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49ers' Ricky Pearsall to miss multiple games after getting shot in robbery attempt

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49ers' Ricky Pearsall to miss multiple games after getting shot in robbery attempt

San Francisco 49ers rookie wide receiver Ricky Pearsall will miss at least four games after being put on the non-football injury list after getting shot in a robbery attempt on Saturday.

The team’s decision to put Pearsall on the list came just 48 hours after the rookie’s gunshot, meaning he won’t play in the team’s games against the New York Jets, Minnesota Vikings, Los Angeles Rams and New England Patriots, and he would be eligible to return for the team’s fifth game against the Cardinals on Oct. 6.

Pearsall, who was drafted in the first round with the 31st overall pick by the 49ers back in April, sustained several injuries after being shot in the chest by a 17-year-old, who tried to steal Pearsall’s Rolex watch, according to San Francisco Police Chief Bill Scott. Pearsall was released from the hospital on Sunday.

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Ricky Pearsall #14 of the San Francisco 49ers works out during mini camp on June 05, 2024 in Santa Clara, California. (Thearon W. Henderson/Getty Images)

The NFL player, 23, had been walking alone shortly after 3:30 p.m. local time when a suspect attempted to rob him with a gun in the Union Square area, according to officials. Scott said that more than one shot was fired.

“A struggle between Mr. Pearsall and the suspect ensued, and gunfire from the suspect’s gun struck both Mr. Pearsall and the subject.”

Scott said that investigators believe the teen had acted alone, adding that there was no indication that Pearsall had been targeted because he’s a football player.

SAN FRANCISCO MAYORAL CANDIDATE TAKES JAB AT OPPONENT AFTER 49ERS’ RICKY PEARSALL SHOOTING: ‘ENOUGH IS ENOUGH’

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Ricky Pearsall with the ball

FILE – San Francisco 49ers wide receiver Ricky Pearsall carries the ball during the NFL football team’s rookie minicamp in Santa Clara, Calif., May 10, 2024. (AP Photo/Jeff Chiu, File)

Pearsall’s mother, Erin Pearsall, shared an update on the NFL player’s health on Sunday. 

“Update on my baby boy,” she started. “First and (foremost) I want to thank GOD for protecting my baby boy. He is extremely lucky, GOD shielded him. He was shot in the chest and it exited out his back. Thanks be to GOD it missed his vital organs.

“He is in good spirits right now,” she added. “Life is so precious my friends. Please love (each other). My son was spared today by the grace of GOD. Please pray for my baby.”

Ricky Pearsall #1 of the Florida Gators catches a pass against Prince Bemah #25 of the Charlotte 49ers during the first halfof a game at Ben Hill Griffin Stadium on September 23, 2023 in Gainesville, Florida. 

Ricky Pearsall #1 of the Florida Gators catches a pass against Prince Bemah #25 of the Charlotte 49ers during the first halfof a game at Ben Hill Griffin Stadium on September 23, 2023 in Gainesville, Florida.  (James Gilbert/Getty Images)

Pearsall played five college seasons from 2019-2023. His first three seasons came at Arizona State before he transferred to Florida in 2022. His final season last year was his best as a college player, and he put up 965 yards receiving for four touchdowns across 12 games, earning a selection in the first round this year.

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Pearsall is not the first NFL rookie with high expectations to suffer gunshot wounds ahead of their first seasons in recent years. 

Washington Commanders running back Brian Robinson Jr. was shot in Washington, D.C., after an attempted carjacking. One of the bullets struck his knee but passed through without causing any significant damage. Robinson had been named the team’s starting running back just prior to that, but he returned to the field just six weeks after the shooting to take over his starting role. 

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‘This is his opportunity’: The Panthers are banking on a Year 2 bump for Bryce Young

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‘This is his opportunity’: The Panthers are banking on a Year 2 bump for Bryce Young

CHARLOTTE, N.C. — Adam Thielen didn’t need six weeks of training camp and preseason practices to see a change in Bryce Young. Thielen noticed something different about the Carolina Panthers’ second-year quarterback in April when the team convened for the start of its offseason program.

“I saw it the day he got back here for OTAs. You could just see his mindset, his energy, his confidence. And I think his ability to just be himself,” Thielen said. “It’s difficult at times to be yourself when you first come to a new place and to a new league. You’re just trying to survive instead of being able to truly be yourself.”

Young faced little adversity during his gilded football past, which featured starring roles at perennial powers at Mater Dei High and Alabama. But challenges arrived nearly every week during Young’s rookie season — in the form of a NFL-high 15 losses (14 in games he started), a league-low passer rating, a franchise-tying record 62 sacks, dysfunction on the coaching staff and a disjointed offensive scheme.

Such struggles could scar a young quarterback. If they left a mark on Young, Thielen hasn’t noticed.

“It was an extremely tough environment. But I told him this after the season, I think it’s the best thing that ever happened to him. I think it was the best thing that ever happened to me,” said Thielen, a wide receiver entering his 11th season.

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Panthers are playing the long game, but it all hinges on Bryce Young

The Panthers centered their entire offseason plan around Young, beginning with the hiring of head coach Dave Canales, who engineered QB turnarounds the past two seasons with Baker Mayfield and Geno Smith. The Panthers then spent a good chunk of the free-agent budget on guards Robert Hunt and Damien Lewis, while trying to surround Young with more playmakers via trade (for ex-Steelers wideout Diontae Johnson) or the draft (Xavier Legette, Jonathon Brooks and Ja’Tavion Sanders).

History suggests Young’s production will tick up in Year 2. An analysis of quarterbacks drafted in the top seven picks over the past 20 years showed their win percentage increased by an average of 16.9 percent and their passer rating by 9.2 points in their second seasons, among those who started at least seven games as rookies.

Young wasn’t too interested when told about the statistics, nor did he want to make too much of the touchdown drive at Buffalo in the only series he and the Panthers’ first-team offense played all preseason.

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But last year’s No. 1 pick and others are optimistic about his prospects in a quarterback-friendly system under the guidance of the uber-positive and communicative Canales.

“I definitely appreciate his approach. I think it’s just a great environment to learn, an environment to grow,” Young told The Athletic last week. “Being able to have conversations, be able to talk about things and hear his perspective — and just get as much of what he says and what he means.”


After the Panthers hired Canales following Frank Reich’s 11-game tenure, Young reached out to Mayfield. The two met during Nissan’s Heisman House TV spot, and Mayfield enjoyed a career resurgence in Tampa Bay last year when Canales was the Buccaneers’ offensive coordinator.

Young said Mayfield, who spent part of the 2022 season in Carolina, gave him a “great landscape” of Canales and his philosophy.

“He told me he loved learning from coach Canales, that he had a ton of confidence in them and all the stuff they did,” Young said. “It was really nice just being able to learn all this stuff. Out of respect for Baker, I’m (going to) be pretty vague. I don’t want to say everything. But it was great hearing his perspective.”

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Canales’ offense has its roots in Sean McVay’s system. Canales’ final two years with Pete Carroll in Seattle coincided with former Rams assistant Shane Waldron’s first two years as the Seahawks’ offensive coordinator.

Thomas Brown, Reich’s offensive coordinator last season, also was in Los Angeles with McVay, whose offenses initially centered on a wide-zone rushing attack that set up a play-action pass game. But Brown’s ideas for the run game didn’t mesh well with Reich’s shotgun-based passing offense, and Reich kept flip-flopping the play-calling duties before getting fired in November.

Canales wants to establish the run first, and two veteran NFL coaches expect Canales’ scheme to better marry the ground game to bootlegs and play-action, designed to slow down the pass rush and get Young outside the pocket. Canales used the same concepts with Mayfield last year, as did the Seahawks with Russell Wilson.


In his only preseason action, Bryce Young completed 6 of 8 passes for 70 yards and a touchdown on his one series against the Bills. (Bryan M. Bennett / Getty Images)

“It fits with what we do because when you’re committed to running the football under center, in the pistol and in gun, then moving the pocket is the natural other part of all those other concepts. So it really just fits within Bryce’s skill set,” Canales said. “It’ll be playing that game of presenting runs and presenting actions to the defense that look the same. They all start off the same and end up different.”

Young believes the boots and rollouts can be a “really good layer” for the Panthers, who ranked last in 2023 in total yards, passing yards and were tied with New England for last in scoring at 13.9 points per game.

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“I think Bryce is open to all of those complements,” Canales said. “It just happened to be something they weren’t doing (last year). But it’s just a part of what we do and he loves it. He loves being out there. He’s got all the touch throws, the creative passes. He uses his eyes down the field on the move, which is great.”

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Besides the designed plays that put Young outside the pocket, Canales has given him the freedom to create off-platform, as he did finding Johnson for a fourth-down conversion in the final preseason game at Buffalo.

“He’s a guy that can make any throw — throws that you see on those little TikTok (or) Instagram reels. They’re like, how did he do it? He can do all that,” tight end Tommy Tremble said. “A lot of guys say this: He didn’t win the Heisman for no reason. He is an excellent football player. So letting him just play free and do what he does best — and that’s just making plays — I think that’s what the offense helps him (with).”

Young averaged 15.8 rushing yards per game as a rookie, which ranked 20th among quarterbacks who played in at least six games. But Canales thinks there will be more opportunities for Young to make plays with his feet.

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“All those actions, all those keepers, so many things come alive, (including) the quarterback running the ball,” Canales said. “Some of our biggest plays over the years have been on play-actions where the coverage looked great, the seas parted and there’s just huge running lanes at times.”


Whether jogging on to the practice field or addressing the media, the 43-year-old Canales brings an exceedingly positive energy to all his interactions. Coaches and players who have been with him believe that benefits quarterbacks.

When the Bucs hit a rough stretch last season, losing six of seven heading into December, Canales didn’t waver from his run-first approach. Tampa Bay won five of its last six and knocked off the Eagles in a wild-card game behind Mayfield, a finalist for Comeback Player of the Year.

“He never changed. Positive, upbeat. And I think when the players really started to see that, they’re like, ‘This guy’s the same guy,’” said Joe Gilbert, the Panthers’ offensive line coach who had the same role in Tampa. “As he always says, ‘We’ve got a new set of downs.’ And we turned a corner and we got it goin’.”

“I think that transformed over to the quarterback,” Gilbert added. “I think it’s gonna do the same thing here.”

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Canales wants his quarterbacks to have the sense that the next play is going to be a great one. Generating that excitement on Sunday is a process that builds throughout the week.

“As we work together and we go over the game plans and the call sheets, I want to make sure that I don’t call any calls where when I say it to them in their headset, there’s apprehension. There’s some type of bad experience or chemistry with it. I don’t like to start that play off with that in mind,” Canales said. “So it really helps us … knowing when I call this, he gets excited.”

Panthers wideout David Moore has seen the effect Canales’ attitude can have on an organization, having played for him in Seattle and Tampa, as well.

“He brings that positivity in the building and makes you feel like you can do anything. You can win. This can happen,” Moore said. “That’s really all players want from a head coach — somebody they can rely on, depend on. Somebody that’s going to have their back and always be positive instead of negative.”


After spending a season in Tampa Bay as offensive coordinator, Dave Canales is tackling a bigger project as play caller and head coach of the Panthers. (Jim Dedmon / USA Today)

Young’s numbers last year were ugly (59.8 completion percentage, 73.7 passer rating, 5.5 Y/A), even more so when compared to those of Houston Texans quarterback C.J. Stroud, who was drafted one spot behind Young. While Stroud won the Offensive Rookie of the Year and led the Texans to the playoffs, the 5-foot-10 Young finished near the bottom of the league in most passing categories behind a turnstile offensive line and receivers who couldn’t separate from coverage.

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Young is not the first No. 1 pick to look overwhelmed as a rookie. Troy Aikman was 0-11 as the Dallas Cowboys’ starter in 1989, while Peyton Manning threw 28 interceptions in 1998, the most by a rookie QB in NFL history. Aikman and Manning are now in the Hall of Fame.

And Eli Manning, the No. 1 pick in 2004, has a chance of joining his brother in Canton after an inauspicious start.

Manning was one of six players from a sample group of 26 quarterback (top-7 picks since 2004 who started seven-plus games as rookies) whose passer rating shot up 20 points or higher their second season. The biggest jumps came from Jared Goff (passer rating increase of 36.9 points), Alex Smith (34.0), Matthew Stafford (30.3), Trevor Lawrence (23.2), Carson Wentz (22.6) and Manning (20.3).

Rookie QBs vs. Year 2

PLAYER DRAFT PICK GS (R) WIN% RAT GS (Y2) WIN% RAT

Eli Manning

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2004

1

7

14.3

55.4

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16

68.8

75.7

Alex Smith

2005

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1

7

28.6

40.8

16

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43.3

74.8

Vince Young

2006

3

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13

61.5

66.7

15

60.0

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71.1

Matt Ryan

2008

3

16

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68.8

87.7

14

64.3

80.9

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Matthew Stafford

2009

1

10

20.0

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61.0

3

33.3

91.3

Mark Sanchez

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2009

5

15

53.3

63.0

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16

68.8

75.3

Sam Bradford

2010

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1

16

43.8

76.5

10

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10.0

70.5

Cam Newton

2011

1

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16

37.5

84.5

16

43.8

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86.2

Andrew Luck

2012

1

16

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68.8

76.5

16

68.8

87.0

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Robert Griffin III

2012

2

15

60.0

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102.4

13

23.1

82.2

Blake Bortles

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2014

3

13

23.1

69.5

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16

31.3

88.2

Jameis Winston

2015

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1

16

37.5

84.2

16

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56.3

86.1

Marcus Mariota

2015

2

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12

25.0

91.5

15

53.3

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95.6

Jared Goff

2016

1

7

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0

63.6

15

73.3

100.5

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Carson Wentz

2016

2

16

43.8

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79.3

13

84.6

101.9

Mitchell Trubisky

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2017

2

12

33.3

77.5

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14

78.6

95.4

Baker Mayfield

2018

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1

13

46.2

93.7

16

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37.5

78.8

Sam Darnold

2018

3

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13

30.8

77.6

13

53.8

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84.3

Josh Allen

2018

7

11

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45.5

67.9

16

48.8

85.3

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Kyler Murray

2019

1

16

34.4

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87.4

16

58.1

94.3

Daniel Jones

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2019

6

12

25.0

87.7

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14

42.7

80.4

Joe Burrow

2020

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1

10

25.0

89.9

16

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74.2

108.3

Tua Tagovailoa

2020

5

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9

66.7

87.1

12

59.5

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90.1

Justin Herbert

2020

6

15

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40.0

98.3

17

73.6

97.7

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Trevor Lawrence

2021

1

17

17.6

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71.9

17

67.1

95.2

Zach Wilson

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2021

2

13

23.1

69.7

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9

35.1

72.8

GS: games started; RAT: passer rating

It’s worth noting Young and the 5-foot-10 Kyler Murray, the No. 1 pick of the Arizona Cardinals in 2019, are the only two quarterbacks on this list shorter than 6 feet. Like Young, Murray suffered from poor pass protection as a rookie and was sacked an NFL-high 48 times.

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The Cardinals bolstered their offensive line that offseason by signing left tackle D.J. Humphries to a big extension and bringing in former New York Jets right tackle Kelvin Beachum. Murray, whose sack total dropped to 27 in 2020, also benefited from the addition of DeAndre Hopkins. In his first season with the Cardinals in 2020, Hopkins tied a career high with 115 receptions (for 1,407 yards) after arriving via a trade from Houston.

The Panthers took similar steps to boost the talent level around the 23-year-old Young. And after sending four high draft picks — two 1s and two 2s — and top wideout DJ Moore to the Chicago Bears to take Young No. 1, the Panthers need to see evidence this season that Young is the long-term answer.

There are plenty of examples of quarterbacks seeing significant improvement in their second seasons.

Manning said he was much more comfortable entering Year 2 after having an offseason to better learn the New York Giants’ scheme, his offensive teammates and everything else thrown at a NFL quarterback.

“Rookie year, you’re just trying to figure out which way is up and down a little bit,” Manning said. “How do you call the plays and what receivers can do — there’s so much going on where you feel like you’re not even playing football. You’re just trying to do something someone is telling you to do.”

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Goff and Lawrence, both No. 1 picks, turned things around playing for new, offensive-minded coaches in their second seasons. Goff lost all seven starts as a rookie in 2016 with the Rams, who fired Jeff Fisher with three games remaining. Goff went 11-4 and passed for nearly 4,000 yards the following year under McVay.

Lawrence threw a league-leading 17 interceptions after going No. 1 overall in 2021 to Jacksonville, which fired Urban Meyer in December following a disastrous, 13-game tenure. After Doug Pederson took over as the Jags’ coach in 2022, Lawrence cut his interceptions in half, won a playoff game and received MVP votes.

Only six of the 26 QBs saw their passer ratings decrease their second seasons, and one of those was Justin Herbert, whose rating dipped by less than one point — from 98.3 as a rookie to 97.7 during a 2021 season that included his first Pro Bowl appearance.

Robert Griffin III, Mayfield and Daniel Jones had more precipitous dips in Year 2.

Former Saints great Drew Brees believes quarterbacks need 50 “high-quality” starts — which can include college and the NFL — to be ready to thrive in the NFL immediately. It’s that threshold, or sit and learn like Brees and many other top passers have done in the past.

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In an interview with The Athletic, Brees pointed to Denver Broncos rookie Bo Nix as a QB in an optimal spot after starting 61 games at Auburn and Oregon. Of the six first-round quarterbacks this year, only Nix and the Washington Commanders’ Jayden Daniels already reached Brees’ 50-game benchmark in college.

Young started 27 games at Alabama, then 16 with the Panthers in 2023.

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“So he’s a great example,” Brees said. “He started two years at Alabama, playing the highest level of football, playing for national championships, playing against the best competition with the best players. So he probably had 30 starts in college and he started most of last year. … So to me, he’s ready to springboard.”

Brees said a lot of highly drafted quarterbacks go to teams with other holes to fill, as was the case with Young.

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“They didn’t have all the pieces last year,” Brees added. “They’re beginning to develop that through the draft and free agency and other things. So they’ll get there. But yeah, this is his opportunity to make a jump.”

Manning also sees potential for Young to improve.

“He’s athletic, he throws the ball really well, he sees everything. I think he’ll calm down and they’ll try to help protect him a little bit and make sure he’s running plays he’s comfortable with,” the younger Manning said. “It doesn’t always have to be the perfect play, but it’s plays where he knows the progression, he knows his 1-2-3 and he knows the timing of the offense.”

Young has repeatedly brushed aside questions about last season, preferring to focus on the clean slate of 2024, with new offensive coaches and a different surrounding cast. Thielen, one of the holdovers at receiver, believes a person’s biggest growth comes after adversity — and is fired up to see what’s in store for Young.

“When things are good, which they had been in the athletic world for Bryce. They’d always been pretty good. He’d been very successful in high school (and) college,” Thielen said. “I think he’s going to look back at (2023) at some point in his career and say, ‘Man, I’m so glad that happened because I was able to do this because of it.’ I’m excited to see that journey.”

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Austin Mock, Larry Holder and Dan Duggan contributed.

(Illustration: Dan Goldfarb / The Athletic; photos: Bryan Bennett, Ryan Kang / Getty Images)

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Chargers newcomers out to prove themselves amid whirlwind of kickoff week

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Chargers newcomers out to prove themselves amid whirlwind of kickoff week

Taylor Heinicke wanted to unwind and celebrate making the Atlanta Falcons’ initial 53-man roster last Wednesday. The veteran quarterback clicked on a Netflix documentary that featured the University of Michigan.

That’s how Heinicke met his new coach.

For the Chargers’ last-minute additions and last-second survivors of last week’s roster cut down, making a 53-man roster is only the chaotic start to a competitive season as the team prepares for Sunday’s opener against the Las Vegas Raiders.

Heinicke, defensive back Elijah Molden and running back Hassan Haskins crisscrossed the country multiple times last week while settling into life with the Chargers and tying up loose ends from their previous teams. Heinicke was watching Netflix’s newly released documentary on Connor Stalions and the sign-stealing controversy at Michigan when Falcons head coach Raheem Morris called to alert him about the trade to L.A. With family members split between Michigan and Ohio State allegiances, Heinicke, a neutral Atlanta native, couldn’t help but chuckle at the timing of the call.

“Meeting Jim [Harbaugh], I think he exceeds every expectation,” Heinicke said Monday. “He’s really fun to be around and I’m excited to work with him.”

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Molden, who came to the Chargers from the Tennessee Titans through a trade, moved with his wife and infant daughter. The couple is expecting their second child in December. Haskins, who was claimed off waivers last Wednesday after two seasons with the Titans, arrived in L.A. the same afternoon he got the call, but flew right back to Nashville the next day to pack up his belongings.

After missing all of last season while on injured reserve, the former fourth-round pick is eager to prove his standing in the league.

“Just show that I’m still one of the guys that can produce and help the team win,” said Haskins, who reunited with his coach, Harbaugh, who recruited him to Michigan. “Whatever they need me to do, run the ball, block, play special teams, anything the coaches need me to do, I’m gonna do it.”

Tennessee Titans running back Hassan Haskins walks off the field after a preseason game against the New Orleans Saints on Aug. 25. Haskins was claimed off waivers last week by the Chargers.

(Tyler Kaufman / Associated Press)

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The roster moves have not stopped even as game week preparations begin for Sunday’s opener at 1:05 p.m. at SoFi Stadium. On Monday, the Chargers added cornerback Shaun Wade and receiver Dez Fitzpatrick to the practice squad and released receiver Cornelius Johnson and outside linebacker Andrew Farmer II.

Receiver Simi Fehoko knows about the league’s tough business decisions. The 2022 Dallas Cowboys draft pick appeared in five games as a rookie, but was waived by the team before the 2023 season. After coming to L.A. last year from the Pittsburgh Steelers’ practice squad, Fehoko emerged as the Chargers’ preseason star. He led the team with 170 receiving yards on seven catches in three games. In addition to strong special teams play, he capped off the stellar performance with a 78-yard touchdown catch in the preseason finale against Dallas.

But Fehoko was hesitant to say he was confident as the roster took shape last week.

“There’s always that something in the back where you never know,” Fehoko said.

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The fourth-year pro from Stanford could be confident in the positive impression he left on coaches, but rookie Brenden Rice was haunted by missed opportunities. Especially against the Cowboys, Rice felt quarterback Easton Stick was making the right throws, but the duo just wasn’t clicking. The rookie from USC had just one catch for 11 yards during the preseason.

Rice glanced around the practice facility as the minutes ticked away toward last Tuesday’s roster deadline. He was just hoping he wouldn’t get a visit from one of the team’s dreaded “reapers,” the staffers who call players into the office for fateful meetings. The no news he received was good news.

Rice is one of two rookies, along with Georgia second-round pick Ladd McConkey, in the seven-man receiver group. In need of offensive weapons for star quarterback Justin Herbert, the Chargers kept extra receivers on their active roster because the competition was too close to call.

“The cream’s always going to rise to the top,” Rice said. “A big thing that was emphasized was nobody separated themselves yet, so it’s just about coming to practice each day and working.”

Without stalwarts Keenan Allen and Mike Williams, who were both offseason salary cap casualties, the receiver group is one of the team’s biggest question marks. Free agent signing DJ Chark Jr. is the only receiver with a 1,000-yard season to his NFL resume, reaching the mark in 2019 with the Jacksonville Jaguars. But the Louisiana State alumnus expects the receivers to surprise critics with their toughness. They get it from their head coach.

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“Yes, we heard a lot of outside noise about what we look like and this and that,” Rice said, “but we are a fundamental group of receivers that can catch the ball, block their [butts] off and run great routes. Once we continue to show that on tape, we’re going to let everybody know. We’ll keep the receipts.”

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Why is Brian Kelly so ‘angry’? Because LSU’s Week 1 woes are now an existential crisis

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Why is Brian Kelly so ‘angry’? Because LSU’s Week 1 woes are now an existential crisis

LAS VEGAS — For most coaches, Week 1 is about shaking off the rust, seeing some young guys get their first game reps and hopefully taking care of business to start 1-0.

For LSU’s Brian Kelly, on the other hand, Week 1 has become an annual existential crisis.

Late Sunday night at Allegiant Stadium, Kelly fielded questions from the media following his third consecutive season-opening neutral-site loss, this one a last-second 27-20 heartbreaker to No. 23 USC. It did not take long for him to let the assembled room know how angry he was with the result.

In fact, his very first words were, “This is the first time since I’ve been here (at LSU) that I’m angry at my football team.” He went on to cite a pair of costly late-game unsportsmanlike penalties by his players and the Tigers’ inability to close out the game.

A few minutes later while answering a follow-up question, Kelly pounded his first on the table, shocking a few sleepy-eyed sportswriters back to peak alertness as his voice rose abruptly.

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“We’re sitting here AGAIN, talking about the same things, about not finishing when you have an opponent in a position to put ’em away,” Kelly said. “What we’re doing on the sideline is feeling like the game is over. And I’m so angry about it, that I’ve got to do something about it. I’m not doing a good enough job as a coach. I’ve got to coach them better, because it’s unacceptable for us not to have found a way to win this football game.

“It’s ridiculous.”

To repeat: This was after the first game of the season.

Kelly’s team actually played fairly well Sunday night. This was not the disastrous 2022 Florida State game in New Orleans, Kelly’s LSU debut, when the Tigers committed every special teams snafu imaginable and lost 24-23 on a blocked extra point. Nor was this the ugly 2023 rematch with FSU in Orlando, when the Noles ran away in the second half of a 45-24 rout.

This was a down-to-the-wire barnburner between two teams trying to find themselves after losing their respective Heisman-winning quarterbacks (USC’s Caleb Williams and LSU’s Jayden Daniels). Lincoln Riley’s Trojans showed off a much-improved defense, one that actually wraps up ball carriers and limits explosive plays. Kelly’s defense, itself a trainwreck for most of last season, allowed a not-great 7.5 yards per play but was improved enough for the Tigers to hold a 17-13 lead late into the fourth quarter.

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Then the dam broke.

After stopping a USC fourth down in LSU territory with 8:38 left, LSU safety Major Burns committed a 15-yard unsportsmanlike conduct penalty that backed up the Tigers to their own 21. Kelly could be seen having a long talk with Burns on the sideline afterward. LSU went three-and-out and punted back to USC. Three plays later, Trojans quarterback Miller Moss threw a beautiful 28-yard touchdown pass to Ja’Kobi Lane to put USC up 20-17 with 5:44 left.

Tigers quarterback Garrett Nussmeier, who finished 29 of 38 for 304 yards, led his team from its own 20 to the USC 14 but missed a wide-open Aaron Anderson for what would have been at least another first down. The Tigers settled for a game-tying 31-yard field goal with 1:47 left.

You likely know how things ended.

USC looked content to settle for a game-winning field goal try until Moss found receiver Kyron Hudson for a spectacular 20-yard catch down the sideline, which, coupled with a targeting call on LSU’s Jardin Gilbert, took the Trojans down to the LSU 13 with 18 seconds left.

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At which point USC tailback Woody Marks took a handoff up the middle for the winning score, and Kelly got that familiar scrunched-up expression on his face that always seems like half-bewilderment, half-resignation.

“It’s clear that when we get up in a game, we do not know how to handle ourselves,” Kelly said afterward. “You’ve got to have that killer instinct in this game. You’ve got to put teams away. We had an opportunity to put this team away, and we got complacent.”

Normally in these moments, the coach reminds us it’s a long season ahead, they’ve got plenty of time to fix their issues, etc., etc. Having heard none of that from Kelly, I feel compelled to personally remind LSU’s coach: Hey man, it’s a long season ahead. You’ve got plenty of time to fix these issues. Don’t freak out too much.

Unfortunately, he already did.

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“To be the kind of football team I want, we have to eliminate the foolish mistakes,” he said. “We have to have a mindset of, when we have an opponent down, have that killer instinct. And we have to play off each other much better.”

Did we mention his team has only played one game?

GO DEEPER

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Kelly made an interesting comment while lamenting that the Tigers did not play complementary football. He said, “We put way too much pressure on our defense to be something that they’re not ready to be. They battled, but we have warts, and they’re not going away overnight.”

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It brought back memories of Kelly’s surprisingly candid comments after the spring transfer portal closed without LSU adding any defensive tackles as many expected. “We’re not in the market of buying players,” Kelly told WAFB-TV, which sounded to some like a preemptive excuse if the Tigers’ defense, which finished 109th in the FBS last season, wasn’t markedly better.

His remarks Sunday night felt as if he was pleasantly surprised said defense held a Lincoln Riley offense, with Moss and ridiculous receivers Zachariah Branch, Hudson and Lane, to “only” three touchdowns, yet that still wasn’t enough.

“I thought our defense took a step forward from last year,” he said. “But we have to help them out as well. We can’t be three-and-out and then put them back on the field.”

This moment occurred in 2024, but it could have just as easily been 2014, or almost any year since. Kelly has won at least 10 games in each of the past seven seasons as head coach (five with the Irish, two with LSU), yet these big-game letdowns feel less like exceptions and more like the norm.

Notre Dame fans mostly made peace with it because the Irish hadn’t enjoyed even that level of success in decades. LSU, on the other hand, has seen its past three coaches win national championships (and it still fired the past two). Tigers fans, which took over Las Vegas only to be let down again, will not exhibit similar patience if this continues.

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No fist-pounding or tough words will reassure them.

(Photo: Candice Ward / Getty Images)

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