The Chargers have already shown this offseason that they know how to get ahead of contract business when they want to. Joe Hortiz and the front office moved quickly on the Derwin James extension, but they also let situations with Zion Johnson and Odafe Oweh drift until both ended up leaving in free agency on sizable deals elsewhere.
That leaves a few important names to watch as July work gets going and the season approaches. Three Chargers in particular stand out as extension candidates who could be headed for big years.
Tuli Tuipulotu is the obvious one. The 23-year-old second-round pick has already piled up 26 sacks in 50 games, and his 13 sacks last season set a career high. With Khalil Mack nearing retirement, Tuipulotu looks like the kind of player the Chargers want to build around on that side of the ball.
The question is whether the team gets something done during training camp or lets it stretch into the regular season and beyond. Tuipulotu and his camp may prefer to wait, especially if they believe another strong year is coming.
That belief makes sense even with the coordinator switch to Chris O’Leary, because the expectation is that the production stays steady. The Chargers also don’t appear to be in any kind of cap squeeze, so the issue is less about money and more about whether both sides want the peace of mind now.
Quentin Johnston is another name worth watching, even if his NFL start hasn’t matched the first-round label attached to him. Drop problems have been part of the story, but he has also been stuck in offenses that didn’t do him many favors. Now he gets a fresh chance in a Mike McDaniel offense that should be better suited to creating yards-after-catch opportunities, especially on shorter throws where Johnston seems to do his best work.
He’s still only 24, and the touchdown production has been there in a limited way: eight scores in each of the last two seasons. If McDaniel’s arrival lands at the right time for Johnston’s growth, the Chargers could suddenly have a very different conversation on their hands.
Donte Jackson rounds out the group. The veteran cornerback arrived in free agency last year and turned in a 71.9 Pro Football Focus grade, which ranked 24th out of 114 at the position. He’ll be 31 in November, but if he puts together another strong season at a premium spot, Los Angeles could be willing to pay him well, even if the arrangement ends up being more year-to-year, the way they handle Mack.
In Other News...
Joe Alt Has Become A Massive Chargers Question Again
Joe Alt entered the league as the kind of franchise building block the Chargers were hoping for when they took the Notre Dame tackle fifth overall in the 2024 draft. He handled 16 games as a rookie and looked close to Pro Bowl conversation, then followed it up with a 2025 season that only added to the sense that Los Angeles had landed an anchor up front, even as his role changed along the way.
Now the question around Alt is less about talent than about how the Chargers plan to settle him back into place after a turbulent year. He is signed for the long term and is expected to be ready for 2026, but with the line picture still tied to health and position fit, his return carries real weight for an offense trying to get its bookends and its continuity sorted out again. [Read more 🡒]
Khalil Mack Is Closing In On Chargers Defensive Royalty
Khalil Mack is heading into his fifth season with the Chargers, and the bigger picture around his time in Los Angeles is still tied to the same thing it has always been: making these years matter in January. Even with the team still chasing the postseason payoff that has eluded it, Mack has already built a strong place in the franchise record book, sitting 11th all-time in sacks and steadily closing in on the next tier of Chargers defensive names.
The path upward is there if Mack can stay on the field and keep producing in 2026 after an injury-interrupted 2025 and a dip from his peak form the year before. A solid sack total next season would push him into the top ten and give him a real chance to keep climbing, which is the kind of legacy-marker that tends to mean more when it comes with team success attached. [Read more 🡒]
