2023 Power Rankings Roundup, Week 11: Where Chargers stand after loss to Lions

Here is what the national media thinks of the Chargers after their loss to the Lions.

The Chargers are coming off a shootout loss to the Lions.

Here is what the national media thinks of the Bolts ahead of Week 11:

USA Today: 15 (Previous: 14)

“In QB Justin Herbert’s three-plus seasons, the Bolts have lost 13 games by three or fewer points – the most in the NFL since 2020. Sorry, but not blaming him for this.”

Touchdown Wire: 15 (Previous: 14)

“That was a pretty typical Chargers’ loss. Justin Herbert and Keenan Allen play like Batman and Robin, but what good is it when The Joker is your head coach and defensive play-caller?”

NFL: 18 (Previous: 16)

“Not sure if the lose-two, win-two pace will keep up all season, but the Chargers followed their most recent pair of victories with a defensive nightmare that landed them back in the loss column, so some things are repeating. Even a brilliant Justin Herbert performance wasn’t enough against the Lions. The defensive showing was even worse than what the Bolts displayed during the pounding Miami laid on them in Week 1 at home. Speaking of, the Chargers are suddenly 2-3 in Inglewood, with the two victories coming against the Bears and Raiders. The four remaining road games are winnable. The four home games all could be tough ones, including a prime-time matchup against the Ravens and the regular-season finale against the Chiefs. The 4-5 Chargers have five teams to pass in the playoff standings, and they’re only 2-3 so far vs. AFC foes. They’re not dead yet, but they’ve got to get going very soon.”

CBS Sports: 19 (Previous: 15)

“The defense is bad right now, which shouldn’t be the case with the supposed stars on that side of the ball and a defensive-minded head coach. They are in a hole now in the playoff chase.”

ESPN: 16 (Previous: 14)

Biggest remaining game: Week 11 at Green Bay

“The Chargers dropped to 4-5 after Sunday’s loss to the Lions, moving them to third place in the AFC West and the 12th seed in the conference. A loss to the struggling Packers in Week 11 would be a significant hit to the Chargers’ playoff chances, especially with a game against the Ravens, the AFC’s No. 2 seed, in Week 12.”

Yahoo Sports: 16 (Previous: 13)

“The Chargers have given up the second-most yards in the NFL, the most passing yards and the third-most net yards per pass attempt, via Pro Football Reference. This is not the defense the Chargers signed up for when they hired Brandon Staley, who was previously the Rams’ defensive coordinator. If the defense doesn’t turn around, that’s what will cost Staley his head coaching job.”

The Athletic: 17 (Previous: 16)

Coach status: Shaky

“Brandon Staley went from being the defensive coordinator at John Carroll University, a 3,600-student private college in Ohio to an NFL head coach in five years, and it’s possible that the ascent was too fast. Staley’s background is on defense, but the Chargers are 24th in points allowed (23.9 ppg) after Sunday, which dropped Staley to 23-20 as a head coach. Justin Herbert had a 114.9 passer rating and the Chargers scored touchdowns on their final five possessions against Detroit, and they still lost.”

Studs and duds from Chargers’ shootout loss to Lions

Take a deeper look at what went wrong (and right) for the Chargers against the Lions.

The Chargers dropped under .500 after a shootout loss to the Lions. While the Chargers scored a touchdown on five straight drives to end the game, Brandon Staley’s defense once again failed to get a stop down the stretch. Los Angeles has given up 475+ yards four times this season. Monster efforts from Keenan Allen and Justin Herbert went to waste.

The team will need to recover as it heads to Green Bay next week, but let’s take a deeper look at what went wrong (and right) against Detroit.

Stud: WR Keenan Allen

Keenan Allen has turned back the clock in a massive way this year. The Chargers’ star receiver has three 110+ yard games this season for the first time since 2020. Allen fought through a shoulder injury to produce an 11-catch, 175-yard effort with two touchdowns. Hebert has been great this year, but Allen’s re-emergence as a top-ten receiver has been the biggest boost to the Chargers’ offense.

What really stands out about Allen’s game vs. Detroit and his season as a whole is just how much quicker he looks in his routes and after the catch. The numbers back it up as well. 2.56 yards per route run through nine games is the highest single-season mark of Allen’s since 2017. In this game, Allen had 15.9 yards per reception with what he was doing after the catch as well. That’s practically a Mike Williams-type of number on jump balls!

Considering all of the injuries on offense and the attrition they’ve faced this season, Allen’s performances in his age 31 season should not be looked over. He’s one of the few key reasons this team has a puncher’s chance at a playoff spot.

Dud: Brandon Staley’s defense

It’s the same story we’ve seen time and time again. Herbert and the offense have an electric effort and score over 30. And yet, the Chargers’ defense simultaneously gets completely dismantled by a good offense.

It looked terrible from the beginning. The defensive line got pushed backward every time it mattered by that Detroit offensive line. The linebackers got gashed. Michael Davis was sick and the secondary got absolutely picked apart. It was an utter failure by all levels of the defense regardless of which metric one chooses to look at. Yards, points, critical conversions given up, poor tackling, explosive plays. An assault on the eyes of anyone watching defensive tape.

The Chargers didn’t just look bad. They looked unprepared from the jump. Ben Johnson continuously worked the underneath stuff he was given with Sam LaPorta, Jahmyr Gibbs, and Amon-Ra St. Brown. Somehow, a defense that was built to stop explosive plays is still giving up a ton of them: just in different, terribly creative ways.

Destroyed in coverage, flummoxed in the trenches, annihilated in play calling and coaching. It will never change until the day Brandon Staley is no longer the playcaller for the Chargers. I don’t need to keep seeing the same movie over and over again to say that.

Stud: QB Justin Herbert

Early in this game, I was a bit concerned about how Herbert looked. He was coming up short on a few passes and threw a particularly careless interception to Kerby Joseph.

But after the first quarter, Herbert rebounded. His performance and rebound couldn’t be better explained by a single play better than his touchdown throw to Jalen Guyton:

There was a stretch of this game where Herbert’s WR1, WR2, And TE1 were Quentin Johnston, Jalen Guyton, and Donald Parham during Allen’s trip back to the locker room with his shoulder injury. He managed to finish the game with 67.5% completion, 323 yards, four touchdowns, one interception, and a 114.9 passer rating. After a few decidedly “meh” weeks for QB1, he returned to form in a massive way.

Dud: The defensive line

I don’t believe in the concept of taking credit away from the defensive line for their previous performances based on this game. Against the Bears and Jets, Joey Bosa, Khalil Mack, and Tuli Tuipulotu balled out. But this Lions’ game against arguably the league’s best offensive line was always going to be a litmus test. And the Chargers failed it.

Los Angeles had just six pressures on Jared Goff. The Chargers gave up 200 rushing yards to the Lions on the ground. Especially with the state of the current secondary, it just was an unacceptable effort from the first level of the defense.

It’s just factual at this point to say that when the Chargers’ have gone up against good offensive lines this year with the likes of Dallas, Kansas City, and Detroit, their defensive line hasn’t performed for the price they’re paying on the cap sheet. This was a disappearing act from everyone on that line a week after they racked up sacks and pressures against Zach Wilson.

Stud: LT Rashawn Slater

Rashawn Slater had his worst game as a pro last week after he allowed eight pressures in New Jersey. Whether it was his ankle, the Jets’ exotic looks, or the turmoil on the Chargers’ offensive line in general, he just didn’t look like himself.

This week was back to the old Slater. He registered an 89.8 pass-blocking grade on PFF with zero pressures allowed on 100 pass-blocking efficiency. The run blocking hasn’t been good for anyone on the offensive line. But with other members of the Bolts’ offensive line underperforming in pass pro at the wrong time, it was a much-needed bounce-back performance from Slater.

Dud: The linebackers

Ben Johnson saw the weakness that few offensive coordinators had actually taken full advantage of this year. The Chargers do not have a good coverage linebacker. Kenneth Murray’s strength this year has been shooting the gap against the run. He just hasn’t figured out coverage at the NFL level. Eric Kendricks looks largely like a shell of himself in coverage. Both players registered the Chargers’ worst two PFF defensive grades this week.

Frankly, it’s surprising to me that more offensive coordinators have not taken advantage of what Johnson exploited in this game. The Chargers absolutely have a problem at the second level if more teams are going to watch the tape from this game or their Chiefs game from earlier this season at Arrowhead.

Chargers PFF grades: Best, worst performers in Week 10 loss to Lions

Spotlighting Pro Football Focus’ highest and lowest-graded Chargers players from the loss to the Lions.

In Week 10, the Chargers fell short to the Lions, 41-38.

Outcome aside, there were some standout performers and others that were duds.

With that being said, here are the best and worst performers from Sunday’s contest, according to Pro Football Focus’ player grades.

Note: To be more accurate, this is based on players who played at least 35% of the snaps on offense (72) or defense (66).

Top 5 Offense

WR Keenan Allen – 92.1

QB Justin Herbert – 83.6

OT Rashawn Slater – 72.4

TE Donald Parham Jr. – 66.7

RB Austin Ekeler – 66.6

Top 5 Defense

EDGE Khalil Mack – 78.8

EDGE Joey Bosa – 66.1

DT Austin Johnson – 65.3

S Derwin James Jr. – 63.4

EDGE Tuli Tuipulotu – 63.1

Bottom 5 Offense

OL Jamaree Salyer – 61.1

WR Quentin Johnston – 59.7

OT Trey Pipkins – 56.9

C Will Clapp – 54.0

OL Zion Johnson – 53.0

Bottom 5 Defense

DT Nick Williams – 54.7

CB Asante Samuel Jr. – 46.3

S Alohi Gilman – 39.9

LB Eric Kendricks – 30.0

LB Kenneth Murray – 27.3

Chargers’ strong offensive performance spoiled by disastrous defense

The Chargers can compete with quality teams, but they must complete their performance to be a championship team. 

The Chargers’ 41-38 loss to the Lions was heartbreaking for two reasons: Detroit is a quality team and the game came down to the final play. It is the 100th one-score game for the Bolts in the last decade. In other words, Los Angeles is notorious for losing close games, as everyone knows.

So what was the problem this time? 

The Chargers’ defense gave up over 500 yards on Sunday, while on the other side of the football, quarterback Justin Herbert and company finished the game with 421 offensive yards. It was the best stretch of play from Herbert this season. He dominated, finishing with 323 yards and four touchdowns.

Los Angeles scored touchdowns on five straight drives to close out the game.

“Every time we got down in the red zone, we scored,” Brandon Staley said. “It was a good enough offensive performance for us to win today and Justin was at the front of it … just didn’t do enough on defense today.”

The Lions gashed the Chargers on the ground, as they rushed for 200 yards and three touchdowns on 31 carries. It wasn’t any better against the pass. Wide receiver Amon-Ra St. Brown had a field day, catching eight of nine targets for 156 yards and a touchdown.

“I didn’t do a good enough job on defense for us today,” Staley said. “That was the story, run and pass.

Some are already calling the matchup the best game of the season, but Chargers fans want wins, not entertainment. 

“They had a good game plan today,” Derwin James said. “They had screens, they had play-action, they had everything. But we got to better on defense, I mean 38 points is enough to win any game and we weren’t good enough today.”

The Chargers can compete with quality teams, but they must complete their performance to be a championship team. 

Highlight: Keenan Allen’s touchdown gives Chargers offense life vs. Lions

Keenan Allen is having a great game.

After struggling on the offensive end for most of the first half, the Chargers finally found life with a great drive that was capped with a Keenan Allen touchdown for 29 yards.

Allen ran a great route. Justin Herbert made a great throw. The wideout made a great catch.

How to watch, listen, stream, wager Chargers vs. Lions

To get you prepared for Week 10, here is everything you need to know about the matchup between the Chargers and Lions.

The Los Angeles Chargers are looking to push past .500 when they take on the Detroit Lions on Sunday afternoon.

Here’s everything you need to know about the Week 10 matchup:

Game Information

Who: Detroit Lions vs. Los Angeles Chargers

When: Sunday, Nov. 12 at 1:05 p.m. PT

Where: SoFi Stadium — Inglewood, CA


Television

Those in the red area will get the game on CBS.

Jim Nantz and Tony Romo will have the call.


Radio

ALT 98.7 FM

KBUA 105.5 / KBUE 94.3 FM


Streaming

fuboTV (try it free)


Betting

Lines are from BetMGM Sportsbook

  • Moneyline (ML): Lions -160 (bet $160 to win $100) | Chargers +135 (bet $100 to win $135)
  • Against the spread (ATS): Lions -3 (-110) | Chargers +3 (-110)
  • Over/Under (O/U): 48.5 (O: -110 | U: -110)

Social Media

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Chargers’ causes for concern vs. Lions

Here is why the Lions could come out victorious on Sunday.

Riding a two game winning streak, the Chargers host the 6-2 Lions at SoFi Stadium on Sunday.

Here are four reasons to be worried about Los Angeles falling back under .500.

Who are the experts taking in Chargers vs. Lions?

Find out who the experts are picking between the Chargers and Lions.

The Chargers are 3-point underdogs to the Lions in Week 10 of the 2023 regular season. The over/under is 48.5 points, per BetMGM Sportsbook.

That means oddsmakers are taking bets on whether the two teams will combine to score more than or fewer than 48.5 points.

My score prediction for the game is a 30-21 win for the Lions, with a combined total of 51 points. So if I were putting money behind my prediction, I’d bet the over.

As for game picks, analysts are leaning toward the Lions winning.

Expert Pick
Nate Davis (USA Today) Lions
Jarrett Bell (USA Today) Chargers
Mike Clay (ESPN) Chargers
Matt Bowen (ESPN) Lions
Pete Prisco (CBS Sports) Chargers
Bill Bender (Sporting News) Lions
NFL.com Staff Lions (5 to 0)
Bleacher Report Lions

Sunday’s game will begin at 1:05 p.m. PT and will be televised on CBS.

5 keys to a Chargers win over the Lions

Here’s what the Chargers can do to get a win over Dan Campbell and company.

The Chargers once again have an opportunity to climb over the .500 mark for the first time this season. To do so, they’ll have to beat the NFC North-leading Lions. Detroit visits SoFi Stadium while having only lost one game on the road this year.

While the wins over the Jets and Bears were critical for the Chargers to be able to tread water in the AFC wild card field, this is the game that will tell us a lot about who this Chargers team is. Let’s talk about what the Chargers can do to get a win over Dan Campbell and company.

Mind the YAC

Everyone remembers the rather infamous defensive gameplan the Chargers deployed against the Chiefs in the first half of their Week 7 matchup. While there were some man coverage concepts, it was what Kansas City did after the catch against zone that killed LA on big plays repeatedly.

Ben Johnson’s offense is predicated on a lot of concepts that create some yards after catch opportunities for his players. Sam LaPorta is eighth amongst tight ends in YAC. Amon-Ra St. Brown is tenth amongst wide receivers in the same category. In general, expect a lot of modified mesh concepts and certainly some shallow crossers.

Running back Jahmyr Gibbs has been one of the most explosive players in the league in the run game and the Lions are actively trying to get him more involved in the receiving aspect. Gibbs has 20 targets in his last three games.

Simply put, the Chargers have to mind what the Lions are going to do in the short game as opposed to respecting the deep ball. If Brandon Staley comes out with a soft zone in this one, the game could get out of hand quickly if the Chargers aren’t creating a lot of pressure.

PFF ranks the Lions 1st among all offensive lines in the league. They’re bolstered by the performance of Penei Sewell at right tackle. After allowing 28 pressures last season, the former Oregon prospect has allowed just five this season.
The rest of the offensive line has been solid as well. Frank Ragnow is still one of the league’s top centers. Left Tackle Taylor Decker has rounded into form recently after returning from an ankle injury. They also have above-average depth in the league behind their main starters.
The Chargers’ defensive front has been great at stopping the run and for the most part, I expect that to continue. The real question is whether they can maintain the pass-rushing production they recorded against the beleaguered Jets and Bears offensive lines.
The 31 pressures they got against the Jets are probably out of the question, but I’d be impressed if they could get 15-20 pressures this week. Considering the state of the Chargers’ cornerback room, they’ll probably need to. It would be great to see more of the NASCAR package that they deploy with Joey Bosa, Khalil Mack, Morgan Fox, and Tuli Tuipulotu. It’s been one of the most efficient pass-rush groupings in the league.

Maintaining the red zone advantage

Kellen Moore came to Los Angeles with the reputation of being a very efficient red zone playcaller. Dallas ranked 1st in the league in red zone conversion percentage last year. The Chargers so far in 2023 are 2nd in the league in RZ% in 2023. Detroit’s defense meanwhile ranks 27th in red zone conversion percentage allowed.

The Chargers are also middle of the pack in red zone defense at 16th while the Lions’ red zone offense ranks 25th. When LA gets a chance to put up six on the board, they have to take advantage. The opponent in this case also calls for it.

Brandon Staley has been rather conservative in the Chargers’ wins against the Bears and Jets on fourth down and I’d even say to some extent the loss against the Chiefs as well. Against Chicago and New York, punting as much as they did was understandable given the circumstances. Don’t give those teams a red zone opportunity they themselves can’t create. But against Detroit, Staley needs to be more aggressive about going for touchdowns instead of field goals. The guy on the other sideline certainly will be.

Pay attention to Jahmyr Gibbs in the receiving game

Jahmyr Gibbs’ inaction in the Lions’ offense might’ve been a storyline early on in the season but the rookie’s usage has now steadily increased every week. He’s one of the top backs in explosive run rate on his sample size.

Gibbs has also been getting more targeted in the receiving game, as mentioned earlier. With the return of running back David Montgomery on deck, the Lions will still want to keep Gibbs involved. He’ll get his fair share of runs, but I’d also expect Johnson to get him some designed opportunities for open-field targets.

As mentioned with LaPorta and St. Brown earlier, things can get out of hand if the Chargers allow Gibbs to get some high-quality YAC opportunities.

Can the run game show some life?

The Chargers have just had no success in getting a sustained rushing attack going in the last three weeks. Austin Ekeler averaged 3.4 yards per carry against the Jets and the team rushed for 84 yards. Outside of one Ekeler carry that went for 20 yards, the teams’ other 20 carries went for 64 yards.

The offensive lines’ run blocking is a problem. So is Ekeler’s efficiency. Since his return from an ankle injury, Ekeler hasn’t graded nearly as well in rush success rate

Unfortunately for the Chargers, Detroit ranks 3rd in opponent rushing yards per game this year with only 76.8 allowed per contest. If the offense is once again unable to run the ball efficiently, it could be a long day for both Herbert and the offensive line in pass protection.

Statistical Breakdown: How the Chargers and Lions stack up before Week 10 game

Here’s how the Chargers and Lions stack up statistically ahead of the Week 10 matchup.

The Chargers and Lions are set to square off this Sunday.

Here’s how Los Angeles and Detroit stack up statistically ahead of the Week 10 matchup: