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I don't put a lot of stock into those career stats. All kinds of things affect them - like how many years a guy plays, how much passing the team was doing when he was playing, did he have a good QB throwing it to him? When you think about it, it's remarkable that both Garrison and Alworth are high on the list since they played at the same time. Gilman's offense shared the ball very well.
Interesting. I do because i value longevity and availability. For Keenan to be putting these numbers together means he has been able to achieve sustained excellence.
Never been to that stadium, what was the seat capacity? Looks like 30k
I think it was 35k when the Chargers played there. It was remodeled into a much smaller stadium for HS after the Chargers left Balboa Park for Mission Valley. I've never attended a game there either. But I did watch the 49ers play at Kezar Stadium in Golden Gate Park in SF two or three times in the 1960s. It was much the same type of stadium, and had about the same capacity. Kezar was also torn down and rebuilt into a much smaller stadium. But the Niners played there until 1971, until they began sharing Candlestick with the Giants. I really enjoyed going to games at Kezar. I liked it much better than going to a Giants game at Candlestick.
Nice to see the Bolts are about the 66th percentile in run blocking grade. Such an improvement over years past. Be nice to get it up to 80th percentile. Top 6 teams or so.
Now, if you excuse me, I have some Charger memories to suppress.
The Wasted Decade is done.
Build Back Better.
Do yourself a favor and go watch the youtube highlights of the 60's era Chargers. They have them for certain years and its pretty fascinating.
1963 AFL Championship Game at Balboa Park, when the Chargers all-steroids team annihilated the Boston Patriots. It was mostly a Keith Lincoln show, but 2nd year flanker Lance Alworth also scores.
If my memory is right - it sat about 35,000. It had cement seats - very hard on the rear. No seatbacks. Actually pretty uncomfortable. However, the seats were so close to the field that it was almost like being on the sidelines. Those early AFL teams concentrated on getting good offensive players first so the games were fun and exciting and the Chargers were the most exciting of all of them. Sid Gilman's offense was ahead of the pack. It was easy to become hooked on the Chargers. BUT, for me, moving to the new stadium was great. The seats were very comfortable compared to Balboa stadium.
Also nice back then was the team practiced at a public park (Lake Murray) so you could drop by there any afternoon and watch them practice. The exception was raider week - Gilman chased us away when they played the raiders. I guess he feared we were scouts for Al.
An improved run defense, creative pressures and a career game from Uchenna Nwosu powered the Chargers' impressive defensive performance.
4. The Chargers now rank sixth in rush defense EPA since the bye week, according to TruMedia. This is no longer the worst run defense in football. Are they still prone to a bad game? Yes. That was clear from the Broncos loss. But the Chargers showed up against the Bengals rushing attack, and they have been showing up now for weeks.
A perfect example was the Bengals’ two-point conversion attempt in the third quarter with the Chargers leading 24-22. A 12-men-on-the-field penalty set the Bengals up from the 1-yard line. They tried a direct run up the middle to Mixon. The Chargers stonewalled him. That is not a play this defense makes earlier in the season. It was a massive moment in the game. The Chargers scored 17 unanswered points after that goal-line stand.
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