1992 San Diego Chargers season

This is a good article. Click here for more information.
Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

1992 San Diego Chargers season
Owner
Jack Murphy Stadium
Results
Record11–5
Division place1st AFC West
Playoff finishWon Wild Card Playoffs
(vs. Chiefs) 17–0
Lost Divisional Playoffs
(at Dolphins) 0–31
Pro Bowlers
AP All-Pros
2
Head coach Bobby Ross led the Chargers to their first playoff appearance for 10 years.

The 1992 San Diego Chargers season was the team's 33rd season, their 32nd in

San Diego, and 23rd in the National Football League
.

San Diego came into the season off the back of a 4–12 record in

defensive backfield (Gill Byrd). They finished 11–5, clinching the AFC West title and becoming the first NFL team to start 0–4 and still make the playoffs. As of 2024, this feat has yet to be replicated.[1]

During the regular season, the Chargers lost all four of their games against eventual playoff teams, though they did defeat

Jack Murphy Stadium in the wild card round. In the divisional playoffs they were emphatically beaten by the Miami Dolphins
, being eliminated by a 31–0 scoreline.

Offseason

Head coaching change

Dan Henning, the Chargers' head coach for the previous three seasons, was fired by general manager Bobby Beathard on December 23, 1991, the day after the Chargers completed a 4–12 campaign. Henning had gone 16–32 during his tenure; his entire staff of assistants were also dismissed.[2]

On December 22, Beathard had denied rumours that Georgia Tech Yellow Jackets head coach Bobby Ross was already set to be installed as Henning's replacement.[3] Nonetheless, Ross remained among the favorites for the role.[4] On December 25, Georgia Tech won the Aloha Bowl by a single point; Ross interviewed for the Chargers job on December 30,[5] and was unveiled as head coach on January 2, 1992. Ross' five-year stint in Georgia had seen the Yellow Jackets win a share of the National Championship in 1990.[6] His accomplishments with the Chargers over the next five seasons included a Super Bowl appearance in 1994, and would earn him a place in their Hall of Fame.[7]

Ross appointed

Super Bowls with Miami as a defensive coordinator, running their "No-Name" defense, and faced San Diego in the same role in the Epic in Miami a decade later.[8] Arnsparger installed a 4–3 defense, a switch from the 3–4 alignment preferred by his predecessor Ron Lynn.[9]

Other coaching appointees included numerous assistants Ross brought with him from Georgia Tech. Ralph Friedgen, who had also been with Ross in a prior job at Maryland, was installed as running game coordinator and tight ends coach; the post of offensive coordinator went unfilled until Friedgen was promoted to it two seasons later.[10][11]

Departures

For the second consecutive year, the Chargers lost 11 players through

H-Back Craig McEwen was waived;[15] neither played in the NFL again.[16]

A well-established name on the defensive line also departed after failing to come to contract terms with the Chargers.

nose tackle the previous season, his fifth with the club. He was a holdout through training camp, asking either for more money or to be traded.[17] On 9 September, he narrowly missed a final deadline to accept a two-year deal, and Beathard announced that negotiations were over.[18] Phillips was released on September 21,[19] and signed for the Chiefs.[20]

Arrivals

On July 27, John Friesz ended a lengthy holdout, signing a two-year deal as the Chargers' starting quarterback. Twelve days later, he suffered a knee injury in the team's preseason opener after a late hit by Ken Harvey.[21] Friesz required surgery for torn knee ligaments and was ruled out for the season, leaving journeyman Bob Gagliano as the only available quarterback with regular-season experience.[22]

In April's NFL draft, Beathard had contacted Washington about the potential

1988.[23] That trade fell through, but the parties reached an agreement after Friesz's injury, with Humphries moving to San Diego in exchange for what proved to be a 3rd-round pick in the 1993 draft.[24] The new quarterback was already familiar with the Chargers' offensive system, as Dan Henning had been influential in both San Diego (as head coach) and Washington (as offensive coordinator). Humphries, who had fallen out of favor with Joe Gibbs in Washington, described the move as "a new life for me and a new opportunity".[25] He would start 76 regular season games with the Chargers over the next six seasons, leading them to their only Super Bowl appearance and ultimately earning a place in the Chargers Hall of Fame.[26][a]

Other arrivals included a pair of defensive linemen, Blaise Winter and Shawn Lee. Winter had been with the Chargers for two seasons in the late 1980s, but was unable to find a team in 1991. After winning a spot on the Chargers' roster, he made six sacks during the regular season and was granted the Ed Block Courage Award by his teammates.[28][29] Lee was a midseason acquisition from Miami,[30] who saw limited action in 1992, but would start 15 games in each of the next three seasons.[31] Cornerback Sean Vanhorse had been unable to get onto the field in his first two seasons in the league, but started nine games in 1992 after the Chargers picked him up through Plan B free agency.[12]

NFL draft

San Diego made Tennessee defensive end Chris Mims their first pick in the draft, with Beathard praising the player's pass-rushing ability.[32] Mims produced 10 sacks in his rookie year, and 38 in total during seven seasons with the Chargers.[33]

Other selections made less of an impact in San Diego. Second-round pick

offensive linemen Curtis Whitley and Eric Jonassen started two games each. Further down the draft, blocking tight end Deems May started six games in his rookie year, and spent five seasons in San Diego.[34]

1992 San Diego Chargers draft
Round Pick Player Position College Notes
1 23 Chris Mims  Defensive end Tennessee
2 33 Marquez Pope  Cornerback Fresno State
3 63 Ray Ethridge  Wide receiver Pasadena City College
5 117 Curtis Whitley  Center Clemson
5 131 Kevin Little  Linebacker North Carolina A&T
5 140 Eric Jonassen  Tackle Bloomsburg (PA)
6 147 Reggie White  Defensive tackle North Carolina A&T
7 174 Deems May  Tight end North Carolina
8 201 James Fuller  Cornerback Portland State
9 231 Johnnie Barnes  Wide receiver Hampton
10 258 Arthur Paul  Defensive tackle Arizona State
11 285 Keith McAfee  Running back Texas A&M
12 315 Carlos Huerta  Kicker Miami (FL)
      Made roster    *   Made at least one Pro Bowl during career

[35]

Personnel

Staff

1992 San Diego Chargers staff

Front office

Head coaches

Offensive coaches

Defensive coaches

Special teams coaches

Strength and conditioning

[36]

Roster

1992 San Diego Chargers final roster
Quarterbacks

Running backs

Wide receivers

Tight ends

Offensive linemen

Defensive linemen

Linebackers

Defensive backs

Special teams

Reserve lists

[37]
Practice squad

[38]

[39][36]
Rookies in italics
47 active, 14 inactive, 5 practice squad

Preseason

San Diego's preseason began badly, as they were comfortably beaten by Phoenix, and lost starting quarterback Friesz for the year with an knee injury. The Cardinals scored touchdowns on their first three possessions, and led 28–0 before Derrick Walker caught a touchdown pass from Gagliano. Eric Bieniemy scored the Chargers' second touchdown.[21] Gagliano started at quarterback in the next game, completing 7 of 11 for 123 yards; Marion Butts and Bieniemy scored with short rushes as San Diego beat the Patriots.[40]

Against San Francisco, Gagliano completed 8 of 13 for 87 yards, and ran 20 yards for a touchdown. He then gave way to the newly-signed Humphries, who went 5 of 12 for 52 yards and an interception, while leading a drive that Ronnie Harmon capped with a 9-yard touchdown run. Future Charger Mark Seay scored for San Francisco as they won the game with 17 unanswered 4th quarter points.[41] Gagliano was again the starter in the final preseason game against the Rams, leading an 80-yard touchdown drive on the opening possession, with Rod Bernstine scoring from the 1-yard line. Gagliano was 6 of 8 for 90 yards. Humphries took over and completed 11 of 16 for 118 yards, with touchdowns to Harmon and Walter Stanley (the latter of whom was nonetheless cut four days later). John Carney, who had won a training camp battle with Carlos Huerta for the kicking job, converted all three of his field goal attempts.[42][43]

On August 31, Bobby Ross named Gagliano as his starting quarterback for week 1 of the regular season. He represented the six different opening day starter for the Chargers in as many seasons.[44]

Week Date Opponent Result Record Venue Attendance
1 August 8 at Phoenix Cardinals L 14–35 0–1
Sun Devil Stadium
28,298
2 August 14 at New England Patriots W 20–10 1–1 Foxboro Stadium 18,626
3 August 21 San Francisco 49ers L 14–20 1–2
Jack Murphy Stadium
40,921
4 August 27 Los Angeles Rams W 30–19 2–2
Jack Murphy Stadium
46,949

[45]

Regular season

Overview

Expectations for the Chargers were not particularly high going into the season. A summary of nine major publications found that four of them had San Diego finishing 4th in their 5-team division, while three placed them 3rd and two 2nd.[46] The low expectations seemed justified as the team lost their first four games, but they improved drastically through the next twelve. This was echoed by the performance of Humphries, who started every game from week 2 onwards: he threw 1 touchdown and 8 interceptions during the 0–4 start, but 15 touchdowns against 10 interceptions the rest of the way.[47] Overall, Humphries had 3,356 passing yards, the most by a Chargers starter since Dan Fouts in 1985.[48] Anthony Miller enjoyed a return to form, crossing 1,000 yards receiving for the first time in three seasons.[49] He ranked 10th in the league for receptions, and 6th for receiving yards, catching 72 passes for 1,060 yards and a team-leading seven touchdowns. Running back Harmon ranked 6th for receptions and 10th for receiving yards, with 79 receptions for 914 yards - he was comfortably the top running back in both categories.[50] Nate Lewis added four touchdowns and over 500 receiving yards.[51]

The Chargers employed a balanced attack that ranked 7th in the league for passing yardage and 9th for rushing (they were 6th overall). Butts led the team with 809 rushing yards. Bernstine had a higher yards per carry than Butts (4.7 to 3.7), but struggled with injuries and only played in nine regular season games. He finished with 499 yards, while Harmon and Bieniemy each contributed over 200. The four running backs combined for 14 rushing touchdowns, and Humphries added four more.[51]

Cornerback Gill Byrd played his tenth and final season in San Diego. He intercepted four passes and was voted to the Pro Bowl.

On defense, the Chargers bounced back from a disappointing showing the previous season, improving from 19th to 4th.[52] With the defensive alignment shifting from 3–4 to 4–3, Leslie O'Neal moved from linebacker to defensive end, and saw his sack count increase from 9 to 17, tied for second-best in the league.[53] This also set an official club record (unofficially, Gary "Big Hands" Johnson had 17+12 in 1980).[54] With rookie Mims adding 10 sacks (including a safety), and fellow defensive lineman Burt Grossman adding 8 (including two safeties), the Chargers totalled 51, joint third in the league. They were also second in the league for interceptions.[55] Darren Carrington led the team with 6 interceptions, with Donald Frank and Gill Byrd had 4 each. It proved to be the final season of Byrd's playing career; after making only 11 interceptions in the first half of his ten-season career, he totalled 31 interceptions in his final five seasons in the league, 6 more than any other player during that span.[56][57] All-Pro linebacker Junior Seau led the team with 102 tackles while adding 4+12 sacks.[51]

Kicker Carney was fifth in the league with an 81.3% conversion rate on field goals (he made 26 of 32). This was a return to form after making only 65.5% the previous season.[58] John Kidd was 14th with 42.6 yards per punt.[59]

Schedule

Week Date Opponent Result Record Venue Attendance
1 September 6 Kansas City Chiefs L 10–24 0–1
Jack Murphy Stadium
45,024
2 September 13 at Denver Broncos L 13–21 0–2 Mile High Stadium 74,367
3 September 20 Pittsburgh Steelers L 6–23 0–3 Jack Murphy Stadium 46,127
4 September 27 at Houston Oilers L 0–27 0–4
Houston Astrodome
57,491
5 October 4 Seattle Seahawks W 17–6 1–4 Jack Murphy Stadium 36,783
6 Bye
7 October 18 at Indianapolis Colts W 34–14 2–4
Hoosier Dome
48,552
8 October 25 Denver Broncos W 24–21 3–4 Jack Murphy Stadium 53,576
9 November 1 Indianapolis Colts W 26–0 4–4 Jack Murphy Stadium 40,324
10 November 8 at Kansas City Chiefs L 14–16 4–5 Arrowhead Stadium 72,826
11 November 15 at Cleveland Browns W 14–13 5–5
Cleveland Municipal Stadium
58,396
12 November 22 Tampa Bay Buccaneers W 29–14 6–5 Jack Murphy Stadium 43,197
13 November 29 Los Angeles Raiders W 27–3 7–5 Jack Murphy Stadium 59,894
14 December 6 at Phoenix Cardinals W 27–21 8–5
Sun Devil Stadium
26,880
15 December 13 Cincinnati Bengals W 27–10 9–5 Jack Murphy Stadium 50,579
16 December 20 at Los Angeles Raiders W 36–14 10–5 Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum 40,152
17 December 27 at Seattle Seahawks W 31–14 11–5 Kingdome 49,324

Note: Intra-division opponents are in bold text.

Game summaries

All game reports use the Pro Football Researchers' gamebook archive as a source.[60]

Week 1: vs. Kansas City Chiefs

Week One: Kansas City Chiefs at San Diego Chargers – Game summary
Period 1 2 34Total
Chiefs 7 3 7724
Chargers 3 0 0710

at

San Diego, California

  • Date: September 6
  • Game time: 1:00 p.m.
    PDT
  • Game weather: 70 °F (21.1 °C), relative humidity 77%, wind 10 mph
  • Game attendance: 45,024
  • Referee: Howard Roe
  • TV announcers (NBC): Dick Enberg and Bob Trumpy
  • Box score
Game information

Harmon miscontrolled the opening kickoff out of bounds at the 2-yard line, forcing the offense to start from there. After three plays netted six yards, Kidd's punt was returned 46 yards for a touchdown by Dale Carter 99 seconds into the game. Later in the opening quarter, San Diego were the beneficiaries of a roughing the kicker penalty, extending a drive after they'd been forced to punt. After Miller caught a 17-yard pass from Gagliano, the drive stalled for a second time and Carney kicked a 45-yard field goal. Gagliano was sacked on consecutive 2nd-quarter plays, again forcing Kidd to punt from deep in his own territory. The Chiefs took possession at the San Diego 48, and gained 8 yards on three plays before Dave Krieg drew Winter offside with a hard count on 4th and 2. Kansas City added a field goal later on in the drive and led 10–3 at the break.[61]

In the 3rd quarter, Seau stopped one drive with an interception and another by sacking Krieg at his own 6-yard line. After Kansas City punted, San Diego started their next drive at the Chiefs 36, and reached a 3rd and 4 at the 13. Gagliano's pass was then tipped away from Harmon by former Charger Martin Bayless for Kevin Ross to intercept and return 99 yards for a touchdown. Humphries then entered the game; on his second drive, he completed 4 of 4 passes for 36 yards, with a defensive pass interference penalty accounting for a further 27 yards. Bernstine finished the drive with a 2-yard run, drawing San Diego back within seven points with 10:24 to play. Kansas City responded with a 15-play, 76-yard drive, converting three third downs and running the clock down to 1:23, with Barry Word scoring the clinching touchdown.[61]

The Chargers held Kansas City to 188 yards, but gained a season-low 155 yards.[51] Humphries completed 7 of 10 passes, for 62 yards and an interception. Gagliano was 7 of 20 for 55 yards and two interceptions. He was also sacked 5 times for a combined loss of 50 yards. It was the last start of Gagliano's career, as Humphries was given the starting job in week 2 and kept it for the rest of the season.[62][63]

Week 2: at Denver Broncos

Week Two: San Diego Chargers at Denver Broncos – Game summary
Period 1 2 34Total
Chargers 0 10 3013
Broncos 7 0 14021

at

Denver, Colorado

  • Date: September 13
  • Game time: 2:00 p.m.
    MDT
  • Game weather: 74 °F (23.3 °C), relative humidity 28%, wind 11 mph
  • Game attendance: 74,367
  • Referee: Dick Hantak
  • TV announcers (NBC): Don Criqui and Paul Maguire
  • Box score
Game information

Denver took the opening kickoff and drove 80 yards in 8 plays, scoring on John Elway's 32-yard touchdown pass to Mark Jackson with Byrd beaten on the play. An answering 60-yard drive by San Diego came to nothing when Carney's 37-yard field goal attempt was blocked. In the 2nd quarter, San Diego drove 77 yards in 15 plays; Bernstine had 3 carries for 34 yards as the Chargers reached a 3rd and 1 from the Denver 2, but he was then stuffed for a loss of a yard, and Carney came on to kick a short field goal with 1:34 remaining in the first half. Three plays later, Byrd intercepted a deep pass from Elway, and returned the ball 44 yards from his own 40-yard line to the Denver 16. A touchdown run by Harmon on the next play was wiped out by the first of two successive penalties, but Harmon's one-handed 29-yard reception moved the ball to the 2, from where Lewis caught Humphries' first Chargers touchdown pass with 24 seconds on the clock.[64]

Leading 10–7, the Chargers allowed a touchdown on Denver's first second-half possession, this time on Elway's 8-yard run. The Chargers pulled back to within a point late in the quarter with a Carney field goal, then forced a

three-and-out and took over at their own 19. Humphries was intercepted on the next play, and Elway threw a 34-yard touchdown pass to Shannon Sharpe on the play after that. The Chargers crossed midfield on all four of their 4th quarter possessions, but the drives ended with two punts, an interception and the clock expiring.[64]

Bernstine rushed for 83 yards and Butts for 78 as San Diego gained 168 yards on the ground. A third running back, Harmon, led the team in receiving yards with 91 from 7 catches. Humphries threw for 231 yards, but the Chargers again gave up five sacks, this time for a loss of 44 yards.[65]

Week 3: vs. Pittsburgh Steelers

Week Three: Pittsburgh Steelers at San Diego Chargers – Game summary
Period 1 2 34Total
Steelers 0 7 01623
Chargers 3 3 006

at

San Diego, California

Game information

San Diego took the opening kickoff and converted three third downs, one of those with Miller's diving 35-yard reception. Lewis appeared to have opened the scoring with an 11-yard touchdown catch, but Swayne was flagged for

illegal motion, and the Chargers settled for a Carney field goal. In the 2nd quarter, the Steelers drove 80 yards in just 4 plays, taking the lead with a Neil O'Donnell touchdown pass. Late in the half, Humphries completed three consecutive passes for 39 yards, but took a blow to the ankle after the third of these and came out of the game.. Gagliano came in and completed his first pass, but the drive stalled and Carney made a 43-yard kick with 1:18 on the clock. Pittsburgh tried to move into field goal range, but Frank intercepted O'Donnell, and the Chargers took over at their own 34 with time for one more play. Gagliano's Hail Mary pass was batted in the air and caught by Harmon for a 55-yard gain, but the Steelers were able to tackle him 11 yards short of the end zone, preserving their 7–6 lead at the intermission.[66]

Gagliano was intercepted on the Chargers' first possession of the second half; Greg Lloyd ran the ball back from his own 45-yard line to the San Diego 20, but Swayne knocked the ball loose at the end of the return and Butts recovered. San Diego punted, and Pittsburgh lost another fumble on the next play, Henry Rolling knocking the ball from Barry Foster's grasp for Byrd to recover. With Humphries back in at quarterback, Bernstine had a 15-yard carry and the Chargers advanced 30 yards to a 4th and 2 at the Pittsburgh 8, before sending Carney in for a go-ahead field goal attempt of 25 yards. Carney pulled his attempt wide to the left, and the game quickly shifted Pittsburgh's way. O'Donnell led an 80-yard touchdown drive, Humphries was intercepted on the next play, and O'Donnell ran for a score five plays later. The Steelers later added a field goal, and Humphries was intercepted a second time in the final minutes.[66]

Harmon was again the leading receiver, with 3 catches for 77 yards (he also ran 3 times for 17 yards). San Diego outgained Pittsburgh 330–272 but were hampered by 10 penalties for 90 yards.[67]

Week 4: at Houston Oilers

Week Four: San Diego Chargers at Houston Oilers – Game summary
Period 1 2 34Total
Chargers 0 0 000
Oilers 10 0 71027

at

Houston, Texas

Game information