Mike McDaniel Faces A Huge Justin Herbert Test In Los Angeles

The Chargers' offensive system under Mike McDaniel emphasizes a multi-dimensional strategy over raw speed to leverage Justin Herbert's strengths and ensure a dynamic attack.

Mike McDaniel’s influence on the Chargers is going to be judged by something bigger than flashy plays or a highlight-reel deep ball. The real test is whether this offense can create problems for defenses in more than one way.

The easy comparison is Miami. McDaniel’s system in Miami leans hard on speed, spacing and timing, and with players like Tyreek Hill and Jaylen Waddle, it can stretch defenses until they crack. But the Chargers are not built to copy that formula piece for piece, and pretending they are would miss the point.

What Los Angeles does have is Justin Herbert, and that changes the conversation. Herbert gives this offense a higher floor than McDaniel had with Tua Tagovailoa.

That is not a shot at Tua. It is simply a reflection of what Herbert brings: arm strength, size and the ability to throw from awkward platforms.

That kind of quarterback gives an offense more room to work with and more answers when the structure starts to break down.

Still, Herbert alone does not solve everything. The Chargers do not have a Tyreek Hill-type weapon who can erase coverage and turn a routine catch into a long touchdown on pure speed. So if this offense is going to become dangerous, it has to do it through variety, not just one elite mismatch after another.

That makes the run game a central piece of the whole thing. If the Chargers can run the ball with real consistency, defenses can’t just sit deep and dare Herbert to keep throwing underneath until something opens.

They have to crowd the box. They have to bring linebackers up.

And once that happens, the passing game gets a cleaner runway.

That’s where the McDaniel-style ingredients start to matter: motion, play-action and formation changes. Even without a Hill or Waddle, those tools can force defenses into uncomfortable decisions.

The receivers in this offense do not need to be pure burners. They need to be sharp, reliable and dangerous once the ball is in their hands.

That puts pressure on Ladd McConkey, Quentin Johnston and Tre Harris to handle their jobs well.

Balance matters here too. The Chargers have too often drifted into predictability, whether that meant leaning too much on Herbert or losing the run game entirely.

McDaniel’s presence should help keep that from happening. The point is not to throw 45 times every week.

The point is to build sequences that keep defenses guessing and off balance.

If it all comes together, this won’t look like a Miami clone. It’ll look more layered and more adaptable. And that may be the better path anyway, because the Chargers have a quarterback who can lift the whole operation when things get messy.

That’s why offensive diversity is not just a talking point for this team. It’s the whole foundation.

In Other News...

Chargers Suddenly Face A Massive Rashawn Slater Question In 2026

Rashawn Slater has already built the kind of rsum that usually settles a teams left tackle spot for years. Drafted 13th overall in 2021, he quickly developed into one of the Chargers most important players, earned Pro Bowl recognition and landed a major extension as the franchise bet on his long-term value.

Now the conversation has shifted from upside to availability, because Slaters recovery is the central 2026 question hanging over the offense. Los Angeles knows what he looks like when he is healthy and at his best, but it also knows how injuries have repeatedly interrupted that arc, from a torn bicep to the latest setback, and the Chargers are left waiting to see how much stability they can count on in front of their quarterback. [Read more 🡒]

Two Chargers Rookies Already Stand Out For All The Right Reasons

The Chargers came out of the 2026 NFL Draft with two rookies who seem built to matter right away, even if in very different ways. Brenen Thompson brings the kind of speed that can change the shape of a passing game and add value in the return game, while Akheem Mesidor arrives with the traits of an edge rusher who can fit into a veteran-heavy room and still carve out a role.

For a team trying to keep adding young, inexpensive help around its core, those are the kinds of picks that make sense on paper and on the practice field. Thompson and Mesidor both land in situations where their specific skills line up with obvious needs, which is why there is already a real buzz around what each could become once the regular season starts to answer the harder question. [Read more 🡒]