Chris O’Leary steps into a favorable spot as the Chargers’ new defensive coordinator, but the job still comes with real expectations. He replaces Jesse Minter heading into the 2026 season, and while that’s no small handoff, O’Leary isn’t taking over a unit in need of a full reset. The Chargers already have the kind of pieces that can keep a defense near the top of the league.
At the center of it all is Derwin James, one of the NFL’s premier defensive leaders. He recently signed an extension that keeps him in Los Angeles for the foreseeable future, and his versatility gives O’Leary plenty of room to work. James can be moved around the formation, used to disguise coverages and sent after the quarterback from different spots depending on the matchup.
The secondary has more than just James to lean on. Tarheeb Still has kept developing into a steady corner, while Cam Hart has shown encouraging growth early in his career. If both continue on that path, the Chargers could be looking at one of the AFC’s better young cornerback pairings.
The front seven is where the picture gets even more intriguing.
Khalil Mack may be getting closer to the finish line of an outstanding career, but he still brings the kind of intelligence and technique that make him a problem for offenses. On the other side, Tuli Tuipulotu has become one of the Chargers’ key defensive building blocks after another step forward last season. Akheem Mesidor adds another young edge rusher with the athletic traits to grow into a major role, and if he develops quickly, O’Leary could keep fresh pass rushers rotating through games while also planning for the post-Mack future.
Daiyan Henley has also become a central figure. He’s emerged as one of the emotional leaders on the defense, and his speed and instincts let him cover ground from sideline to sideline. That kind of range matters in today’s NFL, where linebackers have to handle coverage responsibilities as well as run support.
Up front, the Chargers’ defensive line looks deeper than it has in years. Teair Tartt earned his contract extension by becoming one of the most dependable interior defenders on the roster, and the rest of the rotation gives O’Leary options to mix fronts and create favorable matchups.
Continuity may be O’Leary’s biggest edge of all. He’s new to the coordinator job, but the defense itself is not starting over.
Plenty of the players already know the system’s foundation, which should let O’Leary spend more time adding his own touches instead of building everything from the ground up. That should make the transition easier in training camp and early in the season.
Still, the pieces only go so far. O’Leary will have to show he can adjust during games, put players in the best possible spots and keep the defense ready for some of the NFL’s most dangerous offenses. Being a coordinator is a different challenge than working as an assistant, and that part of the test is still ahead.
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Chris OLeary is back in the Chargers defensive chair for 2026, and with Jesse Minter off to Baltimore, the structure of this unit could change in a meaningful way. OLearys return comes after a season at Western Michigan, where he showed a willingness to heat up opposing quarterbacks more aggressively than the Chargers did under Minter, giving this defense a different personality than the one that helped define the last couple of years.
The biggest question now is how much of that approach carries over to Los Angeles, especially with a linebacker group that looks deep enough to force real competition when camp opens. OLearys track record suggests more pressure could come from the second level and from the slot, which would put players like Derwin James Jr. in the middle of the conversation as the Chargers sort out how they want to attack in 2026. [Read more 🡒]
