Chargers’ 53-man roster shows a strong commitment to fixing shaky special teams

After finishing with the worst special teams in 2020, the Chargers are expecting a major turnaround.

A combination of poor coverage and return skills, bone-headed penalties and  kicking woes led to the Chargers having the worst special teams in the NFL last season.

The first step to fixing the department came with the hiring of Derius Swinton II, who is entering his 14th season as a special teams coach.

While the change in the coaching staff was one thing, the players that make up the 53-man roster shows how a great of an emphasis head coach Brandon Staley and company put on the unit.

“We want to elevate the standard of performance,” Staley said. We’re looking for guys to separate and create roles for themselves. We expect them to do things a certain way.”

The first act of service was finding a starter kicker, which they did by keeping Tristan Vizcaino over Michael Badgley. Staley highlighted Vizcaino as a player who they believe has “real talent,” lauding his leg strength.

The next came when the team established one of their return specialists. Instead of keeping the talented Tyron Johnson, it was K.J. Hill who they decided to roll with as the fifth and final receiver because of his ability to return punts.

Keeping guys that they felt would make an impact on the coverage units was also strongly taken in consideration, which is why bubble players like undrafted rookie Amen Ogbongbemiga, Kemon Hall, Tevaughn Campbell and Stephen Anderson made the cut.

Like the puzzling decision to move on from Johnson, the Chargers didn’t shy away from letting notable names go that they felt didn’t bring much special teams value. That includes Brandon Facyson, who was released on Wednesday in favor of Trey Marshall and eventually Ryan Smith.

The reasoning? Staley called Marshall an “outstanding special teams player.”

Los Angeles wants to be a playoff team in 2021, but they need to see improvement in their special teams unit to make that happen. With the staff and players the team boasts, there is hope this department will be much more competent.

Chargers officially announce 2021 coaching staff

After nearly a month of work and preparation, Chargers head coach Brandon Staley has found his coaching staff.

After nearly a month of work and preparation, Chargers head coach Brandon Staley has found his coaching staff.

Los Angeles announced the additions of their staff this morning, headlined by offensive coordinator Joe Lombardi, defensive coordinator Renaldo Hill, passing game/quarterbacks coach Shane Day and special teams coordinator Derius Swinton II.

On the offensive side of the ball, run game coordinator/offensive line coach Frank Smith, running backs coach Derrick Foster, wide receivers coach Chris Beatty, tight ends coach Kevin Koger, assistant offensive line coach Shaun Sarrett, offensive assistant Dan Shamash, and offensive quality control coach Chandler Whitmer round out the group.

On the defensive side of the ball, run game coordinator/outside linebackers coach Jay Rodgers, defensive line coach Giff Smith, secondary coach Derrick Ansley, linebackers coach Michael Wilhoite, assistant secondary coach Tim Donatell, and defensive quality control coach Isaac Shewmaker make up the group.

Finally, the coaching staff is made up of assistant special teams coach Mayur Chaudhari, strength and conditioning coach Jonathan Brooks, director of sports performance Anthony Lomando, and coaching fellow John Timu.

Chargers officially announce 3 coaching moves

The Chargers have a new offensive, defensive and special teams coordinator.

The Chargers hired Brandon Staley as new head coach last weekend, and Monday the club officially announced the newest additions on his staff.

Los Angeles named Joe Lombardi offensive coordinator, Renaldo Hill defensive coordinator and Derius Swinton II special teams coordinator.

Grandson of Hall of Fame coach, Vince Lombardi, Joe was with the Saints for a combined 10 seasons, both as an offensive assistant and quarterbacks coach. He served as an offensive coordinator for the Lions for two stints.

“I’m just so excited about Joe coming here. The wealth of knowledge and experience he possesses, having operated within one of the premier offensive systems in the NFL for over a decade,” Staley said about Lombardi.

Hill, a former NFL safety of 10 seasons, has been coaching in league for three seasons, one with the Dolphins (assistant defensive backs coach) and two with the Broncos (defensive backs coach).

“He’s a guy that I have a great personal relationship with and a guy that just has a tremendous background to help our team be successful,” Staley said about Hill.

Swinton has an extensive background as a special teams coach. He previously served as the Cardinals’ assistant special teams coach. Swinton has worked as the 49ers’ special teams coordinator in addition to coaching with the Bears, Broncos, Chiefs and Rams.

“Derius has tremendous command, is a great teacher and has the ability to see the game on offense, defense and through the kicking game. I can’t emphasize enough what a great teacher he is, fundamentally, from both offensive and defensive perspectives,” Staley said on Swinton.

Report: Cardinals assistant Derius Swinton leaves Cardinals to be Chargers’ ST coach

He is the first coordinator named on Staley’s staff. He spent one year on the Cardinals’ staff.

The Arizona Cardinals are losing another member of their coaching staff. After quarterback coach and passing game coordinator Tom Clements is reportedly retiring and receivers coach David Raih was reportedly let go, now they are losing assistant special teams coach Derius Swinton.

According to NFL Network’s Ian Rapoport, Swinton is getting a promotion. He will be the special teams coordinator for the Los Angeles Chargers under new head coach Brandon Staley.

Swinton joined the Cardinals just a year ago, reuniting with special teams coordinator and assistant head coach Jeff Rodgers.

Swinton and Staley worked together in 2017 along with Rodgers on the Chicago Bears staff under John Fox. At the time, Rodgers was special teams coordinator and Swinton was his assistant special teams coach, while Staley was outside linebackers coach.

This will be Swinton’s second gig as a special teams coordinator. He also held the position in 2016 for the San Francisco 49ers. He also knows the AFC West. He spent 2012 on the Kansas City Chiefs coaching staff and 2013-2014 with the Denver Broncos.

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Building the perfect Chargers coaching staff

Chargers Wire’s Gavino Borquez lays out how Los Angeles should construct the coaching staff.

Atop of the priority list for the Chargers is finding their new head coach after parting ways with Anthony Lynn on Monday.

While the head coach is the most pressing matter, filling in the coordinator positions comes next.

According to Sports Illustrated’s Albert Breer, Lynn’s staff hasn’t been fired yet. But when a new head coach comes in, the chances of that guy wanting to build his staff from scratch are high.

With that being said, I wanted to construct a coaching staff that I believe can get Los Angeles back in tiptop shape and is capable of dethroning Andy Reid’s Chiefs.

Head Coach — Brian Daboll

The Chargers have a gem in quarterback Justin Herbert, and one of the requirements to become the next head coach is being capable of implementing a system that will maximize his potential.

Daboll has spent the last three years helping to develop Bills quarterback Josh Allen and that work has gone well enough to make him into one of the top quarterbacks in the league and an MVP candidate.

Daboll has had so much success because of how good of a play-caller he is. Teams across the league struggle to defend Buffalo because he seems to have his own adjustments and options built in for different coverages at the ready.

General manager Tom Telesco will be aiding in the search for the team’s next coach and familiarity is a key component. He’s a St. Francis High School graduate from western New York, as is Daboll.

Report: Cardinals hire Derius Swinton II, who follows Jeff Rodgers again

He works with special teams coordinator Jeff Rodgers for the third time.

The Arizona Cardinals have not announced anything officially about changes on their coaching staff, but it appears they we now know who one of the new faces of the staff will be.

According to ESPN’s Field Yates, the Cardinals are hiring Derius Swinton II to be their assistant special teams coach under special teams coordinator and assistant head coach Jeff Rodgers.

He replaces Randall McCray, reportedly fired after the season ended.

Rodgers has worked with Swinton before. Swinton was his assistant special teams coach in 2013-2014 with the Denver Broncos and again in 2015 and 2017 with the Chicago Bears. Swinton was the special teams coordinator for the San Francisco 49ers in 2016. Basically, Swinton has followed Rodgers were he has been.

Swinton was an offensive assistant in 2018 for the Detroit Lions.

There are at least five vacancies to fill this offseason.

Listen to the latest from Cards Wire’s Jess Root on his podcast, Rise Up, See Red. Subscribe on Apple podcasts or Stitcher Radio.

Ep. 255

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Ep. 254

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