It's still early, but the 2025 Charger draft 6 games in looks phenomenal thus far.
Rd 1 - Omarion Hampton: Injury sucks, but appears to be a franchise RB
Rd 2 - Tre Harris: Keenan's return & QJ's breakout have limited his opportunities so far, but I'm all in on him from what I've seen. His separation skills are elite, and Charger nerds are raving about his blocking. Harbaugh gave him a game ball after Sunday's win. The coaching staff loves him.
Rd 3 - Jamaree Caldwell: Starting on the DL and looks like he'll start there for the next 4 years.
Rd 4 - Kyle Kennard: no impact thus far, could be a bust
Rd 5 - KeAndre Lambert-Smith: Buried in the deepest WR corps the Chargers have had in decades, but looked great in the preseason and in limited opps through 6 weeks. His 4.37 speed looked good returning kicks on Sunday.
Rd 5 - Oronde Gadsden II: 15 catches in the last 4 games and has emerged as the clear TE1 in the receiving game for LA. Looks like a big WR the way he moves and receives the football. Barring injury, he should catch 70+ balls per season for the Chargers the next 4 years. Absolute steal.
Rd 6 - Branson Taylor: Bust - currently on the practice squad
Rd 6 - RJ Mickens: Had a great preseason, and impressed the coaching staff so much that they traded starting safety Alohi Gilman to Baltimore last week.
Rd 7 - Trikweze Bridges: Bust - waived in the preseason
6 players contributing, with 4 looking like 5 year starters.
Hortiz has drafted well. He has only missed badly on one pick -- Colson. He also missed on every 7th round pick (WR Rice, WR Johnson, DB Bridges) and 6th round OL Taylor, but they are 6th and 7th rounders, so not a big deal. The jury is out on Kennard and KLS. His other 11 picks have provided a strong nucleus for the roster over the next few years: T Alt, RB Hampton, WR McConkey, WR Harris, IDL Caldwell, IDL Eboigbe, TE Gadsden, CB Still, CB Hart, S Mickens, RB Vidal.
Overall, that looks like a very strong draft performance... if you ignore opportunity cost.
The biggest miss of Hortiz's tenure is not drafting a center in the 2024 draft, the most center-rich draft in NFL history. That has left them with Bozeman again, and he is arguably the worst center in the NFL. Bozeman has visibly hurt the team this season.
For a team that wants to prioritize OL, it made sense to draft Alt at 1.5 last year. It does not make sense at all to have drafted just one other OL, likely 6th round bust Taylor, who was an obvious long term project. The OL has visibly hurt the team this season.
For a team that wants to have a strong defense, it is odd not to have spent any 1st or 2nd round picks on that side of the ball. That is why the only premium defensive players on the roster are those Hortiz inherited: Edge Mack and S James, both former 1st round picks.
It seems quite surprising that the Chargers have spent 5 (of 18) picks on WRs and just 2 on OL and 2 on IDL. It feels like priorities may have been skewed a bit in the first two drafts.
I will just choose WR Harris as an example. He might turn out to be a good player, but the team doesn't truly need him right now with McConkey, Johnston, and Allen. Would they have gotten better value, both short and long term, by drafting OL, Edge, or IDL instead of Harris? IMO the answer is pretty obviously yes.
The team is set once again to have major questions on OL and DL next season.
- On the OL, the only players who are currently under contract for 2025 are Slater (coming off major injury), Alt, Becton, and Bozeman. And, again, Bozeman might be the worst center in the NFL.
- On the IDL, the only players who are currently under contract are Caldwell and Eboigbe.
- At Edge, the only players who are currently under contract are Tuli, Kennard, and Dupree, and it is hard for me to believe they will keep Dupree.
IMO they need to use the 2026 draft as well as 2026 free agency to load up in these position groups. Other position groups are good enough that they don’t need meaningful attention that cannot be accomplished via bargain free agency and/or resigning their own players. I would also point out that having strong lines makes the rest of the offense and defense better, which is another reason to prioritize those position groups.
Honestly, I am surprised at where the Chargers chose to invest in the second offseason of Hortiz and Harbaugh. In the first offseason, I felt they were more constrained, and they made the best of the situation. But I feel that they botched the second offseason. I hope they prove me wrong, but so far I’m not seeing that.