Chargers Week 11 injury report: Who practiced, who didn’t on Wednesday?

Keenan Allen was among the five non-participants.

The Chargers had their first practice in preparation for Sunday’s game against the Packers on Thursday.

Los Angeles had five non-participants: Keenan Allen (shoulder), Gerald Everett (back), Sebastian Joseph-Day (knee), Khalil Mack (rest) and Donald Parham (hip).

Brandon Staley said he’s hopeful Allen will play this week. He is dealing with the left shoulder issue that popped up in last weekend’s game against the Lions.

Staley considered Everett day to day with a back injury that he sustained in the first half against Detroit.

The statuses of Joseph-Day and Everett remain to be seen.

JT Woods was a limited participant. The window for Woods to be activated off of the NFI (non-football injury) list is open.

Key things to know about Chargers’ Week 11 opponent: Packers

Here are some important things to know about the Packers ahead of the Week 11 matchup with the Chargers.

The Chargers travel to face the Packers on Sunday, Nov. 19, at 10:00 a.m. PT.

To get you prepped for the Week 11 bout, here are five key things to know about Los Angeles’ opponent ahead of the matchup.

Not much to Love about Jordan

Jordan Love’s first year as the Packers starting quarterback hasn’t been anything special. Through Week 10, he’s completed just 58.7% of his passes for an average of 6.7 yards per attempt and has 14 touchdowns to ten interceptions. Love will throw a nice pass to the intermediate-deep part of the field here and there, but he’s often careless with the football.

Below-average rushing offense

The Packers rank 21st in run offense, averaging 102.1 yards per game. Their lead back Aaron Jones has struggled with injuries this season but when he’s been on the field, he hasn’t produced. Jones is a game removed from a 2.7-yard per carry performance against the Steelers and he has yet to surpass 75 yards rushing yards in a game this season. On the other hand, Jones’ right-hand man, AJ Dillon, has picked up some of the slack, as he recently rushed nine times for 70 yards with a career-long carry of 40 yards. Dillon has averaged over 4.0 yards per carry in three of his last four games.

Young group of pass catchers

The Packers don’t have a bonafide No. 1 wide receiver, but they’re a very diverse group. Rookie Jayden Reed leads the crop with 417 receiving yards. Behind him is Romeo Doubs with 343 yards. Doubs leads the wideouts with six touchdowns. Christian Watson, who was expected to be a premier weapon, has dealt with injuries. While he’s limited, Watson has still been a reliable downfield threat. He is averaging a team-high 16.9 yards per catch.

Pretty good against the pass

The Packers’ strong suit on defense is at defending the pass. They rank seventh in the NFL, only allowing an average of 187.6 yards per game. Up front, they have some prolific pass rushers, led by Rashan Gary, who has 34 pressures and five sacks. Preston Smith and Kenny Clark also have five sacks. In the back end, they have a crop of solid coverage defenders.

Look out for…

Luke Musgrave. The rookie tight end has been a go-to target for Love. Musgrave ranks second on the team in receptions (29) and big plays (plays of over 20 yards) with five and third in yards (313).

Chargers sign EDGE Justin Hollins

The Chargers added an edge defender in wake of Chris Rumph’s season-ending injury.

The Chargers placed edge defender Chris Rumph II on injured reserve and signed Justin Hollins to the active roster on Wednesday.

In addition, Los Angeles signed tight end Stephen Anderson to the practice squad and released safety Mark Webb from the practice squad.

Hollins was drafted by the Broncos in the fifth round of the 2019 NFL draft out of the University of Oregon. He has played in 60 games and started in seven for the Broncos, Rams, Packers and Giants.

Brandon Staley was Hollins’ defensive coordinator in 2019 with the Broncos and in 2020 with the Rams. In those two seasons, Hollins combined for 20 quarterback pressures, 13 hurries and five sacks.

Hollins is a year removed from his best single season as a pro, as he finished with 15 pressures, eight hurries and four sacks.

Statistical Breakdown: How the Chargers and Packers stack up before Week 11 game

Here’s how the Chargers and Packers stack up statistically ahead of the Week 11 matchup.

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

Here’s how Los Angeles and Green Bay stack up statistically ahead of the Week 11 matchup:

Josh Allen: ‘Of course’ I keep an eye on pass rusher contracts

Josh Allen is in line for a huge pay day soon, one way or another.

Jacksonville Jaguars outside linebacker Josh Allen is on a one-way track to a massive payday, one way or another.

After racking up nine sacks in the first eight games of the season, the 25-year-old pass rusher is set to become a free agent in 2024. There’s only three ways things can get resolved in the next four months:

  1. Allen signs a massive extension with the Jaguars.
  2. The Jaguars allow Allen to reach free agency where he’d potentially be the biggest prize on the market.
  3. Allen receives the always pricy franchise tag.

Regardless of how the situation plays out, Allen is in line to follow in the footsteps of the Chicago Bears’ Montez Sweat and Green Bay Packers’ Rashan Gary, who both signed contracts last week that average more than $24 million per season.

“Of course,” Allen said Wednesday when asked if he keeps an eye on the deals other pass rushers have recently received. “You always want to see where the market is at, especially at my position. Obviously, I see where those guys get paid and say ‘OK, that’s nice.'”

But Allen also made it clear that his focus is on his play and a season that could be special for both him and the Jaguars.

“For what I want to do this year, for what I want to achieve … don’t settle,” Allen said. “If I continue to find ways to be successful, then things might come. But obviously I’ve got goals and aspirations that I want to achieve this year — hell, I want to win a Super Bowl.

“If I can continue to play at a high level — motivate, elevate everybody else around us to get to that point, let’s do it.”

Allen compares favorably to Sweat and Gary, who both trail him in sacks and pressures this year.

Through four and a half seasons, Allen has 36.5 sacks, third most in franchise history and only one behind Yannick Ngakoue for second.

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Saints’ frustrating loss to Packers could come back to haunt them

The Saints’ frustrating loss to the blundering Packers could come back to haunt them. They can’t let many more winnable conference games get away from them:

It’s tough to take much satisfaction from the Green Bay Packers’ blundering loss to the Las Vegas Raiders on Monday night — at least for New Orleans Saints fans, no matter how many interceptions Jordan Love threw. This was a team the black and gold had on the ropes back in Week 3, with Derek Carr’s offense holding a 17-0 lead that felt unsurmountable.

Then Carr got hurt and couldn’t return. The offense punted four consecutive times with Jameis Winston under center and Blake Grupe missed his only field goal of the season as the margin for error shrunk defensively. Pass interference fouls on Alontae Taylor and Isaac Yiadom gifted Green Bay 67 of the 80 yards they gained on their first scoring drive, and a rare missed tackle by Demario Davis let the Packers cut the lead to just a single score. You know the rest (and if you missed it, read our full recap here).

What matters now is that the Saints lost a very winnable game to a bad team in a golden opportunity to pad their record against conference opponents. Letting this game get away from them could come back to haunt the Saints when the playoff picture solidifies in December and January.

There are currently eight teams in the conference with three or more wins, but various tiebreaking procedures like divisional standings and conference records leave New Orleans at the bottom of that group. If the playoffs started today, the Saints would be left on the outside looking in. For the sake of illustrating that point, here’s the way-too-early NFC playoff picture after Week 5’s games:

  • 5-0 Philadelphia Eagles (1) on bye
  • 5-0 San Francisco 49ers (2) vs. 3-2 Dallas Cowboys (7)
  • 4-1 Detroit Lions (3) vs. 3-2 Atlanta Falcons (6)
  • 3-1 Tampa Bay Buccaneers (4) vs. 3-1 Seattle Seahawks (5)

And the 3-2 Saints would be left watching from home. The good news is that they have plenty of conference games left; they’re in the middle of a four-game stretch of matchups with AFC teams leading up to their bye week. They’ll come out of that midseason break with seven consecutive games with NFC teams, four of them at home, with four matchups against division opponents. That’s going to be a great opportunity to strike back and disrupt the standings.

But it all starts now. The Saints must remain focused and take care of business against the teams lined up in front of them. The next step forward will fall Sunday against the Houston Texans.

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Packers QB coach Tom Clements on Jordan Love: ‘He’s confirmed our thoughts’

The first four games of 2023 gave Packers QB coach Tom Clements confirmation on Jordan Love: “He’s a good player.”

Back in May of this year, Green Bay Packers quarterbacks coach Tom Clements related the team’s transition to Jordan Love to the transition from Brett Favre to Aaron Rodgers, insisting the team knew — like the Packers thought they knew with Rodgers in 2008 — that Love would be a good quarterback. How good? No one knew or can know for sure, especially after only four starts in 2023, but Clements and the Packers think they’ve gotten confirmation on their initial belief of Love.

“You always anticipate based on how he’s practiced and done in the preseason and years past, you have an idea of how he might do when he becomes the full-time starter, and he’s confirmed our thoughts. He’s a good player,” Clements said Monday, per Packers.com.

Clements, of course, coached Rodgers during the transition in 2008. And his teaching since returning to Green Bay last year has been vital to Love’s development, especially during this first season as a starter.

Through four games, Love has completed 56.1 percent of his passes, thrown eight touchdown passes and three interceptions, averaged 6.8 yards per attempt and produced a passer rating of 88.0. He’s been up and down, like most first-year starters, but the flashes have been bright and could become more consistent as he gains experience at the game’s most difficult position.

“He only has five games of experience,” Clements said. “As he plays more, he’s going to recognize things that he’s seen previously in games and if he reacted correctly, that’ll trigger in his mind. If previously he didn’t react the way he would’ve liked to, that triggers in your mind, too. And then as you see more defenses and what they’re trying to do you’re going to recognize it and hopefully adjust a little quicker because you’ve seen it before.”

The Packers would like Love to improve his completion percentage and success rate over the course of the 2023 but understand a lot goes into both numbers. The offense is young and prone to making mistakes, and Love is playing behind a makeshift offensive line missing its top two blockers. Only last week did Christian Watson and Aaron Jones return from injuries.

It’s becoming clear that Love has cleared the “can’t play” hurdle. He is a competent starting quarterback who does a lot of things right at the position but must master all the little things that separate good from the best, including the consistency of ball placement, handling pressure and avoiding negative plays. Love must also find a way to start faster and pull the offense out of lulls, which have been challenges through the first four weeks.

The packers knew this first season would be a rollercoaster ride, given the inexperience on offense and the reality of the salary cap situation. This is a team learning how to play together and fighting with one hand behind it’s back. Yet through four games, the Packers believe they have gotten a good read on their new quarterback, the biggest piece of the puzzle.

Rookie Saints safety Jordan Howden misses practices with finger injury

Rookie safety Jordan Howden injured his finger in practice last week, but played through it against the Packers. He missed practice Wednesday and the Saints say they’ll monitor his progress:

This might help explain why the New Orleans Saints made re-signing Daniel Sorensen such a priority: rookie safety Jordan Howden missed practice Wednesday with a finger injury he suffered last week, and Saints head coach Dennis Allen says the team will monitor his progress before deciding whether he’ll play on Sunday against the Tampa Bay Buccaneers.

The good news is that Howden played through the injury last Sunday on the road with the Green Bay Packers. He was on the field for all 79 defensive snaps and totaled 4 tackles (3 assists) in the loss. He’s running point to fill in for Marcus Maye during the veteran’s three-game suspension, but if his injury worsens or hampers his performance the Saints could turn to someone like Lonnie Johnson Jr. or Ugo Amadi while bringing Johnathan Abram and Sorensen up from the practice squad for improved depth.

Hopefully the rookie can gut it out and stay on the field so he can help his team. The fifth-round pick out of Minnesota quickly carved out a role in the Saints’ dime defensive package, playing 12 and 14 snaps in the first two weeks, before earning the nod to start over the top at free safety. The coaching staff thinks very highly of him and he needs these reps now to build his case as a long-term solution in the secondary.

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Geno Smith’s 2-pt. conversion was eerily similar to famous Russell Wilson pass

Watch Geno Smith complete a desperate two-point conversion attempt, and then watch Russell Wilson’s famous heave to Luke Willson during the NFC Championship game against the Green Bay Packers.

Vibes don’t make tackles or put points on the board, but right now they are fairly immaculate as far as the Seattle Seahawks are concerned. Yesterday the team defeated the Carolina Panthers at home in front of much of the 2013 Super Bowl winning squad which was honored at halftime. From Jarran Reed’s sexy sack dance homage to Michael Bennett to Zach Charbonnet’s lethal Marshawn Lynch-like power runs, there was a whole lot of the good old days to be seen on the field on Sunday.

The best example came late in the game, courtesy of Geno Smith and Tyler Lockett. Watch Smith complete a desperate two-point conversion attempt, and then watch Russell Wilson’s famous heave to Luke Willson during the NFC Championship game against the Green Bay Packers.

It’s way, way too early to start thinking about another deep postseason run, but a win next Monday night on the road against the New York Giants would put the Seahawks at 3-1 going into their early bye week.

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