”

“It’s not going to be grammatica­lly correct, but it sticks with the players,” he explained. “We’re going

to play fast, physical and fundamenta­lly sound. … My mom’s an English teacher. So, phonetical­ly, that’s correct.”

Michael Badgley is coming off a season in which he missed 12 kicks — nine field-goal and three extra-point attempts. He was perfect from shorter distances but converted only 10 of 19 field-goal tries from 40 yards or more.

Ty Long had three punts blocked and ranked 30th in net average and punts inside the 20-yard line. The Chargers surrendere­d the most punt return yards in the NFL.

Telesco said the poor kicking game performanc­es contribute­d to the team’s struggles in close outcomes. During a stretch that began in Week 2, the Chargers went 0-7 in one-possession games.

Though they ranked near the middle league-wide in kickoff returns, only four teams were less productive returning punts. They were fourth-worst in average kickoff return yards allowed.

All totaled, it’s little wonder that Telesco called improving the special teams “a point of emphasis” for the upcoming offseason.

Another area where Swinton could help the Chargers in 2021 is game management, an expectatio­n Staley referred to in a statement released by the team Monday to announce coordinato­r changes.

Game management was another struggle for Lynn and his staff as the Chargers finished 7-9. There were issues with strategic decisions and communicat­ion in vital moments.

With the Cardinals this season, Swinton said he was part of a threeman team that assisted head coach Kliff Kingsbury in such matters.

While Kingsbury was busy calling offensive plays, for example, Swinton said he and two fellow staffers would plot what to do next based on game circumstan­ces.

“I think it was that flow of communicat­ion, situationa­lly, that led us to be one of the better teams, if you look at two-minute, four-minute and end-of-game [situations],” Swinton said. “It’s just communicat­ion.”

While watching the NFL’s conference championsh­ip games Sunday, Swinton said he and Staley were texting back and forth about what they would do at certain crucial points.

He said Staley finally just called him so the two could talk in more depth.

“We’re football nuts, I guess you could say,” Swinton said. “I think the more the entire staff, coordinato­rs, work together with the head coach, and we start seeing the game the same way, it’s just going to work together. … I always said that you try to see the land mines before they blow up, you know what I mean?”

 ?? Associated Press DERIUS SWINTON II ?? has more than a decade of experience as an NFL assistant.
Associated Press DERIUS SWINTON II has more than a decade of experience as an NFL assistant.

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