Watch: Legendary Chargers coach Don Coryell inducted into Pro Football Hall of Fame

Don Coryell is finally a Pro Football Hall of Famer.

Legendary Chargers coach Don Coryell was posthumously inducted into the Pro Football Hall of Fame in Canton, Ohio, on Saturday.

On behalf of Coryell, former quarterback Dan Fouts presented him for enshrinement as a member of the Class of 2023. Coryell died in 2010 at age 85.

Coryell coached the Chargers from 1978-1986, posting a 72-60 record. Under him, the Bolts won three division titles and played in four divisional playoff games and two AFC championship games.

But it’s not what he accomplished while serving as the head coach, it’s how he revolutionized the game. The Air Coryell offense marked the beginning of the NFL’s transformation from a run-first league to one where passing reigned supreme.

Fouts led the league in passing yards four straight seasons (1979-1982) and became the first player to surpass 4,000 yards in three consecutive seasons. He was named to all six of his Pro Bowls under Coryell.

Coryell’s offense forced defensive coordinators to bring in extra defensive backs to slow the passing attack. We now refer to those packages as nickel and dime defenses.

Chargers set to host draft party with several franchise greats in attendance

The Chargers 2023 draft party will have several franchise greats in attendance.

The Chargers’ quiet offseason has necessitated that they make big moves in the upcoming NFL draft, which is set to take place in Kansas City later in April.

The team announced that they are set to host a draft party for the occasion on April 27th that will have some legendary players in attendance, including Dan Fouts, Ladanian Tomlinson, and Kellen Winslow.

The event is set to take place at Westfield Century City in Los Angeles, CA and details regarding ticket sales to the general public should be released in the coming days.

While the team has been slow to sign big names in free agency, their plethora of draft capital should ensure that they add premium talent in all seven rounds of the annual selection meeting, especially with their 21st overall pick.

It will be a long summer while fans wait to see the newest crop of talent take the field in August, but they can get an early taste of the Chargers’ 2023 hype train at the draft party.

Chargers’ all-time Mount Rushmore: 4 best players in franchise history

Here are the four best players in Chargers franchise history.

Even though the Chargers don’t have any Lombardi Trophies in their trophy case, they have had a handful of legendary players come through the doors to help the team with successful seasons over the past 64 years.

That said, here are the four best players in the franchise’s history.

Legendary Chargers HC Don Coryell elected into the Pro Football Hall of Fame

Former Chargers HC Don Coryell got the call from Canton.

It’s been long overdue, but former Chargers head coach Don Coryell has finally been elected to the Pro Football Hall of Fame.

Coryell coached the Chargers from 1978-1986, posting a 72-60 record. Under him, the Bolts won three division titles and played in four divisional playoff games and two AFC championship games.

But it’s not what he accomplished while serving as the head coach, it’s how he revolutionized the game. The “Air Coryell” offense marked the beginning of the NFL’s transformation from a run-first league to one where passing reigned supreme.

Quarterback Dan Fouts led the league in passing yards four straight seasons (1979-1982) and became the first player to surpass 4,000 yards in three consecutive seasons.

Coryell’s offense forced defenses to bring in extra defensive backs to slow the passing attack, which we refer to as nickel and dime defenses nowadays.

Coryell passed away on July 1, 2010 in La Mesa, CA at the age of 85.

Joe Burrow and Dan Fouts now have something in common

Joe Burrow had his worst NFL game against an opponent with an inferior quarterback. He has historical company in Hall of Famer Dan Fouts.

Joe Burrow had never thrown four interceptions in an NFL game. The most he had thrown in a game before he did exactly that on Sunday against the Pittsburgh Steelers in a 23-20 overtime loss was three against the Chicago Bears in a 20-17 loss last September.

Burrow, one of the NFL’s best quarterbacks, was going up against Pittsburgh’s Mitch Trubisky, who is… well, not. While it’s uncommon for awesome quarterbacks to barf all over themselves like Burrow did on this day, it’s even less common for them to do it with quarterbacks far below their station on the other team. Brett Favre once threw six interceptions in a game against the St. Louis Rams, but that was in the divisional round of the 2020 playoffs, and the other quarterback was Kurt Warner.

To find a similarly bad performance from one great quarterback with another not-so-great quarterback on the other sideline, you have to get into the Wayback Machine, and travel back in time to two games played by Dan Fouts of the San Diego Chargers, a Hall of Famer, and one of the most prolific quarterbacks in NFL history.

The first time Fouts threw a ton of picks in an instance like this, he was facing the Houston Oilers on December 29, 1979, in the divisional round of the playoffs. The opposing quarterback was Gifford Nielsen, who you may not know. Nielsen lasted six seasons with the Oilers from 1978 through 1983, throwing 20 touchdowns to 22 interceptions in his NFL career.

Fouts on that day completed 25 of 47 passes for 333 yards, no touchdowns, and five interceptions. His problem was Houston’s ferocious defense, which was an issue for every NFL team at the time. The Oilers won 20-17 without Dan Pastorini and Earl Campbell, while Vernon Perry, a free agent safety acquired from the Canadian Football League via Jackson State earlier in the season, had four of those five picks.

“I suppose I should say you’re kidding,” Oilers head coach Bum Phillips said after the game, when informed that Perry’s four picks was a pro football playoff record. “But we knew when we signed him as a free agent out of Canada that the kid was a player. He was a college teammate of [Hall of Fame linebacker] Robert Brazile, who recommended him to us. And like that commercial, when Robert Brazile speaks, people listen.”

Fouts had another game like this in the playoffs a few years later — this time, it was in the divisional round of the 1982 playoffs against the Miami Dolphins, who had a full year to think about Kellen Winslow’s historic game against their defense in the divisional round of the 1982 playoffs.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CIlI1upRSm4&t=24s&ab_channel=NFLFilms

This time, Miami’s “Killer B’s” defense wasn’t giving Fouts or Winslow any traction. Fouts completed 15 of 34 passes for 191 yards, one touchdown, and five interceptions against a defense that ranked first in DVOA that season. Winslow had one catch for 18 yards this time.

“Their defense is the best I’ve seen,” Fouts said after. “Their entire defense was the factor; it wasn’t just the pass rush. We didn’t get much of anything going the way we wanted to. Miami didn’t give us anything.”

Asked if he even played in the second half, Winslow said mordantly, “I believe so, yes. I know sometimes it was difficult to tell.”

Miami’s quarterback on that day was David Woodley, playing out the strong until the Dolphins selected Dan Marino with the 27th pick in the 1983 draft. The Dolphins did make it to the Super Bowl at the end of the 1982 season, whereupon they were thrashed by the Washington Redskins.

So, Mr. Burrow, if you think you’re the only quarterback to have a game like this with another quarterback far beneath you on the other team, you are not. You are now in the company of a Hall of Famer.

Why Don Coryell absolutely, positively belongs in the Pro Football Hall of Fame

Don Coryell might finally be inducted into the Pro Football Hall of Fame in 2023. Here’s why that honor is long, long overdue.

“I don’t think there’s ever been a coach who was more courageous about creating offense.” Dan Fouts on Don Coryell

Don Coryell was many things in his 85 years on this Earth. He was an Army paratrooper during World War II, a defensive back for the Washington Huskies, a longtime high school and college coach, the head coach of the St. Louis Cardinals and San Diego Chargers, and finally, a retiree living a gentle life in the Pacific Northwest. Most prominently, of course, was his work in the NFL from 1973 through 1986, when he took the Sid Gillman vertical passing game, added his own rushing formation concepts, and spun the NFL’s passing offense forward a generation. Coryell can be considered the functional link between the deep passing games of the 1960s and 1970s, and the West Coast Offense that followed into the 1980s and 1990s. As much as any coach in the history of football, Coryell preached the gospel of the nuanced, aggressive passing game wherever he went — and wherever he went, he got results.

On Wednesday, the Pro Football Hall of Fame announced that Coryell, who died on July 1, 2010, was named as the finalist for the Coach/Contributor class of 2023. From the HOF:

A four-hour meeting of the Hall of Fame’s Coach/Contributor Committee concluded Tuesday afternoon with Coryell emerging from the group of 12 Coach/Contributor candidates remaining under consideration as the Finalist for next year’s class of enshrinees. The Hall of Fame’s full 49-person Selection Committee will consider Coryell for election – along with 15 Modern-Era Players and three Seniors – when it meets to choose the entire Class of 2023 in January.

Coryell would be elected to the Pro Football Hall of Fame if he receives at least 80% approval in the up-or-down balloting next year.

Last week, the Hall’s Seniors Committee chose Chuck Howley, Joe Klecko and Ken Riley as Finalists for the Class of 2023. Each of them also would be elected if he receives 80% approval at the January selection meeting.

Coryell had reached the Finalist stage in the selection process six other times: 2010, 2015, 2016, 2017, 2019 and 2020. In 14 seasons as a head coach in the NFL after a lengthy career in the college ranks, he posted an overall record (including playoffs) of 114-89-1.

In St. Louis, Coryell was named Associated Press Coach of the Year in 1974, his second season with the Cardinals. He led the team to a 10-4 record and their first playoff appearance since the 1948 NFL Championship Game. They followed that breakthrough year with an 11-win regular season in 1975 that equaled the then-franchise record for victories in a season (1948, 1925).

After five seasons in St. Louis, Coryell became head coach of the San Diego Chargers, and with future Hall of Famers Dan Fouts, Kellen Winslow, and Charlie Joiner built the “Air Coryell” offense that ranked atop the NFL in numerous statistics. In his nine years with the Chargers (1978-1986), the team led the league in total offense five times, passing yards seven times (and was second another year) and scoring three times.

His 1980 and 1981 teams reached the AFC title games, falling one win short of the Super Bowl. Prior to Coryell’s arrival, the Chargers had not posted a winning record for eight seasons and had not qualified for the playoffs since appearing in the AFL title game in 1965.

Several Hall of Fame coaches voiced support for Coryell as a Hall of Fame-worthy candidate over the years, including Joe Gibbs, John Madden, Dick Vermeil, and Bill Walsh.

We’ve said for as long as we can remember that Coryell already should have been in the Hall of Fame, as a coach and as a schematic innovator. Let’s get into the details of why.

(Article adapted from The Genius of Desperation by Doug Farrar and Louis Riddick. Copyright 2018 Doug Farrar/Triumph Books LLC. Play diagrams by Doug Farrar and Lindsey Schauer. Used by permission). 

Oregon legend Justin Herbert selected to first Pro Bowl; DeForest Buckner gains second selection

Former Duck and current Los Angeles Charger Justin Herbert was selected to his first-ever Pro Bowl in just his second season in the NFL.

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Justin Herbert’s professional career isn’t even two years old and he’s already one of the NFL’s best quarterbacks.

The Los Angeles Chargers announced Herbert was named as one of three quarterbacks that will represent the AFC in the 2022 Pro Bowl. It’s his first Pro Bowl of his young career.

Kansas City’s Patrick Mahomes and Baltimore’s Lamar Jackson are the other two signal-callers for the AFC. Green Bay’s Aaron Rodgers, Tampa Bay’s Tom Brady, and Arizona’s Kyler Murray will represent the NFL.

As for Herbert, he is quickly becoming one of the most prolific quarterbacks in Chargers history. He has already set the NFL record for passing yards through his first two seasons in the league with 8,394 yards and 63 touchdowns. For 2021, Herbert has amassed 4,058 yards (290 ypg) with 32 touchdowns and just 12 interceptions.

Herbert becomes the seventh Charger quarterback to be a Pro Bowler and the second Duck to accomplish the feat with that franchise with Dan Fouts being the first. Fouts was selected to the Pro Bowl six times and a Hall of Famer.

Former Oregon Duck defensive end DeForest Buckner was also named to the 2022 Pro Bowl as he will represent the Indianapolis Colts. Buckner has 55 tackles and 6.5 sacks for the 8-6 Colts. This will be Buckner’s second trip to the Pro Bowl.

5 Chargers records that could be broken in 2021

The Los Angeles Chargers have a few players that could find themselves in the history books this upcoming season.

The Chargers have a handful of talented players on the roster, and it just so happens that their individual greatness can be sealed in the history books this upcoming season.

While there are several records that may seem unbreakable, there are a few that are well within reach. The future is now and it’s time for them to create some history.

With that being said, we will take a look at five single-season franchise records that we could possibly see broken this year.

7 Chargers appear in Sports Illustrated’s ‘Greatest Draft of All-Time’

Find out which players represented the Chargers.

The Chargers have seen some elite players walk through the doors since the franchise originally started up.

Sports Illustrated selected the best player taken at each of the 259 picks in the modern seven-round draft, which dates back to as early as 1942.

The Bolts were represented with seven players.

Here’s who made the list:

9. Lance Alworth, WR, San Diego, 1962. (11, 136) Hall of Fame. NFL’s 100th anniversary team. All-decade. 7 Pro Bowls. 2 championship rings. 3-time AFL receiving champion.

32. Drew Brees, QB, San Diego, 2001. (20, 287) 13 Pro Bowls. 2006 NFL Man of the Year. 1 Super Bowl ring. 2010 Super Bowl MVP. 2-time NFL passing champion. 2008 NFL Offensive Player of the Year. NFL’s all-time leading passer with 80,358 yards – only QB with 80,000. Only 12 5,000-yard passing seasons in NFL history and Brees has five of them. No one else has more than one.

64. Dan Fouts, QB, San Diego, 1973. (15, 181) Hall of Fame. All-decade. 1982 NFL MVP. 6 Pro Bowls. 1982 NFL passing champion. His jersey number 14 retired by the Chargers.

145. Rodney Harrison, S, San Diego, 1994. (15, 186) 3 Pro Bowls. 2 Super Bowl rings. 1,206 career tackles, 34 interceptions. Named to the 50th anniversary teams of both the Chargers and Patriots.

164. Rickey Young, HB, San Diego, 1975. (9, 131) 1978 NFL receiving champion. 408 career receptions, 16 touchdowns. 3,666 career rushing yards, 23 touchdowns.

202. Earnest Jackson, HB, San Diego, 1983. (6, 81) 2 Pro Bowls. 1984 AFC rushing champion. 4,167 career rushing yards, 22 touchdowns.

222. Trent Green, QB, San Diego, 1993. (11, 120) 2 Pro Bowls. 1 Super Bowl ring. Quarterbacked the NFL’s top-ranked offense at Kansas City in both 2004 and 2005. 28,475 career passing yards, 162 touchdowns.

Former home of Chargers set to be demolished

The former home of the Chargers is being torn down.

The former home of the Chargers will no longer exist.

San Diego County Credit Union Stadium, also known as Qualcomm Stadium and Jack Murphy Stadium, is being demolished in San Diego, CA after officially being closed in March, according to Associated Press’ Bernie Wilson.

Opened in 1967, the stadium was where the Bolts resided before they moved to Los Angeles in 2017. The decision to move cities was because a ballot measure to build a new stadium in San Diego didn’t go through in 2016.

San Diego State University’s football team was the most recent to play there.

A new 35,000-seat stadium will be built on the site to serve as their new home after the school purchased a good portion of the land in 2018, set to open in 2022.

Chargers legend Dan Fouts, who was a focal point of the Air Coryell back in the late 1970s, will be one of many that will miss the stadium dearly.

“We knew that when we had to get it done to win at the end of the game, we could reach down deep and then feel the energy of the stadium just carry us down the field at times. It was really, really fun. Plus the weather was always good. I was very fortunate,” Fouts said.

The stadium was also host to three Super Bowls: XXII (Washington-Denver, 1988), XXXII (Green Bay-Denver, 1998) and XXXVII (Tampa Bay-Oakland, 2003) as well as home to MLB’s Padres from 1969-2003.