Chargers’ Khalil Mack delivers career performance vs. Raiders: ‘He is still that guy’

Khalil Mack put together a rare performance against his former team.

Joey Bosa and Tuli Tuipulotu had been getting all the praise in weeks prior, as they had three and two sacks, respectively. All the while, Khalil Mack, who hadn’t recorded a sack entering Sunday, was gearing up for a monstrous performance of his own.

Mack posted six sacks in the Chargers’ 24-17 victory over the Raiders, two of which resulted in fumbles. His six sacks are a career-high for a single game and a franchise record. It’s also tied for the second-most sacks in a single game in NFL history.

Mack was one sack shy of tying the single-game sack record, which is held by Pro Football Hall of Famer Derrick Thomas, dating back to 1990.

Last season, Mack had a three-sack performance the first time the Bolts played the Raiders, the team that drafted him back in 2014 and where he spent the first four seasons of his professional career.

“You can say it’s something extra, but it is what it is,” Mack said about delivering big performances against his former team, per the team’s official website.

“I mean obviously you want to play good against your old team,” Mack later added. “But just knowing where you come from and knowing that organization and what it meant to me to get drafted to that organization. It’s a lot of respect, but it’s a lot of wanting to get back too… At the end of the day, it’s just another game.”

The offensive line was a strength of the Raiders coming into the game, as they allowed just four sacks through the first three games. But this was with Jimmy Garoppolo under center. Instead, rookie Aidan O’Connell started in place of the inactive Garoppolo.

With that came growing pains for O’Connell, who frequently held onto the ball for too long, resulting in an easier path for Mack to get to him. Plus, Mack wasn’t double teamed as much as other opposing teams would. He was double teamed on just two pass rushes.

Despite being 32, Mack showed on the field that he can still play at a high level.

“He had been [pass] rushing at a high level for three games,” Brandon Staley said postgame. “We do this thing — he taught me back in Chicago, — close, he had been close the whole year, to having three monster games. He was close.

“Today, he put it all together,” Staley added. “This guy is one of the best edge players of a generation and he is still that guy, he is still that guy — he just showed everybody, ‘I’m still that guy.’ He’s one of our leaders.”

Mack will look to keep the pressure on two Sundays from now when the Chargers take on the Cowboys in Week 6.

Khalil Mack lights out in his debut as a Charger

Khalil Mack was hungry in his debut in a Chargers uniform.

Despite Chargers head coach Brandon Staley being a defensive-minded guy, there was always a question mark surrounding the inconsistency of the team’s defense last season. 

It’s only the first game of the season, but it seems as though the Los Angeles defense is no longer a weakness for the team, and instead, it is rebuilt as a strength for the Bolts after their slew of off-season acquisitions. 

One of the newest additions to the team is edge defender Khalil Mack who has been a defensive threat for several seasons in the league.

In his debut as a Charger, Mack terrorized blockers all game long. He finished with three sacks, three tackles loss, four quarterback hits, and a forced fumble.

One of Mack’s sacks was a forced fumble on a fourth-and-8 late in the fourth quarter. It led to a turnover on downs, which ultimately sealed the deal.

“It’s team ball, man. It’s all team ball,” Mack said. “The coverage guys were doing an excellent job. They did a lot. It’s been a while since I got coverage sacks. 

They were balling. Whatever it took to get [Davante Adams], especially on those downs I knew [Carr] was looking for him, they had a special game.”

Mack was one of the missing pieces to the Chargers’ defense. His presence allowed for more one-on-ones because Joey Bosa was opposite him. Bosa being double and triple-teamed happened far too often last season.

“It’s real special,” Mack said about his relationship with Bosa. “Just being able to talk ball on the sideline, communicating about what we’re getting on either side and trying to figure out what each tackle is giving us.

We’re able to bounce ideas off each other throughout the game. I feel like they switched a guy in at some point.”

Mack’s performance Sunday afternoon serves as an exciting preview for Chargers fans of the reality that the Bolts’ defensive woes from last season may be in the rearview mirror.

Is it too soon to say that the Chargers are legitimate Super Bowl contenders with their defense coupled with the star power of Justin Herbert?

Watch: Highlights of Chargers’ new EDGE, Khalil Mack

Get familiar with new Charger Khalil Mack with some of his highlights from 2018, when Brandon Staley was his outside linebackers coach.

The Chargers are off to a hot start in building an elite defense for head coach Brandon Staley to work with, trading for edge defender Khalil Mack.

One of the best at what he does, Mack is a terror to offensive tackles. With a combination of natural athleticism, explosive power, burst, Mack has compiled 76.5 sacks across eight seasons.

To get familiar with the player who will be joining forces with Joey Bosa, here’s a look at some of Mack’s highlights from 2018, the year he was coached by Staley where he had 12.5 sacks, a career-high 6 forced fumbles, made the Pro Bowl and First-Team All-Pro.