
Chargers training camp report, Day 4: Quentin Johnston is seizing his opportunity
The Chargers signed Mike Williams in free agency. They drafted Tre' Harris in the second round. They drafted KeAndre Lambert-Smith in the fifth round. Over the past year and a half since Jim Harbaugh took over as coach, the Chargers have remained publicly supportive of Johnston, who was drafted in the first round by the previous regime. But if you want to understand what a team truly thinks of a player, follow the actions, not the words. And the actions indicated that the Chargers were looking for an upgrade.
Advertisement
Things change rapidly in the NFL, though. Williams retired before training camp began last week. Harris did not initially report to camp because he had not yet signed his rookie deal. Quarterbacks and rookies reported on July 12. Harris did not report until July 18. He missed valuable days, including the first practice of camp. Lambert-Smith sat out most of the spring, including all of mandatory minicamp, with an injury, and he is still working his way into the rotation.
Johnston, in turn, has been spending a majority of his reps with Justin Herbert and the first-team offense over the first four days of camp. And he is, quite literally, seizing his opportunity. Johnston caught two explosive touchdowns from Herbert in Monday's practice, both on go routes down the left sideline. He beat rookie Trikweze Bridges on the first for a 58-yard score. The second touchdown, from 25 yards out, came on the first play of a red zone series. Johnston beat rookie Nikko Reed, who was in solid position and contested the throw. Johnston tracked the ball over his shoulder.
have a day, QJ pic.twitter.com/CGa5X00Zs2
— Los Angeles Chargers (@chargers) July 21, 2025
Over the weekend, Johnston was asked about his confidence entering his third season.
'It's higher than it's ever been right now,' Johnston said. 'I come in every day and mash the gas as hard as I can, whether we're in the classroom or on the field. … Leaning on my coaches, leaning on Justin and those type of guys, kind of just re-instilling to me that I got what it takes to still be here. I kind of just got to go out and prove that every day, which I feel like I have to this point.'
Johnston now has three explosive touchdowns in four practices. On Friday, Johnston sprinted open on a deep crossing route off play action. Herbert's throw came in above Johnston's head. At times in his career, Johnston has struggled to track deep balls, especially those over his shoulder. He had no such trouble on this play, even with the pass entering at an awkward angle. Johnston reached both hands up and secured the catch without any juggle or bobble.
Advertisement
Repetitions breed confidence. And receivers coach Sanjay Lal has drilled this over-the-shoulder improvement into Johnston day after day. Before practices and games, Lal will set up on one sideline about 5 yards behind Johnston. Johnston will have his back turned to Lal. The two will start walking across the field horizontally. Lal will toss the ball over Johnston's head. Johnston will secure the catch and toss the ball back to Lal. Lal will do the same thing again.
It is easy to see the growth in Johnston's deep-ball tracking so far this camp.
'Once we put it to practice and eventually in the game, it's just going to be muscle memory,' Johnston said of the Lal drill. 'It's going to be like second nature.'
When asked this offseason how Johnston responded to the influx of new players in the receiver room, Lal said, 'Water off a duck's back.'
Johnston is now proving those words with on-field actions.
Through the first four practices, Ladd McConkey, Jalen Reagor and Johnston have been the three primary receivers with the first-team offense in 11 personnel. McConkey has been in the slot, while Reagor and Johnston have been on the outside.
Perhaps Harris and Lambert-Smith will push for first-team snaps as they continue in their rookie camps. Reagor and Johnston have simply been making more plays.
'All the confidence,' Johnston said, 'just comes with experience.'
• Left tackle Rashawn Slater missed his second straight practice Monday. Slater did not practice Saturday. The Chargers had an off day Sunday. Slater, wearing a black long-sleeved shirt, was working off to the side during the early part of Monday's practice. He was lifting and training with executive director of player performance Ben Herbert. About midway through practice, Slater walked onto the field. He watched team drills from the sideline, standing with the offensive linemen. He then participated in the fourth-quarter-finishing drills at the conclusion of practice.
Advertisement
Slater remains in contract extension negotiations with the Chargers. Offensive coordinator Greg Roman said that the Chargers gave Slater a 'rest' day on Saturday. 'He's here, he's working,' Roman said then. 'It's just whether we give him reps or not.' The Chargers are heading to San Diego for two practices Tuesday and Wednesday. Tuesday is the first padded practice of camp. Harbaugh is scheduled to address the media Tuesday before practice, so we will get a firmer update on Slater then.
Joe Alt moved from right tackle to left tackle for the second straight practice. Trey Pipkins was at right tackle. Mekhi Becton was back at right guard after missing the previous two practices. Zion Johnson was at center, and Bradley Bozeman was at left guard.
• The Chargers have been down two running backs for the past three practices. Najee Harris (eye) remains on the non-football injury list. Rookie Raheim Sanders has not practiced since Day 1. The Chargers held a run period during Monday's practice. Without pads on, it was more of a walkthrough tempo. But we did get a look at the running back rotation amid the injuries. Rookie Omarion Hampton got the first carry. Kimani Vidal got the second carry, followed by Jaret Patterson and Hassan Haskins.
Vidal also had an explosive reception from Herbert on a third down in 11-on-11. The defense brought a blitz. Herbert found Vidal wide open in the flat, and Vidal surged down the sideline for 20 yards before he was tagged off.
A huge opportunity awaits in the upcoming padded practices for all the running backs. Harris' status remains uncertain. How does Hampton look as the clear No. 1 back? Can Vidal, Patterson or Haskins emerge? Earlier this offseason, there was a potential battle for a fourth running back spot. Harris and Hampton would have formed a one-two punch atop the depth chart, while Haskins is likely to make the 53-man because of his special teams experience. Until Harris returns, there is an open No. 2 spot behind Hampton.
The Chargers also added to the group Monday when they signed veteran Nyheim Hines. He hasn't played since the 2022 season after suffering a serious knee injury in a jet ski accident.
•. It is clear through the first four practices that Denzel Perryman is ahead of Junior Colson on the linebacker depth chart. Perryman has received all of the first-team reps over Colson, next to Daiyan Henley. This competition will heat up when the pads come on. Said Colson, 'When the pads come on, that's when the bullets are flying.' On Monday, Colson had a tackle-for-loss on a Hampton run during 11-on-11.
Advertisement
• During the aforementioned run period, the Chargers defense rotated through first-team, second-team and third-team fronts. That gave us a look at the interior defensive line depth chart. The first team: Da'Shawn Hand, Teair Tart and Naquan Jones. Second team: Justin Eboigbe, Otito Ogbonnia, Scott Matlock. Third team: Jamaree Caldwell, Christopher Hinton, TeRah Edwards.
Later in 11-on-11, Caldwell sniffed out a screen attempt from Herbert to Vidal. He has the potential to be a disruptive player. Can he ascend the depth chart when the pads come on?
• Receiver Derius Davis had one of the plays of the day on offense. The second-team offense, led by Taylor Heinicke, faced a fourth-and-5 in 11-on-11. Heinicke layered a throw to the sideline, and Davis made a sliding catch in bounds for the conversion. Later in 11-on-11, Davis accelerated on a post route and was wide open, getting behind the defense. Heinicke overthrew him.
Davis has game-breaking speed, as evidenced by his kick and punt returning production. It feels like an explosive touchdown is coming for Davis at some point this camp. As Lal said earlier this offseason, 'There's so much untapped speed there.'
• Two other Chargers missed Monday's practice: rookie receiver Luke Grimm and rookie edge rusher Kylan Guidry.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
10 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Shedeur Sanders unfazed by lack of first-team reps at Browns camp
BEREA, Ohio (AP) — If Shedeur Sanders is frustrated about not receiving any snaps with the first team during the first week of the Cleveland Browns' training camp, he isn't showing it. Sanders said on Friday that it is out of his control and not his place to answer why he has worked mainly with the third and fourth teams during the first three days of practice. 'I'm not even going to think about that or have that even in my thought process of why it is,' Sanders said. 'It doesn't make me feel down or it doesn't make me feel left out or anything because I know who I am as a person. I know who I am as an individual, and I know what I could bring to this team.' Sanders — selected by the Browns in the fifth round after a precipitous fall in April's draft — did get some work with the second team for the first time on Friday. He had one of the best throws of the 80-minute practice on a completion down the middle to tight end Blake Whiteheart during 11-on-11 drills. Sanders showed he could bounce back after a bad day of practice. He was unable to throw a pass during a four-play red zone drill on Thursday after snap issues on two plays, a false start, and what would have been a sack. 'I know whenever I get my opportunity, I've got to maximize it,' he said. 'I just got to think about what I could do to get better even if I'm not getting reps.' Coach Kevin Stefanski didn't say if Sanders would receive any first-team snaps. Stefanski did note, though, that he has been happy with Sanders' progress over the past couple of months. 'Yeah, I think Shedeur does a nice job of keeping the main thing, the main thing. He's working hard and keeping his head down,' Stefanski said. There have been 13 sets of 11-on-11 drills during the first three days. Joe Flacco has had the most work with the first team with seven, Kenny Pickett has had five and third-round pick Dillon Gabriel one. Flacco and Pickett are the two main combatants in the four-man competition to see who will be the starter for the Sept. 7 opener against the Cincinnati Bengals. All four are getting plenty of snaps on the two practice fields, but there is a difference in who they are working with. Sanders said the one advantage of not getting many snaps is that he has had the opportunity to learn more in-depth about everything instead of on the fly like he did at Jackson State and Colorado, where his father, Hall of Fame cornerback Deion Sanders, instantly made him the starter. Shedeur Sanders added that the area where he has made the most improvement is being more comfortable with the playbook. 'It's always consistent growth, and it always feels like I just solved a puzzle or anything, like, all the time,' he said. Quarterback coach Bill Musgrave — who was Deion Sanders' teammate during San Francisco's Super Bowl-winning season in 1994 — has been impressed with Sanders' ability to call the play in the huddle as well as calling plays under center. He also added he has seen the same progress from Gabriel, a third-round pick. When it comes to the outside pressures Sanders might face — including heightened expectations from fans — Musgrave said that everyone has pressure, but the approach has to remain the same. 'The focus has got to be on the techniques, the five-step drop, the seven-step drop, being accurate with our throws,' Musgrave said. 'If we can focus on our trade, the external factors take a back seat, which is where they should remain.' While some may waver from the expectations, Sanders has embraced them. He has made a couple of appearances in the Cleveland area, including hosting a community event to benefit residents displaced after an apartment complex fire. He also accepted responsibility for two speeding tickets last month. However, things that are happening off the field are the last thing on Sanders' mind over the next five weeks. 'The external is cool. I'm thankful for it,' he said. 'But hey, when I get out there, I'm not thinking about external. I'm thinking about more, in the organization, thinking about getting the play calls, executing my job, and doing what I've got to do.' ___ AP NFL:
Yahoo
10 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Braves activate third baseman Austin Riley from injured list
ARLINGTON, Texas (AP) — The Atlanta Braves activated third baseman Austin Riley from the injured list on Friday ahead of a weekend series at Texas. Riley hadn't played since straining an abdominal muscle while making a throw on July 11 against St. Louis. The 28-year-old was hitting .274 with 14 home runs and 48 RBIs at the time of the injury. The two-time All-Star's return comes with Atlanta fading as the trade deadline approaches. The Braves entered Friday 10 games out of the last wild-card spot in the National League and were 3-5 during Riley's absence. To make room for Riley on the 26-man roster, Atlanta optioned infielder Nacho Alvarez Jr. to Triple-A Gwinnett. ___ AP MLB: The Associated Press
Yahoo
10 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Bryan Reynolds' diving catch
Bryan Reynolds makes a diving catch to rob Corbin Carroll of a hit for the first out of the game