Chargers WR Keenan Allen’s return boosts offense vs. Chiefs

The Chargers benefited from having Keenan Allen back on the field.

Veteran wide receiver Keenan Allen made his return last Sunday night against the Chiefs. 

His performance featured some highs and lows, mainly in the fourth quarter. Allen finished with five catches for 94 yards but also had a costly turnover.

The 30-year-old wideout lost a fumble when the Chargers were nearing the red zone and trailing the Chiefs 23-20. However, Allen redeemed himself soon after the Los Angeles defense forced a turnover on the following drive.  

On third-and-18, quarterback Justin Herbert looked to Allen, one of his favorite offensive weapons that’s been missing since Week 7 with a hamstring injury. He ran up the sideline and got ahead of his defender just in time to make a diving catch that would set up Joshua Palmer’s go-ahead score. 

“It was for the guys. Felt like I owed them,” Allen said. “Fumbling in the fourth quarter against a team like that can go down a way lot harder than we did. Defense came through, got the ball back and put us in position and was able to come down with a big catch,” he added.

The Chargers’ offense hasn’t been as explosive this season due to numerous injuries causing starters to sit out, most notably Allen. At the beginning of the matchup, the unit looked electric. Although it wasn’t consistent enough to get the win, Allen’s diving completion showed how dangerous this group can be when healthy. 

“It was third-and-18, so the odds are stacked against you, but when you have a guy like Keenan, you have to give him a chance,” Herbert said. “Just put the ball up there, knowing that he is going to go fight for it. He made an incredible play on it.”

If Allen can keep his hamstring 100%, his presence could be a driving force to get the Chargers to the playoffs.

5 final takeaways from Chargers’ loss to Chiefs

Before switching gears to this weekend’s matchup with the Cardinals, here are the final takeaways from the Chargers’ loss to the Chiefs.

The Chargers lost to the Chiefs on Sunday night.

Before switching gears to this weekend’s matchup with the Cardinals, here are my final takeaways from the divisional bout.

 

Chargers’ injury updates following loss to Chiefs

Chargers HC Brandon Staley provided updates on Mike Williams, Kenneth Murray and Joshua Kelley.

The Chargers suffered some injuries to a couple of players in their loss to the Chiefs on Sunday, most notably Mike Williams.

Williams had a “re-aggravation” of his high ankle sprain, according to Brandon Staley. Staley said the team will find out a lot more in the next couple of days, but it is not considered to be significant.

Williams sustained the injury during his toe-tap catch along the sideline in the first quarter. Following the play, he came up limping and did not return to the field.

Kenneth Murray sustained a neck injury in the third quarter and remained out for the rest of the game. Staley said it was a “stinger that didn’t resolve” but is better today.

Los Angeles could be getting reinforcement in the backfield, as Joshua Kelley is expected back in practice this week, per Staley.

Kelley, who sustained a knee injury in Week 6, is now eligible to return from the injured reserve.

Top Twitter reactions from Chargers’ loss to Chiefs

How the internet reacted to the Chargers’ loss to the Chiefs on Sunday night.

For the third straight year, the Chargers had a late lead at home against the Chiefs and could not finish.

Here’s how Twitter reacted to Los Angeles’ loss:

Studs and duds from Chargers’ 30-27 loss to Chiefs

Here’s who showed up and who disappointed in the Chargers’ loss to the Chiefs.

The Chargers proved once again that they have been forsaken by the football gods on Sunday night, dropping a heartbreaking 30-27 loss to the Chiefs.

The result essentially knocks Los Angeles out of division contention, but a playoff spot is still within reach if the powers that be find it within themselves to be merciful to the powder blues.

Here’s who showed signs of encouraging development and who struggled in the loss.

Stud: Joshua Palmer

Everyone and their parents knew Keenan Allen and Mike Williams would be back in the lineup this week, but that left us with the question of Palmer. His contributions in this offense with Allen and Williams out went beyond what the box score was capable of showing. With Allen on a pitch count and Williams leaving in the first quarter after aggravating his ankle injury, the onus was again on Palmer to perform like a WR1. He did an admirable job on Sunday, hauling in 8 receptions for 106 yards and two touchdowns. It’s the deep touchdown in the first quarter that shows the most promise: it came with Allen and Williams on the defense’s mind. Palmer now has a taste of what it’s like to be the No. 1 option, but he’s running downfield with little to no attention on him while defenses key in on 13 and 81. On Sunday, No. 5 proved he’s not to be ignored either.

Dud: Run defense

The Chiefs, before Sunday night, had not had an individual player run for over 100 yards in 413 days. That was Week 4 of the 2021 season. This is a team virtually allergic to running the ball – even in the first half, Andy Reid continued to avoid the ground game even as Isiah Pacheco continued to gash the Chargers depleted defensive line. In the second half, Reid adjusted and Los Angeles did not – Pacheco finished with 107 rushing yards on just 15 carries, a 7.1 yards per carry average. I get that injuries have impacted the defense – Joey Bosa, Austin Johnson, Otito Ogbonnia, and Christian Covington all missed this game and Kenneth Murray left early with a neck injury. But at some point, you have to make do with what you have, and the Chargers couldn’t do that on Sunday night.

Stud: Justin Herbert

It pains me that this game ended with a Herbert interception, which his detractors will point to as proof that he’s simply an interception thrower, despite the, well…everything else that says otherwise. Herbert looked comfortable and healthy for the majority of this game, flashing some of those downfield eye-poppers that we haven’t seen for weeks. Having Allen and Williams helped, certainly. But the deep shot to Palmer to open the game was picture-perfect. The sideline bomb to Keenan Allen to keep LA in the game in the fourth quarter was a throw fitting of an All-Pro quarterback. Herbert was his stellar self on Sunday, and the return of his playmakers, if only partially and in name, did wonders for his confidence.

Dud: Pass protection

What did not help Herbert was the pass protection this week. Coming into the game, the Chargers had only allowed 13 sacks, the fewest in the NFL. Part of that was an offensive line that’s played well above expectation, and part was Herbert’s uncanny ability to navigate the pocket and avoid negative plays. On Sunday, the collapse of the former put more bearing on the latter, and Herbert could only do so much to avoid the rush. Los Angeles allowed five sacks in just about every way imaginable. Jamaree Salyer and Matt Feiler failed to pass off a stunt correctly, resulting in a Mike Danna sack. The line shifted away from a blitzing Willie Gay to give him an untouched sack. Herbert tried to scramble and was swallowed by a hyper-aware Chris Jones. It’ll be a rough week of tape study.

Stud: Troy Reeder

Reeder was forced to come in off the bench after Kenneth Murray left with a neck injury, and he immediately made his presence felt with a pass breakup late in the third quarter that put Kansas City behind the sticks. In the fourth quarter, Reeder forced the Jerick McKinnon fumble to give the Chargers the ball back after Keenan Allen’s fumble seemed like it would be the ballgame for LA. It’s nearly impossible to play better in relief than Reeder did, and he deserves his flowers for keeping the Chargers in it.

Dud: Second-half execution

Yet again, the Chargers could not put together a full 60-minute performance. After jumping out to a 20-13 lead in a first half where Los Angeles scored ten points in each of the first two frames, they were outscored 17-7 in the second half. The third quarter especially was ugly for LA, who could not move the ball on offense nor stop the run on defense. A sack of Herbert killed the opening drive after penalties mortally wounded it. Pacheco ran wild to get the Chiefs into field goal range for the only points of the quarter. Herbert missed a wide-open Josh Palmer on a crossing route and threw it to an open patch of grass to avoid incoming pressure. Brandon Staley punted on fourth and inches. It was a huge letdown after a thrilling first half that had you believing the Chargers could hang with anyone now that their health was up and up.

Stud: Morgan Fox

Everybody knows this defensive line is shorthanded after losing Otito Ogbonnia, Christian Covington, and Jerry Tillery over the last week. Everybody knew that Sebastian Joseph-Day and Fox, the two remaining players of the six on LA’s roster heading into the bye, would have to play a huge role. Everybody, including the Chiefs, did everything they could to make someone else beat them. And time after time, it was Joseph-Day and Fox who were making plays for the Chargers. Fox, in particular, seemed to always be in the backfield, whether it was pressuring Patrick Mahomes into throwaways or penetrating rushing lanes to shut down short-yardage opportunities.

Dud: Coaching

Circling back to the second-half execution, at some point, you can’t hide behind injuries as an excuse for why this team suddenly loses steam at any given point in a game. LA hasn’t put together a complete game the entire year, but Sunday’s first half was the best they’ve looked in ages. The defense was battling, forcing Kansas City into field goal after a field goal by stiffening up in critical situations. The offense was flowing – Austin Ekeler was feasting, Isaiah Spiller had a few nice plays to keep him fresh, Justin Herbert looked like the Justin Herbert we remember from his dazzling 2021 season. And then, in the second half, they just…stopped. The defense couldn’t find answers for Travis Kelce. The run game stopped generating yards. Herbert was forced to shoulder more and more of the weight as pass concepts failed to get open.

There is a no bigger condemnation of this than Staley’s decision to punt on fourth and inches with 5 minutes left in the third quarter. The defense had just gotten off the field after an exhausting nine-play, 56-yard drive that they had managed to stop at just a Harrison Butker field goal. The offense, while struggling in the second half, showed at multiple points all game that they could get half a yard against Kansas City’s defense. Being aggressive on fourth down is supposed to be Staley’s calling card. Yes, the offense was a grind. Yes, the defense was playing well. Yes, injuries are mounting up. But I do not think you can make that call to punt and not have your players feel like you’re losing faith after the way you’ve called plays like that your entire head coaching career.

You can see it in the drive chart that follows: LA punts and Kansas City immediately goes on a 10-play, 86-yard drive that results in the touchdown to give them the lead in 4 minutes, 55 seconds. LA comes back out and fumbles on an excruciating drive whose yardage is buoyed by two gains of 11 yards each on its final two plays. It’s not until Reeder forces the fumble to turn the momentum back in the Chargers’ favor that things turn around.

Kansas City is a good team, one of the best. But this has been a season-long issue. If the first half isn’t flat, then the second half is. Is that a preparation issue, a scheme issue, or a coaching issue? We’ve proved it’s not a player issue. Replacements have come in and done their jobs as well as you can possibly ask for this season all over this roster. That should be a rallying cry, not an excuse. And through ten games, it feels like Brandon Staley and his staff are using it as an excuse.

Everything to know from Chargers’ loss to Chiefs

Highlighting all the important stuff from the Chargers’ Week 11 loss to the Chiefs.

In a game with seven lead changes, the Chiefs beat the Chargers on Sunday night, 30-27.

To recap the thrilling primetime divisional showdown, here is everything to know.

Chargers vs. Chiefs first-half highlights

Get caught up with all the action from the primetime matchup between the Los Angeles Chargers and Kansas City Chiefs.

The Chargers lead the Chiefs at the half, 20-13.

Here are all of Los Angeles’ notable highlights from the first two quarters.

After holding Kansas City to a field goal on their first drive, the Chargers responded with a touchdown. Justin Herbert found Joshua Palmer wide open down the field.

The pass gave L.A. a 7-3 lead.

On the Chargers’ second drive, they faced a 3rd-and-2 from their own 33 after two straight Austin Ekeler runs.

Herbert found one of his returning weapons, delivering a strike to Mike Williams. Williams tapped his toes in bounds and converted for the first down before limping off the field due to a complication to his preexisting ankle injury.

After trading field goals and allowing a Chiefs touchdown, the Chargers were down 13-10 in the second quarter.

A thirteen-play, 70-yard drive that ended with six straight runs fixed that.

Herbert, Austin Ekeler, Isaiah Spiller, and Zander Horvath all logged carries to get Los Angeles the last 26 yards on their way to the end zone, with Ekeler punching it in from one yard out to regain the lead.

Chargers inactives: See who’s in and who’s out for Week 11 vs. Chiefs

The Chargers wide receiver room just got a massive boost.

The Chargers are about 90 minutes away from kicking off Week 11 against the Chiefs.

Here is a look at their inactive players today:

Easton Stick

Dustin Hopkins

Gerald Everett

Jason Moore Jr.

Larry Rountree III

Jeremiah Attaochu

Brenden Jaimes

Keenan Allen (hamstring) and Mike Williams (ankle) are both officially ACTIVE.

Who are the experts taking in Chargers vs. Chiefs?

Find out who national pundits are favoring in the matchup between the Los Angeles Chargers and Kansas City Chiefs.

The Los Angeles Chargers are 5.5-point underdogs to the Kansas City Chiefs in Week 11 of the 2022 regular season. The over/under is 52.5 points, per Tipico Sportsbook.

That means oddsmakers are taking bets on whether the two teams will combine to score more than or fewer than 52.5 points.

My score prediction for the game is a 28-23 win for the Chiefs, with a combined total of 51 points. So if I were putting money behind my prediction, I’d bet the under.

As for game picks, analysts favor Andy Reid’s Chiefs in this primetime showdown.

Expert Pick
Nate Davis (USA Today) Chiefs
Jarrett Bell (USA Today) Chargers
Mike Clay (ESPN) Chiefs
Matt Bowen (ESPN) Chiefs
Pete Prisco (CBS Sports) Chiefs
Bill Bender (Sporting News) Chiefs
Gregg Rosenthal (NFL Media) Chiefs
Bleacher Report Chiefs

Sunday’s game will begin at 5:20 p.m. PT and will be televised on NBC.

Chargers vs. Chiefs: 5 storylines to follow in Week 11

Here are five important things to watch during the Chargers’ matchup with the Chiefs.

The Chargers are looking to get revenge on the Chiefs after losing to them back in Week 2.

Here are five storylines to watch for Sunday’s matchup.

Guess who’s back?

The Chargers could be getting some key contributors back at the right time. Keenan Allen and Mike Williams are in line to play on Sunday, as the two were back at practice this past week.

Allen said he is “100%,” and it is now the coach’s decision whether he will play. Meanwhile, Williams said, “I’ll be out there.”

Allen sustained a hamstring injury, returned briefly, and played on a pitch count in Week 7 against the Seahawks, which was the same game Williams suffered a high ankle sprain.

Allen and Williams have been on the field at the same time for just 43 offensive plays this season. Their absences were a big reason the passing game was uneven.

Allen should aid in third-down and red zone situations, whereas Williams gives Justin Herbert a big-bodied target in the intermediate and deep areas of the field to open things up.

The Chiefs rank 22nd in pass defense DVOA.

Austin could be in for big performance

The Chargers are excited about the returns of Allen and Williams. But, while they would give the offense a big boost, Austin Ekeler might be the best option to tear apart the Chiefs.

Kansas City ranks 26th in DVOA allowed on running back targets while surrendering a league-high 8.6 running back targets per game and third-most yards per game (51.2).

Meanwhile, Ekeler has averaged nine receptions and has five total touchdowns in the past four games.

Herbert will be eager to distribute the wealth to his top weapons again, but Ekeler could ultimately be the one who gives the Chiefs problems on Sunday.

Containing the beast

The Chiefs rank No. 1 in offensive DVOA, and the primary reason for being the top dog is Patrick Mahomes. Mahomes is leading the league with 2,936 yards. He is on pace to throw for 5,545 yards, which would top Peyton Manning’s single-season passing yards record (5,545).

In Week 2, Los Angeles held Mahomes to 235 yards and two touchdowns. Aside from a couple of big throws, the defense compressed the pocket, kept contain, and got interior pressure to minimize him from working his magic. The coverage was tight down the field. Players rallied to the football.

They need to do the same thing to come out victorious this time, which might be a tall task without Joey Bosa, who played in the first matchup.

This time, Mahomes will be without some of his pass-catching options, JuJu Smith-Schuster (concussion) and Mecole Hardman (injured reserve). Travis Kelce remains his top target. In the two team’s first meeting, Kelce caught five passes for 51 yards.

In addition, the Chargers will face the newest member of the Chiefs’ wide receiver corps, Kadarius Toney. Toney caught four passes for 57 yards and a touchdown and had two carries for 33 yards last weekend.

Protecting Herbert

Herbert’s fractured rib cartilage occurred against none other than the Chiefs in the second week of the season. And Kansas City will look to put Herbert under duress early and often again.

Over the past two weeks of play, the Chiefs’ defense has come up with a whopping total of eight sacks, including five in Week 10 against the Jaguars.

The Chargers’ pass protection has been inconsistent over the past few weeks. While it’s been a few things for this issue, Trey Pipkins playing with a sprained MCL and missing last weekend’s game due to it is one of them.

Pipkins was removed from the injury report and is slated to start, which is great news.

The new guys

The Chargers lost three interior defensive linemen for the remainder of the season in the past two weeks. First, it was Austin Johnson. Then, it was Otito Ogbonnia and Christian Covington. In addition, Jerry Tillery was waived.

Tyeler Davison was signed to the 53-man roster off the Browns’ practice squad. Joe Gaziano was signed from the practice squad to the active roster.

Davison brings plenty of experience, having appeared in 105 games and started 85 with the Saints and Falcons. He has the motor and hand usage to rush the passer and anchoring ability in the run game.

Gaziano made the most of his limited opportunities last season in both departments but will primarily be deployed as a pass rusher alongside Morgan Fox. He plays with quickness and good lateral movement.