Plaschke: Nutty Bolts are better than stinking Rams. Can Chargers finally win over L.A.?
They’re nuts, these Bolts.
Midway through the second quarter of their Sunday night tussle with the Miami Dolphins at SoFi Stadium, the swarming Chargers defense forced the Dolphins’ Jeff Wilson Jr. to fumble.
Except, in the ensuing scrum, the ball popped loose from the pile and into the hands of the fastest man on the field, whereupon Tyreek Hill raced 57 yards with the newfound gift to score the Dolphins’ first touchdown.
They’re nuts, these Bolts.
Midway through the third quarter in this same game, the Chargers’ Michael Davis was perfectly covering a streaking Hill on a pass route down the right sideline.
Except Davis’ feet became tangled up with Hill’s feet, and Davis fell, whereupon Hill broke free to catch a 60-yard touchdown pass from Tua Tagovailoa for the Dolphins’ second touchdown.
In the six seasons since their return to Los Angeles, the Chargers have stumbled and staggered and slapstick-ed their way out of seemingly every important opportunity, and it was happening again Sunday.
Then, with the speed of a Justin Herbert pass and the shock of an Austin Ekeler juke, it wasn’t.
They didn’t break, these Bolts.
Knocked backward by two freak plays, the Chargers and their incredible quarterback kept hurtling forward until they finally secured a dominating 23-17 victory over the NFL-darling Dolphins, setting themselves up for the most important month in their Los Angeles existence.
Win and they’re in. Win their final four games against four beatable opponents and this 7-6 team surely will make the playoffs. Win at home against the Tennessee Titans and Rams, and on the road at Indianapolis and Denver, and the Chargers will crawl through an open window of opportunity best described in three words.
The Rams stink.
The space is there for the Chargers to make their first real mark on this city since they moved back here. There can be only one playoff team in town this winter, and the Chargers need to fill that void.
The Chargers have outlasted the cries to send them back to San Diego. They’ve built a solid fan base equal in noise to the Rams’ fan base — even if both teams’ fans are regularly outnumbered. Now they have a real chance to make a dent in the domination of the defending Super Bowl champions.
They’re ready for that next step. Now they need to take it.
But if Sunday night’s victory over the favored and playoff-bound Dolphins was any indication, yeah, it’s going to be nuts.
The Chargers outgained the Dolphins 432-219. Herbert nearly tripled the output of his struggling counterpart Tagovailoa. The previously injured Mike Williams and Keenan Allen caught 208 yards’ worth of passes in the first game this season that they’ve started and finished together. The Chargers controlled the Dolphins in every corner of a nationally televised game that originally felt like a Dolphins coronation.
“I felt like it was the hardest we played all season…that’s what we need to build off,” coach Brandon Staley said.
And still, the Chargers nearly blew it again in the end, Joshua Palmer fumbling a Dolphins onside kick in the final moments, Nick Niemann saving the day with a last-gasp recovery.
“Incredible team win for us … the way our guys competed out there … guys trying to prove themselves,” Staley said.
Yet if the Chargers are going to get this done, they’re probably going to have to do it like that young boy who, with “Bolt Up” scrawled across his bare chest, led Sunday night cheers on the giant videoboard.
The kid was screaming but, in these chilly temperatures, he was also shivering.
Despite pushing the Dolphins all over the field, the Chargers didn’t really clinch it until Herbert used both his arm and legs — a 10-yard scramble! — on a 79-yard fourth-quarter drive that resulted in a 28-yard Cameron Dicker field goal with 2:40 remaining.
“That drive in the fourth quarter was awesome, that took the air out of them,” said Staley.
It was a drive that marked the end of the game, but should also mark the beginning of a final-month push.
The benefits of a Chargers playoff berth are obvious. The consequences of falling short of the playoffs are also obvious, and not pretty.
Falling short could, and probably would, result in the firing of longtime general manager Tom Telesco. This is his 10th season, and his teams have only made the playoffs twice, and that sort of prolonged inefficiency would spell doom for virtually any general manager in this league.
Telesco struck gold with draft picks such as Herbert, Joey Bosa and Derwin James Jr., but struggled to build the sort of depth that would have allowed the Chargers to withstand some of their numerous injuries.
It could also put Staley’s job at risk. It’s only his second season, but after blowing a couple of games and probably a playoff berth with poor game management in his rookie year, this season his specialty — defense — has routinely
ranked among the league’s bottom three.
That same struggling defense certainly shined on Sunday, holding Tagovailoa to just 10 completions on 28 attempts for just 145 yards. The hot young quarterback looked completely lost.
“Our secondary tonight really answered the call,” said Staley. “Our guys came with the right mindset tonight.”
That mindset must continue.
These next four games are huge.
On this night, anyway, the nutty Bolts were bigger.
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