4 takeaways from Chargers’ victory over Dolphins

The win was the Los Angeles Chargers’ first victory this season against a team with a winning record.

In a must-win game to keep their playoff hopes alive, the Chargers beat the Dolphins on Sunday night.

Here are a few of my takeaways from the game.

Studs and duds from Chargers’ win over Dolphins

Here’s who showed up and who disappointed in the Chargers’ win over the Dolphins.

Point, Justin Herbert.

The Chargers quarterback thoroughly outdueled his 2020 draftmate Tua Tagovailoa on the way to a 23-14 victory for the Bolts, which catapulted them into the 7th AFC playoff spot and kept their hopes of winning the AFC West alive. Herbert was phenomenal, as always, but here’s who else helped him out and who got bailed out by his play.

Stud: Justin Herbert

What more is there to say about this guy? After a week of dissection, re-dissection, and arguments, both good faith and bad, Herbert trotted out there and shredded the Dolphins’ defense to the tune of 367 yards and a touchdown on 39 of 51 passing. Meanwhile, Tua went 10 of 28 for just 145 yards and a touchdown. While he’ll never say it, something about this game seemed to fire Herbert up more than usual. We saw more emotion from him as he delivered his throws Sunday, a fired-up demeanor instead of his usual robotic matriculation down the field. Herbert’s pocket management was on full display on Sunday as well, as he constantly moved the pocket himself or avoided a free rusher before making a throw. It was one of the best games of his career, and the fact that it came in such an important spot for the team’s playoff chances bodes well for his theoretical clutch gene.

Dud: Offensive line

We just talked about Herbert moving the pocket and avoiding free rushers, and most of the reason he had to do that was that the offensive line couldn’t hang with Miami all night long. Christian Wilkins dominated along the interior, essentially shutting down any inside run game by the first half. Jaelan Phillips was similarly dominant, rushing off the right side, constantly crushing the pocket and forcing Herbert to escape to make a play. I get the unit has been banged up, and Foster Sarell is a practice squad guy the team called up because they had no other choice. But at some point, the guys on the field have to execute, and they couldn’t on Sunday. It’s a miracle Herbert was only sacked four times.

Stud: Brandon Staley

Staley has been criticized by just about everyone around the team, me included, at various points this season. The defense, which he was hired to fix, couldn’t stop anyone. The fourth-down decisions had grown more and more cowardly. The team wasn’t responding when things got difficult. But on Sunday, Staley showed glimpses of why the Chargers thought he was their best option when he was hired in 2020. The defensive game plan was a gem, holding Tagovailoa to the aforementioned 35.7% completion percentage as the Chargers played more press man than they have all season. The run defense still allowed 4.8 yards per carry, but there were more run stops at the line than in previous games. The fourth down decisions were measured but aggressive in some spots, namely going for it twice in goal-to-go situations. Staley seemed to regain his mojo in this one, and if that momentum continues, it’s a great sign for the Chargers down the stretch.

Dud: Joe Lombardi

While Staley regained his mojo on Sunday, Lombardi continued to show he has no juice left as this team’s offensive coordinator. Screens and Stick were once again the staples of the offensive diet, and that worked to open the game because Miami came out with pressure-heavy Cover 0 looks against a battered offensive line. Getting the ball out quickly helped the Chargers generate offense, for once. But it was when those opening scripts concluded, and Miami began to change things up that the offense stalled. Lombardi kept calling that quick game, even as it was made evident that Chargers receivers were getting open down the field. Herbert threw short of the sticks in nearly every third down or goal-to-go situation, putting the Chargers in positions where their slow receivers had to outrun defenders to even have a chance at a first down or scoring opportunity. Lombardi on Sunday proved he is who he is, even with a fully healthy complement of offensive stars: if you need three yards, he’ll get you one and expect you to chip in for the other two. If you need six, he’ll split the check three and three. It’s time to move on.

Stud: Michael Davis

Davis’ rise these last few weeks has been one of the best stories surrounding this Chargers team. The corner was seemingly on the outside looking in when JC Jackson was brought in, but since Jackson’s patella injury, Davis has taken over as the best defensive back on the entire team. Something about the matchup with Tyreek Hill has always brought out the best in Davis, and Sunday was no exception. With free reign to be physical at the line, Davis gave Hill fits in man coverage, losing only the 60-yard touchdown on which Davis tripped over Hill’s feet. If you go back and watch that play, it looks like blanket coverage with Davis in position to make a play on the ball before he falls down. It was the culmination of a few weeks of positive play for Davis, who’s gone from an offseason cut candidate to a potential key piece of the secondary moving forward.

Dud: Red zone offense

Part of this has to do with Lombardi, which we’ve already talked about, but the red zone offense on Sunday left a lot to be desired. Their first red zone drive is the best way to convey this: with first and goal from the 5, LA ran Austin Ekeler for no gain. This is already a red flag to me because Joshua Kelley has proven he should be the short-yardage back due to his bigger frame. On second down, Herbert throws it into the flat for Ekeler, who loses a yard. The Chargers do not throw the ball into the actual end zone. On third down, this pattern continues, with Herbert finding Keenan Allen for 4 yards to get them to the 2. Then, on fourth down, the Chargers send DeAndre Carter into motion to get him into space, but Herbert’s throw doesn’t lead him far enough upfield, and Carter stumbles before being tackled short of the goal line. On this drive, and many of the ensuing ones, the Chargers did not allow Kelley to grind out tough yards, which he’s shown more ability to do than anyone else on this roster. They also did not throw the ball into the end zone, instead running bubble and flat routes to get their receivers YAC opportunities. It’s poor design, and a 33% red zone efficiency will not cut it most nights.

Stud: Alohi Gilman

Another great story emerged in the Chargers secondary, with Gilman filling in for Derwin James admirably despite playing rather poorly this season leading up to tonight. We had seen missed tackles, blown assignments, slow rotations, pretty much any and everything you don’t want from a safety. All of this came as third-rounder JT Woods languished on the bench, and many wanted to see the rookie supplant Gilman in the lineup. On Sunday, the Notre Dame product came to play. Miami went right after him to open the game, and he responded with a beautiful pass breakup intended for Tyreek Hill that spurred an opening three and out. He was the one that forced the fumble that resulted in the Hill rugby scrum touchdown, and while that ended up being a net negative, the awareness to punch the ball out should not go uncredited. Gilman got quieter as the game continued, primarily because the Dolphins worked the sidelines a bit more as the game progressed, but sometimes as a back-end defender, silence is the best thing you can ask for.

Dud: Turnover luck

Speaking of the Hill rugby scrum touchdown, it was the hallmark of an incredibly unlucky game in the turnover department on Sunday. Gilman’s forced fumble on that play likely should have been a turnover or at the very least, a Miami recovery in the pile. Kenneth Murray had an interception go through his hands on a Tagovailoa pass in the first quarter. Davis looked like he’d be in position for a potential interception if he hadn’t fallen down on the Tyreek Hill touchdown. The Chargers did get lucky on the offensive side of the ball, namely when Justin Herbert recovered a fumbled snap that bounced away from him. Still, overall it felt as though LA had more opportunities to take the ball away than Miami and couldn’t convert. Ultimately, it didn’t matter for the outcome of Sunday’s game, but turnovers are generally a very momentum-based stat. If LA’s defense had been able to convert some of those opportunities, it may have given them the confidence to believe they could do so again next week and the week after that, and so on.

Top Twitter reactions from Chargers’ victory over Dolphins

How the internet reacted to the Chargers’ win over the Dolphins on Sunday night.

Justin Herbert shined, and the defense, which was down six starters, stepped up in the Chargers’ 23-17 victory over the Dolphins.

Here’s how the internet reacted to Week 14 showdown:

 

Instant analysis of Chargers’ primetime victory over Dolphins

Highlighting everything important from the Chargers’ 23-17 victory over the Dolphins.

The Chargers defeated the Dolphins on Sunday night, 23-17.

To recap Los Angeles’ Week 14 victory, here is everything to know.

Live tweet updates from Chargers vs. Dolphins

Stay up to date on all the action from the matchup between the Chargers and Dolphins.

The Chargers are set to take on the Dolphins in Week 14 of the 2022 regular season in just a few moments.

If you’re away from the television or can’t stream the game and want to be kept up to date on all the action, we will have you covered.

Chargers inactives: See who’s in and who’s out for Week 14 vs. Dolphins

The Chargers ruled out seven players, including Derwin James.

The Chargers are about 90 minutes away from kicking off Week 14 against the Dolphins.

Here is a look at their inactive players today:

Easton Stick

Derwin James Jr.

Jason Moore Jr.

Sony Michel

Bryce Callahan

Sebastian Joseph-Day

Trey Pipkins III

Chargers vs. Dolphins: 5 storylines to follow in Week 14

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

Here are five Los Angeles Chargers storylines to watch for during the lead-up to the team’s Week 14 matchup against the Miami Dolphins.

Chargers make roster moves ahead of Week 14 matchup with Dolphins

The Chargers made some roster moves ahead of their matchup with the Dolphins on Sunday.

The Chargers made some roster moves ahead of their matchup with the Dolphins on Sunday.

Los Angeles signed cornerback Kemon Hall to the active roster from the practice squad. In correspondence, the team placed tight end Richard Rodgers on the injured reserve.

Further, the Bolts promoted safety Raheem Layne and defensive tackle Christopher Hinton from the practice squad.

With Bryce Callahan out with a groin injury, Hall provides additional depth.

Derwin James will be sidelined with a knee issue. Layne is capable of playing “Money,” a hybrid linebacker-safety role.

Sebastian Joseph-Day will be out with a knee injury, so Hinton is another body along the interior part of the defensive line.

Chargers’ causes for concern vs. Dolphins in Week 14

Reasons why the Dolphins could give the Chargers problems on Sunday.

The Chargers have a lot on the line this weekend against the Dolphins. Not only is it a key game in the AFC playoff race, but the battle between Justin Herbert and Tua Tagovailoa is certain to burn down a good chunk of the internet regardless of the result.

Here are four reasons to be concerned Los Angeles will be on the wrong side of the narratives come Monday morning.

Speed disadvantage

With Derwin James likely out for the game with a quad injury, the Chargers will presumably be missing both him and slot corner Bryce Callahan. That leaves rookie Ja’Sir Taylor and either Alohi Gilman or JT Woods in line to start against an offense that employs Tyreek Hill and Jaylen Waddle. While Michael Davis has been playing exceptionally well this season and has the speed to at least keep pace with one of them, plugging in two new starters will undoubtedly affect the communication on long-developing routes. As long as the pass protection holds up for Tagovailoa, the downfield passing game will be extra dangerous for the Dolphins.

Prompt points pace

Before losing against the 49ers last week, the Dolphins had scored 30+ points in four straight games, while the Chargers have scored 30+ just twice all season. Granted, Miami’s efforts came against teams rated 19th, 26th, 27th, and 32nd in defensive DVOA, but Los Angeles is only 23rd by the metric. The Dolphins also haven’t scored more than 17 points in any of their four losses this season, while the Chargers have allowed 17 or fewer points only twice. One of those games came against the league-worst Broncos offense. In short: Miami is going to get theirs, and Los Angeles hasn’t yet proved they can go out and get theirs to match.

Hurting offensive line

While the Chargers will get Corey Linsley back from concussion protocol this week, Trey Pipkins will remain sidelined with a knee injury. Four of Los Angeles’ five starters have appeared on the injury report this week, with Linsley, Zion Johnson (shoulder), and Jamaree Salyer (knee) all likely to play. Still, the offensive line is banged up, without even mentioning that Rashawn Slater is out for the season. With Jaelan Phillips and Bradley Chubb on the other side, the Chargers will have to fight through the pain to move the ball on offense.

Contender-pretender barometer

Miami has become a contender gatekeeper of sorts this season. In six games against current playoff teams, the Dolphins have a -53 point differential versus a +63 point differential in six games against non-playoff teams. The Chargers have toed the line between contender and pretender all season, but recent results have skewed the scales a bit further in the direction of pretender status. If Miami’s schedule is any indication, that means they should come away with the victory – probably not the same way they beat the 6-6 Patriots 20-7 in Week 1, but perhaps a result similar to the 31-27 victory over Detroit, a team with similar imbalances to Los Angeles.

Derwin James among 4 players doubtful ahead of Chargers’ matchup with Dolphins

The Chargers will be without four key players when the Dolphins come to town.

The Chargers will likely be without four key players, three on defense and one on offense, when the Dolphins come to town.

Derwin James (quad), Bryce Callahan (groin), Sebastian Joseph-Day (knee), and Trey Pipkins (knee) were all held out of practice for the third straight day and have been ruled doubtful for the Miami game.

Meanwhile, Mike Williams is off the injury report and is expected to play. Williams missed the past two games with a knee issue.

Corey Linsley cleared concussion protocol and is also set to play.

With James out, Nasir Adderley and Alohi Gilman will be the starting safeties. Ja’Sir Taylor is set to start in the slot with Callahan sidelined.