Chargers double down on a trend that could lead them deep into the playoffs this season

The Los Angeles Chargers made a name for themselves in Week 16. In a majorly important divisional clash against the Denver Broncos in primetime, both sides of the ball stepped up for the Bolts in the second half of play. In particular, their defense made life difficult to an instrumental and unique degree for Broncos […]

Adam Holt NFL News Writer
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The Los Angeles Chargers made a name for themselves in Week 16. In a majorly important divisional clash against the Denver Broncos in primetime, both sides of the ball stepped up for the Bolts in the second half of play.

In particular, their defense made life difficult to an instrumental and unique degree for Broncos quarterback Bo Nix. That bodes well for the rest of LA's season and possible playoff hopes. 

Defense steps up

Defensive coordinator Jesse Minter's group took a thrashing in the first half of their Thursday night matchup against the Broncos. There's no doubting that. Bo Nix was efficient, and Los Angeles allowed multiple explosive gains leading to points. 

The second half was a different story. The secondary clamped up Broncos receivers downfield, and the Broncos' rushing attack was nonexistent. 

On multiple occasions, the broadcast mentioned Bo Nix's inability and lack of opportunity to push the football downfield

The Chargers simply were not giving him chances, nor time, to make downfield throws to his targets. Even if they got open, the pocket was collapsing too quickly. Other times, defensive backs made nice coverage plays to prevent large gains in the second half. 

Benjamin Solak pointed out an intriguing statistic for the Chargers defense that can help project them into making a playoff run in just a handful of weeks. 

Bo Nix finished the game with 3.3 air yards per attempt. That was the second-lowest air yards per attempt in a game since Week 2 when Carolina Panthers QB Bryce Young had 3.0 against the Chargers. 

This sort of stat points to how frequently a check down was the choice for a quarterback. 

The completions in the intermediate or deep part of the passing game were not happening, for a multitude of reasons. At the center of those, the Chargers defense played gritty and with an edge that no one saw in the first half against the Broncos. 

Going forward

If they can continue to suffocate quarterbacks in this manner, their defense looks a lot more like a potential unit that can help them in the postseason, rather than hinder them in those massive matchups. 

In recent weeks, and for the first of Thursday evening's AFC West showdown, they had been getting run over on the ground. That rushing success by opponents opened up deep passing plays due to adjustments to bring more guys up to slow down the run from the Chargers. 

This week, Los Angeles flipped the script and gave their defense a blueprint for themselves going forward.