Chargers vs. Jaguars: Highlighting Jacksonville’s top defensive players

A look at the Jaguars’ impact defenders that the Chargers must craft their game plan around.

To defeat the Jacksonville Jaguars and avoid an early exit from the playoffs, Justin Herbert and the Los Angeles Chargers must avoid a repeat of the shell-shocking performance displayed in their 38-10 loss earlier this season.

Points are expected in this Wild Card rematch, and the Chargers must be prepared to take on one of the NFL’s most-improved defenses

The Jaguars may not tout a hearty selection of household names, but several playmakers have helped transform this unit into one keen to fortify the trenches and take away the football.

The AFC South champs rank fifth in the NFL with 1.6 takeaways per game. In their Week 18 win against the Tennessee Titans, the Jaguars swarmed quarterback Josh Dobbs for four sacks, an interception, and a forced fumble. The Titans were held scoreless in the fourth quarter.

Additionally, the Jaguars’ 3-4 base defense has been instrumental in quashing the run. Opponents only averaged 4.2 yards per carry (seventh-best in the league) and 114.8 rushing yards per game (12th-best) in 2022. The Jaguars have been especially impressive over the last three weeks of the season, giving up no touchdowns and only 162 yards on the ground.

Here is a look at the three impact players on defense for the Jaguars who the Chargers must craft their gameplan around.

OLB Josh Allen

The Chargers will look to neutralize the best player on the other side. Outside linebacker Josh Allen totaled 57 tackles (11 for loss) and six sacks during the regulars season, the latter of which leads the Jaguars. Allen has also forced four fumbles and recovered two loose balls, including the one forced from Dobbs’ hands that he scooped and returned 37 yards to the end zone. The play earned him AFC Defensive Player of the Week honors. 

Allen is a powerful rusher who effectively uses his speed and explosiveness to overwhelm offensive tackles. He can fluidly switch between attacking the pocket to blanketing routes in his zone or out of the backfield. Allen also has a high success rate at backing down blockers with his length to constrict the pocket and create opportunities for other members of the pass rush.

Keeping Allen contained will be key to decreasing the stress on Herbert and maximizing his time to throw. 

NT Davon Hamilton

Hamilton, a third-round choice by the Jaguars in 2020, has become one of the team’s best defensive pieces at the nose tackle position. Hamilton garnered 39 tackles and 27 pressures, which included three sacks. His 74.9 PFF grade on the year ranks sixth on the Jaguars. This year, his pass-rush tasks have been expanded and he has shown the ability to win with strength and get upfield with urgency.

However, Hamilton’s best work includes absorbing double teams up front so his linebacker support can swoop in and corral the running back. At 6-4 and 320 pounds, Hamilton is well-equipped to do precisely that. The Chargers didn’t run the ball much in their last outing, but starter Austin Ekeler struggled for just five yards on four carries.

The interior offensive line must win the battles against Hamilton to establish the run and open up play-action pass opportunities.

CB Tyson Campbell

Campbell had a big rookie year in 2021, leading the Jaguars in interceptions and pass breakups while ranking fourth in tackles. With a starting role locked down, Campbell parleyed his first-year success into a sturdier performance that displayed major improvement in coverage against the league’s top targets. Campbell collected three interceptions and nine pass breakups, earning an 81.2 PFF Grade – better than Jalen Ramsey, Darius Slay, and Stephon Gilmore.

Campbell was also responsible for a huge play in the win over the Titans, picking off Dobbs with under a minute to play in the third quarter to set the Jaguars up in scoring position. He has good length to stiffen receivers at the line and possesses the awareness to get eyes on the quarterback for opportune plays on the ball.

With Mike Williams out for Saturday’s game with a back fracture, Josh Palmer will get the chance to challenge Campbell on the outside.

Chargers’ keys to victory vs. Jaguars in Wild Card round

This is what the Los Angeles Chargers must do to beat the Jacksonville Jaguars.

The Chargers’ season comes down to a matchup with the Jaguars on Saturday, with a likely meeting with the Chiefs on the line.

After being embarrassed at home by Jacksonville in Week 3, Los Angeles will look to exact their revenge with higher stakes.

Here’s what the Chargers need to do to be successful against the Jaguars.

Early down success

This goes both ways. On offense, LA has been a top-ten team in third down conversion rate all season, but many of those plays have resulted from Justin Herbert bailing the team out on third and longs. In his first playoff game, it’d be nice to get him in rhythm, especially early, by feeding him some early first downs and third and short conversions. Defensively, the Chargers have to contend with a Jacksonville offense that’s right up there with Los Angeles’ in terms of third-down efficiency. The Jaguars convert on just shy of 42% of their third downs, ninth in the league and one spot below the Chargers (43.58%). However, Jacksonville’s offense is also predicated on the quick passing game because their receivers suffer from many of the same deficiencies as LA’s. In Week 3, they were afforded plenty of opportunities to lean into that quick game: out of 15 total third downs, Jacksonville had six or more yards to the sticks only four times. All four times resulted from a run stop on first down – gains of 2, 1, 0, and -4. To keep the Jaguars behind the sticks, LA has to perform more consistently on early downs on defense. To keep Jacksonville at bay on the scoreboard, the same is true for LA’s offense.

Rebound against the run

So, we’ve established that run stops on early downs are generally good for putting opposing offenses behind the sticks on third down. But how do the Chargers, whose 5.4 yards per carry allowed are the worst in the NFL this season, generate those run stops? It’s an especially pertinent question considering that Jaguars running back Travis Etienne is the league leader in rushing yards over expected and fifth in the NFL in broken and missed tackle percentage per attempt. To put it plainly: the Jaguars aren’t blocking Etienne into chunk plays. He’s doing it himself. So, the solution here is to ask the Chargers, especially on the second level, to execute at a higher level than we’ve seen them in a few weeks. Second-level defenders like Kenneth Murray Jr., Drue Tranquill, and even Derwin James have sometimes shown gullible eyes when plugging run gaps if the picture isn’t clear. That’s opened cutback lanes and huge holes, while missed tackles from those defenders and smaller secondary players have made bad gashes worse. That needs to improve, and part of that onus shifts back to the defensive line, who will have to do everything in their power to eat up blocks and clear the way for Murray, Tranquill, and James to get downhill. Expect to see a lot of Breiden Fehoko and maybe more Christopher Hinton than we’re used to. The undrafted rookie has shown some nice flashes recently and could be an X-factor on Saturday.

Jam up the receivers

Let’s circle back to the quick game and what makes it so effective for Jacksonville. Quick passing concepts rely heavily on timing to work correctly, and Doug Pederson and his offensive staff have done a great job this season scheming up those plays to operate on a very precise timer. The way to muck up the quick game, as Chargers fans saw in the Dolphins game, is to get in the face of receivers and disrupt the timing of routes. Oftentimes, these concepts are thrown to spots, not players, and ensuring that the player can’t get to his spot by the time the quarterback hits the top of his drop throws a wrench in the whole play. Los Angeles did a fantastic job of this against Miami while mixing in exotic pressure packages to get Tua Tagovailoa even more off-rhythm. The key difference between the Dolphins’ offense and this Jaguars team is that Jacksonville lacks the speed Miami has. Los Angeles can, therefore, afford to add an extra man into the box as a coverage player or extra man in run support. Perhaps that means we see more packages with Derwin James, Nasir Adderley, and Alohi Gilman all on the field at the same time, with James rolled down into the box. Jacksonville’s primary threats are Christian Kirk and Evan Engram, who do most of their damage split out into the slot. This is why I think Bryce Callahan got a rest week against Denver: LA needs him at his healthiest to battle with Kirk all game. James will likely take the bulk of the Engram assignment, while Michael Davis will be tasked with getting physical with Zay Jones to minimize his impact. The Chargers have the personnel to jam Jacksonville at the line, and the Jaguars don’t have the speed to make them pay for being overaggressive.

To blitz and be blitzed

Jacksonville and LA are two of the most blitz-heavy teams in the league on third down. They also have two of the best quarterbacks in the league at handling the blitz. Trevor Lawrence has been outstanding this season when teams send an extra rusher, largely because Jacksonville is one of the best teams in the league at picking up the blitz. With no pressure coming, even with extra rushers bearing down, Lawrence can scan the field and find the open window with precision almost every time. Now, Lawrence has struggled when the pressure actually gets home. With rushers in his face, the second-year QB’s passer rating drops to 62.7 with 15 turnover-worthy plays (per PFF), and his nine lost fumbles on the season are the most in the league. Such is the conundrum: to blitz Lawrence is to risk being picked apart if his protection holds up, with the knowledge that you can force a mistake if you can get home.

Conversely, the Chargers have been less effective at picking up the blitz. Austin Ekeler and Joshua Kelley are good pass protectors, but there’s always one small thing that goes wrong when the Chargers face an extra rusher and suddenly, Justin Herbert is running for his life. Luckily, Herbert can do that: nearly every metric places him amongst the best in the league at delivering under duress. But Jacksonville is a man-coverage-heavy team, which is a worse matchup for the Chargers’ plodding receiving corps. Against zone blitzes, you can ask a receiver to settle between zones to give Herbert a target to find as the rush closes in. Against man, you have to ask one of those receivers to either create separation or win a contested catch situation. Such, again, is the conundrum: Herbert can escape for an extra few moments, but if his receivers can’t break free, does it really matter?

The lesson here is twofold: if the Chargers are going to blitz, which they will, they must get a rusher home to be effective. If they’re going to be blitzed, which they will, they have to execute at a level beyond their usual capabilities.

Generate interior pressure

The weakness of this Jacksonville offensive line is up the middle. Neither Tyler Shatley nor Ben Bartch has been viable options at left guard, and Shatley is coming off allowing three pressures last week against Tennessee. Right guard Brandon Scherff has an All-Pro pedigree and played in every game for the first time since 2016, but abdomen and ankle injuries rendered him questionable and less effective than normal versus the Titans. Center Luke Fortner is playing well for a rookie, but there are still times when you’re very plainly reminded that he is indeed a rookie. On the exteriors, Walker Little and Jawaan Taylor have performed about as well as you can ask for. Taylor has mastered the art of timing the snap – don’t be upset if he doesn’t get called for false starts on Saturday because they aren’t. It’s allowed him to make up for subpar movement skills by getting a head start to the corner. Little stepped in halfway through the season after an injury to Cam Robinson and has looked the part, by and large. For the Chargers, the path here is pretty obvious. Morgan Fox needs to continue his stellar season, which has already cemented him as one of the more valuable free-agent pickups of the offseason anywhere in the NFL. That’s step one. Step two is unleashing Kyle Van Noy the way the Chargers intended to coming into the year. The two-time Super Bowl champ has been pigeonholed into more of a traditional EDGE role since Joey Bosa’s injury against this Jacksonville squad in Week 3. With Bosa back, LA can move Van Noy all over the formation. Bosa or Khalil Mack can kick inside to get a one-on-one with a guard while Van Noy rushes from the perimeter. The linebacker can line up head-up with an interior lineman and then rush as a blitzer or drop into coverage while Drue Tranquill or Kenneth Murray get after the QB instead. To get back to a previous point, Lawrence is a much different player under pressure, and the best way to create that pressure is to overload the interior of the line, especially on the left side.

Give Herbert time

Back to the offense, which we’ve now established is going to be up against some aggressive man coverage. Jacksonville can afford to play coverage like that because LA doesn’t have a threat over the top to punish aggressiveness, especially now that Mike Williams (back) has been ruled out. The Chargers receivers are also not premier separators underneath: the closest thing they have is Keenan Allen, who still flashes that ability at times but has largely looked sluggish since coming back from an early-season hamstring injury. That means LA needs more time for even short routes to develop. Jacksonville, as we’ve already established, is going to send the blitz after Justin Herbert. Even if they don’t, their rush tendencies are uniquely built to beat the Chargers. Josh Allen is one of the better speed rushers in the game, a trait that left tackle Jamaree Salyer has struggled with throughout his solid rookie season. Arden Key has been a monster on stunts and loops, which the Chargers have had issues picking up cleanly because of injuries causing shuffling along the line and general ineffectiveness at times. So, LA has to find a way to avoid that threat and get Herbert more time to make a play as his receivers plod down the field.

There’s two ways the Chargers can attack this. Number one: focus on the slot. Jacksonville’s interior secondary players have been much worse than their exterior ones, which isn’t a knock given the seasons Tyson Campbell and Darious Williams have had. Keenan Allen historically does most of his damage from the slot and has had at least five receptions in each of the last eight games. It’s harder to press receivers from the slot, which gives Allen more time to win with his craftiness in space. Tight end Gerald Everett also fits into this equation as an option over the middle of the field on (gulp) stick routes.

Number two: get Herbert in space. The Chargers’ offense has been at its best when they redefine the boundaries of the pocket by getting Herbert moving on bootlegs and play-action looks. Herbert is always a threat to run for a few yards, which draws a defender down to account for him. They’re naturally longer-developing plays, which gives the receiving corps enough time to get open on crossing routes by the time Herbert is ready to let the ball loose. They avoid the interior offensive line, where LA has given up its fair share of pressure against a litany of outstanding pass rushers this season.

As long as Herbert has enough time to make a play, there’s little reason to doubt that he will. He looked locked in against Denver before being taken out for rest reasons and has played some of his best football with his back against the wall. He just needs to keep his back off the ground if the Chargers are to come away with the win.

Chargers WR Mike Williams’ injury revealed

Chargers WR Mike Williams is expected to be sidelined for two to three weeks.

Chargers wide receiver Mike Williams was ruled out for Saturday’s Wild Card playoff game against the Jaguars on Friday.

Williams has a small, nonsurgical fracture in his back that is expected to sideline him for two to three weeks, according to ESPN’s Lindsey Thiry.

That means barring a trip to the Super Bowl, Williams would be out for the remainder of the playoffs if Los Angeles beats Jacksonville.

Williams’ x-ray and MRI were initially negative, and it was deemed a back contusion. But since it had not progressed, it led to another MRI, resulting in Williams being diagnosed with the fracture.

Williams finished the 2022 season with 63 catches, 895 yards and four touchdowns in 13 games. He missed four games with a high ankle sprain.

With Williams ruled out, Joshua Palmer and DeAndre Carter will be in line to see additional playing time alongside Keenan Allen.

Chargers WR Mike Williams ruled out for Wild Card round vs. Jaguars

The Chargers will be without a key piece of their offense.

The Chargers will have to get past the Jaguars without Mike Williams.

The team announced on Friday that Williams will remain in Los Angeles to undergo further treatment for the back injury he suffered in Week 18 against the Broncos. NFL Network’s Tom Pelissero later reported that further testing revealed a fracture in Williams’ back that will sideline him for multiple weeks.

It’s a poor look for Brandon Staley and the Chargers. Williams was injured in a game where LA had nothing to play for: they were already locked into the five seed by virtue of a Ravens loss earlier in the day. Then, on Monday, Staley said in his weekly press conference that Williams would practice at least once, with the expectation that he would play on Saturday. After three straight DNPs from the receiver, Staley said Thursday that rest was more important than practice reps and that Williams would be questionable. Less than 24 hours later, Williams has been ruled out.

Back injuries have a notoriously variable recovery timeline, so perhaps Staley was optimistic about Williams’ chances heading into a playoff game. But this is a pattern of behavior regarding inconsistent messaging from the Chargers’ head coach, and it will cost LA one of their most valuable players on offense.

Without Williams, LA will turn to Josh Palmer, who has 72 catches for 769 yards and 3 TDs on the season, to start opposite of Keenan Allen.

The team also announced they elevated running back Larry Rountree III and defensive tackle David Moa from the practice squad for Saturday’s contest.

Chargers’ Justin Herbert shares Keenan Allen’s advice to him ahead of playoff matchup vs. Jaguars

Justin Herbert received some sage advice from his star receiver ahead of his playoff debut against the Jaguars on Saturday.

As he prepares to participate in the first playoff game of his career this weekend, Chargers quarterback Justin Herbert revealed a bit of advice he got from wide receiver Keenan Allen ahead of the elimination matchup.

Speaking to reporters at Los Angeles’ media availability session on Thursday, he clarified that Allen’s words of wisdom were pretty basic.

“Just the same thing that he always says,” Herbert explained. “‘Go out there, have fun, relax and play the game.’ Keenan [Allen] has been such an incredible leader for our team and for this locker room. Guys look up to him and especially that receiver group because he has been such a great inspiration and teammate to all of those guys.”

While relaxing on the football field may seem simple enough in theory, Herbert will be plenty motivated to get his revenge after completing just 56% of his passes the first time these two teams met in Week 3 when he was a week removed from fractured rib cartilage.

In a game that could make or break the Chargers’ season, watch for him to lean on Allen’s experience in all four quarters and for Los Angeles’ offense to live or die by the connection they make when Herbert throws the ball, especially if Mike Williams can’t play.

Who are the experts predicting to win in Chargers vs. Jaguars?

Find out who national pundits are favoring in the matchup between the Los Angeles Chargers and Jacksonville Jaguars.

The Los Angeles Chargers are 2-point favorites over the Jacksonville Jaguars in the Wild Card Round. The over/under is 47.5 points, per Tipico Sportsbook.

That means oddsmakers are taking bets on whether the two teams will combine to score more than or fewer than 47.5 points.

My score prediction for the game is a 27-24 win for the Chargers, with a total of 51 points. So if I were putting money behind my prediction, I’d bet the over.

As for expert predictions, they are split, with the Jaguars slightly favored. Over at NFL Pick Watch, which compiles the list of expert picks, 51% are picking Jacksonville to win.

The showdown between the Chargers and Jaguars is arguably the most evenly matched.

Saturday’s game will begin at 5:15 p.m. PT and will be televised on NBC.

Chargers WR Mike Williams misses practice again, questionable vs. Jaguars

The Chargers could be without a key piece of their offense on Saturday night.

The Chargers had their final practice before the Wild Card round matchup with the Jaguars.

Not on the practice field for the second consecutive day was wide receiver Mike Williams. Williams is dealing with a back contusion he sustained in the regular season finale against the Broncos.

Williams is listed as questionable for Saturday’s game.

Brandon Staley said Williams will be a game-time decision, adding that he is progressing and they are prioritizing rest and treatment.

At the beginning of the week, Staley was asked if Williams could play even if he didn’t practice at all. “I think that’s fair to say,” he responded.

If Williams is ruled out or on a snap count, Joshua Palmer and DeAndre Carter would be in line to see additional playing time alongside Keenan Allen.

During the regular season, Williams caught 63 passes for 895 yards and four touchdowns in 13 games.

Chargers’ causes for concern vs. Jaguars in Wild Card round

Reasons why the Jaguars might beat the Chargers on Saturday night.

Los Angeles heads to Jacksonville seeking survival and revenge after losing to the Jaguars 38-10 in Week 3. The Chargers, of course, need a win this time to continue in the AFC playoff bracket.

Here are four reasons to be nervous about the Bolts’ chances heading into Saturday’s contest.

Speed rush

Jamaree Salyer has played admirably in place of the injured Rashawn Slater. Still, as his rookie season has gone on, we’ve seen why NFL teams let him fall to the sixth round and why many of them, including the Chargers, saw him as a professional guard despite success at tackle for Georgia. One word is all you need here: speed. Salyer struggles against speedier rushers because of subpar length (his arms measure 33 ⅝” at the combine, ⅜” shorter than Zion Johnson’s). He’s built to be a power player, but the disadvantage of optimizing in such a fashion is that rushers can run around you if you can’t reach out to stop them, and Salyer lacks that ability. On the other side, Jacksonville’s Josh Allen and Travon Walker make up one of the more athletic pass-rusher duos in the league. Salyer has the benefit of having gone up against Walker in practice at Georgia, but it’ll have to be a gem from the rookie if the Chargers are going to keep Justin Herbert clean.

The Mike Williams issue

As of Wednesday, Williams has not practiced after suffering a back contusion in Sunday’s game with the Broncos, which is beginning to cloud his status for Saturday. At the top of the week, Brandon Staley said the plan was for Williams to practice at some point before playing on Sunday. There’s now one practice left on Thursday, and we’ll see what his participation status is. Regardless, it looks like Williams will be limited in some capacity on Saturday. 50 or 60% of the veteran is better than some of the other options on the roster, but Williams has pushed his luck like this earlier in the season to dismal results. This Chargers offense struggles mightily without Williams at his best because there’s nobody else on the roster who threatens opposing secondaries down the field. Like, at all. Williams’ presence, even if in name only, opens up the offense underneath, where Joe Lombardi wants his offense to do most of its damage. If he can’t go, Jacksonville can congest the shallow areas of the field even more than normal, and Justin Herbert will have to bail LA out.

Boat race

This is the only playoff game this week that pits two 4,000-yard passers against one another – Herbert has 4,739 on the season, while Trevor Lawrence finished the regular season with 4,113. In some ways, Lawrence profiles like the “next” Herbert, a funny concept considering LA’s quarterback is only in his third NFL season. Still, the similarities are certainly there: a big-armed signal-caller with all the tools which showed flashes in his rookie season before breaking out in a big way as an NFL sophomore. Lawrence and this Jaguars squad put up 38 points against this Chargers defense in Week 3, and yes, LA has become a much different team since then. Still, I think it’s safe to assume that this game will be closer to a shootout than anything else. The Chargers have only scored 28 or more points four times this season against the Texans, Browns, Rams, and Broncos. If the defense doesn’t show up on Saturday, do we trust this team to keep pace?

Defensive questions

Jacksonville isn’t built to launch the ball downfield, which is where the Chargers have struggled for the most part this season. They are, however, built to expose the holes in LA’s run defense on the second level. Brandon Staley is unlikely to adjust away from the lighter boxes up front, which raises the question of how they stop the run. Drue Tranquill, Kenneth Murray Jr., and even Derwin James have had issues diagnosing the run when they haven’t been kept clean. So, how do you keep them cleaner other than asking the defensive line to…play better?

Deeper in the defense, rotating Ja’Sir Taylor in for Asante Samuel Jr. on run looks hasn’t yielded results despite Taylor being the bigger body. Samuel has looked like a less confident player since Taylor started rotating in, which has partially contributed to Michael Davis overshadowing the rest of the secondary. So, you can keep Samuel on the field full-time, which may sacrifice some run defense benefits, and try to pump his confidence back up with a strong first half. Or, you can rotate Taylor in and stop the run at a higher clip but run the risk that Doug Pederson schemes up designed shots right at the sixth-round rookie because your top-50 pick is off the field.

There are a lot of questions to be answered, more than usual. How does the Nasir Adderley/Alohi Gilman split go? How much can you move someone like Kyle Van Noy around with Joey Bosa potentially still slowed by groin surgery? The playoffs are, generally speaking, not a good time to have all of these questions. Ideally, your team has an identity by now, one they can lean on and trust. Right now, it just doesn’t feel like LA has that. Maybe Brandon Staley comes out with the best game plan of the season, but maybe that feels like a tall ask.

4 areas where Chargers must improve going into Wild Card Round vs. Jaguars

We identified four areas where the Chargers need to improve as the playoffs get underway on Saturday.

The Chargers are hot, winning their last four of five games. However, they have to improve in certain areas to avoid being one-and-done. Which areas may be most vital in making necessary adjustments?

We identified four areas Los Angeles could improve as its postseason play kicks off on Saturday night against the Jaguars.

 

Chargers’ reasons for optimism vs. Jaguars in Wild Card round

Reasons why the Los Angeles Chargers will punch their ticket to the divisional round.

The Chargers will match up with the Jaguars for the second time this season, with a trip to the divisional round on the line.

After losing to Jacksonville 38-10 the first time around, Los Angeles will have to make adjustments to come away victorious.

Here are four reasons to be optimistic about LA punching its ticket to the next round.

Offensive firepower

Los Angeles may have lost to Jacksonville in Week 3, but recall the circumstances. It was the Chargers’ first complete game of managing Justin Herbert’s rib injury. They lost Joey Bosa, Rashawn Slater, and deep threat Jalen Guyton to long-term injuries mid-game. Keenan Allen did not play due to a Week 1 hamstring injury and Mike Williams had just one catch for 15 yards. Fast forward three and a half months, and things are a much different story. Rookie Jamaree Salyer has stepped in and provided stability at left tackle in Slater’s absence, a luxury not afforded to a Chargers team that used Storm Norton as his replacement in Week 3. Herbert, Allen, and Williams are all healthy. The ten points LA scored against the Jaguars in their first matchup was the lowest point total of the season for the Chargers. With everyone healthy, it should be safe to assume that Los Angeles brings more than that to the table on Saturday.

Defensive hot streak

Since squaring off against Miami, the Chargers have been lights out as a passing defense. Michael Davis has come into his own, shutting down the likes of Tyreek Hill and Courtland Sutton over his last five games. Asante Samuel Jr. has continued his solid sophomore season, while third-year safety Alohi Gilman has grown into a starting role opposite, and sometimes in place of, Derwin James Jr. Over their last three games, the Chargers have given up 160.3 passing yards per game, the seventh-best figure in the league. Their blanket coverage has also contributed to a league-best sack percentage of 14.29% in their last three contests. Jacksonville’s offense has performed all season to the tune of sixth-best in passing DVOA, and Trevor Lawrence racked up 262 yards and three passing touchdowns against the Chargers in Week 3. But that was before LA found their groove, and if they can extend the hot streak into the tournament in Lawrence’s first career playoff game, it bodes well for a Chargers victory.

Teamwide balance

Jacksonville has the edge in overall DVOA, clocking in at 13th, five spots higher than the Chargers. However, the Jaguars are buoyed by an offense that ranks 9th in DVOA, while the defense lags at 26th. For the Chargers, the offense is 19th and the defense is 16th, both more in line with the overall team ranking. At a more granular level, Jacksonville is 6th in offensive passing DVOA but 20th in rushing; the defense is 11th in rushing but 30th in passing. Those season-long trends paint a picture of a streaky team. That bears out when you look at the schedule: Jacksonville has a stretch in which they lost 6 of 7, immediately followed by a stretch in which they won 6 of 7 to end the season. In the playoffs, balance usually reigns supreme: these are the best teams in the league, and they all know how to stop you from doing what you do well. If you can pass but can’t run, or you can stop the run but not the pass, your opponent has an advantage. For LA, that advantage is there.

Championship pedigree

Brandon Staley preached veteran presence this offseason as this team prepared to make a championship run. Kyle Van Noy was signed for his hybrid role, yes, but his leadership as a two-time Super Bowl winner was just as touted by the Chargers. The since-waived Sony Michel was brought in for similar reasons before his lack of effectiveness on the field rendered him less valuable. Sebastian Joseph-Day and Morgan Fox went deep into the playoffs with Staley’s Rams in 2020 and Joseph-Day won a ring last season on the other side of LA. Even holdovers like Keenan Allen have playoff experience that they can lean on to prep younger players heading into this week. Jacksonville, on the other hand, is led by a talented squadron of younger players that don’t come prepackaged with that same experience. Trevor Lawrence and Trevor Etienne are used to playing deep into December and January as national title contenders at Clemson. Still, the NFL playoffs are usually a different animal for all but the most transcendent pros. On Saturday, it’s time for the impact that the Chargers veterans have made off the field to be felt on it.