Chargers Defense Could Look Very Different Under Chris O'Leary

With Chris O'Leary's return, the LA Chargers' linebacking unit could be the pivotal force that dictates the success of their revamped defensive strategy.

The Chargers’ defense may end up being shaped by one room more than any other: linebacker.

That’s the clearest takeaway from the arrival of Chris O’Leary, who is back in Los Angeles after leaving following the 2024 season to become the defensive coordinator at Western Michigan. O’Leary comes in with a familiar background, plenty of schematic overlap with Jesse Minter, and one major idea that could change how this defense looks in 2026: more pressure.

Los Angeles spent 2025 playing fast, disciplined defense under Minter, and the unit finished among the best in the NFL. Minter is now gone, having left to take over as the new head coach of the Baltimore Ravens, and O’Leary’s return brings both continuity and a chance for change. At his introductory press conference, he said he wanted to “elevate and evolve the defense that is already in place.”

The biggest place that evolution could show up is in the blitz package. Minter’s Chargers were extremely conservative there, blitzing only 18.9 percent of the time, which ranked fifth-lowest in the NFL in 2025.

O’Leary, by contrast, was far more aggressive at Western Michigan. His defense blitzed at a 36.4 percent clip, nearly twice as often as the Chargers did last season.

There are still clear similarities between the two approaches. The Chargers played zone on 81 percent of defensive snaps in 2025, while O’Leary’s Western Michigan defense used zone 76 percent of the time. Both also leaned on cover three, with O’Leary using it slightly more often than Minter, though both sat in the 30s.

But the pressure numbers tell the real story. O’Leary preferred five- and six-man rushes, and he brought extra rushers from all over the formation.

In 2025, his blitzes came from linebackers 28.9 percent of the time, from the slot corner 16.6 percent of the time, and from cornerbacks 11.7 percent of the time. With Derwin James Jr. now available to him, more pressure from the slot cornerback spot would not be a surprise.

That’s where the linebacker group becomes so important. The Chargers have a very deep room there heading into training camp, and roster decisions are going to be difficult. That depth may also be a clue about how O’Leary plans to use the position.

If his Western Michigan tendencies carry over, linebackers won’t just be asked to blitz more often. They’ll also have to handle the coverage responsibilities that open up when defensive backs are sent after the quarterback. In other words, the linebackers may end up carrying a huge share of the load if this defense is going to generate pressure the way O’Leary wants.

Western Michigan’s 2025 numbers back that up. O’Leary’s top two tacklers were linebackers James Camden and Sefa Saipaia Jr., and they were also the team’s top two non-edge rushers in total pressures.

For the Chargers, that points straight to Daiyan Henley and the rest of the linebacker group. If O’Leary’s 2025 trends follow him to Los Angeles, that room could end up deciding how far this defense can go in 2026.

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