Chargers announce 2024 coaching staff

The Chargers have announced the members of head coach Jim Harbaugh’s coaching staff for the 2024 season.

The Chargers have announced the members of head coach Jim Harbaugh’s coaching staff for the 2024 season.

Some of the biggest names were already known as the hirings of offensive coordinator Greg Roman and defensive coordinator Jesse Minter and the holdover of special teams coordinator Ryan Ficken.

Roman will be working with passing game coordinator Marcus Brady, quarterbacks coach Shane Day, run game coordinator/tight ends coach Andy Bischoff, wide receivers coach Sanjay Lal, offensive line coach Mike Devlin, and senior offensive assistant Marc Trestman.

Linebackers coach NaVorro Bowman, defensive line coach Mike Elston, defensive backs coach Steve Clinkscale, safeties coach Chris O’Leary, senior defensive assistant Rick Minter, defensive assistant Dylan Roney, and defensive quality control Robert Muschamp will work with Minter.

Assistant special teams coach Chris Gould rounds out the group.

Several spots on the coaching roster, including running backs coach, still need to be filled.

Here’s who’s on Jim Harbaugh’s Chargers coaching staff

Here’s a look at who’s onboard the Chargers coaching staff as it continues to take shape.

Since being hired as head coach of the Chargers, Jim Harbaugh has been hard at work to build out his staff.

Here’s a look at who’s onboard as it continues to take shape:

Chargers retaining special teams coordinator Ryan Ficken

Ryan Ficken has been a key member of the Chargers coaching staff.

Despite all the turnover in the coaching staff, the Chargers are retaining a key member.

According to multiple reports, special teams coordinator Ryan Ficken is staying in Los Angeles on Jim Harbaugh’s staff.

Hired to oversee the Bolts’ special teams two years ago, Ficken engineered some of the best units in the NFL in that timeframe.

Before joining the Chargers, Ficken spent the first 15 years of his NFL career with the Vikings, serving as the team’s special teams coordinator in 2021 after assisting the group for the prior eight seasons.

Seahawks hiring Jay Harbaugh, Ryan Ficken likely to remain with Chargers

The Chargers are likely a retaining a key piece of their coaching staff.

The path has been paved for Chargers’ special teams coordinator Ryan Ficken to remain with the organization after the Seahawks signed Jay Harbaugh in the same role.

Harbaugh had been in Chargers’ staffing rumors with Jesse Minter and Greg Roman to join his father, Jim Harbaugh, in Los Angeles. However, the tone had shifted through recent weeks with Ryan Ficken becoming more likely to stay in Aaron Wilson’s updated reporting. Jay Harbaugh going to Seattle all but confirms that Ficken will remain in Los Angeles.

Ficken has been the leader of a special teams renaissance for a Chargers’ team that struggled in Brandon Staley’s first season. The Chargers ranked 31st in Rick Gosselin’s special teams rankings despite a 9-8 season in 2021. Previous special teams coordinator Derius Swinton was replaced with Ficken in 2022. Los Angeles proceeded to jump 24 spots to 7th in the same rankings.

Last year, the Chargers continued their dominant special teams performance under Ficken with a fifth-place finish. Key contributors like Cameron Dicker, JK Scott, and Josh Harris have been critical acquisitions in Ficken’s system.

While Ficken staying on the current coaching staff is not confirmed, the Chargers have not interviewed other candidates while blocking other teams from speaking to him. Harbaugh signing with Seattle should accelerate the process of LA finalizing Ficken’s return.

Chargers block Giants’ request to interview special teams coordinator Ryan Ficken

The Chargers don’t want to let go of one of their top assistant coaches.

The Giants are searching for a new special teams coordinator after firing Thomas McGaughey, and one of the coaches they were hoping to bring in for an interview was Ryan Ficken of the Chargers.

However, New York’s request was denied by Los Angeles, according to NFL Media’s Mike Garafolo.

Despite Brandon Staley being fired, the Chargers don’t want one of the assistants he brought in to go to another team, and they hope they can get him to stay on staff with whoever the next head coach is.

Hired to oversee the Bolts’ special teams two years ago, Ficken engineered some of the best units in the NFL in that timeframe.

Before joining the Chargers, Ficken spent the first 15 years of his NFL career with the Vikings, serving as the team’s special teams coordinator in 2021 after assisting the group for the prior eight seasons.

Chargers block Giants’ request to interview ST coach

The Chargers blocked the Giants’ request to interview STs coach Ryan Ficken.

The Los Angeles Chargers have reportedly blocked the New York Giants’ request to interview special teams coordinator Ryan Ficken for their special teams coordinator vacancy.

The Giants fired longtime coordinator Thomas McGaughey on Monday and are in the market for a new one.

The Chargers are in the process of hiring a new head coach but still have many of ex-coach Brandon Staley’s assistants under contract.

Too bad, because Ficken would have been a nice get. From the Chargers’ website:

Ficken coordinated a special teams unit that led the NFL by allowing just 3.1 yards per punt return, which was the best average allowed by any Chargers team in 50 years. He also oversaw the AFC’s top kicking unit, making 31-of-33 field goals (93.9 pct.) despite deploying three different kickers on the year due to injury. The team’s 93.9 field goal percentage ranked No. 2 in the NFL in 2022 and led the AFC. Under Ficken’s tutelage, the unit ranked 10th in the NFL by Pro Football Focus and No. 7 according to Rick Gosselin.

The Giants will continue their search for both a new special teams coordinator and a defensive coordinator.

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Instant analysis of Chargers firing Brandon Staley, Tom Telesco

What the firing of Brandon Staley and Tom Telesco means for the Chargers.

After a record-setting 63-21 loss to the Antonio Pierce and Aidan O’Connell-led Raiders on Thursday night, Los Angeles announced Friday that Brandon Staley and Tom Telesco had been fired. The interim head coach and general manager are expected to be announced Friday afternoon.

Staley finishes with a 24-24 record as Los Angeles’ head coach, and his tenure will be defined by the way the Chargers performed in big games. A timeout in a Week 18 contest against the Raiders in 2021 allowed Las Vegas more time to kick a game-winning field goal, knocking the Chargers out of playoff contention. Los Angeles made the postseason the following year, opening a 27-0 lead over the Jaguars before falling victim to one of the worst playoff collapses of all time. It seemed like they never shook the funk that loss put them in, and a 5-9 record through Week 15 was bad enough to force the franchise to fire a coach midseason for the first time since Kevin Gilbride was let go in 1998.

A former defensive coordinator with the Rams, Staley was hired as one of the brightest young minds in the game, a reversal of the conservative Anthony Lynn era. Staley’s first season on the job was marked by fourth-down discourse, as Staley continuously was one of the most aggressive coaches in the league in those situations. It paid dividends for Los Angeles, whose defense was 29th in points allowed in 2021.

With money to burn entering 2022, the Chargers brought in a number of players with ties to Staley to try to fix their defensive issues. Sebastian Joseph-Day got a hefty contract. Los Angeles traded a second-round pick for Khalil Mack. J.C. Jackson signed a massive deal to emulate Jalen Ramsey’s role with the Rams when Staley was defensive coordinator. The defense improved in points allowed but was the worst in the history of the league at stopping the run. Jackson had ankle surgery before the season and then tore his patellar tendon.

Entering 2023, the Chargers kept most things the same on defense. Jackson played poorly and then refused to enter a game after he was benched, resulting in his release. Joseph-Day and new linebacker Eric Kendricks have not played up to their name value. Young players have not developed. On the offensive side of the ball, optimism abounded about coordinator Kellen Moore, only for players to either regress or get injured as well.

That all brings us to Friday, the end of Staley’s tenure. A defensive head coach who had individual games of greatness (see: 2022 Miami), but never a season of even above-average play after adding players familiar with his system. An aggressive head coach who got less aggressive as his tenure went on.

For Telesco, the firing marks the end of a decade-long run as Chargers general manager. Hired in 2013 after serving as the Colts’ vice president of football operations, Telesco was the youngest general manager hire in Chargers history, promising to build the team through the draft and supplement the roster with free agent additions.

Building through the draft never quite worked for this regime. Keenan Allen, a third-round pick in Telesco’s first season, set a positive tone. But Telesco missed on D.J. Fluker, Jason Verrett, Jerry Tillery and Kenneth Murray in the first round and failed to find the same level of contribution in the middle and late rounds as other teams around the league. When those players did pan out, like Drue Tranquill, Kyzir White or Hunter Henry, they were allowed to hit free agency.

General managers rarely get four swings at head coaching hires. Telesco began his tenure with Mike McCoy, then moved on to Anthony Lynn. His final swing was Brandon Staley.

The Chargers will now make over their leadership team heading into a season in which they are $42 million over the salary cap with big decisions to make about every player outside Justin Herbert and Rashawn Slater.

Chargers fire head coach Brandon Staley, general manager Tom Telesco

The Brandon Staley and Tom Telesco era is over in Los Angeles.

The Brandon Staley and Tom Telesco era is over in Los Angeles.

The Chargers fired Staley and Telesco on Friday following the team’s 63-21 loss to the Raiders.

The interim coach and general manager will be announced later today, per the team’s official release.

This is the first time Dean Spanos fired a coach midseason since 1998 when the team moved on from Kevin Gilbride, replacing him with June Jones.

Staley departs after posting a 24-24 record in the three seasons, including a 0-1 record in the only season he made the playoffs in 2022. Telesco spent 11 years as the team’s general manager. Los Angeles was 84-92, with three playoff appearances in that span.

Parting ways with Staley would have made sense after last year’s historic loss to the Jaguars in the postseason. Los Angeles gave him another shot, and things didn’t get any better.

As for Telesco, he brought in top-end players but the depth consistently was lacking, thus never leading to success on the field.

Staley was hired back in 2021 after overseeing the league’s best defense when he was the Rams defensive coordinator in 2020.

Despite being touted as a defensive guru and investing heavily in premium players, that side of the ball remained the weak link since his arrival.

It was on full display as the Chargers allowed the most points in franchise history on Thursday, which was the last straw for Staley.

This season, Los Angeles is 29th in total yards allowed and passing yards allowed and 27th in points allowed.

Beyond the underachieving defenses, Staley was at the helm for a multitude of late-game meltdowns, head-scratching in-game decisions and injuries to big-name players.

In Staley’s three seasons with the Chargers, of the 24 losses, 16 games had been lost by a touchdown or less, with 12 of those decided by three points or fewer.

The Bolts have appeared in the playoffs just three times over the past ten years, have not won the AFC West division since 2009 and last made the AFC championship game following the 2007 season.

Chargers WR Derius Davis named AFC Special Teams Player of the Week

The Chargers have the longest punt return touchdown in the NFL.

Chargers wide receiver Derius Davis was named the AFC Special Teams Player of the Week on Wednesday following a stellar performance against the Jets. 

The highlight of the rookie’s primetime outing was an 87-yard punt return touchdown, the first of his career. It was the longest punt return by any player in the NFL this season and the longest punt return by any rookie since 2017. 

The former TCU product led the league in Week 9 with 104 punt return yards and his 16.6-yard average on punt returns leads the league. Ranking second in the NFL are his 232 punt return yards.

Davis is the first Chargers rookie returner to receive the accolade since 2000 and is the first returner to win the award since 2018. The fourth-round pick continued to make history as his punt return touchdown ranked as the fifth-longest punt return in franchise history. 

Ryan Ficken breaks down Chargers’ special teams entering Week 1

Special teams coordinator Ryan Ficken talked about the state of his Chargers unit.

Special teams coordinator Ryan Ficken broke down the state of the Chargers’ special teams at his Monday media availability.

First, Ficken was asked about the summer kicking competition between Cameron Dicker and Dustin Hopkins.

Dustin, first and foremost, is an elite kicker. Either way, however it shook out, we were going to lose a top kicker. We felt, as an organization, that the body of work with what Cameron has done — nothing that Hopkins hasn’t done — more of what Dicker has done, our faith and belief in him and his consistency with it. Moving forward, we thought he was the right guy for the opportunity.

Hopkins was traded to the Browns for a 2025 seventh-round draft pick prior to final roster cuts. While the coaching staff has consistently said that the two kickers were in “competition” for most of training camp, it never truly felt that way. Dicker hit about 90% of his field goal attempts throughout the summer while Hopkins had nagging injuries that caused him to sit for various periods of time. As somewhat evidenced by the Browns trade, Hopkins playing in the preseason was merely an audition for kicker-needy teams.

When asked about Dicker’s range on field goals this year, Ficken seemed very confident.

That’s something that depends on the situation. It depends on the game, the environment, the wind, indoor or outdoor and all of that. We’re very confident in his leg strength and where he can kick from, the distance. Especially with how many reps you’re going to get, those opportunities from the greater distances. I don’t think distance really plays a factor with him. He’s steady Eddie as it is.

Dicker went 21 for 22 on field goal attempts last season. From 40-49 yards, he went 6 for 6 on the year. However, range is an interesting discussion. Last year, the former Texas product missed his only attempt from 50+ yards against the Raiders. There’s not much of a sample size to go off of and one has to wonder how many 50+ yarders Dicker would actually attempt with Staley’s 4th down philosophy.

Ficken also noted the work that will have to be done to replace fullback Zander Horvath. The 2022 seventh-round pick officially signed with Pittsburgh’s practice squad yesterday.

It’s a tough replacement. I don’t think that you, necessarily, replace a Zander Horvath. It’s unfortunate — with the way that the roster is made up — to lose a really good player, in terms of special teams, as Zander. I’m very thankful for what he brought to this organization last year and how we were able to get a foundation built with him as a rookie. He’s going to do great things wherever he is at, so I’m very happy for him to have a situation. We wanted him back here, just a different situation. It just kind of works out that way. He’s going to be successful wherever he goes.

Ficken also noted that replacing Horvath will likely be done with a group of players by committee. Kickoff team and punt team coverages are the two responsibilities that the Chargers’ special teams coordinator will now be trying to fill.

On whether he’d name Derius Davis the starting returner, Ficken was a bit tepid in his response.

We have a pretty good idea of who is going to be the returner. Obviously, Derius did some good things in the preseason games. At the end of the day, we still have to make sure that we’re repping and we’re preparing the other guys, too, on this team that can handle the job because you never know what could happen, anything can happen. We’re going full throttle with the three returners that we have on this roster, to prepare them to be ready to go on Sunday, if their number gets called.

Ficken also noted that he views kick returner and punt returner as two separate positions in his philosophy. He said that he’s seen different special teams circumstances dictate the philosophy. On his previous teams, Ficken said that he’s seen one returner handle both roles and some setups where two different returners handle each job separately.

In his final remarks of the presser, Ficken stressed the importance of newly signed LB Tanner Muse on the 53-man roster.

“Yes. We expect him to be out there. That’s a big reason why we ended up bringing him here. We’re excited to have a guy such as Tanner, the way that he plays special teams, with his length and his speed and his strength. He does a great job. We expect him to be out there and be a major contributor for us.”

It’s worth noting that Muse could end up playing a lot of special teams with his experience there. Staley and Ficken have liked their “core four” special teams players to have significant roles on the roster. Daiyan Henley was dealing with a hamstring injury last week, so it’ll also be important to see if there’s any progress on his recovery when the injury reports are released. If Henley can’t go, Muse could play an even larger role than expected.