Season in Review

Chargers 2025 Season in Review

2025 NFL Season · Monday, May 11

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The Rundown

Justin Herbert took fifty-four sacks this season and the Chargers still won eleven games. Let that one breathe. Here's how Los Angeles built a top-ten defense, why the run game quietly carried the offense down the stretch, and the one red-zone number that cost them in January. Eleven and six, a seven-seed wild card, and a season that ended with a thud — three to sixteen in New England, zero offensive touchdowns. The Chargers smashed the regular season. The postseason muffed them.

Start with the team-level portrait, because the splits tell a specific story. The defense was the engine — minus seventy-nine point two total expected points added allowed, and remember, big negative is elite on defense. Seventh in the league, eighty-first percentile. The offense? Minus twenty-five point four expected points added, twenty-fifth in the league, bottom quartile. This was a defense-and-special-teams operation: Cameron Dicker hit thirty-eight of forty-one field goals, ninety-three percent, fifth in the NFL. Third-down offense was genuinely elite — forty-six point four percent, third in the league, ninety-fourth percentile. The variance read is fascinating. Steady against good teams: beat the Chiefs twice, beat the Eagles in overtime, won at Dallas by seventeen. But three full no-shows — ten to twenty-seven against Washington, six to thirty-five at Jacksonville, three to nineteen at Denver in the finale. When this team got muffed, they got muffed badly.

Now let's talk about the passing offense. The headline: minus thirty-five total passing expected points added on six hundred and twenty-nine attempts — twenty-sixth in the league, twenty-second percentile. Bottom-of-the-league efficiency. The reason sits right there in the protection data — sixty sacks allowed on six hundred and eighty-one dropbacks, an eight point eight percent sack rate, fifth-most sacked in football. Herbert was running for his life. And yet — here's the wild part — his completion percentage over expected was plus three point three, eighth among qualified starters. Three thousand seven hundred and twenty-seven yards, twenty-six touchdowns, thirteen interceptions, eighth in the league in passing scores. Accurate. Productive. Constantly on the ground. Boom-or-bust by necessity: explosive when protection held, disastrous when it didn't. Ladd McConkey led the room with sixty-six catches for seven hundred and eighty-nine yards and six touchdowns. A productive aerial attack hiding inside a broken pocket.

Now let's dig into the rushing offense. This is where the Chargers actually outperformed expectations. Two thousand sixty-nine rushing yards on four hundred and sixty-seven carries, four point four a pop — twelfth in the league, sixty-sixth percentile. Rushing expected points added at minus six point three sounds rough, but it's still twelfth in the NFL, and the identity tightened late in the year. The lead back was rookie Omarion Hampton — five hundred and forty-five yards on a hundred and twenty-four carries with four scores across just nine games, plus eighty-one point six rushing yards over expected. That's how much more he gained than an average back would have given the same blocking. Trended up late. The Dallas win in Week sixteen, thirty-four to seventeen, was the ground-game showcase.

Next up, the pass defense. This is the unit that defined the season. Three thousand three hundred fourteen passing yards allowed across seventeen games — under one hundred ninety-five a game. Total passing expected points added allowed: minus fifty point two five, seventy-fifth percentile work. Forty-five sacks, eleventh in the league. Nineteen interceptions, three fumble recoveries, twenty-two takeaways total — eighth in the NFL, seventy-eighth percentile. And the takeaways came in bunches when it mattered. The Week fourteen overtime win against Philadelphia was a three-interception game against Jalen Hurts, sealed when Tony Jefferson picked him off at the one-yard line in overtime to set up the winning field goal. Game-sealing turnovers all year. Third-down stop rate landed in the eighty-eighth percentile — boom-or-bust elsewhere, but on third down, automatic.

And the run defense — this was the best unit on the team, full stop. Total rushing expected points added allowed: minus twenty-eight point nine eight, ninety-fourth percentile. One hundred six rushing yards allowed per game. Sixteen rushing touchdowns surrendered — solid — and the front consistently won the leverage battle on early downs. Steady floor, high ceiling. There was no week this group got gashed for two hundred on the ground. The foundation everything else was built on. The pass rush got home, the takeaways followed, and the run defense never let games tilt sideways. Bottom-line: a defense-first eleven-win team that finally ran into a wall it couldn't outscore in Foxborough.

The Bottom Line

A-

11-6 regular season

Season MVP is Justin Herbert, and it's not particularly close — three thousand seven hundred and twenty-seven yards, twenty-six touchdowns, plus three point three completion percentage over expected, all behind a line that gave up sixty sacks. Eighth in the league in passing touchdowns while running for his life. What has to get fixed: the protection and the red-zone offense. Fifty-two point two percent red-zone touchdown rate is thirtieth in the league, ninth percentile — bottom of the barrel. An eleven-win team that scores touchdowns in the red zone instead of settling for Dicker field goals is a January problem, not a January casualty.

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