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After playoff loss to Jaguars, pressure mounts on Chargers’ Brandon Staley

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JACKSONVILLE, Fla. — Three minutes past midnight in the hushed visitors locker room, more than half an hour after the newest debacle of his franchise’s tortured history, Justin Herbert sat at his locker, facing shellshocked teammates. He wore a thousand-yard stare and was still dressed in shoulder pads and full Los Angeles Chargers uniform down to his bare feet. He thought about the game that had just transpired, a dream that had dissolved into a nightmare. He had only begun to reckon with the fallout of an impossible collapse.

Across the room, teammates packed bags and hugged farewell. Equipment staffers wheeled out carts. They muttered expletives in quiet tones. One Charger blurted to a teammate, “That’s something we got to answer for for the rest of our f—— lives.”

The Chargers have endured playoff heartbreaks so ingrained they require only one image to open the wounds: Nate Kaeding’s shank, Marlon McCree’s fumble, Philip Rivers’s torn ACL. Saturday night at TIAA Bank Field may have topped them all. The Chargers lost to the Jacksonville Jaguars, 31-30, despite building a 27-0 lead in the first half as they intercepted Trevor Lawrence four times. Blessed with Herbert’s ballistic quarterbacking, they scored only three points in the final 34 minutes. Equipped with the pass rushing might of Joey Bosa and Khalil Mack, they yielded 24 points after halftime.

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The Chargers at once melted down and folded under the weight of their own history. They committed a rash of undisciplined penalties, including Bosa’s game-flipping helmet slam. They defended Jacksonville’s up-tempo attack as if the Jaguars had performed alchemy. They missed a 40-yard field goal. They yielded one final drive, highlighted by Travis Etienne’s 25-yard run on fourth down that set up Riley Patterson’s 36-yard, game-winning field goal. In the parlance that sticks to them now more than ever, they Chargered.

“I’ve seen this movie too many times,” Chargers tight end Gerald Everett said.

The future, now, becomes the question for Los Angeles. Coach Brandon Staley entered the game under fire for his decision to play his starters in a Week 18 game irrelevant to the standings, which led to star wideout Mike Williams suffering a fractured bone in his back and being ruled out for the game against the Jaguars. That decision, combined with Saturday night’s disaster, may convince Los Angeles to seek a new coach, with the ability to dangle the possibility of coaching Herbert to the top candidates, starting with Sean Payton.

Firing Staley would be easier said than paid for, especially for a franchise that is a tenant in its home stadium and is building a new practice facility. Staley still has two years remaining on his contract. Securing Payton would require not only shipping draft compensation to the New Orleans Saints, but also a contract likely to reset the coaching salary market. What Chargers ownership wants to do is one thing. What it can afford might be another.

If Staley survives, he will enter the 2023 season under immense pressure. The gift of Herbert, a quarterback on an inexpensive contract who can make throws even peers only dream of, has gone unfulfilled. He is only in his third season. But quarterbacks of his pedigree, when properly supported, flourish by that stage. Patrick Mahomes won the Super Bowl in his third season. Draft classmate Joe Burrow made the Super Bowl in his second. Herbert has one catastrophic loss in his lone playoff appearance. It stands as an organizational failure, from team owner Dean Spanos to General Manager Tom Telesco to Staley.

“This is the toughest way that you can lose in the playoffs,” Staley said. “Certainly, with the way we started the game, that’s the team I know we’re capable of being. We just didn’t finish the game.”

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The Chargers’ litany of self-inflicted damage could be repurposed as an instruction manual for how to squander a season. The Chargers should have built a larger lead to begin with — they kicked two field goals in the first half from inside the Jaguars’ 5-yard line, including one after Herbert missed Keenan Allen wide-open in the zone. And blowing that lead began with what seemed like an innocuous gaffe.

Late in the second quarter, leading 27-0, the Chargers had a chance to control the ball into halftime. On third and one, they called a play that included a “kill” to a different play: They would run up the middle unless Herbert saw a specific defensive alignment at the line, in which case he would switch to the second play — an end-around to a receiver streaking in motion.

There was a problem, and it made the play choice baffling. All week, the Chargers had practiced the play with veteran wideout DeAndre Carter taking the handoff. But Carter had been sidelined midgame with an injury. So the Chargers instead attempted an end-around to Michael Bandy, a 5-foot-10, 190-pound wide receiver out the University of San Diego who had never taken a handoff in his two-year NFL career.

Here was the Chargers in a nutshell: a misguided coaching decision built atop a lack of depth at a premium position. Bandy collided with Herbert and muffed the handoff, diving on the ball five yards behind the line. The resulting punt allowed the Jaguars a possession with ample time remaining before half, which they used to score their first touchdown.

On the Jaguars’ first possession of the second half, which followed the Chargers’s stalled drive, Bosa lined up in the neutral zone on what would have been a drive-killing sack by Mack. Etienne hauled in a first-down reception the next play, and Lawrence hit wide receiver Marvin Jones Jr. three plays later. A blowout had suddenly become a two-possession game.

“That’s the halftime swing right there,” Jones said. “It was everything.”

The Chargers seemed to stabilize themselves with a nearly seven-minute drive in the fourth quarter while holding a 30-20 lead. Staley eschewed his trademark fourth down aggression and opted for a 40-yard field goal, which Cameron Dicker hooked left of the goal posts.

“Time just freezes,” Everett said. “They start rallying, coming back, they’re building their morale. Their confidence is growing. All we could do is just sit back and watch.”

The Jaguars raced down the field again, using the fast tempo that changed the game until Lawrence found Christian Kirk for a nine-yard touchdown. Bosa slammed his helmet as he left the field, drawing his second personal foul of the game. The penalty convinced Coach Doug Pederson to go for two. Lawrence leaped over the line from the 1, which meant Patterson’s field goal would win it rather sending the game to overtime.

The Chargers managed five yards on a three and out in response. The Jaguars used Etienne’s burst around the right end as the linchpin of their game-winning drive. To the end, the Chargers had no answer for the Jaguars’ fast-paced attack, which challenged Staley’s reputation as a defensive guru. Safety Drue Tranquill said it exposed Los Angeles’s subpar conditioning and tackling.

“We got to be able to get our cleats in the grass and not have breakdowns,” Tranquill said. “We gave them a few explosive plays just on breakdowns. Coach Staley was saying early in the week, ‘We have to make them beat us.’ We beat ourselves.

“When it’s 27-0, you fully expect to win the game on defense. It shouldn’t matter what the offense does. When you’re up 27-0, you should win the game defensively.”

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The Chargers’ failings ran headlong into Lawrence, a 23-year study in poise, resilience and the virtues of quality hair conditioner. He completed four of his first 16 passes and threw four interceptions, three of them to cornerback Asante Samuel Jr., becoming the first quarterback since Craig Morton in the 1978 Super Bowl to throw four picks in the first half of a playoff game. After his fourth interception, Lawrence completed 24 of his final 31 passes for 258 yards and four touchdowns.

“I knew he was fine regardless, because that’s the type of guy he is,” Jones said. “If he throws four picks or if he’s throwing for 500 yards, he’s the same guy. He has that calm about him. So it’s easy to rally behind him.”

Triumph will probably come for Herbert, but Saturday night he had to digest shock and disappointment. Eventually, he rose from his seat and changed into sweats. He paced into his postgame news conference with his head up. “Sorry to keep you guys waiting,” he said.

“It’s really tough, because we think really highly of our team,” Herbert said. “That’s a special group of guys in that locker room. They deserve better, and it didn’t go our way. Definitely tough to process, but got to keep it going.”

The Chargers must determine which coach leads them next year, whether it is Staley or somebody new. Late Saturday night, Staley slung on a black backpack with the Chargers logo. His wife squeezed his shoulder as he walked from the locker room down the tunnel. He headed to the team bus, past equipment trucks and an ambulance, out of another Chargers fiasco and toward an uncertain future.

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Brandon Staley’s Chargers left stunned after Jaguars’ historic comeback: ‘We choked’

JACKSONVILLE, Fla. — Seven months ago, on a quiet offseason day in early June, I was sitting on a couch in Brandon Staley’s office at the Chargers facility in Orange County. I was there to interview the head coach about fourth-down decision-making and analytics, but early on in the conversation, Staley’s words drifted to something broader, something more deep-seated — something that might seem intangible but has left real, permanent wounds for anyone associated with this franchise.

“The history of this team when I got here, it was like, someone’s going to get hurt, they’re going to blow a lead, something catastrophic is going to happen,” Staley said then. “There’s this Chargering, and there’s all these external factors that I know in my life, they’re just all excuses. They’re just all excuses. And so, all right, well, how do you change that? Well, you have to do things different. You have to have a different approach.”

Staley has tried his hardest to eradicate the black cloud — “Chargering” — that hangs over this organization. He has tried to take that different approach. In 2021, he hired an additional analytics staffer and leaned into more aggressive math-based decision-making, attempting to establish a killer mindset among his players in his first year on the job. He brought in a new director of sports performance and implemented a more forward-thinking process for recovery and injury maintenance, like a mandatory activation period at the beginning of practices to allow players additional time to roll out their muscles and stretch individually. Staley has been refreshingly candid and open with the media, revealing the type of schematic details few, if any, NFL coaches are willing to share.

And yet, despite Staley’s best efforts to be different, the Chargers 2022 season ended in viciously familiar fashion. Someone got hurt. The Chargers blew a lead. And something catastrophic happened.

The Chargers fell to the Jaguars, 31-30, on Saturday night at TIAA Bank Stadium in the wild-card round of the playoffs. They led 27-0 in the first half. They carried a 27-7 into halftime. They won the turnover margin 5-0.

They still lost.


Asante Samuel Jr. was in disbelief after the Chargers blew a 27-0 lead to lose Saturday’s playoff game. (Nathan Ray Seebeck / USA Today)

Frankly, catastrophic does not even feel like a strong enough word for what happened Saturday night.

Since 2000, teams who won the turnover margin by five or more were 142-4-1 heading into this game, according to TruMedia. The Chargers are now the fifth team to lose, joining the 2000 and 2010 Browns, the 2012 Cardinals and the 2007 Buffalo Bills.

“You can only preach so much,” said tight end Gerald Everett, who led the Chargers with 109 receiving yards on six receptions. “It just comes down to what you actually do in the moment and what you don’t allow in the moment.”

Staley tried to fly full speed through that black cloud at 500 mph. It split, but only briefly. The cloud re-coalesced, bigger and darker and even more ominous, raining down acid on the hopes and dreams for something better, something more.

I don’t know if Chargering is real, but it damn sure felt real Saturday night.

“We choked,” edge rusher Kyle Van Noy said.

This debacle tops them all. It was the Chargers’ biggest blown lead in franchise history, according to Pro Football Reference — 27 points.

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How did it happen?

Well, it started late in the first half. The Chargers led 27-0 when they got the ball back at their own 18-yard line with 3:11 left in the second quarter. Quarterback Justin Herbert’s first-down pass was batted at the line. On second down, Herbert responded with a completion to receiver Keenan Allen, who made a diving catch on a well-placed throw. That brought up a third-and-1.

Herbert said after the game that offensive coordinator Joe Lombardi called an interior run with a “kill” built in for this third down. The kill, or audible, was a jet sweep end around. All week, the Chargers had been practicing that jet sweep play with receiver DeAndre Carter as the handoff man, according to Herbert. Carter was already filling in for Mike Williams, who suffered a back fracture in the Chargers’ meaningless Week 18 loss at the Broncos. At this stage of the second quarter, though, Carter was out of the game with an ankle injury, so Michael Bandy, a former undrafted free agent who started the season on the practice squad, was in at Carter’s spot.

Herbert got to the line and saw a Jaguars front aligned to stop an interior run. Based on this look, Herbert killed the initial play, checking to the jet sweep. Herbert took the snap and turned to hand off to Bandy, who was running in motion from right to left. Bandy was not even looking for a handoff. He was not aware of the kill, Herbert said. They fumbled the exchange. Bandy recovered, but the Chargers were forced to punt. And Trevor Lawrence engineered a 53-yard touchdown drive on the ensuing possession to put the Jaguars on the scoreboard heading into the break.


Michael Bandy wasn’t prepared to receive this jet sweep handoff — a play call that never should have been made. (Nathan Ray Seebeck / USA Today)

“I could have done a better job of going to him and telling him exactly what we needed to do,” Herbert said.

But this was not Herbert’s fault.

The jet sweep handoff call from Lombardi was an asinine decision in the first place, even if Carter had been in the game. The Chargers have run four jet sweeps to Carter this season. He has gained a combined -21 yards — note the negative sign in front of that number — on those four touches.

Beyond that, Bandy playing meaningful snaps in a playoff game is an indictment of this entire organization. Bandy earned his practice squad spot with a fine training camp. And my intention is not to pile on a hard-working player who has made some meaningful contributions this season. But a team trying to win a Super Bowl has to do better. Williams would have been on the field if Staley had just rested his starters in Week 18. And general manager Tom Telesco should have added more receiving talent this past offseason. Perhaps a speed threat who, you know, could thrive in that type of lateral rushing concept.

This was the pivot point in the game. And it unraveled in the second half. The Chargers had a 20-point lead and should have been able to run the clock out offensively. They mustered just 7 rushing yards on seven designed carries over the final two quarters. That is not a typo. Seven.

The Chargers did not trail in this game until Riley Patterson’s 36-yard field goal sailed through the uprights as time expired, and they had 55 rushing yards on 20 designed carries in the game. Blame the blocking. Blame the running backs. Blame Lombardi and his offensive staff. Blame Staley. Blame everyone.

The Chargers had a clear path to winning this game. Staley has always maintained that he wants to be a physical “line of scrimmage team.” When they needed to be that team the most, they failed. Epically.

“Certainly when you have that type of lead, if you can possess the ball effectively enough, then there won’t be enough time (for a comeback),” Staley said. “And we just didn’t do that.”

The defense had flummoxed Lawrence in the first half with disguised coverages and blitzes. Jaguars coach Doug Pederson adjusted in the second half and upped the tempo for his offense. The Chargers were not prepared for the wrinkle, and Staley’s unit fell flat.

The Jags ran 15 no-huddle plays in the game, according to TruMedia. Twelve of those came in the second half. On those 12, the Jaguars averaged 10.5 yards per play. Lawrence had three passes of 20 or more yards in the second half. All of them came out of no-huddle snaps, including Zay Jones’ 39-yard touchdown that cut the Chargers’ lead to 30-20 in the third quarter. That was a busted coverage, and Jones ran wide open into the end zone. The Chargers scored their only points of the second half on a Cameron Dicker 50-yard field goal on the previous possession.

“We got to be better in tempo situations,” linebacker Drue Tranquill said. “We got to be in better conditioning, all across the board.”

The Chargers committed a series of devastating defensive penalties in the second half.

Joey Bosa was flagged for lining up in the neutral zone on a third down in the third quarter, negating a Bryce Callahan sack. The Jaguars scored a touchdown on that drive to cut the Chargers’ lead to 27-14. Bosa was also called for two unsportsmanlike penalties, one for complaining to officials and the other for slamming his helmet near the Chargers sideline after what he seemed to view as another missed call in the fourth quarter. The second unsportsmanlike moved the Jaguars’ two-point attempt from 2-yard line to the 1 yard, and Lawrence converted on a sneak to make it 30-28.

“We can’t lose our composure like that,” Staley said.

“I’m not going to speak my mind and get fined more than I already am,” Bosa said in the locker room after the loss.

Rookie cornerback Ja’Sir Taylor — playing in place of the injured Michael Davis — committed a pass interference penalty on a second-and-19 in the fourth quarter that gave the Jaguars a fresh set of downs. The Jaguars scored a touchdown and converted that two-point sneak late in the drive. Dicker had missed a 40-yard field goal — just his second missed kick of the season — to give the Jaguars the ball for that possession. The Chargers faced a fourth-and-3 on Dicker’s attempt, but Staley opted not to go for it in a continued deviation from his 2021 process.

Davis suffered a pectoral injury in the third quarter and had to leave the game. Taylor has a future in this league, but he is still young, and he made some critical mistakes down the stretch of this game.

“We had far too many penalties in the second half that really hurt us,” Staley said.

And then, with the game in the balance, the Chargers, well, Chargered, in the two-minute drill. The Jaguars faced a fourth-and-1 from the Los Angeles 41-yard line. Pederson schemed up a run to running back Travis Etienne Jr. that got him one-on-one on the edge against Asante Samuel Jr., who had three interceptions in the game. Etienne beat Samuel to the edge and set up Patterson’s winning field goal.

Perimeter run defense has been an issue for the Chargers all season. And that issue popped up again in the biggest moment of the game.

“Twenty-two years of playing football in my life,” safety Derwin James Jr. said. “This one probably hurts the most.”


In the locker room after the loss, Herbert sat at his locker, still in full uniform, staring straight ahead. The pain was evident in the emptiness of his gaze. Teammates around him got back from the showers, dressed and packed their bags. As Van Noy was on his way out of the locker room, he stopped at Herbert’s locker, gave him a long embrace and murmured a few words into his ear.

The hug ended, and Herbert nodded to Van Noy. Then he sat back down. Staring. Longing for something better, something more.


The look on Justin Herbert’s face long after Saturday’s game ended told the story of this painful loss. (Mark J. Rebilas / USA Today)

He was still wearing his black cleats. All the Chargers had worn black cleats for this game.

Toward the end of a team meeting on Wednesday, according to players, Staley had shown a picture of the late 1990s Bulls — Michael Jordan, Scottie Pippen, Dennis Rodman, Toni Kukoc and Ron Harper — all walking off the court in black sneakers. He told the team he wanted everyone to wear black cleats on Saturday night as an homage to that team.

Staley’s message in the meeting, according to one player: “We look the same. We stand for something. We’re all going to do this together.”

Players rallied around the idea. Another motivational tactic from a coach trying to do it differently. Football guys do not channel basketball ideas. But Staley did.

It worked. Until it all fell apart.

It was not until 12:06 a.m. ET — nearly 40 minutes after the clock at TIAA Bank Stadium had hit triple zeroes — that Herbert started to take his uniform off.

He took off his cleats, the black ones, then slumped back into his seat.

Gifted with the rocket arm that was supposed to lead this organization to a new era, Herbert sat, and stared, and felt the weight of a dark cloud that might never dissipate.

(Top photo of Brandon Staley: Chris Carlson / Associated Press)



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Brandon Staley on Chargers’ collapse: I’m hurting for everybody in that locker room

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Chargers head coach Brandon Staley said after Saturday night’s epic collapse against the Jaguars that it hurt to see his players and coaches in pain.

After ratting off all the things the Chargers did well — including jumping out to a 27-0 lead and winning the turnover battle 5-0 — Staley acknowledged that it wasn’t enough.

“I’m hurting for everybody in that locker room,” Staley said. “It’s a special group of guys and this is the toughest way that you can lose, in the playoffs. The way we started the game, that’s the team I know we’re capable of being, and in the second half we just didn’t finish the game. Unfortunately, this is the tough side of things. Our season is over, but I love everybody in that locker room.”

Staley said he believes the Chargers will grow and get better from the loss. But the big question is whether Staley will be there for that growth and improvement. He’s squarely on the hot seat after his team melted down in the playoffs.

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Trevor Lawrence, Jaguars stun Chargers in playoffs

JACKSONVILLE, Fla. – The Jaguars started on the wrong side of history and came out of it on the other.

Just like that, the storybook season continues with a playoff performance for the ages.

Trevor Lawrence erased the worst half of football in his life with one of the best, leading the Jaguars to a somehow-they-did-it and you-still-can’t-believe-it-happened 31-30 comeback over the Chargers on a chilly Saturday night at TIAA Bank Field.

Riley Patterson’s 36-yard field as time ran off the clock set off an electric celebration that put a series of exclamation points on a comeback from a 27-0 deficit.

Yes, 27-0! The Jaguars had five turnovers and were dead in the water in the opening half. They roared back and delivered Doug Pederson one of the most stunning victories of his career.

“I mean, it’s everything. That’s just what I told them at halftime, it’s kind of like our season,” Pederson said. “We’ve put ourselves in a hole at times, and we’ve worked ourselves out of it at times. Just to have the resiliency and the fight and the desire and the ability to continue to play, because it could have easily gone the other way, and that’s what I’m so proud of these guys for. Everything is on the line, and they go out and get the job done.”

Lawrence tossed four interceptions in the first half and countered that with four touchdowns and a clutch two-point conversion vault after that with 5 minutes, 30 seconds to play to get Jacksonville in position for a comeback that didn’t seem realistic. The defense forced a punt and Lawrence engineered a classic drive from his own 21 to set Patterson up for the dagger to win it.

It was the third-largest comeback in playoff history and sends the Jaguars into the divisional playoffs next week. Their opponent will be finalized Sunday but will likely be either the top-seeded Chiefs or the No. 2-seed Bills, barring major upsets.

“Typical us,” said receiver Marvin Jones. “We know how to throw a good party.”

Added receiver Christian Kirk: “I told them we’re never doing that again.”

That the Jaguars were even sniffing the divisional round was unthinkable when the game was in the first half.

Lawrence threw four interceptions in the first two quarters — half of what he threw in the previous 17 games combined — that silenced the crowd of 70,250 just about immediately. That start was historically bad, but Lawrence’s finish managed to make that a footnote.

From a 27-0 deficit in the second quarter, Lawrence threw second-half touchdown passes to Zay Jones, Christian Kirk and to Marvin Jones, then added a two-point conversion leap over the pile to make it 30-28 with 5:30 to go. Lawrence, sensing that the impossible was within reach, spiked the ball down as hard as he’s ever done after a scoring play and the crowd went ballistic.

The Jaguars defense came up huge after that. Roy Robertson-Harris sacked Justin Herbert for a loss of 8. And Foye Oluokun stopped Joshua Kelly short on third down to force a punt. Lawrence got it back with 3:09 left at his own 21.

“I mean, the odds, I told the boys, I don’t like my odds but I love my chances,” Oluokun said. “As long as there’s a little probability of winning at all, we’re going to keep fighting. We saw the tables start turning, we had momentum, we kept that, we keep getting the ball back to the offense and they started rolling.”

Down the field Lawrence moved the Jaguars, hitting Kirk, Marvin Jones and Zay Jones with four passes, although a third-and-1 target to Kirk was off. That set up a play for the game. Fourth-and-1 at the Chargers 41 and too far for Patterson, Pederson called on Travis Etienne.

Instead of going up the middle, Etienne broke around the right side and had an open field to work with. He was tackled after a gain of 20 and that set Patterson up for a makeable shot which he nailed.

Ballgame.

Lawrence’s three first-quarter interceptions marked the first time in NFL playoff history that a quarterback was picked off three times in the first quarter, according to the Boston Globe.

His four first-half interceptions are a dubious feat accomplished just one other time in playoff history, in the 1978 Super Bowl by Denver’s Craig Morton against the Cowboys. Lawrence finished 28 of 47 for 288 yards, four touchdowns and four interceptions.

“For myself, obviously yeah, definitely the worst half of my football life, of a lot of people’s football life, too,” Lawrence said. “Some type of history probably in that stat.”

He found a rhythm after that disastrous start, bringing Jacksonville to within 30-20 on a 39-yard touchdown to Zay Jones late in the third quarter.

Lawrence turned in the worst game he’s had at any level of football, throwing an interception on the second play of the game, another on Jacksonville’s next drive and another late in the opening quarter. Those led to 17 quick points for the Chargers and a lead that was nearly too steep to overcome.

“I played with one of the greatest quarterbacks ever in Brett Favre and there were times he didn’t have a great first half and came back in the second half and could light it up,” Pederson said.

“That’s what I love about Trevor and his demeanor and his aggressiveness and the ability to just forget and move on. But he’ll be the first one to tell you that it’s not about him, it’s the guys around him, too. [They] made plays, the protection was good, receivers were doing a nice job being where they needed to be. But from an individual standpoint, this is really a great performance by our quarterback.”

Lawrence got out of his funk before halftime, throwing a 9-yard touchdown to Evan Engram. He added that 39-yard strike to Jones and a 6-yard pass to Marvin Jones in the third quarter that whittled the deficit to 30-20.

That started the thought process. Maybe, just maybe?

“Hopefully we play a little bit better next week. The defense, hopefully they play just like they did tonight. They did a great job. But offensively you can’t turn the ball over that many times and expect to win. We found a way tonight, but it’s probably not a good formula moving forward,” Lawrence said. “So, I know for me personally, it shouldn’t take that type of second half to go win the game. If you just play better in the first half and take care of the ball.”

The start drained the electricity from the stadium in the blink of an eye. After picks on Jacksonville’s first two drives and a punt after that, Lawrence was picked for a third time in the first quarter, and the second by Asante Samuel, that set up a 6-yard touchdown run by Austin Ekeler. By the time the opening quarter ended in a 17-0 deficit, Lawrence had completed four passes to his teammates and three to the Chargers.

No one expected the Jaguars to be in this position. Cleaning up the mess of Urban Meyer and years of struggles before that, it would have been ambitious to Jacksonville turning the corner in 2022.

But the Jaguars escaped a 2-6 start and won their final five games of the season to snatch an unexpected AFC South title.

That’s house money. And the Jaguars are still spending it.

Copyright 2023 by WJXT News4JAX – All rights reserved.

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Jaguars vs. Chargers score: Trevor Lawrence leads 27-point comeback to down L.A. on Super Wild Card Weekend

The Jacksonville Jaguars came back from down 27-0 to defeat the Los Angeles Chargers on Super Wild Card Weekend, 31-30. After a rough start, Trevor Lawrence and the Jags embarked on a 24-3 second-half run, and completed the comeback with a 36-yard field goal from Riley Patterson as time expired. 

It was a tale of two halves for the Jaguars, and Lawrence had about as rough of a first half as one could have. On his first 16 passing attempts, the quarterback completed four to his teammates, and four to the Chargers. The former No. 1 overall pick was intercepted four times in the first half — three being recorded by Asante Samuel Jr. Lawrence became the fifth quarterback to throw three interceptions in a playoff quarter since 1991, but he was the first to do it in a first quarter. However, Lawrence came out of the halftime break rejuvenated.

Lawrence led three straight touchdown drives, and ran in a two-point conversion to trim the deficit to just two points with over five minutes remaining in the fourth quarter. After the Jaguars defense forced a three-and-out, Lawrence got a chance to write his own ending. With the game on the line, he led the offense 61 yards down the field on 10 plays, and Patterson sent the ball through the uprights as the clock hit triple zeros.

Check back soon, as this article will be turned into a takeaways piece which dives more deeply into what went down in Jacksonville on Saturday night. 

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Chargers vs. Jaguars score: Live updates, game stats, highlights, analysis from AFC wild-card showdown

The Los Angeles Chargers and Jacksonville Jaguars are battling from TIAA Bank Stadium, as the first day of Super Wild Card Weekend wraps up. It’s been all Chargers so far, as Brandon Staley’s squad secured a 27-7 halftime lead. 

Trevor Lawrence had about as rough of a first half as one could have. On his first 16 passing attempts, the Jaguars quarterback completed four to his teammates, and four to the Chargers. The former No. 1 overall pick was intercepted four times in the first half — three being recorded by Asante Samuel Jr. Lawrence became the fifth quarterback to throw three interceptions in a playoff quarter since 1991, but he was the first to do it in a first quarter. 

Lawrence did lead a seven-play, 47-yard drive that was capped with an Evan Engram touchdown right before the halftime break, but there is plenty of work to do in the second half. 

Can the Jaguars mount a comeback, or will the Chargers continue to dominate in Jacksonville? Follow along in the live blog below, as we break down this matchup as it happens. 

How to watch

Date: Saturday, Jan. 14 | Time: 8:15 p.m. ET
Location: TIAA Bank Field (Jacksonville)
TV: NBC | Stream: fuboTV (try for free)  
Follow: CBS Sports App 
Odds: Chargers -2.5, O/U 47.5 (courtesy of Caesars Sportsbook)

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Jaguars to host Chargers Saturday at TIAA Bank Field in AFC wild-card round

JACKSONVILLE, Fla. – The Jacksonville Jaguars will host the Los Angeles Chargers on Saturday, Jan. 14 at 8:15 p.m. at TIAA Bank Field in an AFC wild-card round matchup.

This comes after the Jaguars’ big win against the Titans Saturday night, leading them to win the AFC South for the first time since 2017 — and fans are still celebrating the day after.

Related | Difficult road ahead: The Jaguars 2023 schedule is out

Jaguars Analyst Frank Frangie said in Saturday’s game the defense and special teams were phenomenal. Now the team needs to stay consistent.

Coming into Sunday, there were only two possible matchups for the Jaguars next week — both of them would be second matchups with a team the Jaguars beat during the regular season: the Ravens and the Chargers. The Ravens needed a win to earn the No. 5 seed.

That 27-16 loss to the Bengals on Sunday locked in the Chargers to the fifth seed. That means Los Angeles will make the cross-country trek to face the fourth-seeded Jaguars on Saturday at 8:15 p.m.

Frangie also said aside from Trevor Lawrence, a lot of players have stood out in making the team successful.

“I think offensively Trevor has been great. He’s had great help. Christian Kirk is the leader in that receiver room. He’s been so good. Evan Ingram has had his best year as a pro. Zay Jones. All three receivers I think have been very good, as well as Travis Etienne,” Frangie said. The running back, I think, defensively a couple of guys have really stepped up. Foye, the middle linebacker, has been so good. He is a tackling machine. The best tackler, I think, in the league. The best linebacker in the league. He deserved to go to the Pro Bowl, and Rayshawn Jenkins, the safety, had his best year.”

The Jaguars made the trip to the West Coast earlier this year and it went pretty well for them. They beat the Chargers 38-10, part of a 2-1 start to the season, a start that raised expectations for fans. Jacksonville was just 3-15 all-time in the Pacific time zone entering that game. This will be a matchup between two of the rising star quarterbacks in the NFL — Justin Herbert and Trevor Lawrence.

The winner of Saturday’s game will go on to face the Kansas City Chiefs in the Divisional Round.

Copyright 2023 by WJXT News4JAX – All rights reserved.

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Chargers safety Derwin James Jr. reportedly won’t be suspended after he was ejected for a brutal hit on Colts WR that left both in concussion protocol

It didn’t take long before everyone knew that Los Angeles Chargers safety Derwin James Jr. might be ejected for a vicious hit on Indianapolis Colts receiver Ashton Dulin.

James came in with the crown of his helmet and hit Dulin in the head and neck area after Dulin made a short catch. The hit sounded like something exploded on the field, and the crowd immediately reacted. Dulin was down for a few moments.

“We’ve watched a lot of football, I don’t know if I’ve seen a hit quite like that,” ESPN analyst Troy Aikman said.

Los Angeles Chargers safety Derwin James Jr. (3) was ejected after a hit on Indianapolis Colts wide receiver Ashton Dulin on Monday night. (AP Photo/Zach Bolinger)

James got a 15-yard penalty and was disqualified for the hit. That type of hit wasn’t outlawed decades ago, but it was shocking to see it in the current environment. Aikman spoke about it for a while after James was ejected.

“That was as big of a collision as I’ve seen in a long, long time,” Aikman said.

Dulin went back to the locker room shortly after the hit and was later ruled out with a concussion. Head coach Brandon Staley said after the Chargers’ win that James had entered concussion protocol. Dulin was defenseless on the play and James hit him in the head and neck with the crown of his helmet — it was practically a textbook example of what the NFL is trying to erase from the game.

While James reportedly won’t be suspended for his hit on Dulin, according to NFL Network’s Tom Pelissero, he could face a fine from the NFL for his aggressiveness. The standard fine for James’ hit could be as high as $21,218 for using his helmet, according to the NFL and NFL Players Association. A hit on a defenseless player comes with a slightly smaller fine of $15,914.



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NFL 2022 playoff picture, standings: Chargers clinch berth by beating Colts, Packers still alive for wild card

The NFL playoff races are going down to the wire as we work through the Week 16 slate. The race for home-field advantage will be a good one between the Buffalo Bills and Kansas City Chiefs, with the Cincinnati Bengals having an outside shot heading into next week’s showdown with the Bills. 

The Baltimore Ravens are back in the playoffs after their win Saturday — holding serve with the Bengals in the race for the AFC North — while the Los Angeles Chargers will also be in the postseason after handling the Colts on Monday night. The Jacksonville Jaguars are in the AFC South lead with two games to play — thanks to the Tennessee Titans continuing their free fall.

The NFC wild card race seems to be coming down to the wire as all of the teams vying for the two spots lost on Saturday, opening the door for the Packers. The New York Giants and Washington Commanders currently hold the No. 6 and No. 7 seeds in the playoff race. 

Two weeks remain until the playoffs. Below, you can find a division-by-division breakdown of the current standings and what each contender is facing on their schedule the rest of the way. 

AFC East

y-clinched division title

Buffalo Bills

What to know: The Bills locked up the AFC East title with Saturday’s win over the Bears, and still hold the No. 1 seed in the conference with the head-to-head tiebreaker on the Chiefs. They clinch the No. 1 seed with a win and Chiefs loss next week. 

Remaining schedule: at Bengals, vs. Patriots

Miami Dolphins

What to know: Miami is the No. 7 seed in the AFC and holds a one-game lead over New York, New England and Pittsburgh for the final playoff spot in the conference. 

Remaining schedule: at Patriots, vs. Jets

New England Patriots

What to know: The Patriots’ playoff chances are dimming with their loss to the Bengals. They are one of four teams tied at 7-8, but hold the conference-record tiebreaker over the Titans and Steelers. They hold the division tiebreaker by sweeping the Jets. 

Remaining schedule: vs. Dolphins, at Bills

New York Jets

What to know: The Jets are the No. 9 seed in the playoffs, losing the division-record tiebreaker to the Patriots. They hold the better win percentage in common games against the Titans and a conference-record tiebreaker over the Steelers. 

Remaining schedule: at Seahawks, at Dolphins

AFC North

x-Bengals

11

4

0

.733

85

x-Ravens

10

5

0

.667

49

Steelers

7

8

0

.466

-55

e-Browns

6

9

0

.400

-20

x- clinched playoff spot

e- eliminated from playoffs

Cincinnati Bengals

What to know: The Bengals hold on to their AFC North lead with a win over the Patriots. Cincinnati is the No. 3 seed in the conference, needing a win over Buffalo to have a shot at home-field advantage. 

Remaining schedule: vs. Bills, vs. Ravens 

Baltimore Ravens

What to know: The Ravens clinched a playoff spot with a win over the Falcons on Saturday and currently are the No. 5 seed in the AFC standings. Baltimore has the head-to-head tiebreaker over Cincinnati. 

Remaining schedule: vs. Steelers, at Bengals

Pittsburgh Steelers

What to know: The Steelers keep their playoff hopes alive with their win over the Raiders. Pittsburgh is the No. 11 seed in the AFC, losing the conference-record tiebreaker to the Patriots, Jets, and Titans. 

Remaining schedule: at Ravens, vs. Browns 

Cleveland Browns

What to know: The Browns have been eliminated from the playoffs with their loss to the Saints. 

Remaining schedule: at Commanders, at Steelers

AFC South

Jaguars

7

8

0

.467

+22

Titans

7

8

0

.467

-43

e-Colts

4

10

1

.321

-109

e- Texans

2

12

1

.167

-104

e – eliminated from playoffs

Jacksonville Jaguars

What to know: The Jaguars take over first place in the AFC South with their win over the Jets and the Titans’ loss to the Texans. Regardless of their Week 17 result, Jacksonville will play for the division title in Week 18 when they play host to the Titans.

Remaining schedule: at Texans, vs. Titans

Tennessee Titans 

What to know: The Titans fell out of the No. 7 seed and into the No. 10 seed in the AFC with their loss to the Texans. Tennessee loses a conference-record tiebreaker to the Patriots, and a common-record tiebreaker to the Jets. They win the conference-record tiebreaker over the Steelers. 

Remaining schedule: vs. Cowboys, at Jaguars

Indianapolis Colts

What to know: The Colts are eliminated from the playoffs and lost to the Chargers on Monday night.

Remaining schedule: at Giants, vs. Texans 

Houston Texans

What to know: The Texans are eliminated from playoff contention and have the worst record in the NFL. They beat the Titans for their second win of the year. 

Remaining schedule: vs. Jaguars, at Colts

AFC West

y- clinched division title

e – eliminated from playoffs

Kansas City Chiefs

What to know: The Chiefs are still the No. 2 seed in the AFC as the Bills own the head-to-head tiebreaker for the top spot in the conference. They’ll get the top seed if they finish 2-0 and the Bills finish 1-1. 

Remaining schedule: vs. Broncos, at Raiders

Los Angeles Chargers

What to know: The Chargers clinched a postseason berth with their win over Indianapolis on Monday. They’re in sole possession of the No. 6 seed in the AFC.

Remaining schedule: vs. Rams, at Broncos 

Las Vegas Raiders

What to know: The Raiders are still mathematically alive in the AFC playoff race after their loss to the Steelers. Las Vegas is the No. 12 seed in the AFC, two games out of the final playoff spot. 

Remaining schedule: vs. 49ers, vs. Chiefs  

Denver Broncos

What to know: The Broncos have been eliminated from the playoffs and were blown out by the Rams on Sunday.

Remaining schedule: at Chiefs, vs. Chargers  

NFC East

x- Eagles

13

2

0

.867

137

x- Cowboys

11

4

0

.733

131

Giants

8

6

1

.567

-28

Commanders

7

7

1

.500

-28

x- clinched playoff spot

Philadelphia Eagles

What to know: The Eagles still control their own destiny for the No. 1 seed in the NFC, just needing a win in their final two games. A win (or a Cowboys loss) wraps up the NFC East and home-field advantage (or a Vikings loss).  

Remaining schedule: vs. Saints, vs. Giants

Dallas Cowboys  

What to know: The Cowboys kept their slim NFC East hopes alive with Saturday’s win over the Eagles. Dallas needs to win out and Philadelphia to lose out to win the diviison. 

Remaining schedule: at Titans, at Commanders

New York Giants

What to know: The Giants retain the No. 6 seed in the NFC with all the wild card contenders battling for a playoff spot losing Saturday. New York clinches a playoff spot with a win next week. 

Remaining schedule: vs. Colts, at Eagles 

Washington Commanders

What to know: The Commanders stay as the No. 7 seed in the NFC thanks to the Seahawks and Lions losing. They remain a half game up on both for the final playoff spot in the conference. 

Remaining schedule: vs. Browns, vs. Cowboys 

NFC North

y-Vikings

12

3

0

.800

+5

Lions

7

8

0

.467

-9

Packers

7

8

0

.467

-21

e-Bears

3

12

0

.200

-90

y-clinched division title

e – eliminated from playoffs 

Minnesota Vikings

What to know: The Vikings move a game behind the Eagles for the No. 1 seed in the NFC with their win and Philadelphia losing. Minnesota needs to win out and Philadelphia to lose out to get home-field advantage since the Eagles hold the head-to-head tiebreaker. 

Remaining schedule: at Packers, at Bears 

Detroit Lions

What to know: The Lions remain the No. 9 seed in the NFC after losing to the Panthers, a half game behind the Commanders for the final playoff spot. Seattle holds the head-to-head tiebreaker over Detroit. 

Remaining schedule: vs. Bears, at Packers

Green Bay Packers

What to know: The streaking Packers are the No. 10 seed in the NFC and very much alive in the playoff race thanks to their win over the Dolphins on Sunday. They are currently one game behind the Commanders for the final playoff spot. If the Packers win out and the Commanders lose once, Green Bay will earn a postseason berth.

Remaining schedule: vs. Vikings, vs. Lions 

Chicago Bears

What to know: The Bears have been eliminated from playoff contention. They have the worst record in the NFC. 

Remaining schedule: at Lions, vs. Vikings

NFC South

Buccaneers

7

8

0

.467

-38

Panthers

6

9

0

.400

-24

Saints

6

9

0

.400

-22

e-Falcons

5

10

0

.333

-35

e – eliminated from playoffs 

Tampa Bay Buccaneers

What to know: The Buccaneers lead the NFC South by one game after their OT win over Arizona on Sunday. They can wrap up the division next week with a victory over Carolina.

Remaining schedule: vs. Panthers, at Falcons

Carolina Panthers

What to know: The Panthers need to beat the Buccaneers next week to stay alive in the NFC South race. Carolina holds the head-to-head tiebreaker over Tampa Bay and would hold a three-way tiebreaker based on being unbeaten against the Buccaneers and Saints. 

Remaining schedule: at Buccaneers, at Saints 

New Orleans Saints

What to know: The Saints lose the head-to-head tiebreaker to the Panthers and were swept by the Buccaneers, even though they are also one game out of the division lead. 

Remaining schedule: at Eagles, vs. Panthers

Atlanta Falcons

What to know: The Falcons were eliminated from playoff contention with their loss to the Ravens. 

Remaining schedule: vs. Cardinals, vs. Buccaneers

NFC West

y-49ers

11

4

0

.733

145

Seahawks

7

8

0

.467

-14

e-Rams

5

10

0

.333

-53

e-Cardinals

4

11

0

.267

-83

y-clinched division title

e- eliminated from playoffs

San Francisco 49ers

What to know: The 49ers are still the No. 3 seed in the NFC with their win over the Commanders, and will be at least the No. 3 seed in the playoffs. They are still alive in the race for home field, but need the Eagles to lose out and the Vikings to lose once to have a shot at that. 

Remaining schedule: at Raiders, vs. Cardinals

Seattle Seahawks

What to know: The Seahawks are still a half game out of the final wild card spot after their loss to the Chiefs. Seattle holds the head-to-head tiebreaker over Detroit for the No. 8 seed, trailing Washington by a half game for the No. 7 seed. 

Remaining schedule: vs. Jets, vs. Rams

Arizona Cardinals

What to know: The Cardinals are eliminated from the playoffs. 

Remaining schedule: at Falcons, at 49ers

Los Angeles Rams

What to know: The Rams are eliminated from the playoffs after Monday’s loss to the Packers. They crushed the Broncos on Sunday. 

Remaining schedule: at Chargers, at Seahawks 

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Chargers safety Derwin James Jr. ejected after brutal hit on Colts WR

It didn’t take long before everyone knew that Los Angeles Chargers safety Derwin James Jr. might be ejected for vicious a hit on Indianapolis Colts receiver Ashton Dulin.

James came in with the crown of his helmet and hit Dulin in the head and neck area after Dulin made a short catch. The hit sounded like something exploded on the field, and the crowd reacted immediately. Dulin was down for a few moments.

“We’ve watched a lot of football, I don’t know if I’ve seen a hit quite like that,” ESPN analyst Troy Aikman said.

James got a 15-yard penalty and was disqualified for the hit. That type of hit wasn’t outlawed decades ago, but it was shocking to see it in the current environment. Aikman was talking about it for a while after James was ejected.

“That was as big of a collision as I’ve seen in a long, long time,” Aikman said.

Dulin went back to the locker room shortly after the hit, and was later ruled out with a concussion. Dulin was defenseless on the play and James hit him in the head and neck with the crown of his helmet — it was practically a textbook example of what the NFL is trying to erase from the game.

James is a great player, but his aggressiveness cost the Chargers on Monday night. It will probably cost him a big fine as well.

Safety Derwin James Jr. was ejected after a big hit on Monday night. (Photo by Steve Marcus/Getty Images)

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