Free Agency 2026

Zigging, Then Zagging:
Hortiz’s Offensive Line Misfire

After outsmarting the center market, the Chargers spent $26.5M on OL depth that undercuts their own compensatory pick strategy.

Joe Hortiz zigged when the rest of the league zagged. The Tyler Biadasz signing (three years, $30M, locked up before the center market detonated) was the kind of move that makes you believe the front office sees three moves ahead. It was textbook Hortiz: identify the value pocket before the market discovers it, strike early, protect the compensatory pick formula by targeting a player who was released (and therefore doesn’t count as a CFA), and get your guy at a number that looks reasonable before comparable deals blow past it.

Then the offensive line shopping continued. And the savvy evaporated.

What followed was a trio of signings (Trevor Penning, Cole Strange, and Trey Pipkins) that, taken individually, each carry a defensible football argument. Taken together, they represent $26.5M in total value dedicated to offensive line depth, a puzzling allocation that directly contradicts the compensatory pick discipline Hortiz has built his roster-construction philosophy around.

Trevor Penning — 1 year, $3.5M. This was the first domino, and the most defensible. The Chargers OL room was barren heading into free agency. Bringing back a player from the old guard who already knew the building made practical sense, especially given Penning’s profile. The former first-round pick carries a legitimate mean streak in the run game and proved his value as the sixth offensive lineman in the jumbo packages Greg Roman deployed last season. Those are the same heavy personnel groupings Mike McDaniel loves to run. His ceiling is a swing tackle who can moonlight as a pulling blocker in 13 and 22 personnel. That’s real utility.

The downside: $3.5M is qualifying CFA money. That contract counts against the compensatory pick formula, and in a year where the Chargers needed every outgoing free agent dollar they could muster to insulate picks from cancellation, Penning’s deal immediately began chipping away at the cushion protecting the Zion Johnson and Odafe Oweh compensatory selections.

Cole Strange — 2 years, $13M ($7M guaranteed, $2M additional injury guarantee). Strange’s name surfaced on opening night of the tampering window. The prevailing speculation had pointed toward one of two departing Miami Dolphins (Strange or Liam Eichenberg) as a buy-low depth target who could provide system familiarity under McDaniel and offensive line coach Butch Barry. In Eichenberg’s case, the point is moot; Miami released him with a failed physical designation on March 2nd after he spent the entire 2025 season on the PUP list, his playing future uncertain. He was never a realistic option.

The assumption for Strange was that either player could be had for non-qualifying value: something around $3M APY or below, a deal that would slip beneath the CFA threshold and leave the comp pick math untouched.

Instead, Strange signed for $6.5M APY. That’s not depth money. That’s low-end starter money for a guard PFF graded 58th out of 81 qualifying guards last season, with a bottom-10 pass blocking grade. McDaniel clearly values him. They were together in Miami, and Barry coached him on the Dolphins’ OL last year. But the price tag immediately shifts Strange from a shrewd system reunion into qualifying CFA territory that puts additional downward pressure on the Chargers’ outgoing comp pick projections.

Cole Strange — By The Numbers

Year Cap Hit Context
2026 $4.1M Manageable Year 1
2027 $8.85M Escalation year

PFF ranked Strange 58th of 81 qualifying guards in 2025. He was a bottom-10 pass blocker. His run blocking graded slightly above the man he’s replacing. Mekhi Becton ranked 61st in RBWR (63.4%) while Strange came in at 59th (65.8%). The pass blocking numbers go the other direction: Becton ranked 17th in PBWR (91.2%) vs. Strange at 26th (91.9%). This is, at best, a lateral move at a premium price.

Between the two of them, Penning and Strange were seen by fans as OL depth who could cover all five positions between them, with the expectation that they’d compete for one starting guard spot, assuming Hortiz made a legitimate upgrade elsewhere, either by spending a Day 1 or Day 2 draft pick at guard or, preferably, signing a veteran like Elgton Jenkins.

Jenkins was the obvious fit. A two-time Pro Bowl guard released by the Packers with a failed physical designation, meaning his signing would not have counted against the comp pick formula, just like the Biadasz deal. He could play left guard next to Rashawn Slater and give Justin Herbert the best blindside protection of his career. He’s 30 and coming off a broken leg, but the Packers released him owing $24M on the cap; that’s not a performance cut, it’s a cap casualty. The Browns signed him for two years, $24M with $20M guaranteed.

For Jenkins to sign with Cleveland was a gut punch. A team mired in a perpetual rebuild, drowning in cap commitments, and stacking offensive linemen like they’re collecting trading cards (Zion Johnson, Tytus Howard, Teven Jenkins, and now Elgton Jenkins). For reports to surface that the Chargers didn’t call, didn’t seriously consider him, and watched a CFA-exempt upgrade walk to the AFC North without a fight? That was infuriating.

The Chargers had $99M in cap space. Jenkins cost $12M APY. He wouldn’t have touched the comp formula. And they didn’t pick up the phone.

And then came the one that made it all feel intentional in the worst way.

Trey Pipkins — 2 years, $10M. Re-signed to serve as the swing tackle behind Slater and Alt. A reasonable football decision in isolation. He’s played 97 career games, and Spotrac had projected his next deal at roughly one year, $5M. Fine. Depth is depth.

But Pipkins was also the Chargers’ strongest outgoing CFA opportunity to shield Zion Johnson’s compensatory pick from cancellation. On our StormCloud War Room cancellation chart (not yet published on the site, but it’s coming), we had Pipkins projected at a $5M APY on the open market. At that number, his outgoing contract value would have immediately absorbed Strange’s incoming cancellation pressure, shifting it away from Zion’s pick.

Comp Pick Damage Report

By re-signing Pipkins, the Chargers simultaneously added $5M APY in qualifying CFA money (his new deal) and removed their best outgoing CFA shield (his projected open-market value). That’s a double hit on the cancellation math.

The Chargers are now relying on scenarios to protect Zion’s pick: Jamaree Salyer finding a suitor who believes in his starting tackle upside and pays north of $3.2M APY, or veterans like Keenan Allen and Tony Jefferson departing for meaningful paydays, though both feel like UFA Tender candidates if they remain unsigned through the draft.

Here’s where the math gets uncomfortable. Total it up:

Player Deal APY Role
Trevor Penning 1 yr / $3.5M $3.5M OL6 / Swing T
Cole Strange 2 yr / $13M $6.5M Likely RG starter
Trey Pipkins 2 yr / $10M $5.0M Swing T / Depth
Total $26.5M $15M

One of these deals on its own is a perfectly defensible depth add. Two is harder to stomach, but manageable if you squint and see a competition for a starting guard spot. But if all three of these players are depth pieces (and absent a draft pick or another signing, at least two of them will be), that’s $15M APY dedicated to reserves. For a team that just let Zion Johnson walk to Cleveland, passed on Elgton Jenkins entirely, and still doesn’t have a clear answer at left guard, that allocation feels deeply misaligned with the stated goal of protecting Justin Herbert.

Fans are right to question what Hortiz is thinking. The comp pick math doesn’t add up. The draft capital protection strategy that defined this front office’s early moves has been eroded by three signings that, while individually explainable, collectively suggest a plan that’s either more complex than what’s visible on the surface, or one that simply lost the thread.

We’ll work on the “why” in the next part of this series. Because either Hortiz sees something the rest of us don’t, or these offensive line moves represent the first real departure from the disciplined roster-construction philosophy that earned him the benefit of the doubt in the first place.

KD
STORMCLOUD STAFF
Kyle DeDiminicantanio
The Armchair GM
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