LOS ANGELES — Days after a brutal, season-ending loss to the New England Patriots, a game that felt depressingly familiar in how it unraveled, the Chargers dismissed offensive coordinator Greg Roman.
LOS ANGELES — Days after a brutal, season-ending loss to the New England Patriots, a game that felt depressingly familiar in how it unraveled, the Chargers dismissed offensive coordinator Greg Roman. It was a move fueled by frustration as much as inevitability. Another playoff appearance, another sputtering offense when it mattered most, another year of Justin Herbert walking off the field without answers.
On Tuesday night, the Chargers made their counterpunch, hiring former Miami Dolphins head coach Mike McDaniel as their new offensive coordinator. If Roman represented an old-school bet on physicality and control, McDaniel represents something else entirely: creativity, adaptability, and a belief that elite quarterbacks should be unleashed, not managed.
For Herbert, this is the latest chapter in a career that has been anything but stable on the offensive side of the ball. McDaniel will be the fifth offensive coordinator Herbert has had since being selected sixth overall in the 2020 NFL Draft. Five coordinators in six seasons is not a recipe for continuity, but it does underscore the urgency in Los Angeles. Shane Steichen in 2020, Joe Lombardi in 21-22, and Kellen Moore in 2023, who left to take the OC job with the Eagles. Roman was the guy running a Burger King offense in 24-25.
The Chargers aren’t searching for incremental improvement anymore. They’re searching for a breakthrough.
McDaniel arrives with baggage, but also with bona fide credibility. Fired by the Dolphins on January 8, 2026, after a 7–10 season, McDaniel leaves Miami with a 35–33 record and a 0–2 mark in the playoffs over four years. That résumé is why he’s no longer a head coach—for now. But it’s also why the Chargers see him as an answer rather than a risk.
Before Miami, McDaniel made his name in San Francisco, serving as the 49ers’ offensive coordinator in 2021 and as a key lieutenant in Kyle Shanahan’s system. That offense was defined by motion, misdirection, and ruthless efficiency—traits the Chargers have only flashed in recent years. McDaniel took that philosophy to Miami, where he was tasked with developing Tua Tagovailoa, the fifth overall pick in the same 2020 draft class as Herbert. The results were uneven, but the vision was clear: tailor the system to the quarterback, not the other way around.
That’s the appeal here.
Herbert doesn’t need to be protected from himself. He needs a coordinator who understands how to stress defenses horizontally and vertically, how to manufacture easy answers early in games, and how to adjust when January football inevitably tightens. McDaniel’s offenses, at their best, do exactly that. They force defenses to declare, then punish them for it.
There’s also a larger picture at play. McDaniel interviewed for head coaching vacancies with the Browns, Ravens, and Raiders during this cycle. That he’s now settling into an offensive coordinator role under Jim Harbaugh speaks volumes about timing and fit. Harbaugh wanted a proven offensive mind who wouldn’t be intimidated by Herbert’s arm or reputation. McDaniel wanted a quarterback capable of executing his full playbook. This is a marriage of mutual need.
Still, the hire doesn’t come without ripple effects. As the Chargers solidify one side of the ball, the other could soon be in flux. Defensive coordinator Jesse Minter has been interviewing with multiple teams for head coaching openings and met for a second time with the Las Vegas Raiders on Tuesday. If Minter departs, Harbaugh may soon be rebuilding both coordinator spots—an uncomfortable but not unfamiliar position for this franchise.
That uncertainty, however, shouldn’t overshadow what this move signals. The Chargers are done hedging. By bringing in McDaniel, they’re betting that scheme, imagination, and quarterback-centric football can finally push Herbert over the hump.
Whether it works will be decided in January. But for the first time in a while, the Chargers aren’t just reacting to disappointment—they’re daring to think bigger.
Category: General Sports