Brandon Staley and Tom Telesco’s firings were long overdue, if not too late

Brandon Staley and Tom Telesco should’ve been let go of a lot earlier.

The Chargers cleaned house on Friday after parting ways with GM Tom Telesco as well as HC Brandon Staley. This comes on the heels of an embarrassing 42-point loss to the Raiders on Thursday Night Football.

JoJo Wooden and Giff Smith were promoted to interim GM and HC respectively. Wooden has been the Director of Player Personnel since 2013. Giff Smith has served various roles from 2016-2023, including defensive line and outside linebackers coaching stints.

Before moving on to coaching and GM candidates for replacement content, it’s time to truly look back on the Telesco-Staley era as it comes to an end. After having plenty of cap space in 2021, a stud quarterback on a rookie deal, and plenty of big names on the roster, the Chargers sit here today with nothing to show for it. The Telesco-Staley era was defined by “all in” promises with more flash than substance.

Let’s start with Telesco. With a relatively slim playoff resume and mediocre regular season success in his 11 years, it was past time for him to go. Dean Spanos and Chargers’ ownership could not willingly let him hire a fourth head coach. His last shot was Staley.

Frankly, he got the opportunity to hire a third coach because of the selection of Justin Herbert in 2020. Had that not happened for this organization, I think it’s safe to say that he would’ve been gone sooner. But the Chargers wanted to keep some sort of structure at the top to bring along their rookie QB. At the time, there was a core of the fanbase and media that believed Telesco should’ve been relieved of his duties with Anthony Lynn after 2020.

And it’s clear that is the direction the franchise should’ve gone in. Telesco has struck out on finding requisite depth for the team in the draft. He’s spent all of the teams’ financial resources and their future capital on poor investments. The Chargers are $42 million over the projected cap in 2024. That stems from four max contract restructures for a losing season and J.C. Jackson dead cap money.

The retention of drafted players over the Telesco tenure was generally bad. Consistently, guys like Kyzir White and Drue Tranquill left the team on the cheap after their rookie deals while the Chargers would choose the worse team-building plays instead.

Letting Telesco manage another season would’ve been untenable. To be honest, the short-term damage he’s inflicted on the team in 2024 is enough to deal with. It was well past time to go.

For Staley, he leaves Los Angeles after three years on the job. He finishes 24-24 after 9-8, 10-7, and 5-9 seasons. While Staley showed promise in his first season, his downfall primarily occurred for a plethora of reasons. After promises to build the offense around Justin Herbert and “throw that sh*t downfield”, the Chargers’ head coach never fully figured out the offensive staff/personnel side of the ball. From Joe Lombardi to Kellen Moore, one thing remained consistent on offense: football that was never fundamentally sound.

And when the Chargers did manage to score 30 or 40 points, Staley’s defense managed to give up more. Herbert bailed out the former Chargers’ head coach in a number of games. Staley harped on the lack of complementary football all year and it presented itself in largely every game LA played. Even some of their wins were relatively ugly.

Staley’s defense and special teams combined units ranked bottom 10 in EPA in every season he was the head coach. Simply put, he was hired as a defensive coordinator who never fixed the defense. LA’s unit was plagued with poor tackling fundamentals, bad player development, and convoluted personnel decisions on gamedays. While Staley had good ideas in theory like the style of defense he intended to play, it was the execution of the concepts that were lacking.

Truthfully, there are plenty of more platitudes and moments I could mention on why both Staley and Telesco are finished in LA as we sit here today. But what’s more pressing is the future. While the Chargers will likely still be a hot destination with Herbert viewed as a top franchise cornerstone around the league, the damage has been done. There’s the cap situation. There’s deep player unhappiness rooted in the current situation. There probably will be a decent amount of turnover with not just coaching personnel, but many of the Chargers’ franchise figure players who have been present over the last half decade or longer.

Staley was hired by Telesco to make a run and build off the Herbert window. But whatever GM and coach pairing is hired next will be brought in to clear the wreckage “all in” venture that completely collapsed.

Chargers GM Tom Telesco hasn’t had discussions with DT Jerry Tillery about fifth-year option

Teams have until next to decide whether to exercise the fifth-year option on the contracts of first-round draft choices in 2019.

Teams have until May 2 to decide whether to exercise the fifth-year option on the contracts of first-round draft choices in 2019.

The fifth-year option price tag is set for $11.5 million.

That means that Chargers defensive tackle Jerry Tillery will be a candidate. But at the moment, Telesco said no decision has been made on Tillery’s fifth-year option.

“Jerry had a really nice role for us last year,” Telesco said, per The Athletic’s Daniel Popper. “I expect an even bigger role this year. We’ll figure the contract stuff out after the draft.”

After two underwhelming seasons, it was presumed that Tillery would be elevated in Staley’s defense. Unfortunately, while he did produce career-highs in nearly every category, Tillery was a liability against the run.

Heading into the 2022 season, Tillery will be joined by the new additions along the defensive line, Sebastian Joseph-Day and Austin Johnson.

My guess is that the Chargers will decline it and have Tillery prove he can live up to his first-round billing.

If he takes a big step, Tillery has the opportunity to be extended by Los Angeles or sign a nice contract elsewhere. If he does not, his time in the blue and gold will likely be over, and he will be looking for a new home.

How Chargers can hit home run in 2021 NFL draft

Chargers Wire’s Gavino Borquez lays out what general manager Tom Telesco needs to do in the draft to receive an A-grade.

Only six more days.

The Chargers enter this draft in hopes of carrying the momentum that they have from free agency to solidify an already talented roster.

With nine picks from Rounds 1-7, Los Angeles will have every opportunity to knock it out of the park. But how can they put together the “perfect” draft?

Here’s exactly how L.A. can get an A-plus draft haul:

Fortify offensive line

The Chargers went into free agency with an aggressive approach to revamp the offensive line, signing Corey Linsley, Matt Feiler and Oday Aboushi.

At the moment, four probable starting spots are filled: left guard (Feiler), center (Linsley), right guard (Aboushi) and right tackle (Bryan Bulaga).

Now, Los Angeles is in a position where they have to find a starting left tackle.

The team could trade up for Oregon’s Penei Sewell if he sees a slide past the Bengals, or they could have Rashawn Slater or Christian Darrisaw sitting there at No. 13 overall.

Nonetheless, like I’ve been saying, the team is in a good spot to grab one in the first-round, and should not pass up on the opportunity.

The work should not stop there, however.

There’s no guarantee that Aboushi will be the Day 1 starter and he’s on a one-year contract. In addition, the team is lacking depth. Therefore, they could benefit from a mid-round guard and a versatile lineman on Day 3.

Protecting quarterback Justin Herbert should be the team’s main priority, which is why I expect the Bolts to come out of the draft with at least three offensive linemen.

How to fix:

Penei Sewell/Rashawn Slater/Christian Darrisaw

Aaron Banks/Jackson Carman/Ben Cleveland

Royce Newman/Larry Borom/Adrian Ealy

Solidify secondary

The Chargers saw some movement in the secondary earlier this offseason, releasing Casey Hayward and losing Rayshawn Jenkins to the Jaguars.

Given the fact that head coach Brandon Staley’s defense is heavily reliant on solid play in the defensive backfield, Los Angeles should be looking to shore up the group.

Even after re-signing Michael Davis, they will need to add another player with the ability to start along the boundary. The team must also factor in Chris Harris Jr. being on the final year of his contract.

As for the safety group, the Bolts only have three players at the position on the roster – Derwin James, Nasir Adderley and Alohi Gilman. Since Staley likes to use three-safety formations, the team needs to add more talent.

Staley is a big advocate of position versatility with his defensive backs. For corners, they must possess the ability to play outside and inside. Safeties should be able to play man coverage in the slot or diagnose from depth in a single-high role.

How to fix:

Jaycee Horn

Asante Samuel Jr./Tyson Campbell/Paulson Adebo/Ifeatu Melifonwu

Richie Grant/Jevon Holland

Robert Rochell/Keith Taylor/Olaijah Griffin/Trill Williams

Damar Hamlin/Tariq Thompson/Shawn Davis

More pressure, more diamonds

Despite making the change from a 4-3 to a 3-4 scheme, the Chargers could benefit from adding a few more players that are capable of consistently getting into the backfield.

Uchenna Nwosu enters the season as a starting edge defener. Joey Bosa will play on the “edge” of the defense, but will move around a lot. Kyler Fackrell along with Emeke Egbule will come on the field as rotational pass-rushers.

To round out the group, Staley should be able to find one of his “guys”, one who’s lengthy and explosive with the ability to set the edge versus tight ends and “dominate” the edge in the run game in the middle rounds.

As for the interior part of the defensive line, Linval Joseph, Jerry Tillery and Justin Jones are a formidable trio. However, the depth is lacking, which is why they could afford to add some more juice in the middle to late rounds.

How to fix:

Joe Tryon/Joseph Ossai/Jayson Oweh/Payton Turner

Osa Odighizuwa/Alim McNeill/Jonathan Marshall/Bobby Brown/Milton Williams

Cameron Sample/Elerson Smith/Joshua Kaindoh/Chauncey Golston

Ta’Quon Graham/Darius Stills

Establish special teams competency

A combination of poor coverage and return skills, bone-headed penalties, kicking woes and a coaching change led to the Chargers having the worst special teams unit in the NFL last season and the third-worst special teams unit ever tracked by DVOA.

Finding quality players that are physical, aggressive, proven tacklers and most importantly, experienced in this department is a key part of the team’s selection process.

Three defensive backs, a linebacker, a tight end and a receiver would go a long way to not only supplying depth at the perspective positions but aide in upgrading coverage units on kick and punt returns.

How to fix:

Grant Stuard/Paddy Fisher/Ernest Jones/Tony Fields/Amen Ogbongbemiga

John Bates/Racey McMath

Jamien Sherwood/Tre Brown/Avery Williams/Benjamin St-Juste