NFL Playoffs: Secret Superstars of the wild-card round — the offense

Which players whose names you might now know could go off in the wild-card round of the playoffs? Here’s our potential Secret Superstars.

If your team is going to win a Super Bowl, at some point along that ride, your team will have to get at least one remarkable postseason performance from a player nobody saw coming. Yes, we all expect the big names to come up big in big moments in big games, and other attendant cliches, but somewhere along the line, you will need a Secret Superstar to get the job done.

If you expected Buffalo Bills receiver Gabe Davis to go off for four touchdown catches against the Kansas City Chiefs in the 2021 divisional round, you should probably be working for a team. Because, with all due respect to Davis, I don’t think even the Bills were expecting that.

The same could be said for Houston Oilers defensive back Vernon Perry in the divisional round of the 1979 playoffs against the San Diego Chargers of Don Coryell and Dan Fouts. The undrafted rookie from Jackson State picked off four of Fouts’ passes, and blocked a field goal for good measure. As the game ended 17-14 in Houston’s favor, that block was as important as any of the picks.

You get the idea. At some point in the wild-card round of the upcoming playoffs, there will be at least one player whose name you don’t know who will pop up on the screen, and grab your attention. Here are my most likely players to do just that on the offensive side of the ball; the defensive players on this week’s Secret Superstars team will be up shortly.

And here’s the wild-card schedule for all who are curious; I tried to focus on repeat matchups as much as possible.

NFL sets Super Wild-Card Weekend schedule: Times, days, and networks

[mm-video type=video id=01gpe6x1ntf8apd3n095 playlist_id=none player_id=01eqbvhghtkmz2182d image=https://images2.minutemediacdn.com/image/upload/video/thumbnail/mmplus/01gpe6x1ntf8apd3n095/01gpe6x1ntf8apd3n095-5a613d3dbce0f48bdaa5643e7e138467.jpg]

Chargers OL Zion Johnson named to PFF’s 2022 NFL All-Rookie Team

Zion Johnson was recognized for his efforts during the 2022 regular season.

The Chargers’ year is not over, as they are set to go toe-to-toe with the Jaguars in a playoff matchup on Saturday night.

But players are starting to be recognized for their efforts during the regular season, and among them is rookie Zion Johnson.

Pro Football Focus released its 2022 NFL All-Rookie Team, and Johnson made the cut.

Johnson didn’t quite live up to his NFL-ready billing as much as the Chargers would have hoped, but he was still easily the NFL’s best rookie starter at guard. He finished with a 64.8 overall grade, although that was mainly down to his performance as a run-blocker, as he allowed 40 pressures on the year.

Selected No. 17 overall out of Boston College in the 2022 NFL draft, Johnson was thrown into the fire in his first season, filling in as the team’s starting right guard from the get-go.

He appeared in every game, playing 100% of the offensive snaps, except for Week 11 against the Raiders when he came off the field for 11% of the snaps due to a shoulder issue that he experienced.

Johnson experienced rookie growing pains, particularly in pass protection, as he was tasked to go up against elite competition. However, he was steadily strong as a run blocker alongside Trey Pipkins.

With another full offseason to work on his game, Johnson could grow into a good player at the position for years to come.

Pair of Chargers named to 2023 Pro Bowl

On Wednesday, the league released its entire roster of Pro Bowlers.

On Wednesday, the league released its entire roster of Pro Bowlers, which was decided by the fans, the players and the coaches around the league.

Chargers edge defender Khalil Mack and safety Derwin James were named to the AFC Pro Bowl Games team.

Named to his seventh Pro Bowl, Mack has proven to be a valuable addition to the team. He has 45 tackles, ten for loss, seven sacks and two forced fumbles.

Named to his third Pro Bowl, James, the do-it-all defender, has 106 tackles, five for loss, four sacks, four passes defended, two forced fumbles and an interception in 12 games this season.

This year’s Pro Bowl will have a new format, including a skills challenge and an AFC vs. NFC flag football game. It will be held on Feb. 5 in Las Vegas.

Several Chargers players were listed as Pro Bowl alternates: Running back Austin Ekeler (first), center Corey Linsley (first), quarterback Justin Herbert (second), long snapper Josh Harris (second), punter JK Scott (fourth) and returner DeAndre Carter (fifth).

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.

Chargers inactives: See who’s in and who’s out for Week 13 vs. Raiders

The Chargers ruled out six players.

[sendtonews_embed video_id=”8wlbu6BJIZ-2394765-7498″]

The Chargers are about 90 minutes away from kicking off Week 13 against the Raiders.

Here is a look at their inactive players today:

WR Mike Williams

C Corey Linsley

OT Trey Pipkins

QB Easton Stick

RB Sony Michel

WR Jason Moore

Raiders, Chargers Week 13 final injury report: RB Josh Jacobs (calf) Questionable

RB Josh Jacobs (calf) and LB Denzel Perryman (wrist) both Questionable vs Chargers.

It took a herculean effort from Josh Jacobs for the Raiders to beat the Seahawks in overtime last week. If he has it in him again, he will have to fight through a calf injury to do it.

The league-leading rusher is Questionable against the Chargers on Sunday after being limited all week with a calf injury.

Also Questionable for the Raiders is LB Denzel Perryman who showed up on the injury report mid-week with a wrist injury. He was limited Thursday and Friday. DT Andrew Billings (fibula) and RB Brandon Bolden (calf) are also Questionable.

Missing the game will be TE Jesper Horsted (concussion) and DT Kendal Vickers (back).

The Chargers will be without several starters including center Corey Linsley (concussion), tackle Trey Pipkins (knee), and WR Mike Williams (ankle).

Late additions to the injury report this week were Breidon Fehoko and Drue Tranquil who both came down with an illness.

Chargers’ reasons for optimism vs. Raiders in Week 13

Reasons why the Chargers will beat the Raiders on Sunday.

The Chargers advanced to 6-5 last week with a last-minute comeback victory over the Cardinals.

On Sunday, they match up with a Raiders team that’s been sluggish for much of the season but is beginning to string solid games together.

Here are four reasons to be optimistic about LA’s chances of sweeping the silver and black and staying in the playoff mix.

Down and out

For once, the Chargers are arguably the less injured team going into Week 13. Los Angeles is missing Rashawn Slater, Joey Bosa, Mike Williams, and likely Corey Linsley (concussion). Still, the Raiders will be lacking Hunter Renfrow, Darren Waller, Nate Hobbs, and potentially Josh Jacobs (calf). With Renfrow and Waller out, Las Vegas’ offense has flowed through Jacobs, who will not practice in full all week in hopes that he can play Sunday. If he can’t go, moving the ball will fall to Derek Carr and rookie Zamir White, who hasn’t had more than two carries in a game all season. On defense, losing Hobbs and Anthony Averett means that 2020 undrafted free agent Tyler Hall will likely start at cornerback after being signed from the Raiders practice squad earlier this week. While Hall has performed admirably, giving up just two receptions for 6 yards in 50 snaps, matching him up with Keenan Allen or DeAndre Carter should be advantageous for the Chargers.

Michael Davis’ re-emergence

Davis has really turned things around since training camp when pundits criticized him for pinning his poor play last season on personal drama. Since then, Davis has put together a strong season, playing well enough to start a few CB2 debates in the preseason and then filling in admirably for JC Jackson while the prized free agent battled ankle and knee ailments. With Jackson out for the year, Davis has once again seized the opportunity, most recently by allowing just three receptions for 36 yards on six targets against Arizona. The fact that Davis was able to do that against a receiver like DeAndre Hopkins bodes well for the Davante Adams matchup: Adams had 141 yards and a touchdown in Week 1 against LA and will garner a healthy amount of targets, covered or not, with the injuries to the Raiders offense.

The Khalil Mack difference

Khalil Mack won the Chargers’ first Raiders game this season, sealing a victory with a strip sack of Derek Carr on fourth down. Mack had three sacks, including that one, against Vegas, but he’s cooled down a bit since then without Joey Bosa on the other side. Opposing offensive lines have been able to allocate more resources to limiting Mack without worrying about another All-Pro caliber threat on the other side, and that’s been evident in Mack’s stat line: the former Defensive Player of the Year has just four sacks since Week 1’s trio. On Sunday, though, Mack gets the Raiders again, and his performance in Week 1 feels like it was based on more than just Bosa’s presence on the field.

Justin Herbert vs. Patrick Graham

Raiders defensive coordinator Patrick Graham is 0-2 against Justin Herbert – a 37-21 loss last season when Graham was with the Giants and Week 1’s defeat. In those two games, Herbert is 49 of 65 (75.4%) with six touchdowns and zero interceptions. Small sample size there, but the accuracy numbers are a full eight points higher than Herbert’s career-best throughout a season (67.4%). Long story short: Graham hasn’t found the answer to LA’s signal caller. Third time’s the charm, as they say, but Herbert will have Keenan Allen on a full snap count for only the second time this season. That bodes well for Herbert’s chances of going 3 for 3 against Graham’s defense.

Raiders, Chargers Thursday Week 13 injury report: Denzel Perryman injures wrist

Raiders LB Denzel Perryman injured his wrist Thursday. Chargers get back S Derwin James, CB Bryce Callahan

Outside of Maxx Crosby, there is no player on the Raiders defense who has proven to be more of a difference-maker than middle linebacker Denzel Perryman. So, when he shows up on the injury report mid-week with a wrist injury, it’s cause for concern.

Perryman injured his wrist Thursday, causing him to be listed as limited and bringing into question as to whether he will practice on Friday and ultimately his status for Sunday’s game against his former team.

Others who were limited Thursday were DT Andrew Billings (fibula), RB Brandon Bolden (calf), and RB Josh Jacobs (calf).

Missing practice were TE Jesper Horsted (concussion) and DT Kendal Vickers (back).

The Chargers got some good news Thursday with CB Bryce Callahan and S Derwin James both returning to practicing after not participating on Wednesday.

Still missing were C Corey Linsley (concussion). T Trey Pipkins (knee), and WR Mike Williams (ankle). Safety Nasir Adderley (thumb) was limited.

[mm-video type=playlist id=01eqby7y715wxzbczy player_id=none image=https://raiderswire.usatoday.com/wp-content/plugins/mm-video/images/playlist-icon.png]

Chargers’ keys to victory over Falcons in Week 9

Here is how the Chargers beat the Falcons on Sunday.

The Chargers return from the bye on Sunday to face the Falcons, an unlikely first-place team through eight weeks of the season.

Los Angeles’ injury luck has not turned even with an extra rest week, making Sunday’s contest feel much closer than it should, given the preseason expectations of these two teams.

Here’s what L.A. needs to do to come away with a victory.

Find offensive contributors

We know Mike Williams and Joshua Kelley will miss this game. Keenan Allen aggravated his hamstring injury during the bye week, despite contrasting reports from Brandon Staley. Donald Parham Jr. looked set to come back from a concussion, only to be added to the injury report Thursday with a hamstring issue. Even kicker Dustin Hopkins and backup kicker Taylor Bertolet are on the injury report. Someone for Los Angeles has to step up beyond just Justin Herbert and Austin Ekeler. Maybe that’s Josh Palmer putting together his best game of the season as he returns from a Week 7 concussion. But more likely, it’ll need to be an unheralded name. Isaiah Spiller as RB2 behind Ekeler. Michael Bandy or a practice squad receiver like Keelan Doss, who was promoted. Whoever it is, the Chargers need someone to step up and produce because we’ve seen what this offense looks like without Allen. Now without Williams, there’s little reason to be optimistic about moving the ball if nobody answers the call.

Run the ball effectively

Speaking of moving the ball, one of the biggest reasons the Chargers haven’t been able to do so is that the running game is not functioning well. The blame is easy to place on offensive coordinator Joe Lombardi (more on that in a bit), but I think Lombardi’s run game calls have been the most creative and effective part of this offense. The issue is the blocking, especially on the interior. As Daniel Popper of The Athletic pointed out in this week’s mailbag, the Chargers have been at their most effective running the ball when center Corey Linsley has been 100%. That’s been a rarity, but it should be true on Sunday. Combine health, relatively speaking, with the creativity Lombardi has shown as a play-caller, and it should result in a big game on the ground. With the injuries at wide receiver, that’s exactly what the Chargers need.

Call a complete game

Okay, back to Lombardi and the blame game. Multiple things about this offense are true. Lombardi has shied away from dialing up the deep shots we’ve come to expect from Justin Herbert. That’s partly on Lombardi, of course, but it’s also that the Chargers find themselves in a lot of second or third and longs due to their poor run game. It’s also partly because Herbert’s rib injury has affected his ability as a passer. Herbert just wrapped up the worst five game stretch of his career by EPA/play, and not all of that can be waved away by playcalling or injuries to other personnel. He’s fighting every week, and credit to him, but the rib is clearly bothering him.

This, again, brings us back to the offensive coordinator because what is also true about this offense is that it’s falling flat for reasons beyond the injuries. With Herbert’s injury, Lombardi’s playsheet feels like it’s shrunk to just Stick, Hank, and the occasional Austin Ekeler screen. He has to do better, and he’s had the bye week to cook up some new variations. If LA is going to pull this one out even with all the talent missing on offense, it has to be because Lombardi reaches into his bag and produces something new.

Keep Marcus Mariota in the pocket

Atlanta has one M.O. on offense: get Mariota on the move. One of their most effective plays has been running crossers to the right side as Mariota rolls that way off of play action, primarily because it puts any zone defender in that half of the field in conflict as they follow Mariota’s eyes. If that defender crashes down to protect against a scramble, Mariota throws it over their head. If they stay home, Mariota can tuck and run, where he’s proven to be dangerous as well. The Chargers have to protect against this outcome, especially because of how poor the tackling has been this season, by playing outside contain. This has its risks, namely that Atlanta will use Tyler Allgeier and Caleb Huntley as battering rams on the inside as a counter. But it’s a risk worth taking because if Mariota has to shorten his bootleg to remain inside the tackle box, things get much harder. Every single one of his six interceptions this season has come between the numbers.

Limit the explosive play

The Chargers are 31st in plays of 35 or more yards allowed this season with 13, per TruMedia. Again, there are multiple reasons for this, in my opinion. Joey Bosa’s absence has decimated this run defense, especially on the outside. Running backs can direct plays behind the tackle blocking a Chargers defender not named Khalil Mack, at which point defenders in the second and third levels have struggled to make tackles. Kenneth Murray in particular has struggled, logging a 28.4 PFF grade as a run defender on 113 snaps thus far. But the pass defense has given up 8 of these 13 plays as well. Maybe it’s as simple as chalking that up to JC Jackson losing track of his zone responsibilities, and we can close that case. But if it’s not, and I don’t think it is, LA had plenty of time to get their defensive miscommunications ironed out. On Sunday, they need to show their work if the Chargers will come away with the victory.

Generate momentum plays

LA is 4-3 coming into this game and will drop to .500 if they lose, with clashes against the 49ers and Chiefs next up on the schedule. PFF says the Chargers have the 4th hardest remaining schedule in the league. Although they still have a 47% chance to make the playoffs, per PFF, coming away from this game with something to feel positive about is paramount. The offense needs to find some sort of rhythm. The defense could use a turnover or two, especially ones that lead directly to points. A special teams splash play could flip the momentum of this game just as easily as an offensive or defensive one. This will likely be a one-possession game, but it needs to be one that the Chargers a) win and b) feel good about. They’re 3-1 in one-possession games this season, but all three wins came with growing pains. Against the Raiders, the game shouldn’t have been one possession in the first place. The Cleveland game was mired in controversy over Brandon Staley’s decision to go for it on fourth and two and felt more like an escape than a victory. Ditto for the Broncos game, in which the offense could only muster 19 points in an overtime contest. The best possible path to victory, on Sunday and beyond, is for LA to convert on big plays of their own and feel like they went out and took a game for perhaps the first time this season.

Where Chargers statistically stand at bye week

Statistically, here is where the Chargers stand on offense, defense and special teams after seven games.

The Chargers are on a bye week following a 37-23 loss to the Seahawks, which brought the team to 4-3.

To recap how Los Angeles has performed in the first seven games of the 2022 season, here’s a look at how the Bolts have done statistically.