Chargers Enter Camp With One Defensive Concern Fans Can't Ignore

As training camp approaches, the Chargers must address significant concerns in their offensive line and defensive edge-rushing unit if they aspire for a successful season.

The Los Angeles Chargers’ biggest camp question isn’t the one getting the most attention.

Yes, the offensive line has plenty to sort through, and Justin Herbert has dealt with guard issues in front of him for years. Cole Strange arrived in free agency as a presumed starter, but there’s no guarantee he takes to Mike McDaniel’s system the way the team hopes.

Jake Slaughter, a college center drafted to play guard, has opened his pro career behind veteran free-agent additions. And with the whole offense adjusting to McDaniel’s scheme, some early camp turbulence feels inevitable.

But the quieter concern might be the one that ends up mattering most: the edge-rushing group.

That’s a strange place for a Chargers team to find uncertainty, especially with Khalil Mack still on the roster. Yet Mack is 35, and the production has already started to reflect that reality.

He logged just 424 snaps last season and finished with 5.5 sacks and 23 pressures. In 2024, he played only 616 snaps across 16 games.

Age and workload are no longer abstract talking points here.

Tuli Tuipulotu gives the Chargers a real building block. At 23, he’s coming off a 13-sack season and looks headed for a major payday down the line.

The problem is what happens if opposing offenses start treating him like the only true threat off the edge. That kind of attention can change the shape of a defense fast.

ESPN’s Seth Walder pointed to that exact concern in a national column.

“Can Khalil Mack deliver again at age 35? Can Akheem Mesidor be disruptive as a rookie?

If the answer to those questions is yes, that would go a long way toward helping a Chargers defense that lost former defensive coordinator Jesse Minter,” Walder wrote. “If no, then those two and Tuli Tuipulotu could hold back the defense.”

That note matters because the Chargers already had to go shopping for help once last season. Mack and Tuipulotu, with an injury mixed in, pushed the team to trade for Odafe Oweh. He fit the scheme and produced, but the front office still chose not to pay him market value to keep him around.

Instead, the Chargers used a first-round pick on Akheem Mesidor, an older rookie they’re clearly hoping can step into a similar role right away. The timing is a little awkward, though, since he may already be thinking about a fifth-year option around age 30.

So while the offensive line will draw the loudest complaints when camp opens, the edge rush could become the sneaky problem that defines the Chargers’ early summer. If Mack slips, and Mesidor isn’t ready, the pressure on Tuipulotu gets a lot heavier - and the defense loses a lot of its margin for error after the departure of Jesse Minter.

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