Justin Herbert on quarterbacks coach Shane Day’s return: ‘I thought he was best for that position’

Justin Herbert thinks highly of Shane Day.

Justin Herbert spoke to the media for the first time since the rehiring of quarterbacks coach Shane Day. Herbert would confirm that he was asked about the vacant position under Jim Harbaugh’s staff before Day’s return:

He’s an incredible coach. He’s done such a great job for this quarterback room. And the relationship that he has with Easton (Stick) and I, and now with Max (Duggan) and Casey (Bauman), he’s done a great job of just picking up and moving right where we left off. Obviously, tough losing him for a year. But when the question came up who I thought was best for that position, Shane was the number one guy and I’m really glad to be working with him again.

Day and former offensive coordinator Joe Lombardi were fired from Brandon Staley’s staff. While that was likely an attempt to get the best possible offensive coordinator available with Staley being on the hot seat at the time, it’s telling that Herbert had the urge to work with Day again after not having him on staff last season.

2023 offensive coordinator Kellen Moore brought in quarterbacks coach Doug Nussmeier with him to Los Angeles last offseason. One year later, both are paired in the same package deal with the Eagles.

Time will tell if the Chargers can have a consistent offensive coaching staff under Harbaugh in the future, but it’s certainly a positive start that he has a good working relationship with Day in the future.

Report: Chargers bringing back Shane Day as quarterbacks coach

The Chargers are bringing back a familiar face.

The Chargers are bringing back Shane Day to serve as the team’s quarterbacks coach, according to NFL Media’s Mike Garafolo.

Day was previously Los Angeles’ QBs coach during the 2021 and 2022 seasons under former head coach Brandon Staley. He was relieved along with former offensive coordinator Joe Lombardi.

Day spent the 2023 season as the Texans’ senior offensive assistant.

Day cracked in the NFL in 2007 as the 49ers’ offensive quality control coach.

Day has served as the quarterback coach of the Bears (2010-11) and 49ers (2019-20), the assistant offensive line coach of the Commanders (2014-15), and the tight ends coach of the Dolphins (2016-18).

Justin Herbert had a good relationship with Day, so familiarity should be good for him as the fifth-year signal-caller is about to play in yet another new offensive system.

The Chargers announced Greg Roman as their offensive coordinator and Marcus Brady as their passing game coordinator.

4 takeaways from the Houston Texans’ introductory presser with OC Bobby Slowik

Here are the four takeaways from the Houston Texans’ introductory press conference with new offensive coordinator Bobby Slowik.

The Houston Texans are going with a new offensive coordinator for the third time in as many seasons. It kind of seems to be a theme, much like their propensity for coaching changes in the same span.

However, Bobby Slowik isn’t just another name. The former San Francisco 49ers passing game coordinator matured as a coach during the same time DeMeco Ryans was growing as a coach with the 49ers from 2017-22. In fact, Slowik and Ryans’ first job together in San Francisco under rookie coach Kyle Shanahan was as defensive quality control coaches.

Here are four takeaways from Slowik’s introductory presser at NRG Stadium.

What Chargers HC Brandon Staley said at end-of-season press conference

Highlighting what Chargers HC Brandon Staley said at his end-of-season press conference.

Chargers head coach Brandon Staley spoke to the media to express how he felt about the 2022 season, his feelings after parting ways with Joe Lombardi and what he’s looking for in the team’s next offensive coordinator.

Here are some notable things that Staley said on Wednesday:

Twitter reacts to Chargers firing offensive coordinator Joe Lombardi

Here’s how the internet reacted to the Chargers firing Joe Lombardi.

The Chargers made a notable coaching change, firing offensive coordinator Joe Lombardi on Tuesday. Additionally, passing game coordinator/quarterbacks coach Shane Day was relieved of his duties.

The move was expected, as Los Angeles did not get the most out of quarterback Justin Herbert’s special abilities, given Lombardi’s offensive system predicated on quick and underneath throws.

The Chargers were also lackluster in the run game, red zone and on third down.

Now, head coach Brandon Staley will be looking for a new offensive coordinator as he heads into Year 3 of his regime.

Let’s see how Twitter reacted to the Lombardi news.

Instant analysis of Chargers firing offensive coordinator Joe Lombardi

Here’s what led to the firing of Chargers OC Joe Lombardi.

Joe Lombardi is out after two seasons in Los Angeles, leaving Brandon Staley and Tom Telesco to search for a new offensive coordinator in what will likely be a make-or-break season for both head coach and general manager.

Lombardi’s firing is no surprise, and that it was paired with the firing of pass game coordinator/QB coach Shane Day should also not be a shock. The Chargers’ offense took a step back in nearly every meaningful way this season, falling from 4th in DVOA in 2021 to 19th in 2022.

So what went wrong?

For starters, injuries. To get out in front of this: no, that’s not an excuse for Lombardi. The way he handled injuries to key players, however, informed his ability (or lack thereof) to adapt the offense on the fly. When Keenan Allen was injured in Week 1, Lombardi had no way to scheme other receivers open. DeAndre Carter, Josh Palmer, and Michael Bandy ran Allen’s routes like nothing had happened, except those less talented players failed to get open at the same rate Allen did. After Corey Linsley left the game in Week 2, Lombardi continued to run traditional drop-back passing concepts. At the same time, Kansas City’s defensive line took advantage of miscommunications on the offensive line, eventually leading to Justin Herbert’s rib injury. Mike Williams’ injury resulted in Palmer plugging directly in for him. Injuries along the offensive line, namely to right tackle Trey Pipkins, decimated the Chargers’ control of the pocket while Lombardi refused to get Herbert on the move.

That refusal links back to another issue with Lombardi’s offense: it seemed like he never truly figured out what he had in Herbert. The running joke online was that Lombardi was running the late-stage Drew Brees offense with the Chargers’ signal-caller. Brees, in his later years, had a weak arm but a sharp processor, so running a series of quick routes for him to snap through was an effective game plan. Herbert has similar processing ability but also is able to make throws that few other people on Earth are capable of. Downfield throws, no matter how often they worked for the Chargers, were limited to one or two chances a game. Again, getting Herbert on the move was frequently not a consideration, despite it working to perfection nearly every time they called the plays. It often felt like Lombardi had a script after the script; that no matter what his opening script told him about the defense, he was sticking to his pregame notions of how to win the game.

This stickiness, if you want to call it that, was a large part of why the Chargers could not get any offense going in the third quarter this season. (The Stick-iness of the offense was also a problem.) Lombardi would script out the first few drives, LA would get a lead, and then he’d decide his job was done, and they just needed to sit on the ball until the game ended. Defenses would adjust at halftime, Lombardi would not, and the offense would stall. Herbert would either make magic happen to pull the game out, or the Chargers would lose.

Red zone playcalling also proved to be problematic for Lombardi, who consistently could not design run plays to get the ball into the end zone and ran pass plays that were designed short of the goal line. This was despite having the basketball team of Gerald Everett, Donald Parham Jr., and Mike Williams available at his disposal. Granted, all three of those players missed time at one point or another, but even when all three were on the field, Lombardi preferred to run bubble screens to a hamstrung Keenan Allen than draw something up for one of his taller receivers.

All in all, Lombardi’s tenure with the Chargers is emblematic of his refusal or inability to adjust to his circumstances. Press conferences midseason included many quotes from the offensive coordinator about how they didn’t have the speed to attack downfield, despite deep crossing routes to Mike Williams working when Herbert rolled out. Lombardi doesn’t have the final say on the roster construction, and I get that, but part of the job is to turn what you’re given into something functional. Coaches like Brian Daboll in New York are running better offenses, with Daniel Jones throwing the ball to Richie James and Isaiah Hodgins. Lombardi got head coaching interviews recently as a year ago for what he did when everything was perfect: no injuries, only the base version of the offense installed, lower stakes. How he fared when things got messy is why LA let him go on Tuesday.

5 Chargers offensive coordinator candidates to replace Joe Lombardi

The Chargers will begin looking for a new offensive coordinator. Here are some potential replacements.

The Chargers will now look for a new offensive play-caller after the firing of Joe Lombardi on Tuesday morning.

With that, here is a look at a few candidates that could take over as the team’s offensive coordinator.

Chargers fire offensive coordinator Joe Lombardi

The Chargers’ offensive system will undergo reconstruction.

On Tuesday, the team announced that offensive coordinator Joe Lombardi would not return for the 2023 season. Pass game coordinator/QB coach Shane Day was also fired.

It ends a tumultuous tenure for the 51-year-old Lombardi, who joined the Chargers as Staley’s offensive coordinator prior to the 2021 season. After piloting LA to a top 5 offense by DVOA, the talk was much more about how high the ceiling could go rather than how hot Lombardi’s seat was.

2022 was, unfortunately, not the sequel Chargers fans were hoping for. After offseason talk about how much more of the offense LA could install, the Chargers plummeted to 19th in offensive DVOA. Injuries certainly played a part: Keenan Allen, Mike Williams, Rashawn Slater, Corey Linsley, and Trey Pipkins all missed multiple games and Justin Herbert, Gerald Everett, and Josh Palmer spent stretches banged up. But Lombardi showed an inability to adjust when those injuries occurred, which resulted in a midseason stretch of Herbert trying to force throws to DeAndre Carter and Michael Bandy running Allen’s routes without much success. Offensive sequencing consistently felt off, the offense fell flat after the opening script concluded, and Lombardi insisted on running the same concepts even after they were proven to be ineffective. Perhaps the cardinal example of this was the refusal to get Justin Herbert on the move, despite generating highlight play after highlight play when they did and facing immense pressure when they didn’t because of the banged-up offensive line.

All this coalesced into a season-long discourse about Lombardi and his viability as offensive coordinator going forward. With Staley’s job also subject to a number of rumors, sacrificing Lombardi to buy himself one more year always seemed like the likeliest outcome.

The Chargers will now embark on a search for a new coordinator, preferably one who can extract the best out of the ascending Herbert. 

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.

Report: Chargers hire former 49ers QB coach Shane Day

The Los Angeles Chargers scooped up Shane Day from the 49ers’ coaching staff.

Some confusion about the 49ers’ coaching staff was cleared up Thursday morning when ESPN’s Nick Wagoner reported that Shane Day will join the Los Angeles Chargers as their quarterbacks coach and passing game coordinator.

Day was the 49ers’ quarterbacks coach for the last two seasons following Rich Scangarello’s exit before the 2019 campaign. Scangarello was rehired by the 49ers this offseason to be the QB coach, but there was no word on what Day’s position would be or if he was returning. It turns out Day will be moving on to Southern California to take on a larger role with the Chargers and second-year QB phenom Justin Herbert.

The 49ers might’ve tried to elevate Day to passing game coordinator in San Francisco had they not promoted Mike McDaniel to the offensive coordinator role.