Chargers 2025 offseason preview: Pending free agents, cap space, team needs, draft picks

Examining the Chargers’ offseason, including team needs, pending free agents, and salary-cap space.

After finishing 11-6 and making the playoffs, the Chargers are in full offseason mode.

Los Angeles is still a couple of months away from the new league frenzy, but it’s not too early to look at what to expect then, starting with 27 players scheduled to be unrestricted free agents.

  1. CB Eli Apple
  2. OL Bradley Bozeman
  3. WR DJ Chark
  4. RB J.K. Dobbins
  5. LB Troy Dye
  6. TE Hayden Hurst
  7. WR Simi Fehoko
  8. DL Poona Ford
  9. DL Morgan Fox
  10. CB Kristian Fulton
  11. QB Taylor Heinicke
  12. OL Brenden Jaimes
  13. S Tony Jefferson
  14. EDGE Khalil Mack
  15. S Marcus Maye
  16. S Elijah Molden
  17. OL Sam Mustipher
  18. LB Nick Niemann
  19. WR Joshua Palmer
  20. LB Denzel Perryman
  21. LB Shaq Quarterman
  22. WR Jalen Reagor
  23. EDGE Chris Rumph II
  24. CB Asante Samuel, Jr.
  25. P JK Scott
  26. QB Easton Stick
  27. DL Teair Tart

Cap space

The Chargers have a projected $63 million in cap space, the sixth most among all NFL teams.

Team needs

Wide receiver

Time and time again, we saw Justin Herbert’s receivers drop crucial passes this season. Ladd McConkey is here to stay for the long term, and Quentin Johnston did show some improvements. With that, the Chargers still need a legit No. 1 playmaker on the outsider, like a Tee Higgins in free agency. Keenan Allen even teased that he would consider a return to Los Angeles. Regardless of who it is, the Chargers must get Herbert some help and it should be at the top of the priority list.

Tight end

Just behind the wide receiver position, the Chargers need tight end talent badly as well. Recent mock drafts have had Los Angeles using their first-round draft selection on a tight end. This year’s talent at the position was subpar in both the pass-catching and blocking departments. Don’t be surprised to see the front office add multiple tight ends this offseason.

Center

The offensive line is set at offensive tackle, but center was the clear weakness of this unit in 2024. Bradley Bozeman was brought in on a cheap deal, and it didn’t work out. He was regularly the weak link of the offensive line, and it’s time Los Angeles gets younger at this position.

Running back

J.K. Dobbins proved to be a good value pickup. But as we saw, his injury history is concerning. While he can’t be relied upon for an entire 17-game season, Dobbins could be a candidate to return on a short-term deal. Still, it would be wise to draft a running back in this year’s deep class or resort to the free agency pool to improve a rushing offense that ranked far below Jim Harbaugh’s standards.

Guard

Zion Johnson is sometimes inconsistent, but he will still be a starter on the left side in 2025. However, the team has a decision to make regarding his fifth-year option. On the right side, the team should seek reinforcements through the draft and free agency. Trey Pipkins was not good enough, particularly in pass protection.

Interior defensive line

Poona Ford is the big name to watch here, as he had a breakout season this year and is set to hit free agency. He was dominant on the inside, particularly in the run game. Even if Ford is brought back, this unit still needs some depth.

Cornerback

Kristian Fulton and Asante Samuel Jr. are set to become free agents, so the team must decide on those two first and foremost. Beyond that, Cam Hart and Tarheeb Still are in the plans after promising rookie seasons. The team will need depth, at minimum, at the position still. The front office may even consider getting a No. 1 corner in free agency if they lose Fulton and Samuel.

Edge defender

This is largely dependent on Khalil Mack’s fate. Mack will turn 34 in a little over a month. The veteran is coming off his third consecutive Pro Bowl appearance, and he was phenomenal under Jesse Minter this year. The team should do everything in its power to bring him back, but if they do lose him, this becomes a huge area of concern. Additionally, the team could cut ties with Joey Bosa, who has struggled with injuries.

Draft picks

The Chargers have the No. 22 overall selection and are projected to have ten total picks in the 2025 NFL draft.

Chargers receive high grade for 2024 offseason

ESPN’s Seth Walder thinks highly of the Chargers’ offseason.

The Chargers had an eventful offseason, and it received high praise from most pundits, with ESPN’s Seth Walder being the latest who liked what the Bolts did.

Walder graded each team’s offseason moves and gave Los Angeles an A-. Overall, they finished third, only behind the Eagles, who were the only team to receive an A and the Chiefs (A-).

The biggest move made by the Chargers was the hiring of Jim Harbaugh.

“It’s hard not to buy the Chargers long term with Harbaugh on board given his incredible track record and Justin Herbert under center,” Walder said. “This is a team that should be a force in the future.”

Training camp hasn’t even started yet, but there’s been nothing but rave reviews coming out of the Chargers facility with Harbaugh at the helm. His presence has positively impacted the culture of the team.

Beyond the acquisition of Harbaugh, Walder mentioned how he liked Joe Hortiz and company retooled the roster with players who will be contributors not only this season but also in 2025 and beyond.

They made minor moves in free agency — signing veteran players such as linebacker Denzel Perryman, running back Gus Edwards, center Bradley Bozeman and tight end Hayden Hurst — released high-priced receiver Mike Williams and traded receiver Keenan Allen, another costly veteran. They retained their two veteran edge rushers, Joey Bosa and Khalil Mack (a bit of a surprise), but got them to take pay cuts.

Rookies Joe Alt and Ladd McConkey received praise, as Walder said the Chargers selected two players at key positions early in the draft.

The only thing that Walder disliked was the Bolts not adding a higher-quality veteran wide receiver. While his point is valid, they still have a formidable positional group that should benefit from the arm of Justin Herbert.

On paper, the Chargers are a solid team that should be able to contend for a playoff spot this season, given Harbaugh’s presence, Herbert, top-end talent at most positions and having the second-easiest schedule.

Highlights from Day 2 of Chargers mandatory minicamp

The Chargers wrapped up their second day of mandatory minicamp on Wednesday, which saw standout performances from Justin Herbert and Tarheeb Still.

The Chargers wrapped up their second day of mandatory minicamp on Wednesday.

To experience some of the action that went down at Hoag Performance Center, here are a few clips from the team’s official Twitter account and members of the media.

Chargers projected to receive 3 compensatory picks in 2025

The Los Angeles Chargers could have seven Day 3 selections next year.

With the Jim Harbaugh era underway, the Chargers retooled their roster over the past couple of months, letting go of former players. However, there is a chance that they could be compensated for their losses.

According to Over The Cap, Los Angeles is projected to receive three compensatory picks for the departure of Kenneth Murray (Titans), Austin Ekeler (Commanders) and Gerald Everett (Bears).

The league gives out 32 compensatory picks from the third through seventh rounds of the draft each year based on a selected pool of free agents lost. Among that, the largest 32 contracts signed by free agents based on average per-year value will net a team compensation.

A formula considers salary, playing time and postseason accolades to value players and determine whether teams should be compensated for those players leaving in free agency. However, the compensation for players is also determined by a formula dictated by individual teams’ gains and losses of unrestricted free agents each year.

The picks won’t be determined until after the 2024 season, but here’s to hoping that L.A. is able to end up with a total of ten picks.

Key dates for Chargers fans to know for 2024 offseason

Here are some important dates for Chargers fans to keep an eye on in the coming weeks and months.

The 2023 NFL season has officially come to an end, and the Chargers are headed into their offseason.

With that, here are some important dates for Chargers fans to keep an eye on in the coming weeks and months.

February

  • Feb. 27-March 4: NFL Scouting Combine (Indianapolis, IN)

March

  • March 5: Deadline for teams to designate franchise or transition tag players
  • March 11-13: Teams are permitted to contact, and enter into contract negotiations with, the certified agents of players who will become unrestricted free agents
  • March 13: At 1 p.m. PT, the 2024 league year and free agency begin; trades can be executed
  • March 24-27: Annual League Meeting (Orlando, FL)

April

  • April 1: Clubs that hired a new head coach may begin offseason workout programs.
  • April 19: Deadline for restricted free agents to sign offer sheets
  • April 25-27: NFL Draft (Detroit, MI)

May

  • May 2: Deadline for clubs to exercise fifth-year option for players selected in the first round of the 2021 NFL draft

Chargers 2024 offseason preview: Pending free agents, cap space, team needs, draft picks

Examining the Chargers’ offseason, including team needs, pending free agents, and salary-cap space.

After finishing 5-12, the Chargers are set to enter the offseason. While their focus is bringing in their next head coach, they will quickly have to shift gears and get ready for the roster reconstruction.

Los Angeles is still a couple of months away from the new league frenzy, but it’s not too early to look at what to expect then, starting with 27 players who are scheduled to be unrestricted free agents.

  • Essang Bassey
  • Will Clapp
  • Michael Davis
  • Austin Ekeler
  • Alex Erickson
  • Gerald Everett
  • Alohi Gilman
  • Will Grier
  • Jalen Guyton
  • Jaylinn Hawkins
  • Justin Hollins
  • Austin Johnson
  • Joshua Kelley
  • Dean Marlowe
  • Kenneth Murray, Jr.
  • Tanner Muse
  • Easton Stick
  • Cameron Tom
  • Nick Vannett
  • Nick Williams

Cap space

The Chargers are projected to be $44 million over the salary cap in 2024, the second-worst situation in the NFL.

Team needs

Interior defensive line: Brandon Staley made the point to bolster the interior part of the defensive line with the signings of Sebastian Joseph-Day and Austin Johnson two offseasons ago. Joseph-Day was released after Staley was fired and Johnson will be a free agent. Nick Williams will be, too. That leaves Morgan Fox, Otito Ogbonnia and Scott Matlock. The Chargers need more juice up front with players who can rush the passer and defend the run.

Running back: Austin Ekeler and Joshua Kelley are set to hit the free agency market, leaving Isaiah Spiller as the primary back on the roster. After having lackluster rushing offenses the past few seasons, the Chargers need to make the point to add at least two backs to improve this positional group, one as a pure runner and the other with a multi-dimensional skill set.

Wide receiver: Mike Williams and Keenan Allen are still on the roster, but given they are slated for cap hits of over $30 million and the Chargers are going to be strapped for cash, they could be dealt to clear up some space. Even if Allen is brought back, he is not getting any younger. Joshua Palmer has shown that he can be a reliable receiver. The jury is still out on Quentin Johnston, who struggled in his rookie season. The bottom line is that Los Angeles still lacks speed and dynamic playmakers at the position.

Tight end: The Chargers needed to upgrade the tight end room last offseason and after failing to do so, they saw how crucial it was they neglected it. While they got some contributions from Gerald Everett in the passing game, Los Angeles didn’t have an impactful blocker, which was detrimental in the running game. Everett is set to be a free agent, leaving Donald Parham and Stone Smartt as the tight ends on the roster. They need a bonafide No. 1.

Secondary: The Chargers finished with the third-worst pass defense during the regular season. Some of the issues were attributed to Staley’s scheme and the others were the players. Michael Davis’ play was up and down. Davis will be a free agent. Asante Samuel Jr. made plays in coverage, but struggled as a run defender. As for the safeties, Derwin James was far from the player we’re used to seeing, often getting beat in coverage. Alohi Gilman was consistent, but he will be a free agent.

Center: The anchor of the Chargers’ offensive line of the past two seasons, Corey Linsley, is likely going to retire due to a heart issue that kept him sidelined for most of 2023. Will Clapp, who started in place of him, is a free agent. Brenden Jaimes got three starts to close out the season when Clapp got hurt and he played well, but they need a true starting center with experience.

Draft picks

The Chargers have the No. 5 overall selection in the 2024 NFL draft, and they are projected to have seven total picks.

2024 NFL offseason: Important dates for Chargers

Here are some important dates for Chargers fans to keep an eye on in the coming weeks and months.

While some teams are still going as the playoffs are in full swing, the Chargers are in full offseason mode.

With that, here are some important dates for fans to keep an eye on in the coming weeks and months.

January

  • Jan. 22: Teams can conduct in-person or virtual interviews with candidates employed by other NFL teams whose seasons ended.
  • Jan. 29: Second interviews, either in-person or virtual, are allowed with head coach candidates employed by teams in the Super Bowl.

February

  • Feb. 1: East-West Shrine Bowl (Frisco, TX)
  • Feb. 3: Senior Bowl (Mobile, AL)
  • Feb. 4: Pro Bowl Games (Orlando, FL)
  • Feb. 19: HBCU Legacy Bowl (New Orleans, LA)
  • Feb. 20: First day clubs can designate franchise or transition players.
  • Feb. 27-March 4: NFL Scouting Combine (Indianapolis, IN)

March

  • March 5: Deadline for teams to designate franchise or transition tag players
  • March 11-13: Teams are permitted to contact, and enter into contract negotiations with, the certified agents of players who will become unrestricted free agents
  • March 13: At 1 p.m. PT, the 2024 league year and free agency begin; trades can be executed
  • March 24-27: Annual League Meeting (Orlando, FL)

April

  • April 1: Clubs that hired a new head coach may begin offseason workout programs.
  • April 19: Deadline for restricted free agents to sign offer sheets
  • April 25-27: NFL Draft (Detroit, MI)

May

  • May 2: Deadline for clubs to exercise fifth-year option for players selected in the first round of the 2021 NFL draft

Chargers general manager candidate profile: Ed Dodds

Examining who Ed Dodds is, where he comes from and why he’d be a good choice to be the GM of the Chargers.

For the first time in a decade, the Chargers are searching for a new general manager.

Tom Telesco and head coach Brandon Staley were fired on December 15, ushering in a new era of football in one half of SoFi Stadium. Telesco, hired in 2013 as the youngest general manager in franchise history, brought the team to just three playoff appearances and two wins.

So, who could be next?

Colts Assistant General Manager Ed Dodds

Called the number one general manager candidate in this year’s hiring cycle by NFL Network’s Tom Pelissero, Dodds will reportedly meet with the Chargers on Wednesday. He has also interviewed with Carolina and Las Vegas, the latter of whom gave him his first job in the league in 2003.

Dodds has built a name for himself purely via scouting. From 2003-2006, he was a pro personnel intern for the Raiders, before landing his first full-time job as a pro personnel scout with Seattle in 2007. The Seahawks moved him to the college side the following year, where he remained as an area scout until 2014 when he was elevated to a national scout. Another promotion followed in 2015 to senior personnel executive. In 2017, Indianapolis hired him away to become vice president of player personnel before he entered his current role of assistant GM under Chris Ballard in 2018.

An alumni of Texas A&M-Kingsville, where Ballard once served as defensive coordinator, Dodds’ current role as assistant general manager is primarily overseeing the day-to-day operations of the college and pro scouting departments. It’s a fitting role for a man whose tenure in the league has included, in part, the selections of Kam Chancellor, KJ Wright, Richard Sherman, Super Bowl MVP Malcolm Smith, Grover Stewart, and Zaire Franklin on Day 3 alone.

That work has not gone unnoticed: Dodds has been a hot GM candidate since at least 2020 when he turned down an interview with the Browns. In 2021, he interviewed with Carolina but withdrew from the running and was interviewed but not selected for the job with the Lions. Chicago, Las Vegas, and Pittsburgh all made inquiries in 2022, with Dodds withdrawing from the Bears’ search. (Dodds did not get a reported interview for the openings in Arizona or Tennessee last season.)

Indianapolis’ assistant GM is on record saying there’s a method to all of this. In a 2022 article with The Athletic reporter Zak Keefer, Dodds said:

I mean, there’s quality of life. You have to feel like you’re being allowed to make an impact and do it the way you know works. I mean, there’s more than one way to skin a cat — like, there are other ways that work, but there’s a way I know, and I’m not going to learn some new way and become an expert on it at 42 years old. That’s not the training ground to do it.

The way that Dodds does know it took him two years to perfect, from scouting travel to area scout documentation to background research. He uses a modified version of legendary GM Ron Wolf’s 1-9 grading scale, has every member of his team watch every player, and stays in the office nearly every day from December to April, 12 hours on weekdays and 6 on weekends. That sort of demand requires buy-in from staff, even in an industry famous for early mornings and late nights around the league, and Dodds has consistently gotten it and been able to reap the rewards.

Dodds has also been tied to the oft-rumored Chargers’ head coaching target Jim Harbaugh. Sports Illustrated’s Albert Breer reported last week that Dodds was seen as the “Harbaugh GM” when he interviewed for the Raiders job in 2022. The two men also overlapped in Oakland in Dodds’ first year in the NFL: while Dodds was a pro personnel intern, Harbaugh was completing his second season as the Raiders’ QB coach. It’s a brief connection, but one that has reportedly spun into a strong relationship that has led insiders to believe Dodds is still the most realistic general manager option for a team looking to employ the current Michigan head coach.

An old-school Texan seen as one of the league’s best talent evaluators, Dodds has been in high demand for close to four years now, but his commitment to his own system and alleged desire to find the perfect situation have prevented him from finding his own team to run thus far. Could Los Angeles, where ownership under the Spanos family is famously disconnected from personnel decisions, be the situation to link Dodds’ own interest with a similar desire from the organization to hand things over?

Highlights from Day 2 of Chargers mandatory minicamp

The Chargers wrapped up their second and final day of mandatory minicamp on Wednesday.

The Chargers wrapped up their second day of mandatory minicamp on Wednesday.

To experience some of the action that went down at Hoag Performance Center, here are a few clips from the team’s official Twitter account and members of the media.

RB Austin Ekeler on contract with Chargers: ‘One more year that I’m obligated to be here’

Chargers RB Austin Ekeler spoke to the media for the first time since the end of the season.

Running back Austin Ekeler is entering seventh and what seems to be his last with the Chargers.

“For me, I understand that I have one more obligation here,” Ekeler said at mandatory minicamp.

“One more year that I’m obligated to be here. I wanted to go poke around and see if there was any other value. If not, right? Come back and have my last year. Like I said before, do what I can do here.”

Los Angeles granted Ekeler and his team permission to seek a trade in March, but nothing came out of it.

Instead, Ekeler ended up staying in L.A. after the team added $1.75 million in incentives on the final year of his current contract.

Ekeler may not have gotten what he was looking for, a hefty contract to make him one of the highest-paid running backs. Still, he plans to put his head down and play this upcoming season to the best of his abilities.

“Regardless of what happens here – whether I think it’s fair or not – look, I’m going to try to put myself in the best position I can while I’m here, but I’m also doing that off the field, as well,” Ekeler said.

“So, I’ve kept a pretty open mind, a forward-looking outlook about it.

“I’m not mad. I’m not mad about the situation or anything like that.”

Ekeler, who was signed as an undrafted rookie back in 2017, has run for 34 touchdowns and has caught 29 scores for Los Angeles. He’s amassed 7,125 total yards over that span.