1987 San Diego Chargers season | |
---|---|
Owner | Alex Spanos |
General manager | Steve Ortmayer |
Head coach | Al Saunders |
Home field | Jack Murphy Stadium |
Results | |
Record | 8–7 |
Division place | 3rd AFC West |
Playoff finish | Did not qualify |
Pro Bowlers | 3 |
AP All-Pros | 3
|
The 1987 San Diego Chargers was the franchise's 18th season in the National Football League (NFL), and the 28th overall. The team improved on their 4–12 record in 1986, finishing 8–7 but missing the playoffs. The strike of 1987 reduced the regular season schedule from sixteen to fifteen games. The Chargers started the season 8–1, with victories over eventual division winners Indianapolis and Cleveland, before collapsing to lose their final six games of the season, narrowly missing the playoffs. All but one of their final six losses came to teams that made the postseason in 1987.
As was the case with all NFL teams in 1987, the Chargers were obliged to field a replacement team for three weeks due to the NFLPA strike. This team, dubbed the 'Re-Chargers' by head coach Al Saunders, was made up primarily of players who had missed the final cut for an NFL squad in preseason. While the regular players picketed outside San Diego's Jack Murphy Stadium, the new Chargers won three games out of three against other replacement teams. After the strike ended, most of the regular Chargers reclaimed their jobs, though some replacements were able to keep their places in the squad beyond the end of the 1987 season.
In the twelve non-strike games, San Diego performed fairly well on defense, with defensive end Lee Williams, linebacker Billy Ray Smith and safety Vencie Glenn among the leaders. The offense, however, struggled increasingly as the season wore on. With the run game contributing little, it fell to quarterback Dan Fouts and the passing attack to produce points, but they were hampered by sacks, turnovers and Fouts' struggle to recapture his mid-career form. It would be his final season in the NFL, having spent his entire fifteen-year career in San Diego. Also retiring after the season was tight end Kellen Winslow, ending his nine-year career with a fifth Pro Bowl berth.
San Diego lost a future Hall of Fame wide receiver during the offseason when Charlie Joiner announced his retirement. [1] Joiner finished as the NFL career leader in receptions (750) and receiving yards (12,146). [2] At 39, he considered himself too old to play on, but switched to a new role as the Chargers' receiving coach. [3] The Chargers also traded their third-leading wide receiver from 1986, [4] Trumaine Johnson, to the Buffalo Bills in exchange for linebacker David Brandon and a 3rd-round draft pick. [5] They also switched backup running backs, trading Buford McGee and two future draft picks to the Rams in exchange for Barry Redden. [6] McGee had scored seven touchdowns in the first nine weeks in 1986, but missed the final seven games after a double knee surgery; [4] Redden was a former 1st-round draft pick, but went on to have only 30 carries during his two years with the Chargers. [7] On the offensive line, the Chargers added Broderick Thompson, a former Cowboy who started only 3 games in 1987, but 76 out of a possible 80 from 1988 to 1992. [8] [9]
An established defensive player also left the active squad when linebacker Woodrow Lowe was placed on injured reserve during preseason; [8] he did not play again, and was eventually released on 11 March 1988. [10] Lowe spent his entire playing career with the Chargers, appearing in 164 out of a possible 165 games from 1976 to 1986. [11] San Diego also added an established linebacker in Chip Banks, who had made the Pro Bowl in four of his five seasons with the Browns, though he had held out while in Cleveland. [12] After playing a single season in San Diego, he did so once more, and never played for the Chargers again after 1987. [13] [14] On the defensive line, San Diego picked up Mike Charles, a nose tackle recently cut by Miami. [15] He went on to start 25 games during three years with the Chargers. [16] Meanwhile, defensive end Earl Wilson, who had started 15 games over the past two seasons, was cut after week 1. [17] He was arrested as part of a drug investigation later the same day, though the Chargers stated the timing was coincidental and his release was based purely on performance. [18] In the defensive backfield, San Diego traded cornerback Wayne Davis for Buffalo safety Martin Bayless. [19] Bayless started every non-strike game for the Chargers in 1987, and went on to start 66 times in total during five seasons in San Diego. [20]
The Chargers held a battle for the placekicker position through training camp and preseason, eventually won by free agent acquisition Vince Abbott, who secured his first NFL job after losing four previous training camp battles. [21] This meant that veteran Rolf Benirschke lost his job after ten years in San Diego; he was traded to Dallas for a draft pick. Benirschke felt he wasn't given a fair chance to compete for the job after attempting no field goals in preseason. He left as the team's leading scorer (766 points), and the third-best kicker in league history by career field goal percentage (70.2%), [22] though his accuracy had diminished through the past four seasons. [23]
Despite having three veteran tight ends on their roster, the Chargers added more depth at that position with their 1st-round draft pick; [24] Rod Bernstine had played at running back in high school, but converted to tight end under the advice of Texas A&M coach Jackie Sherrill. [25] He had only 10 catches as a rookie, and eventually switched back to the running back position. Bernstine would finish his time with the Chargers having scored 19 touchdowns and rushed for over 2,000 yards, with a further 888 receiving yards. [26]
Except for Bernstine, the Chargers received little production from their 1987 draft class, with all but four having left the team within two years. [27] 2nd-round pick Lou Brock was placed on injured reserve with an infection of the lymphatic system after only one game, and released before the following season without playing again. [28] Defensive end Karl Wilson started only twice in two years, [29] while quarterback Mark Vlasic started three times in three years. [30] Wide receiver Jamie Holland started in 12 games and also featured as a kickoff returner, but scored only twice in three seasons with the team. [31]
1987 San Diego Chargers draft | |||||
Round | Pick | Player | Position | College | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | 24 | Rod Bernstine | Tight end | Texas A&M | |
2 | 53 | Lou Brock | Cornerback | USC | |
3 | 59 | Karl Wilson | Defensive end | LSU | |
4 | 88 | Mark Vlasic | Quarterback | Iowa | |
5 | 115 | Nelson Jones | Defensive back | NC State | |
7 | 173 | Jamie Holland | Wide receiver | Ohio State | |
8 | 199 | Joe MacEsker | Tackle | UTEP | |
8 | 204 | Michael "Ron" Brown | Linebacker | USC | |
9 | 226 | Thomas Wilcher | Running back | Michigan | |
10 | 256 | Anthony Anderson | Defensive back | Grambling State | Recalled to Chargers for strike games |
11 | 284 | Joe Goebel | Center | UCLA | Recalled to Chargers for strike games |
12 | 310 | Marcus Greenwood | Running back | UCLA | |
Made roster * Made at least one Pro Bowl during career |
Front office
Head coaches
Offensive coaches
| Defensive coaches
Special teams coaches
|
For the second consecutive season, the Chargers opened their preseason schedule by shutting out the Cowboys. They allowed only 11 first downs and 208 yards, while scoring on a Mark Herrmann touchdown pass to Lionel James and runs by Frank Middleton and Kevin Scott. [43] In the following game, three different quarterbacks (Herrmann, Rick Neuheisel and Vlasic) threw touchdowns to three different receivers (Tim Spencer, Bernstine and Holland). The last of these put San Diego ahead 21–20 with 2:47 to play, but the Rams drove into position for a game-winning field goal with four seconds left. [44]
Starting quarterback Dan Fouts hadn't played at all in the first two games. He did so at San Francisco, completing only 3 of 11 passes for 14 yards while getting sacked three times in a quarter of action, but leading the Chargers to their only points, an Abbott field goal. [45] Fouts played into the 3rd quarter in the final game, leading three touchdown drives. He threw a 64-yard touchdown pass to Wes Chandler and a 1-yarder to Sam Claphan on a tackle-eligible play, before Spencer scored his second touchdown of the preseason on a 4-yard run. [46]
Week | Date | Opponent | Result | Record | Venue | Attendance |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | August 15 | Dallas Cowboys | W 29–0 | 1–0 | Jack Murphy Stadium | 48,020 |
2 | August 23 | Los Angeles Rams | L 21–23 | 1–1 | Jack Murphy Stadium | 45,433 |
3 | August 27 | at San Francisco 49ers | L 3–17 | 1–2 | Candlestick Park | 52,733 |
4 | September 4 | New York Jets | W 30–6 | 2–2 | Jack Murphy Stadium | 45,757 |
San Diego lost their opening game and won the next, leaving them at 1–1 heading into the players' strike (see following section). Their replacement players won all three of their games, before the regulars returned and extended the Charger winning streak to eight games in total, including seven wins by six points or fewer. At 8–1, San Diego had the best record in the NFL, and a two-game lead in the AFC West. [48] However, they lost their remaining six games and missed the playoffs, being outscored 162–61 during the losing streak. As of 2022 [update] , the 1987 Chargers remain the only post-merger team to miss the playoffs after starting 8–1. [49] On a 2012 episode of NFL Top 10 , theirs was named the #5 worst single season collapse in NFL history. [50]
A weak offense increasingly hampered the Chargers as the season wore on – they scored only seven offensive touchdowns in their final eight games. [51] They finished the season ranked 27th out of 28 teams for points scored, and 21st for yards gained, while converting a league-worst 30% of their third downs. [32] Fouts struggled with injuries, missing two non-strike games, and posted a passer rating of 70.0, below the league average of 75.2 and his worst for 12 years. [52] [53] Chandler led the team with 617 receiving yards, while James, Kellen Winslow and Gary Anderson had over 500 each. [54] Winslow's 53 catches were the second most in the league for a tight end, earning him a fifth Pro Bowl appearance in his ninth and final season, though his yards per catch dropped to a career-low 9.8. [55] While San Diego's passing yardage was the 8th-best in the league, their rushing yardage ranked 27th, and their average yards-per-carry of 3.3 ranked dead last. [56] Curtis Adams led the team, but his 343 yards ranked only 44th in the league. [57]
The defense was middling, finishing 15th in the NFL for both points conceded and yards allowed. This represented an improvements on recent years – San Diego had ranked 23rd or worse in both categories for six consecutive seasons. [58] They were stronger against the pass than the run (4th-ranked vs. 24th-ranked). [32] Defensive end Leslie O'Neal, who had been named AP Defensive Rookie of the Year the previous season, missed all of 1987 with an injury. [59] In his absence, the team's sack total dropped from 62 to 45; Lee Williams repeated as sack leader, though his total dropped from 15 in 16 games to 8 in 12 games. [60] [32] Linebacker Billy Ray Smith led the team with 5 interceptions (he also had 3 sacks), while safety Vencie Glenn was second with 4, one of which he returned 103 yards for a touchdown. [32] On special teams, James ranked 5th in the league with 12.5 yards per punt return, including a touchdown, while Anderson was 17th with 19.7 yards per kickoff return. [61] New kicker Abbott made 13 of his first 17 field goals, but missed his last five attempts and finished 25th in the league with a 59.1% conversion rate. [51] [62] Punter Ralf Mojsiejenko averaged 42.9 yards per kick, earning the lone Pro Bowl nomination of his career. [63]
The 1987 NFL season began under the shadow of a potential National Football League Players Association (NFLPA) strike, with the collective bargaining agreement set to expire and talks stalling as the players pushed for improved free agency rights. [64] The NFLPA set a date of September 22 to strike, two weeks into the season; in response, the owners threatened to field replacement teams stocked with free agents. [65] With this possibility in mind, San Diego was one of several teams who offered optional agreements to players they waived in the build-up to the season, allowing them to rejoin the Chargers in the event of a strike. [66]
With no agreement having been reached, the strike went ahead as planned. Chandler, the Chargers' player representative, described the situation as disappointing, but derided existing free agency restrictions as a "form of slavery". [67] Head coach Al Saunders sympathized with the fans and stated that he could see both sides of the disagreement. He noted that it was his job to coach replacement players if instructed to do so by the league. At a meeting with his players on the eve of the strike, Saunders encouraged them to continue to stay in shape; the players were in agreement, and scheduled group training sessions at the University of California, San Diego. [68] All 45 regular Chargers refused to play for the team once the strike began. This included Fouts, who was not a member of the NFLPA union and stated that he did not consider himself to be on strike. He declined to play on a team stocked with replacement players, noting that he would be risking injury behind an inexperienced offensive line. [69]
The NFL cancelled its slate of week 3 games, and proceeded to form teams of non-union players to replace the regulars from week 4 onwards; [70] director of football operations Steve Ortmayer was primarily responsible for building the Chargers' replacement squad. On September 22, they announced the first 18 players in their new team, including eight they had cut in preseason. [71] By the following day's first practice session, the squad had grown to 38, and 5 more appeared for a later session. [72] While many of the new players had little or no NFL experience, cornerback Elvis Patterson had won the Super Bowl with the New York Giants; [73] he had been released one game into the 1987 season after being badly beaten on a touchdown catch by Chicago Bears receiver Willie Gault. Patterson described his signing as a second chance, and expressed optimism that he could keep his place after the strike was over. [74] At quarterback, the Chargers quickly signed Mike Kelley, formerly of the USFL, but since they also hoped to add someone familiar with their offensive scheme they approached Rick Neuheisel and Tom Flick, both of whom they had cut in training camp. Neuheisel struggled with the choice: on September 22, he decided to play, but changed his mind through loyalty to the striking players, and announced on September 23 that he would continue his studies at USC Law School instead. [75] On September 28, Neuheisel met with both Charger officials and striking players to try and get both sides of the story; [76] the following day, he reaffirmed his decision not to play. [77] Finally, he agreed to sign with the Chargers on September 30, noting that some established NFL veterans had crossed the picket lines. [78]
Many of the established players responded with hostility to their replacements. A group of 39 striking Chargers established a picket line at the new players' first practice session. They gathered on a hill overlooking the facility and jeered the performers throughout; Patterson was greeted with cries of "Where's Willie Gault?" [79] Chandler stated that the real players were picketing, and their replacements were "stunt men". Linebacker Gary Plummer said that he couldn't blame the replacements for taking advantage of the situation, but that it was the picketers' job to give them a hard time. [79] Saunders dubbed his new team the "Re-Chargers"; he acknowledged that they were below the regulars in terms of quality, but said, "there's still the thrill of coaching and there's still the challenge." [80] Going into their first replacement game (week 4), the Chargers had seventeen players with NFL experience on their squad while their opponents, the Cincinnati Bengals, had two. [78]
With the strike continuing, teams of mostly non-union players contested the NFL's slates of games in weeks 4 and 5; the replacement Chargers won both games, with none of the regulars involved. As the strike proceeded, increasing numbers of established stars crossing the picket lines; with the defections weakening their position, the NFLPA relented and called off the strike after 24 days, on October 15. This was one day too late for players to report for duty for week 6, giving the replacements one more game before the majority of them would lose their jobs. [81] The regular Chargers turned up at Jack Murphy Stadium on October 16 ready to work; they were told by Ortmayer that they could use the club's facilities, but would not be paid or permitted to play that week, whereupon they left the building. [82] One exception was defensive lineman Terry Unrein, who had contacted club management shortly before the deadline and indicated that he would cross the picket line. Two other players (Mack Moore and Jeffery Dale) re-joined the team but were listed on injured reserve and unable to play, so Unrein was the lone strike-breaker to appear for the Chargers in week 6. [83] Despite their opponents (the Los Angeles Raiders) having several regulars available, the Chargers won again to complete a clean sweep of their strike games. [84]
All three wins came on the road, and the Chargers trailed at halftime in each game. Neuheisel and Kelley split time at quarterback, with one replacing the other in each game – they finished with 672 combined yards (367 for Neuheisel, 305 for Kelley). [32] The top receiver was Al Williams, with 12 catches for 247 yards and a touchdown; his yardage total was the 8th-highest in the league during the strike games. [85] No rushers gained 100 yards or more, with Keyvan Jenkins' 88 yards leading the team. [32] San Diego scored 50 points during the three games, 21st in the league; by contrast, they conceded only 39 points, 5th fewest in the league. [86] [87] Notable performers included Patterson, whose 75-yard interception return touchdown beat the Raiders in the final minute, [84] and Blaise Winter, whose 4 sacks were tied for 3rd-most in the league during the strike games. [88]
A day after their non-union replacements beat the Raiders, the regular Chargers returned for their first practice at Jack Murphy Stadium. [82] While Chandler described practising with the replacements as the biggest challenge for the returning Chargers, alternate player representative Gill Byrd praised their performances and stated that he expected no animosity between the two groups. [89] When the Chargers beat the Kansas City Chiefs 42–21 in their first post-strike game, Chandler and Fouts were among several players who credited the result to team unity and the regular practice sessions the striking players had run together. [90]
The Chargers quickly trimmed their list of non-union players once the regulars returned. On 20 October, they cut 35 replacement players, retaining 19 on their active roster and three more on injured reserve. [91] A further seven were waived the following week, together with four members of the pre-strike squad, as NFL teams were given increasingly tight squad limits to meet. [92] By 14 November, the pre-strike limit of 45 players had been restored, with nine replacement Chargers remaining. [93] Patterson won a starting role in 1987, [94] and remained with the team through the 1989 season, [95] while Les Miller and Joe Phillips both started games for the Chargers as late as 1990. [96] [97]
Click "show" to expand the table below, which displays brief career notes on the 50 replacement Chargers who featured in at least one strike game (Weeks 4, 5 and 6). Players who were on the Chargers' replacement squad but did not feature in any games are not included; neither is Unrein, a union player who crossed the picket lines and played in week 6. Players are taken to have pre-strike or post-strike experience in a league if they featured in at least one regular season or postseason game.
Replacement players | ||||||||||||
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Name | No. | Position | College | Prior experience | Strike games | After strike | Career notes | |||||
NFL | CFL | USFL | Week 4 | Week 5 | Week 6 | NFL | CFL | |||||
Anthony Anderson | 24 | DB | Grambling State | Rookie in 1987, drafted by Chargers in 10th round, [98] waived on 29 August. [99] Signed to strike team on 23 September. [72] Credited with half a sack in week 6. [100] Cut on 20 October. [91] | ||||||||
Monte Bennett | 69 | DE | Kansas State | Started 6 games for the 1981 New Orleans Saints as an undrafted rookie, [101] released before the 1982 season. [102] Played for the USFL's Oakland Invaders from 1983–85. [101] Signed by the Chargers on 28 May 1987, [103] but cut on 7 September. [8] Signed to strike team on 23 September. [71] Cut again after strike games, on 20 October. [91] | ||||||||
Ed Berry | 38 | CB | Utah State | 7th-round draft pick; played for the 1986 Green Bay Packers as a rookie; [104] cut on 7 September 1987. [105] Signed to Chargers' strike team on 22 September. [71] Missed week 6 with hamstring injury. [106] Cut on 20 October. [91] Played in the CFL from 1988–96, [104] scored in the 1991 Grey Cup win; [107] won second Canadian title in 1996. [108] | ||||||||
Carl Brazley | 48 | S | Western Kentucky | Spent seven years in the CFL (1980–86). [109] Signed for the Chargers on 28 May 1987, [110] but cut on 26 August after an error in a preseason game. [111] Signed to strike team on 23 September. [71] Had an interception in week 5. [112] Cut on 20 October. [91] Returned to Canada for a further five seasons (1988–92). [109] Grey Cup winner in 1983 and 1991. [113] | ||||||||
Bruce Davis | 83 | WR | Baylor | 2nd-round pick for Cleveland in 1984 draft; used primarily as a kickoff returner in his rookie year. [114] Waived on 30 August 1985. [115] Released by the CFL's Calgary Stampeders on 3 June 1987 and the Chargers on 26 August. [116] [117] Signed to strike team on 23 September. [72] Registered no statistics during his lone appearance. [114] Cut on 20 October. [91] | ||||||||
David Diaz-Infante | 63 | C | San Jose State | Undrafted rookie in 1987, [118] waived by Chargers on 29 August. [99] Signed to strike team on 22 September. [71] Was long snapper for a game-winning field goal in week 4. [119] Subsequently played in the WLAF, CFL, NFL and XFL. [118] Won two Super Bowls (XXXII and XXXIII) with the Broncos as their long snapper. [120] | ||||||||
Chuck Faucette | 57 | LB | Maryland | Rookie in 1987, drafted by Giants in the 10th round, [121] waived on 7 September. [122] Signed to Chargers' strike team on 2 October. [123] Missed third strike game with knee injury. [106] Retained on injured reserve list after strike ended. [38] Started the first eight games for San Diego in 1988, [121] but a fractured vertebra in his neck ended his career. [124] | ||||||||
Greg Feasel | 67 | T | Abilene Christian | Cut in preseason by three different NFL teams [125] before playing for the USFL's Denver Gold for three seasons (1983–85). [126] Played in 15 games for the 1986 Green Bay Packers, then traded on 31 August 1987 to the Oilers, [127] who waived him a week later. [128] After strike games, cut by Chargers on 27 October. [92] | ||||||||
Kevin Ferguson | 87 | TE | Virginia | Undrafted rookie in 1987, signed by Chargers on 25 July. [129] Waived on 26 August. [117] Signed to strike team on 23 September. [71] Caught no passes in his three games, cut on 20 October and did not play again. [91] [130] | ||||||||
Jeff Gaffney | 4 | K | Virginia | Undrafted rookie in 1987, signed by Chargers on 27 May. [110] Lost training camp battle to Abbott. [131] Signed to strike team on 22 September. [71] Made a late game-winning field goal in week 4. [119] Overall, made 3 of 6 field goals and 4 of 5 extra points; cut on 20 October and did not play again. [91] [132] | ||||||||
Joe Goebel | 68 | C | UCLA | Rookie in 1987, drafted by Chargers in 10th round, [98] Retired on 27 July to become a pilot, without having attended training camp. [133] Signed to strike team on 28 September. [76] Cut on 20 October. [91] | ||||||||
Willard Goff | 76 | DT | West Texas A&M | Featured in 7 games for the 1985 Atlanta Falcons as an undrafted rookie; [134] waived on 26 August 1986. [135] Spent time with both the Raiders and 49ers during the 1987 preseason. [136] Signed to Chargers' strike team on 22 September; [71] cut on 20 October and did not play again. [91] [134] | ||||||||
Walt Harris | 46 | S | Stanford | Played minor league baseball in 1986. [137] On the Chargers' roster during the 1987 preseason, but cut on 7 September. [8] Signed to strike team on 22 September. [71] Recovered a fumble in week 6. [138] Cut on 27 October. [92] Returned to minor league baseball for three more seasons (1988–90). [137] | ||||||||
Harry Holt | 85 | TE | Arizona | Two CFL All-Star nominations in five season with BC Lions. [139] Signed for Cleveland in 1983; [140] caught 63 passes for 837 yards and 5 touchdowns; [141] released on 12 August 1987. [142] Briefly on Packers' roster. [139] [143] Signed to Chargers' strike team on 29 September. [144] Caught 7 passes for 56 yards. [141] Cut on 20 October. [91] | ||||||||
Darrel Hopper | 47 | CB | USC | Undrafted rookie in 1985. [145] Preseason cut for Seattle in 1985 and Edmonton in 1987. [146] Signed by Chargers on 29 July; [147] waived on 26 August. [117] Signed to strike team on 22 September. [71] Cut on 27 October, [92] but briefly returned for one further game (Week 11). [148] [145] Played for CFL's Ottawa Rough Riders in 1989–90. [149] | ||||||||
Mike Hudson | 28 | S | Oklahoma State | Undrafted rookie in 1987. [150] Spent time with Tampa Bay in training camp, but released on 27 July. [151] Failed physical with Minnesota due to pneumonia. [152] Signed to Chargers' strike team on 23 September. [72] Cut on 20 October. [91] | ||||||||
Mike Humiston | 50 | LB | Weber State | Made the 1981 Bills' squad as an undrafted rookie. [153] Waived in 1982; [154] was with the Colts from 1982–84, but missed all of 1983 due to injury. [153] [155] Waived on 20 August 1985. [156] Joined the Arizona Outlaws but did not play for them as the USFL ceased operations in 1986. [157] Was a deputy sheriff before being signed to the Chargers' strike team on 28 September 1987. [158] Retained for a month after the strike, recovering a key fumble in week 9. [157] Waived on 25 November. [159] | ||||||||
Brian Ingram | 52 | LB | Tennessee | 4th-round pick for New England in 1982 draft; played little during his first four seasons. [160] Missed entire 1986 season with knee injury. [161] Waived by Patriots on 7 September 1987. [162] Signed to Chargers' strike team on 28 September. [76] Sustained a hamstring injury in week 4; [163] placed on injured reserve, then released on 25 November. [164] | ||||||||
Jeff Jackson | 52 | LB | Auburn | 8th-round pick for Atlanta in 1984 draft; [165] featured in 27 games, then waived on 18 August 1986. [166] Signed by Chargers on 23 April 1987; [167] cut on 7 September. [8] Signed to strike team on 23 September. [72] Credited with a sack in week 6. [165] Retained through the 1988 season totalling 25 appearances and 7 starts; waived on 29 August 1989. [168] Played in CFL from 1991–93. [169] | ||||||||
Keyvan Jenkins | 39 | FB | UNLV | Spent three years in the CFL (1984–86). [170] Signed for the Chargers on 12 May 1987, [171] but waived on 26 August. [117] Signed to strike team on 23 September. [72] Rushed 22 times for 88 yards, and caught 8 passes for 40 yards. [172] Featured in two games for the 1988 Kansas City Chiefs, but eventually returned to Canada for a further five seasons (1990–94). [170] Grey Cup winner in 1985 and 1992. [173] | ||||||||
James Johnson | 57 | LB | San Diego State | 4th-round draft pick for the 1986 Lions; featured in 11 games as a rookie, but started none. [174] Waived on 1 September 1987. [175] Joined San Francisco strike team and played for 49ers in week 4. [176] [174] Traded to San Diego on 13 October and played for Chargers in week 6. [177] [174] Cut on 20 October. [91] | ||||||||
Mike Kelley | 10 | QB | Georgia Tech | 6th-round pick for Atlanta in 1982 draft; cut in preseason. [178] [179] Spent three seasons in the USFL (1983–85), mostly with Memphis Showboats, and 1986 in the CFL. [178] Signed to Chargers' strike team on 23 September. [72] Passed for 305 yards in total, with one touchdown. [180] Cut on 20 October. [91] Joined CFL's Memphis Mad Dogs in 1995; cut in preseason and retired. [181] | ||||||||
Randy Kirk | 94 | LB | San Diego State | Undrafted rookie in 1987, [182] waived by Giants on 1 September. [183] Signed to strike team on 22 September. [71] Had the only start and only sack of his career in week 6. [182] Stayed with the Chargers through the 1988 season and returned for part of 1991; overall, played in 157 games for six different NFL teams in a 13-year career (1987–99), serving mainly as a long snapper. [184] | ||||||||
Frank Middleton | 30 | RB | Florida A&M | Undrafted, preseason cut for 1983 Seahawks. [185] [186] Played for Colts in 1984 and 1985. [187] Preseason cut for Buccaneers in 1986. [188] Joined Chargers in 1987, waived on 8 September. [189] Signed to strike team on 28 September. [76] Rushed for 61 yards and a touchdown in week 4, but only 13 yards afterwards. [185] Cut on 20 October. [91] | ||||||||
Les Miller | 75 | DE | Fort Hays State | Undrafted rookie in 1987, [96] cut from Saints' squad on 7 September. [190] Worked in a factory for $5 per hour before being signed to the Chargers' strike team; retained his place on the team after the strike ended, and scored on a fumble recovery the following week. [191] Stayed with the Chargers through the 1990 season, and returned to San Diego for part of 1994. Overall, had 152 appearances, 51 starts and 20 sacks during a 12-year NFL career. [96] | ||||||||
Pat Miller | 52 | LB | Florida | 5th-round pick for 49ers in 1986 draft; cut in preseason. [192] Joined Raiders in 1987 offseason, but cut on 7 September. [193] Signed to Chargers' strike team on 13 October. [177] After strike, released on 27 October. [194] Re-signed by Chargers on 22 February 1988; [195] played in 8 games that season. [196] Played for Ottawa in 1989–90. [197] | ||||||||
Tim Moffett | 86 | WR | Mississippi | 3rd-round pick for Raiders in 1985 draft. Caught 11 passes in two seasons; [198] waived on 1 September 1987. [199] Signed to strike team on 23 September. [72] Totalled 5 catches for 80 yards and a touchdown. [198] Cut on 20 October. [91] | ||||||||
Calvin Muhammad | 81 | WR | Texas Southern | 12th-round pick for Raiders in 1982 draft; [200] won Super Bowl XVIII in his second year. [201] Traded to Washington and posted over 700 receiving yards in only 10 games, [202] [200] but less productive in 1985. [203] Spent part of 1987 in Toronto while struggling with injuries; released on 18 September. [204] Signed to strike team on 23 September. [72] Caught 2 passes for 87 yards. [200] Cut on 20 October. [91] | ||||||||
Rick Neuheisel | 7 | QB | UCLA | Started a total of 32 games for the USFL's San Antonio Gunslingers over 1984 and 1985. [205] Joined Chargers on 24 April 1987; [206] cut on 7 September. [8] Initially declined offer to join replacement team, [72] but signed on 30 September. [207] Threw for 367 yards, with a touchdown and an interception; also ran for a touchdown. [208] Cut on 27 October. [92] | ||||||||
Elvis Patterson | 34 | CB | Kansas | Undrafted free agent signed to 1984 Giants roster; [95] started on their Super Bowl-winning team two seasons later. [73] Cut by New York after their 1987 opener. [209] Signed to Chargers' strike team on 22 September. [71] Scored game-winning touchdown in week 6. [84] Remained in San Diego through the 1989 season; [95] finished career in 1993 with Super Bowl XXVIII-winning Cowboys. [210] | ||||||||
Duane Pettitt | 93 | DE | San Diego | Undrafted rookie in 1987, signed by Chargers on 5 May. [211] Waived on 26 August. [117] Signed to strike team on 22 September. [71] Cut on 20 October. [91] Named one of the league's best replacement defensive linemen by The St. Lucie News-Tribune. [212] | ||||||||
Joe Phillips | 75 | DE | SMU | 4th-round pick for Vikings in 1986 draft; started one game as a rookie. [97] Cut on 7 September 1987. [213] Signed to Chargers' strike team on 23 September. [72] Had two sacks during the strike games. [214] Retained after the strike ended. [215] Stayed with Chargers through 1991 season; went on to have 14-year NFL career, with 200 appearances, 152 starts and 24+1⁄2 sacks. [97] | ||||||||
Jeff Powell | 31 | RB | Tennessee | 4th-round draft pick for the 1986 Bears; [216] cut on 19 August. [217] Signed for Chargers on 12 March 1987; [218] cut on 18 August. [219] Signed to strike team on 22 September. [71] Had no carries in his single game. [216] Cut on 20 October. [91] | ||||||||
Stacy Price | 53 | LB | Arkansas State | Undrafted rookie in 1987, cut from Ottawa's squad in preseason. [220] Signed to Chargers' strike team on 23 September. [72] Cut after strike games, on 20 October. [91] | ||||||||
Joe Prokop | 8 | P | Cal Poly-Pomona | Undrafted in 1984; first started for the 1985 Packers. [221] Cut midseason after disappointing performances. [222] Signed for Chargers on 13 April 1987; [223] cut on 15 September. [224] Signed to strike team on 22 September. [71] Punted 17 times at an average of 38.5 yards. [225] Cut on 20 October. [91] Punted for four different teams from 1988–92. [225] | ||||||||
Tag Rome | 82 | WR | ULM | Played for two different CFL teams from 1984–86. [226] Signed for Chargers on 12 March 1987; [218] waived on 29 August. [99] Signed to strike team on 28 September. [76] Caught 6 passes for 49 yards. [227] Cut on 20 October. [91] | ||||||||
Dan Rosado | 66 | G | Northern Illinois | Graduated from college in 1979, but didn't play professional football until 1985 with the USFL's Houston Gamblers. [228] Cut by the Dolphins in preseason in both 1986 and 1987. [229] Signed to Chargers' strike team on 23 September. [72] Retained and played in week 7, then moved to injured reserve. [38] Played in 12 games in 1988, starting in 11. [230] Cut on 26 August 1989. [231] | ||||||||
Curtis Rouse | 77 | T | Chattanooga | 11th-round pick for Minnesota in 1982 draft; played in 58 games and started 29 during five seasons with the Vikings. [232] Cut on 7 September 1987. [233] Signed to Chargers' strike team on 30 September. [234] Played in seven further games after the strike. [232] Traded to Atlanta in 1988 due to a lack of fitness; the Falcons cut him on 11 August, and he did not play again. [235] | ||||||||
Martin Sartin | 35 | RB | Long Beach State | Undrafted rookie in 1986; [236] signed for the Raiders but spent the entire year on injured reserve; [237] cut on 1 September. [238] Signed to Chargers' strike team on 23 September. [72] Had 19 carries for 52 yards and a touchdown. [236] Cut on 20 October. [91] Played for the CFL's Hamilton Tiger Cats in 1988. [239] | ||||||||
King Simmons | 41 | S | Texas Tech | 12th-round pick for Browns in 1986 draft; [240] Spent the entire year on injured reserve; [241] cut on 1 September 1987. [242] Signed to Chargers' strike team on 23 September. [72] Had 1+1⁄2 sacks across the three games. [240] Cut on 20 October. [91] Played for the CFL's Hamilton Tiger Cats in 1988. [243] | ||||||||
Tony Simmons | 97 | DE | Tennessee | 12th round pick for the Chargers in 1985; featured in 13 games during his rookie season. [244] Spent 1986 on injured reserve; [245] waived on 29 August 1987. [99] Signed to strike team on 23 September. [72] Credited with a sack in week 6. [244] Cut on 20 October. [91] Played for BC Lions in 1989 and 1990. [246] | ||||||||
Emil Slovacek | 72 | T | Stephen F. Austin | Undrafted rookie in 1987, signed for the Chargers on 5 May. [211] Cut on 26 August. [117] Signed to the strike team in September, [247] but deactivated before the third game. [248] | ||||||||
Todd Spencer | 32 | RB | USC | Undrafted; signed by Steelers and used mainly as a kickoff returner in 1984 and 1985. [249] Allowed to become a free agent in February 1986; did not play the following season. [250] Signed to strike team on 23 September. [72] Rushed 14 times for 24 yards and caught 2 passes for 47 yards. [249] Cut on 20 October. [91] | ||||||||
John Stadnik | 65 | C | Western Illinois | Undrafted in the NFL; cut by Seahawks on 18 July 1983. [251] Played for two different Arizona-based USFL franchises in 1984 and 1985. [252] Signed for Chargers on 13 April 1987; [253] waived on 29 August. [99] Signed to strike team on 23 September. [72] Cut again on 20 October. [91] | ||||||||
Anthony Steels | 45 | RB | Nebraska | Played for the USFL's Breakers franchise in 1983 and 1984. [254] Played for both the Chargers (who placed him on waivers midseason) [255] and the Bills in 1985, acting mainly as a kickoff returner. [256] Cut by Bills on 11 August 1986. [257] Signed to Chargers' strike team on 23 September. [72] Registered 1 rush for 3 yards and 1 catch for 4 yards. [256] Cut on 20 October. [91] | ||||||||
Johnny Taylor | 55 | LB | Hawaii | Played in 2 late-season games for the 1984 Atlanta Falcons as an undrafted rookie and 15 the following season. [258] [259] Cut midseason in 1986 and signed by Miami; [260] placed on injured reserve after one game and released soon afterwards. [261] Signed to Chargers' strike team on 23 September. [72] Retained for four games after strike; [259] injured in the last of these. [42] Released on 22 August 1988. [262] | ||||||||
Dwight Wheeler | 71 | G | Tennessee State | 4th-round pick for New England in 1978 draft; spent six years with the Patriots, then featured in four games for the 1984 Raiders. [263] Cut in preseason by Los Angeles for three straight years (1985–87). [264] Signed by Chargers on 18 September 1987, before their week 2 game, [264] but featured only in the strike games. [263] Cut on 27 October. [92] Played for the Raiders in 1987–88. [263] | ||||||||
Al Williams | 84 | WR | Nevada | Undrafted; [265] played for the USFL's Outlaws franchise for two seasons (1984–85). [266] Made 1986 Lions squad, but cut midseason without playing. [267] Waived by both Chargers and Saints in 1987. [268] Signed to Chargers' strike team on 23 September. [72] Caught 12 passes for 247 yards and a touchdown. [265] Remained on the roster until August 1988, [269] but did not play for the Chargers again. [265] Played for the CFL's Hamilton Tiger Cats in 1989. [266] | ||||||||
Blaise Winter | 96 | NT | Syracuse | 2nd-round draft pick for the 1984 Colts; voted to All-Rookie team. [270] Missed all of 1985 and the start of 1986 through injury; [271] cut midseason and signed by Chargers, playing four games. [272] Waived on 29 August 1987. [99] Signed to strike team on 23 September. [72] Posted 4 sacks in three games, then placed on injured reserve and traded to the Packers, [273] with whom he spent 1988–90. Returned to San Diego for 1992–94. Finished 11-year NFL career with 300 tackles and 21 sacks. [274] | ||||||||
Ken Zachary | 33 | RB | Oklahoma State | Undrafted in the NFL; spent 1986 and 1987 with the CFL's Hamilton Tiger Cats. [275] Dropped to the practice squad during his second season. [276] Signed to Chargers' strike team on 23 September. [72] Rushed once for 3 yards (losing a fumble), and returned a kickoff for 2 yards. [275] Cut on 20 October. [91] Returned to Hamilton for one further season (1988). [275] |
Week | Date | Opponent | Result | Record | Venue | Attendance | Recap |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | September 13 | at Kansas City Chiefs | L 13–20 | 0–1 | Arrowhead Stadium | 56,940 | Recap |
2 | September 20 | St. Louis Cardinals | W 28–24 | 1–1 | Jack Murphy Stadium | 47,988 | Recap |
3 | September 27 | Seattle Seahawks | cancelled | 1–1 | Jack Murphy Stadium | NFL Players Strike | |
4 | October 4 | at Cincinnati Bengals | W 10–9 | 2–1 | Riverfront Stadium | 26,209 | Recap |
5 | October 11 | at Tampa Bay Buccaneers | W 17–13 | 3–1 | Tampa Stadium | 23,873 | Recap |
6 | October 18 | at Los Angeles Raiders | W 23–17 | 4–1 | Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum | 23,541 | Recap |
7 | October 25 | Kansas City Chiefs | W 42–21 | 5–1 | Jack Murphy Stadium | 47,972 | Recap |
8 | November 1 | Cleveland Browns | W 27–24 (OT) | 6–1 | Jack Murphy Stadium | 55,381 | Recap |
9 | November 8 | at Indianapolis Colts | W 16–13 | 7–1 | Hoosier Dome | 60,459 | Recap |
10 | November 15 | Los Angeles Raiders | W 16–14 | 8–1 | Jack Murphy Stadium | 60,639 | Recap |
11 | November 22 | at Seattle Seahawks | L 3–34 | 8–2 | Kingdome | 62,444 | Recap |
12 | November 29 | Denver Broncos | L 17–31 | 8–3 | Jack Murphy Stadium | 61,880 | Recap |
13 | December 6 | at Houston Oilers | L 18–33 | 8–4 | Houston Astrodome | 31,714 | Recap |
14 | December 13 | Pittsburgh Steelers | L 16–20 | 8–5 | Jack Murphy Stadium | 51,605 | Recap |
15 | December 20 | Indianapolis Colts | L 7–20 | 8–6 | Jack Murphy Stadium | 46,211 | Recap |
16 | December 27 | at Denver Broncos | L 0–24 | 8–7 | Mile High Stadium | 21,189 | Recap |
Note: Intra-division opponents are in bold text.
All game reports use the Pro Football Researchers' gamebook archive as a source. [277]
Period | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | Total |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Chargers | 0 | 0 | 3 | 10 | 13 |
Chiefs | 3 | 7 | 0 | 10 | 20 |
at Arrowhead Stadium, Kansas City, Missouri
Game information | ||
---|---|---|
|
San Diego gave up a late kickoff return touchdown after rallying from a 10-point 4th-quarter deficit. [278] The Chargers turned the ball over twice in the opening eight minutes; James fumbled a punt and Fouts threw an interception to Deron Cherry, with the Chiefs converting the second turnover into a field goal. In the 2nd quarter, the Chargers reached a 2nd and 6 at the Kansas City 14, but Cherry produced another interception, this time in the end zone. Kansas City then drove 80 yards and extended their lead, with rookie Christian Okoye breaking away on a 43-yard touchdown run. The Chiefs led 10–0 at halftime. [279]
The Chargers opened the 3rd quarter with a 14-play, 72-yard drive, featuring a 27-yard catch by Winslow. They reached a 1st and goal at the 2, but were pushed back by a Dennis McKnight false start, and had to settle for an Abbott field goal. Abbott missed from 44 yards out on the next Charger drive, and Kansas City responded with a successful kick by Nick Lowery. Midway through the final quarter, San Diego got their lone touchdown of the game when Anderson caught a Fouts pass near the right sideline and barely stayed in bounds before completing a 34-yard touchdown catch. Two plays later, Plummer intercepted Todd Blackledge, setting his team up at the opposition 30. The Chargers drove to the 5, but Anderson was ruled out of bounds in the end zone on an attempted 3rd-down catch, and they settled for a game-tying field goal. Paul Palmer, another Chiefs rookie, returned the ensuing kickoff untouched for a 95-yard touchdown with 3:19 to play. The Chargers then went three-and-out. They nearly had one more opportunity, but Danny Walters was unable to come up with a tipped Blackledge pass, which was instead caught by Stephone Paige for the first down that allowed Kansas City to run out the clock. [279]
Smith had 2 of the Chargers' 4 sacks. They allowed only 58 net passing yards, compared to their own total of 258, but lost the turnover count 4–1. James finished with 6 catches for 100 yards. [280]
Period | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | Total |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Cardinals | 0 | 0 | 10 | 14 | 24 |
Chargers | 14 | 14 | 0 | 0 | 28 |
at Jack Murphy Stadium, San Diego, California
Game information | ||
---|---|---|
|
After taking a 28-point halftime lead, the Chargers barely hung on to win thanks to a late drop at the goal line. [281] The Cardinals went three-and-out on the game's opening possession, and James profited from a block by Glenn en route to an 81-yard punt return touchdown. Three plays later, Neil Lomax fumbled the snap, and Smith recovered at the Cardinal 15. Anderson scored four plays later, and it was 14–0 only 5:24 into the game. Later, Fouts led an 11-play, 80-yard touchdown drive, capped by a 26-yard touchdown pass to Chandler. Late in the half, Smith intercepted Lomax, and James scored from the 7 on the next play. St. Louis reached the Charger 5 before running out of time, leaving the Chargers up 28–0 at the break. [282]
Anderson had a 25-yard run and a 17-yard catch on the opening possession of the second half, but he then fumbled a pitch on 1st and goal from the 10, and St. Louis recovered. The Cardinals were forced to punt, but Fouts was soon intercepted in his own territory to begin the comeback. St. Louis scored 24 points on four consecutive possession, with Lomax throwing three touchdowns. San Diego answered with a punt each time, the final one of which was run back to the Charger 32 with 1:15 to play. Catches by Jay Novacek and Earl Ferrell moved the ball to the 5 yard line, from where Lomax threw three incompletions, bring up 4th and goal with 20 seconds to play. Due to an error by Smith, Ferrell was open to the right, but he dropped Lomax's pass at the goal line and the Chargers held on to win. Despite the victory, the home crowd booed the team off the field. [281]
Lomax was sacked by five different players, but passed for 457 yards, then a record against the Chargers. [283] San Diego only ran 56 plays, against 86 by the Cardinals. [284]
All week 3 games were cancelled due to the NFLPA strike. [285]
Period | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | Total |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Chargers | 0 | 0 | 0 | 10 | 10 |
Bengals | 7 | 2 | 0 | 0 | 9 |
at Riverfront Stadium, Cincinnati, Ohio
Game information | ||
---|---|---|
|
The replacement Chargers won their first game after being held scoreless for over three quarters. [119] Todd Spencer fumbled on their first offensive play, though he recovered the ball himself. On the next possession, a 23-yard catch by Al Williams positioned them for a 30-yard field goal attempt that Jeff Gaffney missed wide left. San Diego soon moved back into Bengals territory, but Ken Zachary lost a fumble. Marc Logan then had a 51-yard run, leading to a Cincinnati touchdown two plays later. In the 2nd quarter, the Chargers had a 3rd and 12 from their own 18 and Neuheisel was sacked back in the end zone for a safety. Darrel Hopper blocked a Bengals' field goal try on the ensuing drive, and San Diego took over at the Cincinnati 45. Neuheisel then connected with Williams for 18 yards, but was intercepted two plays later, and the Bengals led 9–0 at halftime. [286]
Cincinnati drove to a 4th and 1 at the San Diego 23 late in the 3rd quarter; the Bengals tried to run for the first down, but were stopped for no gain. Kelley was then inserted at quarterback. His first possession was a three-and-out, but his second was an 8-play, 86-yard touchdown drive: Spencer took a pass 45 yards for the biggest play, and Frank Middleton leapt over the line to score from the 1 two plays later. On the extra point attempt, a bad snap by Dwight Wheeler eluded the holder (Neuheisel). Gaffney picked up the loose ball and ran to the left; confronted by several Bengals, he pitched the ball back to Neuheisel, who headed to the right and dove in from a yard out, pulling the deficit back to 9–7 with eleven minutes to play. After the next three drives ended in punts, Williams had a 15-yard catch to help position Gaffney for a 24-yard field goal, with David Diaz-Infante replacing Wheeler as the long snapper. Gaffney converted the kick with under three minutes left. The Bengals opted to punt after gaining 6 yards on three plays, and Middleton ran for two first downs to help San Diego run out the clock. [286]
Neuheisel completed 10 of 19 passes for 84 yards and an interception; Kelley completed 7 of 9 for 110 yards. [287] The Chargers defense allowed −13 passing yards (the Bengals' quarterbacks had 10 passing yards, and lost 23 yards from 3 sacks); this remains a franchise record as of 2022 [update] . [288]
Period | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | Total |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Chargers | 0 | 0 | 10 | 7 | 17 |
Buccaneers | 7 | 3 | 0 | 3 | 13 |
at Tampa Stadium, Tampa Bay, Florida
Game information | ||
---|---|---|
|
Strong performances by Neuheisel and the defense helped the replacement Chargers to another comeback win. [289] Tampa Bay were forced to punt on the game's opening possession, but Al Williams fumbled the punt and the Buccaneers recovered, leading to a touchdown two plays later. Gaffney missed a 38-yard field goal on the next drive, and the following seven possessions ended in punts. Kelley had started the game at quarterback, but Neuheisel replaced him with 6:22 to play in the 2nd quarter. Four plays later, he completed a pass to Harry Holt, who lost a fumble. Tampa Bay recovered, added a field goal and led 10–0 at the break. [290]
San Diego scored on their first three possessions of the second half. First, Neuheisel converted a 3rd and 10 with an 18-yard scramble, setting up a 27-yard field goal that Gaffney successfully converted. After a Buccaneers three-and-out, San Diego drove 80 yards in 9 plays to tie the score. Williams had catches of 20 and 32 yards, and Martin Sartin scored from the 2. A sack by Phillips forced another Buccaneers three-and-out, and the Chargers drove for the go-ahead touchdown, a 19-yard pass from Neuheisel to Tim Moffett two minutes into the final quarter. After Tampa Bay pulled three points closer with a field goal, San Diego drove to the Buccaneers' 16 before Sartin lost a fumble. Tampa Bay soon reached a 4th and 1 at their own 35, and elected to punt with three minutes to play. Sartin converted a 3rd and 1 on the next drive, and the Chargers ran all but seven seconds off the clock before the Buccaneers got the ball back. Carl Brazley ended the game with an interception. [290]
Kelley completed 5 of 11 passes for 53 yards; Neuheisel was 18 of 22 for 217 yards and a touchdown. His completion percentage of 81.8% was a Charger record at the time (minimum 20 attempts). [291] Williams caught 5 passes for 110 yards. The Buccaneers gained only 7 first downs, and 70 passing yards. [292]
Period | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | Total |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Chargers | 7 | 0 | 0 | 16 | 23 |
Raiders | 0 | 14 | 0 | 3 | 17 |
at Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum, Los Angeles, California
Game information | ||
---|---|---|
|
Patterson's late interception return gave the replacement Chargers their third win, ensuring that the regular players would return as division leaders. [84] Patterson gave his team the first scoring chance of the game when he recovered a fumble at the Raider 8; San Diego eventually went for the touchdown on 4th and goal from the 1, but a Sartin sweep lost 8 yards. Miller forced another fumble on the next play, with Walt Harris recovering, again on the Raider 8. This time, Neuheisel followed two incompletions by scrambling for a touchdown. On their next possession, San Diego produced an 11-minute, 22-play drive that took them from their own 6 yard line to a 3rd and goal from the 4, before Neuheisel was sacked and Gaffney saw his 36-yard field goal attempt blocked. The Raiders then drove 73 yards the other way, and tied the score on a touchdown pass from Vince Evans. After a series of punts, the Raiders took over on their own 25 yard line with 33 seconds left. Evans moved the ball to the San Diego 32, from where he threw another touchdown pass a single second before halftime. [293]
Trailing 14–7, the Chargers punted on their first two possessions of the second half, then switched to Kelley at quarterback. His first possession was a three-and-out, but he opened his second with a 67-yard completion to Calvin Muhammad, setting up a short field goal. After Los Angeles responded with a field goal of their own, Kelley connected with Al Williams for 57 yards, with the same pair ending the drive with a touchdown pass on 3rd and goal from the 7. With the score tied at 17–17, the Raiders drove into position for a 37-yard field goal, which Chris Bahr missed wide right with two minutes left. San Diego went three-and-out, and Los Angeles drove to the Charger 33 in the final minute. Patterson then cut in front of an out pattern, intercepted Evans and ran untouched for a 75-yard touchdown return with 18 seconds to play. Los Angeles reached the Charger 45, from where Evans' final pass was incomplete in the end zone as time expired. [293]
Neuheisel completed 12 of 18 passes for 66 yards; Kelley completed 5 of 9 for 142 yards and a touchdown. The replacement Chargers scored 33 of their 50 points in the 4th quarter. [294] The Raiders had 17 of their regular players available, compared to just one (Unrein) for the Chargers. [84]
Period | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | Total |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Chiefs | 0 | 14 | 7 | 0 | 21 |
Chargers | 14 | 21 | 0 | 7 | 42 |
at Jack Murphy Stadium, San Diego, California
Game information | ||
---|---|---|
|
The regular Chargers returned with a relatively comfortable win. [90] They went 75 yards on their first drive, with Fouts completing 4 of 5 passes for 58 yards, including a 10-yard touchdown to Chandler. Later in the opening quarter, they had a 91-yard touchdown drive; this time Fouts completed 5 of 6 for 71 yards, and Anderson scored with a 1-yard run. In the 2nd quarter, Thomas Benson stopped a threatening Chiefs drive with a fumble recovery, and Mojsiejenko pinned Kansas City at their own 8 with a punt. Two plays later, Bayless sacked Bill Kenney, forcing a fumble that Miller, a replacement player who'd retained his place in the team, recovered in the end zone. The next Charger touchdown was set up by James' 18-yard punt return to the Kansas City 38, setting up a short drive that ended with Fouts sneaking in from the 1; the score was 28–0, with the Chiefs only having gained two first downs. Kenney threw a touchdown on the following drive; in response, San Diego reached a 3rd and 13 at midfield, which they converted when Chandler drew a 31-yard defensive pass interference penalty. Fouts found Winslow in the front corner of the end zone on the following play. Kenney responded with another touchdown pass on the next play from scrimmage, and it was 35–14 at halftime. [295]
Another 18-yard punt return by James set the Chargers up in Chiefs territory early in the second half; they reached a 2nd and goal from the 4, but Fouts fumbled while being sacked, and Kansas City recovered at their own 7. The Chiefs then drove 93 yards in only six plays, aided by three Charger penalties, and scored on Okoye's 1-yard run. Kansas City were threatening to draw closer shortly afterwards when Anderson lost a fumble inside his own 40, but Glenn recovered another fumble two plays later at the Charger 20. Late in the 3rd quarter, Mojsiejenko punted but Kansas City were flagged for roughing the kicker, allowing San Diego to retain possession. Anderson ended that drive with another 1-yard touchdown run. That was the final score of the game; the next two Chiefs possessions ended with a fumble (forced by Lee Williams and recovered by Banks) and an interception by Smith. [295]
Fouts completed 24 of 34 passes for 293 yards, with 2 touchdowns and no interceptions. The Chargers gained 30 first downs and possessed the ball for 37 minutes. Both teams gave up over 100 yards in penalties (141 by the Chiefs, 118 by the Chargers). [296] Chandler's touchdown was the 56th and final one of his career (15 for the New Orleans Saints, 41 for the Chargers). [297]
Period | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | OT | Total |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Browns | 7 | 7 | 10 | 0 | 0 | 24 |
Chargers | 14 | 0 | 0 | 10 | 3 | 27 |
at Jack Murphy Stadium, San Diego, California
Game information | ||
---|---|---|
|
San Diego overturned a 10-point 4th quarter deficit to win in overtime. [298] Their defense got an early turnover when ex-Brown Banks intercepted Bernie Kosar and returned the ball 20 yards to the Cleveland 15 – James went around right end for a touchdown on the next play. Kosar led a touchdown drive in response, but the Chargers came back with a 9-play, 81-yard drive, facing no 3rd downs and scoring via Bernstine's 10-yard catch (his first career touchdown). In the 2nd quarter, Kosar tied the score with his second touchdown pass. James set up a field goal attempt late in the half with a 21-yard punt return, but Abbott was well short from 52 yards out, keeping the score at 14–14. [299]
Banks forced and recovered a fumble early in the second half, setting his offense up at the Cleveland 29, but Fouts gave the ball back with an interception two plays later. The Browns then drove for a field goal, and James lost a fumble on the next play from scrimmage, setting up a short touchdown drive and a 24–14 Cleveland lead. A 66-yard Charger drive then produced no points, as Abbott missed a 32-yard field goal. Phillips sacked Kosar to force a punt, and Fouts passed on every play of the ensuing drive, completing 6 of 7 for 85 yards, including a 22-yard touchdown pass to James with 5:08 to play. Phillips and Unrein split a 3rd-down sack on the following drive, and a short punt started the Chargers off at the Cleveland 46. San Diego drove as far as the Cleveland 2, but Pete Holohan couldn't come down with Fouts' 3rd down pass in the end zone, and Abbott tied the score with a 22-yard field goal, 1:46 from the end of regulation time. Kosar led his team as far as the San Diego 41, but another sack pushed them back, this time split by Glenn and Bayless. Following an incompletion, they were forced to punt, and the game went into an extra period. [299]
Cleveland won the overtime coin toss and elected to receive. After two runs, they faced a 3rd and 2 at their own 36; Kosar's overthrown pass was intercepted by Glenn and returned 20 yards to the Cleveland 25, with a face mask penalty moving the ball five yards further. After two running plays, Abbott drove the winning 33-yard field goal just inside the left upright. [299]
Fouts completed 25 of 42 passes for 315 yards, 2 touchdowns and 1 interception. James rushed 3 times for 21 yards and a touchdown, and caught 4 passes for 90 yards and a further touchdown. This was the last overtime game the Chargers won until 2002. [300]
Period | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | Total |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Chargers | 0 | 0 | 6 | 10 | 16 |
Colts | 3 | 10 | 0 | 0 | 13 |
at Hoosier Dome, Indianapolis, Indiana
Game information | ||
---|---|---|
|
Humiston recovered a key fumble as San Diego fought back from a 13-point halftime deficit to win. [301] Indianapolis opened the game with an 8-minute field goal drive, and had crossed into Charger territory again when Charles sacked Jack Trudeau, forcing a fumble that Byrd recovered. In the 2nd quarter, two Fouts interceptions set up Colts field goal attempts, though Dean Biasucci missed the second of these. On the next Indianapolis drive, Eric Dickerson rushed 8 times for 50 yards, and Albert Bentley found the end zone for a 13–0 lead. Fouts was intercepted again on the final play of the half. [302]
The first drive of the second half ended with Abbott's 42-yard field goal. Indianapolis tried to convert a 4th and 1 from their own 40 on the following drive, but Banks stopped Bentley for no gain. San Diego reached a 3rd and 1 at the Indianapolis 18, whereupon Fouts fumbled; Center Don Macek recovered, allowing Abbott to kick another field goal, from 37 yards. The Chargers completed their third consecutive scoring drive early in the final quarter; Fouts converted a 3rd and 11 with a 23-yard completion to Chandler, then threw a 5-yard touchdown pass to James on 3rd and goal. After an exchange of punts, the Colts drove from their own 36 to a 1st and goal at the Charger 8. On the following play, Dickerson ran the ball inside the 2 before being tackled by several Chargers; Smith knocked the ball loose, and Humiston recovered in his own end zone with four minutes to play. San Diego then drove 59 yards on 11 plays, with Fouts completed all three of his passes for 40 yards. Abbot made the game-winning field goal from 39 yards with 12 seconds to play. [302]
San Diego improved in several areas after halftime. Their time of possession nearly doubled, from 7:48 to 14:23, while their defense gave up 12 first downs in the first half and 6 in the second. Dickerson gained 103 of his 138 yards before halftime. [303]
Period | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | Total |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Raiders | 0 | 0 | 0 | 14 | 14 |
Chargers | 7 | 9 | 0 | 0 | 16 |
at Jack Murphy Stadium, San Diego, California
Game information | ||
---|---|---|
|
San Diego won their eighth straight game as a Raider rally fell short. [304] Smith intercepted Marc Wilson's first pass of the game and returned it 22 yards to the Raider 22. A defensive holding penalty on 3rd down prolonged the ensuing drive, and Fouts hit a wide open Winslow for a 9-yard touchdown on 3rd and 8. Bahr missed a 41-yard field goal on the next drive. Late in the opening quarter, another Charger drive was prolonged by a 3rd down penalty, this time of 30 yards – a pass interference drawn by Anderson. That led to a 38-yard field goal by Abbott; he then made a 47-yarder, after Jeff Jackson recovered a fumble in Raider territory. When Abbott was successful from 39 yards late in the half, San Diego led 16–0. [305]
The first nine drives of the second half all ended in punts, with neither offense crossing the halfway line. In the final quarter, San Diego were able to advance from their own 3 to the Raider 41, aided by a 29-yard pass interference penalty, again drawn by Anderson. Fouts then overthrew his intended receiver, resulting in an interception and 58 yard return. Wilson threw a touchdown three plays later with eight minutes left. Aided by another Raider 3rd down penalty, the Chargers then ran over four minutes off the clock before punting. Los Angeles also punted, after reaching 4th and 13 at their own 33 with barely two minutes left. After a Charger three-and-out, the Raiders covered 72 yards in only four plays, scoring on James Lofton's 47-yard touchdown over Charles Romes with 16 seconds left. The ensuing onside kick went out of bounds, allowing San Diego to run out the clock. [305]
San Diego picked up only 88 yards in the second half, and were outgained 365–248 overall. They profited from 17 Raider penalties for 186 yards (the Chargers were penalized 7 times for 60 yards). As of 2022 [update] , this is tied for the most penalties given up by a Charger opponent, and top for penalty yards. [306]
Period | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | Total |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Chargers | 0 | 3 | 0 | 0 | 3 |
Seahawks | 3 | 14 | 10 | 7 | 34 |
at Kingdome, Seattle, Washington
Game information | ||
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Seattle dominated San Diego to end their winning streak. [307] Anderson lost a fumble on the opening kickoff return, leading to a Seahawks' field goal. San Diego responded by driving into Seattle territory and attempting a 4th and 2 at the 44. Herrmann, starting at quarterback because Fouts had a calf injury, was unable to handle the snap, and the attempt failed. The Charger defense thwarted the next Seattle drive when Glenn forced a fumble and Smith recovered at his 10, but the Seahawks scored a touchdown on their following possession. A 34-yard catch by James set up the lone Charger score of the game (a 33-yard Abbott field goal), but Seattle came straight back with another touchdown, and led 17–3 at halftime. They continued to pull away in the second half. Fouts was inserted into the game, but was sacked twice and intercepted once before Herrmann came back in to finish. [308]
San Diego were outgained by 496 yards to 156, outrushed by 277 to 17, possessed the ball for 18:25 (including only 5:12 in the second half); Seattle generated 34 first downs to the Chargers' 6. The yardage differential of −340 was the worst in franchise history to that point, eventually being surpassed in 2003. [309] With the win, Seattle pulled within a game of the Chargers atop the AFC West. [310]
Period | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | Total |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Broncos | 7 | 10 | 14 | 0 | 31 |
Chargers | 7 | 3 | 0 | 7 | 17 |
at Jack Murphy Stadium, San Diego, California
Game information | ||
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Glenn's record-tying interception return wasn't enough to beat the Broncos, who drew within half a game of San Diego. [311] On Denver's first drive they drove 74 yards to a 2nd and goal at the Charger 6, before John Elway's pass was intercepted in the end zone by Glenn; he took off along the right sideline, slipped one tackle, benefitted from a block by Benson, and completed a 103-yard touchdown return, the joint-longest in league history at that point. Elway bounced back on his next two drives, a 51-yard completion setting up a touchdown run, and a 46-yard completion accounting for another touchdown. After an exchange of field goals, Fouts completed four passes for 58 yards, and the Chargers reached a 3rd and goal at the Denver 7 with 17 seconds left and no timeouts, trailing 17–10. Winslow caught Fouts' next pass inside the 1, but was ruled not to have broken the plane of the goal line before being pushed back by three Broncos. Time ran out before San Diego could attempt a field goal. [312]
Denver extended their lead on their first two drives of the second half via two further Elway touchdown passes. After the second of these, the Chargers responded; Anderson had catches of 38 and 33 yards, and Adams scored on a 1-yard run with 14 minutes to play. Denver's next drive ended with a missed field goal, but ran seven minutes off the clock. Fouts drove San Diego into opposition territory before his deep pass was intercepted to effectively clinch the game for Denver. He was intercepted again in the final minute. [312]
Fouts completed 23 of 40 passes for 322 yards, with 2 interceptions. [313] The Chargers were again dominated in terms of time of possession, holding the ball for only 18:41. They gave up a season-high 522 yards of offense. [32] While contemporary reports described Glenn's touchdown as a new record for an interception return, [311] there had been a previous 103-yarder, by Pete Barnum in 1926. [314] The record was tied again by Louis Oliver in 1992 and eventually broken by Ed Reed in 2004. [315]
Period | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | Total |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Chargers | 0 | 5 | 6 | 7 | 18 |
Oilers | 10 | 10 | 7 | 6 | 33 |
Game information | ||
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San Diego fell out of first place in their division with a third straight loss. [316] Glenn intercepted Warren Moon's first pass of the game, setting his offense up at the Oiler 30. Three plays later, Fouts was sacked on a blitz and fumbled; Houston ran the ball back 55 yards for a touchdown. Chandler later fumbled near midfield, setting up a Houston field goal, and the Oilers added ten more points on their following two drives. San Diego staged a mini-revival late in the half, with Lee Williams sacking Moon for a safety, and the offense driving to a 3rd and 5 at the Houston 10 with seven seconds to play. Saunders opted not to risk another play, settling for an Abbott field goal and a 20–5 halftime scoreline. [317]
The Chargers drew no closer in the second half. Houston scored another touchdown the first time they had the ball, then James fumbled at the Oiler 5. Holland drew a 33-yard pass interference penalty on the next drive, and Fouts beat the Oiler blitz to find Winslow for a 6-yard touchdown. San Diego forced a punt, but Fouts again fumbled while being sacked, with Houston recovering at the Charger 30. That led to a touchdown run by Moon, and San Diego didn't score again until the final minute, when Herrmann threw a 9-yard touchdown to Anderson. [317]
Patterson and one Oiler were ejected for their roles in a fracas with one second left in the first half. Chandler caught 10 passes for 140 yards. San Diego outgained Houston by 8 yards (332–324), but fumbled four times and lost them all. [318] Winslow's touchdown was the 45th and final one of his career. [319]
Period | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | Total |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Steelers | 0 | 7 | 10 | 3 | 20 |
Chargers | 9 | 0 | 0 | 7 | 16 |
at Jack Murphy Stadium, San Diego, California
Game information | ||
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|
Numerous errors cost the Chargers a chance to move back into first place. [320] Fouts fumbled a handoff to Spencer on the game's second play, but Charles forced Pittsburgh quarterback Mark Malone to fumble in turn a play later, with Smith recovering. San Diego advanced to the Steeler 12 before turning the ball over with a further fumble, this time by Adams. However, they scored soon afterwards when Glenn blocked a punt and Brandon recovered in the end zone. After Pittsburgh missed a field goal, Winslow was ruled just short of the end zone on a 30-yard catch. Anderson appeared to have run for a touchdown on the following play, but McKnight's illegal motion penalty negated the score. Three plays later, the Chargers went for it on 4th and goal from the 1, but Spencer fumbled as he reached for the end zone. San Diego's defense was able convert the good field position into two points on the next play, as Chuck Ehin sacked Malone in the end zone for a safety. Pittsburgh shanked the ensuing free kick, but Daniel Hunter failed to gather the ball at the Steeler 43. In the 2nd quarter, James fumbled on a punt return, leaving the Steelers to drive only 39 yards for their first touchdown of the day. After Abbott missed a 42-yard field goal in the final minute of the half, San Diego led only 9–7. [321]
The Chargers appeared to have earned a 1st down on the Steeler 13 on their first possession of the second half, but Chandler's 22-yard catch was wiped out by another illegal motion penalty, this time on Holohan. That drive ended with Abbott's 48-yard field goal falling short and to the left. Pittsburgh then took the lead, driving 69 yards in only five plays, with Malone running the ball in from the 7. After a third consecutive Charger drive ended in a missed Abbott field goal (short again and wide right, from 46 yards), the Steelers added two Gary Anderson field goals to lead 20–9. San Diego quickly moved into Pittsburgh territory, but a deflected Fouts pass was intercepted with seven minutes to play. The Steeles went three-and-out, and San Diego drove 58 yards in 8 plays to get back into the game. Fouts converted a 4th and 10 with a 14-yard pass to Chandler, and connected with James for back-to-back 15-yard gains, the latter for a touchdown. Following another Steeler three-and-out, San Diego began their final possession on their own 20 with 1:50 to play. Chandler began the drive with a 17-yard catch, Spencer converted a 4th and 1 with a 10-yard carry, and a 20-yard Chandler reception moved the ball to the Pittsburgh 24 with 22 seconds left. From there, Fouts threw four consecutive incompletions. [321]
The Chargers outgained Pittsburgh by 435 yards to 254, but committed five of the game's six turnovers, losing four fumbles for the second consecutive week. Chandler caught 7 passes for 116 yards. Fouts completed 29 of 52 passes for 334 yards, one touchdown and one interception. [322] The touchdown pass was the 254th and final one of his career. [323]
Period | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | Total |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Colts | 7 | 6 | 0 | 7 | 20 |
Chargers | 7 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 7 |
at Jack Murphy Stadium, San Diego, California
Game information | ||
---|---|---|
|
A fifth straight loss nearly eliminated the Chargers from playoff contention. [324] They began the game well, taking the opening kickoff and driving 74 yards in 13 plays to take the lead. Fouts completed 5 of 5 passes for 56 yards, and scored on a 4th-down quarterback sneak. Indianapolis tied the score later in the 1st quarter when Bill Brooks took advantage of a coverage error by Bayless on a 42-yard touchdown catch. The Chargers reached the Colts' 25 yard line in the 2nd quarter, but Fouts took a 3rd-down sack and Abbott was short and left on a 52-yard field goal try. Indianapolis scored through a pair of Biasucci field goals on their final two possessions of the half, and led 13–7. [325]
Neither team advanced further than the opposition 34 during the first twelve possessions of the second half; Indianapolis punted six times, while San Diego punted four times and Fouts was intercepted twice. Eventually, Dickerson broke off a 53-yard run and Bentley scored on the play after the two minute warning. Fouts threw incomplete on 4th and 2 from the Colt 26 in the final minute, and was intercepted as time expired. [325]
Fouts completed 22 of 37 attempts for 257 yards and 3 interceptions, while being sacked 5 times for the loss of 43 yards. [326] It was the final game of his career, as he missed the finale with a slightly torn rotator cuff, [327] and announced his retirement three months after the end of the season. [328] The result meant that San Diego would be eliminated if either the Steelers or Oilers won in week 16, regardless of their own result.
Period | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | Total |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Chargers | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
Broncos | 14 | 0 | 0 | 10 | 24 |
at Mile High Stadium, Denver, Colorado
Game information | ||
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|
San Diego's season ended with a shutout in a Denver blizzard. [329] They were confirmed to have missed the playoffs during the 1st quarter, when Houston completed a victory over the Cincinnati Bengals. By then, the Chargers already trailed to a 71-yard punt return touchdown. Denver added a second touchdown later in the quarter, with San Diego yet to register a first down after three possessions. The Chargers were inside the Denver 30 three times in the 2nd quarter, but Herrmann was intercepted twice, and Abbott missed a 26-yard field goal. The Chargers gained only 22 yards and a single first down after halftime, while Denver added a field goal and an interception-return touchdown. [330]
Herrmann finished with 13 completions from 23 attempts for 123 yards, with 4 interceptions; backup Vlasic added a fifth interception on his debut appearance. Winslow caught 6 passes for 44 yards. [331] It was the final regular season game of his career, as he retired during the 1988 season without playing again. [332]
AFC West | |||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
W | L | T | PCT | DIV | CONF | PF | PA | STK | |
Denver Broncos (1) | 10 | 4 | 1 | .700 | 7–1 | 8–3 | 379 | 288 | W2 |
Seattle Seahawks (5) | 9 | 6 | 0 | .600 | 4–3 | 5–6 | 371 | 314 | L1 |
San Diego Chargers | 8 | 7 | 0 | .533 | 3–4 | 6–7 | 253 | 317 | L6 |
Los Angeles Raiders | 5 | 10 | 0 | .333 | 2–6 | 3–8 | 301 | 289 | L3 |
Kansas City Chiefs | 4 | 11 | 0 | .267 | 3–5 | 3–9 | 273 | 388 | W1 |
Three Chargers were named to the 1988 Pro Bowl, [333] each of whom was also named a 2nd-team All-Pro by the Associated Press. [334]
Player | Position | Pro Bowl starter | Pro Bowl reserve | AP 2nd team All-Pro | NEA 2nd team All-Pro |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Jim Lachey | Tackle | ||||
Ralf Mojsiejenko | Punter | ||||
Kellen Winslow | Tight end |
Daniel Francis Fouts is an American former professional football quarterback who played for the San Diego Chargers of the National Football League (NFL) throughout his 15-season career (1973–1987). After a relatively undistinguished first five seasons in the league, Fouts came to prominence as the on-field leader during the Chargers' Air Coryell period. He led the league in passing every year from 1979 to 1982, passing for over 4,000 yards in the first three of these—no previous quarterback had posted consecutive 4,000-yard seasons. Fouts was voted a Pro Bowler six times, first-team All-Pro twice, and Offensive Player of the Year in 1982. He was named a member of the NFL 1980s All-Decade Team, and elected to the Pro Football Hall of Fame in 1993, his first year of eligibility.
The 1994 San Diego Chargers season was the team's 35th, its 25th in the National Football League (NFL), and its 34th in San Diego. It featured a surprising run to Super Bowl XXIX, where the Chargers lost to the San Francisco 49ers. To date, this is the only Super Bowl appearance in franchise history.
The 1991 San Diego Chargers season was the franchise's 22nd season in the National Football League (NFL), their 32nd overall and the third and final season under head coach Dan Henning. The team failed to improve on their 6–10 record in 1990, losing eight of their first nine games and finishing at 4–12, their fourth consecutive losing season.
The 1990 San Diego Chargers season was the franchise's 21st season in the National Football League (NFL) and its 31st overall. After a 1–4 start, the Chargers recovered to 5–5, only half a game out of the playoff places. Five losses in their final six games, however, saw them finish with a 6–10 record for the third consecutive season. Only one of San Diego’s six victories came against a team with a winning record, and none were against eventual playoff teams. As had been the case in 1989, close finishes were a problem—the Chargers were 0–5 in games decided by seven points or fewer.
The 1989 San Diego Chargers season was the franchise's 20th season in the National Football League (NFL), its 30th overall and the first season under head coach Dan Henning, whose predecessor, Al Saunders, had been fired shortly after the previous season.
The 1988 San Diego Chargers season was the franchise's 19th season in the National Football League, its 29th overall and the second and final full season under head coach Al Saunders.
The 1985 San Diego Chargers season was the franchise's 16th season in the National Football League (NFL), its 26th overall. The team improved on their 7–9 record from 1984 to an 8–8 finish. For the third time in five years, the Chargers led the league in scoring. It was Don Coryell's final full season as the team's head coach, as he would resign halfway through the following season after a 1–7 start.
The 1983 San Diego Chargers season was the franchise’s 14th season in the National Football League (NFL) and its 24th overall. The Chargers fell from their 1982 6–3 record to 6–10. It was their first losing season since 1976, to date the most points the Chargers have surrendered in a sixteen-game season, and began an era in the wilderness for the Chargers, who would not place higher than third in the AFC West, nor win more than eight games in a season, until 1992.
The 1982 San Diego Chargers season was the team's 23rd year, and 13th in the National Football League. The team had a 10–6 record in 1981. 1982 was a strike-shortened season so the league was divided up into two conferences instead of its normal divisional alignment - the Chargers finished 6-3, qualifying for the playoffs as the #5 seed. Their run ended with a second round loss to the Dolphins. This would be the team's last playoff appearance until 1992.
The 1981 San Diego Chargers season was the franchise's 12th season in the National Football League (NFL) and its 22nd overall. The team failed to improve on their 11–5 record from 1980 but they did retain the AFC West Division title for the third consecutive year, finishing 10–6. In the playoffs, they beat the Dolphins in a classic game known as the Epic in Miami then lost to the Bengals in a frigid game known as the Freezer Bowl.
The 1980 San Diego Chargers season was the franchise's 11th season in the National Football League (NFL), and its 21st overall. The team failed to improve on their 12–4 record in 1979 and finished 11–5, though they won the AFC West and gained the top seed in the AFC playoffs for the second consecutive season. Their season ended in the AFC Championship Game when they lost to their divisional rivals and the eventual Super Bowl champions, the Oakland Raiders.
The 1976 San Diego Chargers season was the franchise's seventh season in the National Football League (NFL), and its 17th overall. The Chargers improved on their 2–12 record from 1975 and finished 6–8, but missed the playoffs for the 11th straight season. The Chargers started off the season by winning their first 3 games, but they struggled through the rest of the season by losing 8 of their last 11 games, which included 4 shutout losses, two of which were to division rival Denver.
The 1975 San Diego Chargers season was the franchise's sixth season in the National Football League (NFL), and its 16th overall. The team were seeking to improve on their 5–9 record in 1974, but they lost their first eleven games amidst attendances under 30,000.
The 1966 Season was the 7th season for the San Diego Chargers as a professional American Football League (AFL) franchise; the team failed to improve on their 9–2–3 record from 1965. In the team's final season at Balboa Stadium, the Chargers went 7–6–1 and finished in third place in the AFL West Division. They would move to San Diego Stadium for the following season. It was the first season to feature an AFL-NFL World Championship Game, now known as the Super Bowl. San Diego began the season among the favorites to represent the AFL in the historic game, but faded after a 4–0 start, winning only three more times in the remaining ten games.
The 1965 San Diego Chargers season was their sixth as a professional AFL franchise; the team improved on their 8–5–1 record in 1964. Head Coach Sid Gillman led the Chargers to their fifth AFL West title with a 9–2–3 record, before losing the AFL Championship Game to the Buffalo Bills for the second consecutive season. It would prove to be the Chargers' last post-season appearance until 1979.
The 1964 San Diego Chargers season was their fifth as a professional AFL franchise; the team failed to repeat as AFL champions after winning the championship in 1963 with a record of 11–3, and finished at 8–5–1. San Diego struggled at the start and finish of the season, but a six-game winning streak in the middle proved to be enough to win the AFL West, in a league where the two strongest teams were in the Eastern division.
The 1963 San Diego Chargers season was the team's fourth in the American Football League. The team had gone 4–10 in 1962 but rebounded with an 11–3 record, winning the AFL West by one game over the Oakland Raiders, who were coached by former Chargers assistant Al Davis. San Diego scored the most points in the league and conceded the fewest. Their offense, led by veteran quarterback Tobin Rote, and featuring future Hall of Fame receiver Lance Alworth, gained more yards than any other team; Rote and Alworth were each named the league MVP, by the Associated Press and UPI, respectively.
The 1962 San Diego Chargers season was the club's third in the American Football League. San Diego had won the AFL West with a 12–2 record in 1961, but slipped to 4–10, losing eight of their final nine games after a 3–2 start. It was their worst record to date; this would be the only time the Chargers would endure a losing season during their 10 years in the AFL.
The 1961 San Diego Chargers season was the team's second in the American Football League. Following a move from Los Angeles, it was the Chargers' first season in San Diego, where the team remained until returning to Los Angeles in 2017.
The Chargers–Chiefs rivalry is an American football rivalry between the National Football League (NFL)'s Los Angeles Chargers and Kansas City Chiefs. Since the American Football League (AFL) was established in 1960, the Chargers and the Chiefs have shared the same division, first being the AFL Western Conference, and since the AFL–NFL merger, the American Football Conference (AFC) West. Following the Raiders' move to Las Vegas (Chiefs) and the Rams' return to Los Angeles, they are now the farthest apart two teams in the same division.