Brandon Staley and Tom Telesco’s firings were long overdue, if not too late

Brandon Staley and Tom Telesco should’ve been let go of a lot earlier.

The Chargers cleaned house on Friday after parting ways with GM Tom Telesco as well as HC Brandon Staley. This comes on the heels of an embarrassing 42-point loss to the Raiders on Thursday Night Football.

JoJo Wooden and Giff Smith were promoted to interim GM and HC respectively. Wooden has been the Director of Player Personnel since 2013. Giff Smith has served various roles from 2016-2023, including defensive line and outside linebackers coaching stints.

Before moving on to coaching and GM candidates for replacement content, it’s time to truly look back on the Telesco-Staley era as it comes to an end. After having plenty of cap space in 2021, a stud quarterback on a rookie deal, and plenty of big names on the roster, the Chargers sit here today with nothing to show for it. The Telesco-Staley era was defined by “all in” promises with more flash than substance.

Let’s start with Telesco. With a relatively slim playoff resume and mediocre regular season success in his 11 years, it was past time for him to go. Dean Spanos and Chargers’ ownership could not willingly let him hire a fourth head coach. His last shot was Staley.

Frankly, he got the opportunity to hire a third coach because of the selection of Justin Herbert in 2020. Had that not happened for this organization, I think it’s safe to say that he would’ve been gone sooner. But the Chargers wanted to keep some sort of structure at the top to bring along their rookie QB. At the time, there was a core of the fanbase and media that believed Telesco should’ve been relieved of his duties with Anthony Lynn after 2020.

And it’s clear that is the direction the franchise should’ve gone in. Telesco has struck out on finding requisite depth for the team in the draft. He’s spent all of the teams’ financial resources and their future capital on poor investments. The Chargers are $42 million over the projected cap in 2024. That stems from four max contract restructures for a losing season and J.C. Jackson dead cap money.

The retention of drafted players over the Telesco tenure was generally bad. Consistently, guys like Kyzir White and Drue Tranquill left the team on the cheap after their rookie deals while the Chargers would choose the worse team-building plays instead.

Letting Telesco manage another season would’ve been untenable. To be honest, the short-term damage he’s inflicted on the team in 2024 is enough to deal with. It was well past time to go.

For Staley, he leaves Los Angeles after three years on the job. He finishes 24-24 after 9-8, 10-7, and 5-9 seasons. While Staley showed promise in his first season, his downfall primarily occurred for a plethora of reasons. After promises to build the offense around Justin Herbert and “throw that sh*t downfield”, the Chargers’ head coach never fully figured out the offensive staff/personnel side of the ball. From Joe Lombardi to Kellen Moore, one thing remained consistent on offense: football that was never fundamentally sound.

And when the Chargers did manage to score 30 or 40 points, Staley’s defense managed to give up more. Herbert bailed out the former Chargers’ head coach in a number of games. Staley harped on the lack of complementary football all year and it presented itself in largely every game LA played. Even some of their wins were relatively ugly.

Staley’s defense and special teams combined units ranked bottom 10 in EPA in every season he was the head coach. Simply put, he was hired as a defensive coordinator who never fixed the defense. LA’s unit was plagued with poor tackling fundamentals, bad player development, and convoluted personnel decisions on gamedays. While Staley had good ideas in theory like the style of defense he intended to play, it was the execution of the concepts that were lacking.

Truthfully, there are plenty of more platitudes and moments I could mention on why both Staley and Telesco are finished in LA as we sit here today. But what’s more pressing is the future. While the Chargers will likely still be a hot destination with Herbert viewed as a top franchise cornerstone around the league, the damage has been done. There’s the cap situation. There’s deep player unhappiness rooted in the current situation. There probably will be a decent amount of turnover with not just coaching personnel, but many of the Chargers’ franchise figure players who have been present over the last half decade or longer.

Staley was hired by Telesco to make a run and build off the Herbert window. But whatever GM and coach pairing is hired next will be brought in to clear the wreckage “all in” venture that completely collapsed.

Chargers oust HC Brandon Staley, GM Tom Telesco hours after historic trouncing vs Raiders

Chargers oust HC Brandon Staley, GM Tom Telesco hours after historic trouncing vs Raiders

No question Brandon Staley was on a hot seat coming into his third season as Chargers head coach. That seat only got hotter as the season went along and the Chargers were en route to their worst season under his leadership.

Thursday night, everything came to a head with a monumental 63-21 loss to the Raiders on Thursday Night Football.

What came Friday morning was to be expected — Staley along with GM Tom Telesco were both fired.

Thursday night’s game wasn’t the reason, but it was about as much of a slamming of the book as you’ll ever see.

The game wasn’t even as close as the 49-point final score margin. It was 42-0 at the half, 49-0 before the Chargers first score, and 63-7 early in the fourth quarter. All of which only served to make what owner Dean Spanos had to do that much easier.

It was clear after the Chargers went down 21-0 in the first quarter, they packed it in and gave up. The result was three more touchdowns before the half, each one about as easy as one can imagine. They didn’t even try to stop Brandon Bolden on a direct snap run 26 yards for a touchdown.

The Chargers had lost four of their previous five games coming into this one. The only win being an ugly 6-0 game against the hapless Patriots. They were a rudderless ship.

With Justin Herbert, Keenan Allen, and Joey Bosa on the sideline with injuries, this team had no fight in them. It was past time for a reset and now they will play out the string and be in the market for new leadership to see if they can manage to get a pretty talented team to play to the level everyone has expected them to play each season.

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.