Rashawn Slater’s career with the Chargers has already been defined by big highs and brutal setbacks, and 2026 now feels like the season that will tell the real story.
The left tackle arrived in Los Angeles with plenty of pedigree. Born March 26, 1999, in Sugar Land, Texas, Slater grew up in a football family - his parents are Reggie Slater, a former eight-year NBA veteran, and Katie Slater.
At Clements High School, he earned first-team All-District honors on the offensive line as both a junior and senior, then entered the recruiting process as a three-star prospect according to 247Sports. Northwestern won out over Kansas, Wyoming, Rice and Illinois, and once he got to Evanston, Slater didn’t waste time.
He stepped into the starting lineup as a true freshman and made the Big Ten Conference All-Freshman Team. The success kept rolling through his sophomore and junior seasons with more conference recognition and awards.
His senior year never happened on the field. The COVID-19 pandemic wiped it out, so Slater shifted his focus to training for the 2021 NFL Draft. The Chargers took him 13th overall, a pick many viewed as a steal.
That decision paid off immediately. Slater was charged with protecting Justin Herbert, then entering his second season as the team’s franchise quarterback, and he looked every bit like a high-end offensive tackle. The Chargers had not seen that kind of presence on the edge for much of Philip Rivers’ run, and Slater’s first season brought a Pro Bowl nod, Second-Team All-Pro honors and a fourth-place finish in Offensive Rookie of the Year voting.
Then the injury trouble started to pile up. Heading into his second season, Slater was supposed to take another leap, but a torn bicep cost him all but the first three games.
He returned in 2023 and showed some rust, though he still graded out as an above-average tackle. In 2024, he got back on track in a major way, earning another Pro Bowl selection and then landing a $114 million contract before the 2025 season.
That next season never got going. Slater suffered a ruptured left patellar tendon during a training camp practice.
The numbers from his last healthy stretch show why the Chargers invested so heavily in him: 15 games played, a Pro Bowl selection, a 91.1 overall PFF grade that ranked second among all offensive tackles, a 90.4 pass-blocking grade that ranked third, and an 82.8 run-blocking grade that ranked fifth.
As Spotrac noted, “Rashawn Slater signed a 4 year, $114,000,000 contract with the Los Angeles Chargers, including $29,000,000 signing bonus, $92,000,000 guaranteed, and an average annual salary of $28,500,000. In 2026, Slater will earn a base salary of $11,000,000 and a roster bonus of $7,000,000, while carrying a cap hit of $23,800,000 and a dead cap value of $67,200,000.”
Now the spotlight shifts to 2026. Slater has already shown he can play at one of the league’s highest levels when he’s healthy, but his injury history is impossible to ignore.
The ruptured patellar tendon is viewed by many as one of the toughest injuries an athlete can face, especially for an offensive lineman who depends so much on lower-body power. For Slater, this season is about proving he can come back from it and give the Chargers the kind of help their offensive line badly needs.
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