JACKSONVILLE, FL – JANUARY 14: Los Angeles Chargers cornerback Asante Samuel Jr. (26) reacts after an interception during the game between the Los Angeles Chargers and the Jacksonville Jaguars on January 14, 2023 at TIAA Bank Field in Jacksonville, Fl. (Photo by David Rosenblum/Icon Sportswire)

The Los Angeles Chargers aren’t even one full off-season into their new regime’s rebuild, but it’s already been an impressive overhaul backed by a clear vision and plan. The invisible hand that guided much of Joe Hortiz’s decisions in his inaugural off-season was the compensatory formula, a carry-over from his time with the Baltimore Ravens, an organization that has been one of the biggest benefactor of the comp formula over the last decade.

The Chargers let five multiple-year starters starters walk in March, each which netted a humble compensatory pick offering. As it stands, Kenneth Murray is due to get the Bolts a fifth round comp pick, Gerald Everett and Austin Ekeler should net six rounders, while Michael Davis and Austin Johnson contributed 7th rounders that were cancelled out with the signings of Gus Edwards and Kristian Fulton.

An offseason season like this is likely to be the rule, not the exception. Hortiz has made it clear he wants to create a flow of compensatory picks. While five starters departing in one off-season may seem like heavy turnover, we’re likely going to see starters can key role-players departing every season under Joe to keep these draft annuities rolling.

The underlying theme for this strategy to be successful is for Joe to be successful – and selective – is identifying and retaining his “core” players, and building around them. It often means letting productive players in their prime hit free agency if his coaching staff believes they can adequately backfill the departing players production without a major dip in team performance.

The most intriguing Charger in his contract year this season is Asante Samuel Jr. There’s a solid argument that his ball-hawking skills would be an asset on any roster, and players like J.C. Jacskson and Trevon Diggs have shown that teams will be pay a hefty ransom for cornerbacks that create turnovers. He’s had stretches of dominant CB1-worthy play, where he not only is a ever-present threat to get his hands on the football, he’s also locking top receivers down.

Where Samuel Jr’s future with the Chargers gets complicated is he has largely been responsible for blown run coverage in back-to-back seasons, in 2021 and 2022, where costly mistakes and gap discipline were largely responsible for the Raiders and Jaguars game-winning drive heroics.

Doug Pederson specifically schemed against Asante Samuel Jr. in the run gam, as Benjamin Solak illustrates here, and even in a three interception game, Asante still had plays that directly tied to the Jags keeping the game within reach and ultimately winning the game.

This puts Jim Harbaugh, Jesse Minter, and Joe Hortiz in a very unique and difficult situation. Joshua Queipo and I recently wrote an article for A to Z Sports as part of a large project projecting the market for various extensions around the league. After researching the various cornerback contracts, here was my ultimate conclusion (but it would certainly support me and the work I do with A to Z if you check out the whole article here):

Zontโ€™s lack of accolades despite his knack of generating turnovers will drop him to a tier below Trevon Diggs. The gap between Zont and Diggs is similar to that between Jamel Dean and Jaylon Johnson; Dean has a similar catch rate allowed and lower yards allowed per coverage rep than Jaylon Johnson, but Johnsonโ€™s single-year of shutdown excellence earned him accolades and notoriety that distanced him from Deanโ€™s crowd.

If Zont tries to get a similar ball-hawk bump over Deanโ€™s valuation as Diggs has over Johnson, the Chargersโ€™ brass can simply point to the fifth year attached to Diggsโ€™ deal that significantly hurt his future negotiating leverage. Thereโ€™s also a sizable gap from Diggsโ€™ 17 picks and Zontโ€™s 9 – the Chargers will be bidding with some projection to bring a deal together. Dean and Johnsonโ€™s deals set the cap-share bracket between 5.78-7.44%, with Zont landing around 6.5% as a happy medium between the two.

Final Contract Projection: 4 four years, $66,400,000 million – $28 million fully guaranteed

The contract Joshua and I estimated landed at an APY of $16.6 million.

The question becomes – will Harbaugh, Minter, and Hortiz pay that size of a contract for a cornerback that has been good-to-great in coverage, but a major liability against the run? Doing so would seem contradictory to the moves they have made since joining the Chargers.

Alternatively, does this make Samuel Jr. a candidate to walk in the offseason for an APY that would likely be worth a 4th round compensatory pick? Doing so would likely prevent the Chargers from signing a top-tier compensatory free agent in a year where they’ll have extra finances, as they’ll want to protect that comp pick from the cancellation chart.

Lastly – would the Chargers be smart to franchise tag Samuel Jr and keep him around for at least one more year? The added year could give him time to add that nose for gap-filling that he’s missed previously, and could also give the Chargers flexibility to trade him in the 2025 offseason or in-season if they can get better value than what the compensatory formula would bring.

What do you think, StormCloud? Do you think the brass will opt to find a more well-rounded replacement, or stick with ASJ and make him a core member of this roster?

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Buck Melanoma
Buck Melanoma(@buck-melanoma)
1 year ago

Wanna talk clickbait? Now HERE’S some clickbait.
https://www.si.com/nfl/chargers/home/second-year-la-player-may-allow-la-to-trade-vet-rks97
ย 
I love Tuli but if Bosa were going to be traded I’m nearly certain it would’ve happened by now. He’s herd for 2024.

KevDiego
KevDiego(@kevdiego)
Reply to  Buck Melanoma
1 year ago

Bosa didn’t take a pay cut so the Chargers could trade him. The Chargers do not want to sell at a low-point in Bosa’s career, especially in a year with so much up-side if Ben Herbert can keep Joey healthy for the season.

So, yea, totally lazy click-bait.

TDU_Alister
TDU_Alister(@alisterlloyd)
1 year ago

Zont has improved each year but he would have to take another significant leap this year for me to be interested in keeping him in LA (for $16.6m APY).
He strikes me as the perfect candidate to let walk and replace him (perhaps with a cheap Michigan CB in next year’s class).
People have referred to the analytics above, but here’s my additional gloss. Asante Jnr does someย dumb stuff on the field, and soundsย dumb when he’s interviewed. I respect his playmaking instincts for sure, but he’s a guy who’s prone to mental lapses on the field, including stupid penalties. I don’t know if the stupid is ever going to be coached out of him. So when you add that to the physical limitations that manifest most frequently in run defense (but also limit his ceiling as an outside corner), I would say ta ta and farewell.

TDU_Alister
TDU_Alister(@alisterlloyd)
Reply to  Kyle DeDiminicantanio
1 year ago

 Kyle DeDiminicantanio Yeah I’ve gone pretty hard there 😆 But I’ve found myself rolling my eyes just one too many times at stuff Asante does and says on Chargers social media,ย All In, etc.
Hey, Kris Rhim went onย Locked On Chargersย today and said that Chark and Asante have looked the best so far of the veterans at OTAs, so hopefully he shuts me right up with his play this year. I won’t be mad if he does!

Buck Melanoma
Buck Melanoma(@buck-melanoma)
Reply to  Kyle DeDiminicantanio
1 year ago

 Kyle DeDiminicantanio probably by people who have little to no understanding of the comp pick mechanism nor the role it can….should!!….play in building roster strength.
ย 
Eff ’em.

Tau837
Tau837(@tau837)
Reply to  TDU_Alister
1 year ago

 TDU_Alister Agree with Al here. He isn’t a guy the current regime invested in, and I think he’ll be gone after this season. And I’m fine with that. To this point, he has not been a difference maker.

KevDiego
KevDiego(@kevdiego)
Reply to  TDU_Alister
1 year ago

I donโ€™t know if the stupid is ever going to be coached out of him. 

That is possibly one of the best sentences you’ve ever written. Its confusing to me how Zont can look so good and be a difference maker a times, then become a liability at other times.

We’ll see if a simplified, attacking Minter defense will make Zont smarter.

Spanos Must Go
Spanos Must Go(@spanos-must-go)
1 year ago

Zont is solid in coverage and by far the best defensive back on this roster in producing interceptions. In fact, if he had held onto some easy ones, he would probably have another 5-picks to his totals. I agree that the other side of the coin is his run defense and lack of interest in stepping up and being physical. Early in his career I watched him stick his nose into the play and that resulted in some decent results, but he also started racking up injuries due to it. Since then, I have seen him be much more passive in run defense and almost expect someone else to make a tackle. The Jacksonville game was an awful look and indictment of his weakness on full display. I would expect that with Harbaugh/Roman/Minter mentality that the deficiency in tackling and the lack of physicality will be a serious issue and unless he can offset that with huge interception numbers they will most likely move on and draft additional defensive backs in next year’s drafts and gladly take a comp pick.
PFF Pass defense: 75.6 23rd/126 CBs
PFF Run defense: 60.6 68th/121 CBs
Overall Grade: 73.9 28th/127 CBs
Other side of the coin: He is only 24-years old and in a contract-year may have a big year and may decide to step up and hit people in the run game. I always think that run support for an undersized corner is a decision more than an ability. With Zont’s athleticism and understanding of the game it really comes down to him making business decisions and stepping up his physicality in the run game even if it bumps him up 20-spots in the PFF rankings could be huge for the Chargers and Zont personally.ย ย 
My hope is that he has a huge year (contract year) and that he establishes himself as a keeper and worth of the money. Minter/Harbaugh can drag this out of him.

Ryan Watkins
Ryan Watkins(@ryanwatkins)
Admin
1 year ago

I’m out on Zont anywhere close to that kind of contract! Damn. Even with inflation and Cap growth that kind of deal is hard to stomach for a player who only excels in one of the four key areas of cornerback play (press man, off-man, zone and run fits). As he will be the CB1 in Minter’s system he will end up playing the flats with his back to the sideline in a similar trap role that got Diggs to get up to double figure INTs in his career season. So if the cards fall right and Asante helps this team transition to a playoff side by taking the ball away 6+ times then I see the Chargers letting him walk for a healthy comp pick. For added juice what about if they used that very same comp pick to trade up in the 1st to grab Will Johnson to be the CB1 until 2030, that prospect excites me a hell of a lot more than the idea of Asante missing tackles on the edge and allowing a hard nosed stout defense to have a glaring weak spot in meaningful football season come January.

Ryan Watkins
Ryan Watkins(@ryanwatkins)
Admin
Reply to  Kyle DeDiminicantanio
1 year ago

 Kyle DeDiminicantanio this is a tough one for me as current league trends dictate a true gap penetrator IDL is the most disruptive way to beat quick passing cconcepts. The en vogue way of building a defense is up the spine (DT, MLB, S) to take on the narrow formations and bigger personnel of a 2024 offense but as the Chargers wanted to stay ahead of the curve they’ve chosen to invest in edges and that dictates adding a corner in too. Plus in 3×1 formations it frees up a safety to take on the crossers and in a division with Travis Kelce that’s imperative. The counter-punch to chasing big IDL contracts would 100% be to invest in corners who can play press, the Lions are currently doing just this so it’ll be interesting to see how their defense does now that Aaron Glenn has the pieces he’s been screaming for.

TDU_Alister
TDU_Alister(@alisterlloyd)
Reply to  Ryan Watkins
1 year ago

 Ryan Watkins Great comment. The Lions have become my “NFC Team”. Terrion Arnold and Rakestraw were two guys whose tape might both have made my Top 10 fun watches of last class. I think it’s “make or break” time for Aaron Glenn. I’ve been fairly underwhelmed by his scheme in Detroit. They’re probably still missing a complement to Hutchinson, but they’re running out of excuses (like Staley did) for being a bottom-half Defense.

Ryan Watkins
Ryan Watkins(@ryanwatkins)
Admin
Reply to  TDU_Alister
1 year ago

Rakestraw was one of my guys too, love a corner who welcomes runs in his direction and his sticky coverage is tough to deal with. Both him and Arnold are built for the playoffs so it’ll be interesting to see them develop over the course of the season. I anticipate they may struggle early if they’re both starting but they could get their flowers in January.

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