Chargers expect to have Ryan Mathews and Antonio Gates back this week, not Jared Gaither

Normally slow starters, the Chargers are 2-0 this season and doing it in a year when a lot of people wrote them off after 2 straight seasons without the postseason and with the team possessing many holes on paper. Philip Rivers might be the MVP of the league for the first 2 games, leading this team to a 2-0 record despite not having much help. He’s completed 73.8% of his passes for an average of 7.9 YPA and 4 touchdowns to 1 interception.

He’s playing behind the league’s worst offensive line in terms of pass block efficiency and he’s doing it while throwing to Malcom Floyd, Robert Meachem (just kidding, no one ever throws to Robert Meachem), and one game of Antonio Gates. His running game isn’t helping him much either as none of their backs have really gotten much going in Ryan Mathews’ absence. They are averaging just 3.1 YPC.

The good news for Rivers is that Mathews will be back this week. Mathews is injury prone, but he’s one of the most talented backs in the league and they were planning on using him as an everything back so he should definitely help their offense. Gates is also expected back. He should reprise his role as Rivers’ favorite target. The Chargers will need them both as they face their toughest test so far as the also 2-0 Atlanta Falcons come to town.

The bad news is that Jared Gaither, who was supposed to be their left tackle, is reportedly closer to being put on IR than to returning. Gaither hasn’t practiced in months with back spasms and given his history of back problems, that’s very concerning. When healthy, Gaither is an elite left tackle. With the Ravens, in 2009, he allowed just 4 sacks, 3 quarterback hits, and 6 quarterback hurries, while committing 10 penalties in 13 games and in 2008, he allowed just 2 sacks, 2 quarterback hits, and 22 quarterback hurries while committing 15 penalties in 19 games. Gaither was amazing in 5 starts last season for the Chargers, after being cut midseason by the Chiefs. He didn’t allow a sack or quarterback hit and only allowed 3 quarterback hurries, while committing just 3 penalties.

The Chargers rewarded him with a 4 year, 24.6 million dollar deal with 13.5 million guaranteed this offseason. That may seem like a lot to pay, but franchise left tackles do not grow on trees. There’s a reason they’re never available on the open market. Seeing one available is almost as rare as seeing a franchise quarterback on the open market. If Gaither were to stay healthy, that deal would have been a steal. However, now it’s looking like that could very well not happen. In his absence, undrafted rookie Mike Harris has looked like an undrafted rookie left tackle, surrendering 11 quarterback hurries, most in the league. He’s also been penalized twice and is overall rated as ProFootballFocus’ 66th rated offensive tackle out of 71. He’ll deal with John Abraham this week as he looks to get it going. The active leader in sacks has just 1 sack, 1 quarterback hit, and 1 quarterback hurry through 2 games.

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Atlanta Falcons at San Diego Chargers: Week 3 NFL Pick

Atlanta Falcons (2-0) at San Diego Chargers (2-0)

The Chargers are one of just six 2-0 teams left in the NFL. Have they conquered their early season woes? They certainly look good. They’ve used 7 of their last 8 picks in the first 3 rounds on defensive players and it seems to have paid off while veterans like Quentin Jammer and Shaun Phillips seem to be holding things together for one more year. Meanwhile, on offense, Philip Rivers might be the MVP of the league for the first 2 games, leading this team to a 2-0 record despite not having much to throw with. He’s playing behind the league’s worst offensive line in terms of pass block efficiency and he’s doing it while throwing to Malcom Floyd, Robert Meachem (just kidding, no one ever throws to Robert Meachem), and one game of Antonio Gates. His running game isn’t helping him much either as none of their backs have really gotten much going in Ryan Mathews’ absence.

The good news for Rivers is that Mathews will be back this week. Mathews is injury prone, but he’s one of the most talented backs in the league and they were planning on using him as an everything back so he should definitely help their offense. Gates is also expected back. The problem is their schedule is getting much harder this week. I don’t fully believe they’ve conquered their early season problems just because they’re 2-0 after beating two crappy teams. They started 4-1 last year beating up on crappy teams before eventually going on a 6 game losing streak once things got harder. Before last year, they were 14-12 from weeks 1-5 under Philip Rivers and 41-11 (41-11!!!) from weeks 6-17. Including last week, they’re actually just 4-7 ATS as favorites during the first 4 weeks of the season in the Philip Rivers era.

This week, the Falcons come to town and they represent by far their toughest opponent so far. Matt Ryan and this passing offense has been as advertised, completing 70.1% of his passes for an average of 7.7 YPA, 5 touchdowns and no interceptions, and the defense has been okay despite the loss of Brent Grimes for the season.

However, I wasn’t overly impressed with the Falcons’ performance last week on Monday Night Football. I felt like they should have been up 20 given how badly the Broncos started and how much they turned the ball over, but they didn’t capitalize like they should have. They lost the yardage total battle and the yards per play battle and if it wasn’t for those 4 turnovers, they probably would have lost at home by double digits. They can’t keep relying on winning the turnover battle to win games.

As a result of that game, they actually have a yards per play differential at even, +0, and that’s my favorite stat and what I feel is the best indicator of how a team has played and how they will play in the future. For what it’s worth though, the Chargers sit at only +0.3, so it’s not like they’re much better. Neither team’s yards per play differential is as good as their record. On top of that, I don’t really trust the Falcons outside on the road, especially on just 5 days rest coming off Monday Night Football.

I’m really torn on this one. I don’t believe the Chargers have gotten rid of their early season problems and I feel they could be due for a stinker now that they’re playing an actually good opponent. However, I wasn’t that impressed with the Falcons on Monday Night Football at home, where they’re best and now they go on the road on short rest. Besides, the Chargers never blew out a team last year in their strong start against an easy schedule like they did last week.

I’m picking the Chargers because the Falcons are one of the heaviest public underdogs you’ll ever see. Not only do I love betting against the public when the action is heavy in one direction (the public is getting killed on these types of games this year), I love it even more when the publicly backed team is an underdog. The Chargers are getting their due respect against a Falcons team that, like they are, is hasn’t really played as well as their record would suggest. I’m taking the home team for a small play.

Public lean: Atlanta (new thing I’m adding, siding with the odds makers on bets is not a bad thing to do since they make so much money, so I’m listing this here to allow readers to “fade” the public, if they so choose, in this example, the odds makers win if San Diego covers)

San Diego Chargers 28 Atlanta Falcons 24

Pick against spread: San Diego -3 (-110) 1 unit

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San Diego Chargers: Week 3 NFL Power Rankings (#7)

Last week: 8 (+1)

Record: 2-0

No, I’m not convinced the Chargers have suddenly become good in the 1st half of the season. The Raiders and the Titans suck. They’ll have a test this week when Atlanta comes to town. That being said, I think this is still the favorite in the AFC West. The Broncos are not a finished product, as you saw in Monday Night, and they have a tougher schedule. The Chargers’ defense seems much improved over last season (as you would expect of a team that has used 7 of its last 8 picks in the first 3 rounds on defense) and Philip Rivers is doing an excellent job holding together an injury riddled offense that’s going to be getting their everything back, Ryan Mathews, back from injury this week. Rivers was pressured on 20 of 37 drop backs, last week. Do you know what he did? 3 sacks, 1 scramble, and completed 10 of 16. And that’s throwing to Malcom Floyd, Robert Meachem (just kidding, no one ever throws to Robert Meachem), and Dante Rosario. If this is what this team looks like in early season form, just imagine what will happen once they hit their strides.

Studs

QB Philip Rivers: 24 of 32 for 284 yards, 3 touchdowns, 1 interception, 1 hit as thrown, 91.3 adjusted QB rating, pressured on 20 of 37 drop backs (3 sacks, 1 scramble, 10 of 16, 1 hit as thrown, 1 interception)

FS Eric Weddle: Did not allow a reception on 1 attempt, 1 interception, 3 solo tackles, 1 stop

RE Corey Liuget: 1 quarterback hit and 2 quarterback pressures on 19 pass rush snaps, 1 batted pass, no tackles

LOLB Shaun Phillips: 2 quarterback hits and 3 quarterback pressures on 19 pass rush snaps, 1 solo tackle, 1 assist, 1 stop

Duds

LT Michael Harris: Allowed 10 quarterback hurries on 41 pass block snaps, 2 penalties, run blocked for 1 yards on 3 attempts

RT Jeromey Clary: Allowed 3 sacks, 1 quarterback hit, and 3 quarterback hurries on 41 pass block snaps, run blocked for 8 yards on 6 carries

C Nick Hardwick: Allowed 1 sack, 1 quarterback hit, and 2 quarterback hurries on 41 pass block snaps, run blocked for 47 yards on 11 carries

RB Curtis Brinkley: Rushed for 43 yards (29 after contact) on 18 carries, 1 broken tackle, 1 fumble, caught 4 passes for 23 yards on 4 targets

WR Robert Meachem: Did not catch a pass on 4 targets on 30 pass plays

LE Vaughn Martin: Did not record a pressure on 19 pass rush snaps, no tackles

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Chargers expect Antonio Gates, Quentin Jammer to play, Ryan Mathews to be a game-time decision

The Chargers are one of the most banged up teams in the league right now. Last week against the Raiders, they had to start an undrafted free agent at left tackle on an already weak offensive line because Jared Gaither is out indefinitely with back spasms. They were also without Vincent Brown, their top receiver in Training Camp, and Philip Rivers never looked comfortable throwing to Robert Meachem and Malcom Floyd, completing 24 of 33 for 231 yards and a score against an incredibly thin Oakland secondary.

Rivers isn’t helped by his offensive line’s deficiencies, though they did do a decent job in the opener of protecting him, as Rivers was pressured on just 10 of 34 drop backs, and he also isn’t helped by their inability to run the ball. Missing Ryan Mathews, who was supposed to be their everything back, the Chargers managed just 32 yards on 20 carries, led at running back by a duo of the washed up Ronnie Brown and the mediocre Curtis Brinkley.

Brown and Gaither will miss this week as well and are out indefinitely (Brown is out for at least 6 weeks), but Ryan Mathews has yet to be ruled out. Even still, it doesn’t sound promising for him. Reports have been varied, but trusted beat writer Michael Gehlken, of the Union-Tribune San Diego, who attends all practices and press conferences, believes Mathews will once again be inactive. At the very most, he’ll be a game time decision.

The Chargers also have two new injuries to worry about, Antonio Gates and Quentin Jammer, though both are expected to play. Gates has a rib problem that has caused him to miss some practice this week, but he normally plays through injuries, so expect him out there playing through the pain, good news for Rivers since he’s his most trusted target in a thin receiving corps. Jammer, meanwhile, has a broken hand, but is also expected to play through it, wearing a cast. Jammer, a declining player at age 33, had a nice opener, but a broken hand will hurt his ability to tackle and be physical with wide receivers, so the Titans could throw on him with some ease this week, especially if the aged corner proves last week was a fluke.

Jammer’s presence is necessary though, as nickel cornerback Shareece Wright will miss this week with an ankle problem, which would have left the inexperienced Marcus Gilchrist, a 2011 2nd round pick, to start and someone signed off the streets to man the nickel as the Chargers only carry 4 cornerbacks. Instead, Gilchrist will just take Wright’s spot in the slot, which isn’t a huge downgrade.

Still, with all these injuries and their history early in the season, it’s definitely possible they could be caught off guard and upset by the underrated Titans this week. If it wasn’t for an injury to the Raiders’ long snapper last week, they could have lost to a Raider team that I think is one of the worst in the league. That win reminded me of their 4-1 start last season. The Chargers were able to beat up on a cupcake schedule last year early, beating Minnesota by 7, Kansas City by 3, Miami by 10, and Denver (prebow) by 5. However, once they started playing real teams, things got a lot harder for them and they actually went on a 6 game losing streak. The Titans are a real team, so the Chargers have to be careful.

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Tennessee Titans at San Diego Chargers: Week 2 NFL Pick

Tennessee Titans (0-1) at San Diego Chargers (1-0)

Never bet on the Chargers early in the season. Prior to last year, when the Chargers went 4-1 early against a cupcake schedule, the Chargers were 14-12 from weeks 1-6 under Philip Rivers and 41-11 (41-11!!!) from weeks 6-17. Including last year, they’re actually 3-7 ATS as favorites during the first 4 weeks of the season in the Philip Rivers era. Well, almost never. I bet on the Chargers last week because they were playing what I thought was an overrated Raiders team and I turned out to be right with that pick.

Still, the Chargers didn’t look good. If it wasn’t for an injury to the Raiders’ long snapper, they could have lost to a Raider team that I think is one of the worst in the league. That win reminded me of their 4-1 start last season. The Chargers were able to beat up on a cupcake schedule last year early, beating Minnesota by 7, Kansas City by 3, Miami by 10, and Denver (prebow) by 5. However, once they started playing real teams, things got a lot harder for them and they actually went on a 6 game losing streak.

The Titans are a real team. I picked them to make the playoffs before the season and I’m not changing that prediction. They had the league’s 8th ranked scoring defense last year, despite having 6 of 11 starters in their 3rd year or younger. That continued growth and maturity, as well as their cornerback depth, and the addition of Kamerion Wimbley and potential breakout of Derrick Morgan as much needed pass rushers would cancel out the loss of Cortland Finnegan.

Offensively, I felt they should continue to have one of the best passing blocking offensive lines, led by bookend tackles Michael Roos and David Stewart and I felt their run blocking would be better with Steve Hutchinson replacing Jake Scott at guard. Meanwhile, I felt Chris Johnson would be back to his old self. Chris Johnson averaged 3.0 YPC in his first 8 games last season after missing most of the offseason with a new coaching staff coming in and also getting out of shape. However, he averaged 4.8 YPC the rest of the way and put in a ton of work this offseason to get back into tip top shape, attending every single one of the Titans’ offseason activities, even the optional ones (OTAs) which he would normally skip in order to train at home in Orlando.

They also have Kenny Britt returning from injury. Britt missed 13 ½ games with injury last year, but he’s still only 24 (later this month) and the 2009 1st round pick has 56 catches for 1146 yards and 12 touchdowns in his last 13 full games. In 2010, when Britt was healthy (11 games) and Chris Johnson was still his old self, the Titans averaged 27.1 points per game in those 11 games. That number is a little skewed because the Titans had an unrealistically low yards per point ratio, but the point is, when they have all their offensive weapons, they can put points on the board.

Since then, Nate Washington and Jared Cook have broken out in Britt’s absence and the latter could be even better this year after catching 21 passes for 335 yards and a touchdown in his final 3 years last year. They also add 1st round pick Kendall Wright as a 3rd receiver. On top of that, they’ve made an obvious upgrade at quarterback going from Kerry Collins and Vince Young to Matt Hasselbeck and now to Jake Locker, who led them to 1.83 points per drive last year, as opposed to 1.63 points per drive for Hasselbeck (albiet in limited action). Basically, I felt the same way about the Titans that I did at that point last year about the Lions, who proved me right.

And you know what, none of that has really changed. The Titans just ran into the wrong team at the wrong time playing the Patriots last week. The Patriots might be the best team in the league. Jake Locker played well before leaving with injury and he should be back for this one, with Kenny Britt also returning to give them an added boost in the receiving corps. Locker should have another good game now that he has one start under his belt.

Defensively, there’s no shame in giving up 30+ points to the Patriots. Everyone does it pretty much. It doesn’t mean they have a bad defense. They should have a bounce back week this week against the Chargers. The Chargers still have Philip Rivers, but they’re incredibly banged up offensively. They’ll be probably be without top running back Ryan Matthews again, leaving Ronnie Brown and Curtis Brinkley to split carries. Neither of them did anything against the Raiders last week.

They’re also without Vincent Brown, their best receiver in Training Camp before his injury, leaving Philip Rivers with the overpaid Robert Meachem, who has a career high 45 catches despite playing 4 years with Drew Brees, and Malcom Floyd, an inconsistent receiver in his age 31 season who has caught 3 or fewer passes in 14 of his last 23 games, missing 9 games over the past 2 years. Antonio Gates will be his favorite target, unless the 32 year old, who has also missed 9 games over the past 2 years, gets hurt.

Finally, they’ll be without left tackle Jared Gaither once again, leaving undrafted rookie Mike Harris to start on the blind side again on a line already with major weaknesses at left guard and right tackle. Philip Rivers is an elite quarterback, but this might just be too much for him to handle. After all, despite being set up with great field position by 3 Raider special teams miscues, the Chargers managed just 22 points and got in the end zone just once against a Raider defense that ranked 29th in scoring last year and lost several key players this offseason. The Titans defense should be able to keep them in check.

The one thing I’m really worried about is Chris Johnson, especially since the Chargers’ run defense just did a great job on Darren McFadden last week. However, I’m not quite ready to give up on him and a lot of his problems are on the offensive line. The Titans replaced right guard LeRoy Harris with Jake Matthews late in the game and he played a little bit better. Matthews will continue to start this week, so maybe that will help. Playing anyone other than the Patriots’ great run defense will also help, no matter how good a job the Chargers did on McFadden last week.

I also believe this is what’s called a trap line. Trap lines are when odds makers want the public to bet one way or another so they make a “too good to be true” line. Typically when odds makers want you to do something, it’s a good idea not to do it. The two signs of a trap line are a suspiciously low line and a line that drops even though the majority of the public is betting it. Right now, about 85% of the money is on San Diego, yet the line has dropped from -7 when it opened (already suspiciously low) to -6 with juice. They really want us to bet San Diego. The odds makers seem to agree that Tennessee is overrated and San Diego is still the same old September Chargers. They’re not a bad group of guys to have agree with you. They’re not stupid. That’s why they make money every single year.

This is my pick of the week. The Titans looked bad last week because of who they played, but they’re still a solid team. The Chargers meanwhile, should never be bet on as favorites early in the season, especially not against a solid team. The Titans defense should continue to make the Chargers’ offense struggle, while Jake Locker and company should be able to move the ball against a Chargers defense that ranked 22nd in scoring last year and is overrated now because they held an overrated Raiders’ offense to 14 points when they were missing arguably their top receiver Denarius Moore. Covering Locker to Kenny Britt and the rest of these weapons will be a lot harder than covering Carson Palmer to Darrius Heyward-Bey and Rod Streater.

Public lean: San Diego (new thing I’m adding, siding with the odds makers on bets is not a bad thing to do since they make so much money, so I’m listing this here to allow readers to “fade” the public, if they so choose, in this example, the odds makers win if Tennessee covers)

Tennessee Titans 27 San Diego 23 Upset Pick +230

Pick against spread: Tennessee +6 (-110) 5 units

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San Diego Chargers: Week 2 NFL Power Rankings (#8)

Last week: 10 (+2)

Record: 1-0

The Chargers barely beat an overrated Raiders team that was shooting themselves in the foot all night. Yep, it’s the same old early season Chargers. That game reminds me of their close early season wins against bad teams last year, Miami, Denver, Minnesota, and Kansas City, all by 10 or fewer points. Playing a real team next week in the Titans, they might not find themselves so lucky, even if Ryan Mathews returns to give them a running game. Of course, they’ll eventually get it together and probably make the playoffs, where they’ll go one and done as favorites. After all, it is their way.

Studs

QB Philip Rivers: 24 of 33 for 231 yards, 1 touchdown, 2 throw aways, 1 drop, 101.6 adjusted QB rating, pressured 10 times

CB Quentin Jammer: Allowed 4 completions for 36 yards on 7 attempts, 1 pass deflection, allowed 7 solo tackles and 3 stops on 20 run plays

FS Eric Weddle: Allowed 4 completions for 17 yards on 4 attempts, 9 solo tackles, 1 missed tackle, 5 stops on 20 run snaps

LE Kendall Reyes: 1 quarterback hit and 5 quarterback pressures on 23 pass rush snaps, 0 tackles on 9 run snaps

K Nate Keading: 7 kickoffs, 5 touchbacks, 69.0 yards per kickoff, 17.7 average start distance, 5/5 FG (19, 23, 28, 41, 45)

Duds

LG Tyronne Green: Allowed 1 quarterback pressure on 36 pass block snaps, run blocked for 6 yards on 6 carries

C Nick Hardwick: Allowed 1 quarterback pressure on 36 pass block snaps, run blocked for 0 yards on 2 carries, 1 penalty

RB Ronnie Brown: Rushed for 5 yards (4 after contact) on 5 carries, 2 quarterback pressures on 8 pass block plays, 5 catches for 26 yards on 5 targets

LE Vaughn Martin: 0 sacks, quarterback hits, or quarterback pressures on 36 pass rush snaps, 0 tackles on 11 run snaps

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Chargers won’t put Jared Gaither on IR yet

Jared Gaither has been ruled out for week 1 with back spasms, particularly concerning because back spasms are a lingering problem and Gaither missed about a half and a year with back problems from 2010-2011. However, when asked about putting Gaither on IR, Head Coach Norv Turner said “I think that’s way premature.” I agree it is, but it’s definitely a concerning situation.

Failing to get a reliable backup for their unable blindside protector, undrafted free agent Mike Harris will start on the blindside for as long as Gaither, who hasn’t suited up in 6 weeks, is out. I don’t need to know you that’s a problem. He figures to be one of three big holes on the Chargers’ offensive line. Left guard Tyronne Green will take over full-time for the retired Kris Dielman. Green struggled in limited action last year in place of Dielman. He rated 61st out of 76 guards on ProFootballFocus despite only really playing half the season.

Right tackle Jeromey Clary has been awful for years. He was horrific last season, allowing 7 sacks, 7 quarterback hits, 42 quarterback pressures, and committing 11 penalties, while struggling as a run blocker. He was ProFootballFocus’ 71st rated offensive tackle out of 73. Right guard Louis Vasquez and center Nick Hardwick are solid starters, but Philip Rivers will be under pressure a lot this year.

When healthy, Gaither is an elite left tackle. With the Ravens, in 2009, he allowed just 4 sacks, 3 quarterback hits, and 6 quarterback pressures, while committing 10 penalties in 13 games and in 2008, he allowed just 2 sacks, 2 quarterback hits, and 22 quarterback pressures, while committing 15 penalties in 19 games. Gaither was amazing in 5 starts last season for the Chargers, after being cut midseason by the Chiefs. He didn’t allow a sack or quarterback hit and only allowed 3 quarterback pressures, while committing just 3 penalties.

The Chargers rewarded him with a 4 year, 24.6 million dollar deal with 13.5 million guaranteed this offseason. That may seem like a lot to pay, but franchise left tackles do not grow on trees. There’s a reason they’re never available on the open market. Seeing one available is almost as rare as seeing a franchise quarterback on the open market. If Gaither were to stay healthy, that deal would have been a steal. However, now it’s looking like that could very well not happen.

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Chargers’ Ryan Matthews won’t play week 1, sets sights on week 2

He did some work in practice this week, but Ryan Mathews has been officially ruled out by the Chargers’ coaching staff for their Monday Night game against the Oakland Raiders. Mathews said of the situation “the next game, that’s what I’m looking for now. I don’t know about the team, but me personally, now I’m looking for that game against Tennessee.” Since he did some practice this week, it sounds like he’ll be able to go next week, which would be right in the middle of the 4-6 week prognosis he was given after the August 9th injury.

In his absence, the Chargers will use a trio of Ronnie Brown, Curtis Brinkley, and Le’Ron McClain and though none of those backs stand out and it initially sounded like they would split carries and cancel each other out in fantasy, it now sounds like Brown will be the lead back. Norv Turner loves using feature backs and he seems to like Brown, saying of him that he will be “very involved.” Brown isn’t a very talented back, heading into his age 31 season after averaging just 3.2 YPC last season, but he’ll get volume yardage and the Raiders had the league’s worst run defense last year, so he’s startable in fantasy.

He’s obviously a downgrade from Mathews though and for a Chargers’ offense missing left tackle Jared Gaither and wide receiver Vincent Brown already, Philip Rivers has his work cut out for him, even against the Raiders’ terrible defense. The Raiders have enough offensive firepower and the crowd will be crazy in Oakland for a rare Monday night home game so the Chargers will need to avoid their annual early season funk or they could lose. More likely, I think the Chargers beat the Raiders in unimpressive fashion the way they beat teams similar caliber teams like Minnesota, Kansas City, Miami, and Denver last year, to start 4-1.

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San Diego Chargers at Oakland Raiders Week 1 NFL Pick

San Diego Chargers (0-0) at Oakland Raiders (0-0)

Buy tickets for this game

I have the Raiders as one of my overrated teams. The Raiders’ Pythagorean Expectation last year suggested they should have won 6 games, not 8, as they went 7-2 in games decided by a touchdown or less, the most wins of that kind of any team last season. The Raiders also lost their top cornerback Stanford Routt and their top pass rusher Kamerion Wimbley in free agency. If that’s not enough, starting linebacker Aaron Curry could be out for the year and will be replaced in the starting lineup by a 4th round rookie and defensive tackles Tommy Kelly and Richard Seymour are both going into their age 33 seasons, with the latter already dealing with a bad knee. They had the league’s 29th ranked scoring defense last year, allowing 27.1 points per game and could be the league’s worst scoring defense this year. Carson Palmer and the playmakers on offense can make some plays, but they’ll also commit a lot of turnovers and it won’t be enough to offset the defense’s play.

The idea behind identifying overrated and underrated teams was to be one step ahead of the odds makers and essentially blindly bet against the overrated teams and on the underrated teams until the odds makers caught up or the teams proved me wrong. However, I’m just not that comfortable betting on the Chargers here. They’re incredibly banged up offensively. They’ll be without top running back Ryan Matthews, leaving decrepit running back Ronnie Brown to start, in his age 31 season, after averaging 3.2 YPC last year.

They’re also without Vincent Brown, their best receiver in Training Camp before his injury, leaving Philip Rivers with the overpaid Robert Meachem, who has a career high 45 catches despite playing 4 years with Drew Brees, and Malcom Floyd, an inconsistent receiver in his age 31 season who has caught 3 or fewer passes in 14 of his last 23 games, missing 9 games over the past 2 years. Antonio Gates will be his favorite target, unless the 32 year old, who has also missed 9 games over the past 2 years, gets hurt.

Finally, they’ll be without left tackle Jared Gaither, leaving undrafted rookie Mike Harris to start on the blindside on a line already with major weaknesses at left guard and right tackle. Philip Rivers is an elite quarterback who should bounce back from a down year last year (he had 14 touchdowns to 6 interceptions in his final 8 games, a sign of a turnaround) and he’s done well with limited help in the past before, but this might just be asking too much of him.

There’s also the issue of the Chargers’ early season struggles, especially on the road. Prior to last year, when the Chargers went 4-1 early against a cupcake schedule, the Chargers were 14-12 from weeks 1-6 under Philip Rivers and 41-11 (41-11!!!) from weeks 6-17. Including last year, they’re actually 2-9 ATS on the road during the first 4 weeks of the season in the Philip Rivers era. The Raiders crowd will be amped up getting a Monday Night Football home game, a rarity for a franchise that has had a rough past decade or so (9 straight years without the playoffs).

All that being said, I’m taking the Chargers. I’m just not particularly confident about it. The Chargers were able to beat up on a cupcake schedule last year early, beating Minnesota by 7, Kansas City by 3, Miami by 10, and Denver (prebow) by 5. That’s not particularly impressive, but all the Chargers need to do is win here as small underdogs and I think they should be able to do that against an opponent who, like their early opponents last year, isn’t very good. Rather than putting 1 unit on the spread and 1 on the money line, I’m putting 2 on the money line because 1 point games are rare. It’s not worth the extra -15 juice to get the +1.

San Diego Chargers 31 Oakland Raiders 24 (+105) 2 units

Pick against spread: San Diego +1 (-110) 0 units

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Chargers’ Jared Gaither expected to miss regular season action

According to Chargers’ beat writer Kevin Acee, left tackle Jared Gaither is not expected to play in the Chargers’ preseason finale this week and the Chargers are preparing to play week 1 without him. Gaither has been suffering from back spasms and missed all of the preseason and Training Camp, very bad news for him because he missed essentially a year and a half with back problems from 2010-2011. Back spasms can often be lingering injuries so Gaither is a candidate to miss even more than 1 game with his history.

When healthy, Gaither is an elite left tackle. With the Ravens, in 2009, he allowed just 4 sacks, 3 quarterback hits, and 6 quarterback pressures, while committing 10 penalties in 13 games and in 2008, he allowed just 2 sacks, 2 quarterback hits, and 22 quarterback pressures, while committing 15 penalties in 19 games. Gaither was amazing in 5 starts last season for the Chargers, after being cut midseason by the Chiefs. He didn’t allow a sack or quarterback hit and only allowed 3 quarterback pressures, while committing just 3 penalties.

The Chargers rewarded him with a 4 year, 24.6 million dollar deal with 13.5 million guaranteed this offseason. That may seem like a lot to pay, but franchise left tackles do not grow on trees. There’s a reason they’re never available on the open market. Seeing one available is almost as rare as seeing a franchise quarterback on the open market.

If Gaither were to stay healthy, that deal would have been a steal. However, now it’s looking like that could very well not happen. The Chargers did not give themselves a very good security policy as undrafted rookie Mike Harris has been working on the blindside in practice in Gaither’s absence. He’ll almost definitely struggle in that role this season.

He figures to be one of three big holes on the Chargers’ offensive line. Left guard Tyronne Green will take over full-time for the retired Kris Dielman. Green struggled in limited action last year in place of Dielman. He rated 61st out of 76 guards on ProFootballFocus despite only really playing half the season. Right tackle Jeromey Clary has been awful for years. He was horrific last season, allowing 7 sacks, 7 quarterback hits, 42 quarterback pressures, and committing 11 penalties, while struggling as a run blocker. He was ProFootballFocus’ 71st rated offensive tackle out of 73. Right guard Louis Vasquez and center Nick Hardwick are solid starters, but Philip Rivers will be under pressure a lot this year.

If you’re interested in doing a fantasy football league with me, here’s the link (no draft date set yet, currently standard, with the option to become PPR with group vote). http://msn.foxsports.com/fantasy/football/commissioner/Registration/Private.aspx?league=55086&password=FanSpot2

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