logo
Chargers back in San Diego for 2 days at school where Harbaugh landed 1st head coaching job

Chargers back in San Diego for 2 days at school where Harbaugh landed 1st head coaching job

Al Arabiya4 days ago
The Chargers returned to San Diego on Tuesday for the first time since they bolted for Los Angeles eight years ago, holding the first of two practices at the small college stadium where Jim Harbaugh began his head coaching career in the mid-2000s. Harbaugh ran the Chargers through their first padded practice of training camp at Torero Stadium at the University of San Diego, a hilltop Jesuit school about five miles west of the site where they used to play. It was just the second time the Chargers have held a practice in San Diego County since 2017, when owner Dean Spanos moved them to Los Angeles after he was unable to get a stadium deal in San Diego. They held a walkthrough at Camp Pendleton in far northern San Diego County during minicamp in 2024. The Bolts haven't held a public event or practice here since their acrimonious split with the city they called home for 56 seasons. Tickets to Tuesday's practice were made available to active-duty military and veterans, and tickets to Wednesday's practice were available to season ticket holders. The 6,500-seat stadium appeared half full. A dozen or so fans watched from a public sidewalk overlooking the stadium. There were a lot of No. 10 Justin Herbert jerseys in the crowd and also some from the San Diego days, including Philip Rivers–who quarterbacked the Chargers in both cities–LaDainian Tomlinson, and Junior Seau.
The Chargers were scheduled to hold a walkthrough on the aircraft carrier USS Abraham Lincoln on Tuesday evening. While some San Diegans still follow the Chargers, many remain bitter or have moved on from the NFL. Harbaugh said the idea to practice in San Diego came from the organization. 'I heard the idea and said, 'Heck yeah, let's do it,' and a suggestion if I might, 'let's do it at USD.' This is about as good as it gets.' Harbaugh was asked if having practices here was the sign of the team extending an olive branch to San Diego, where he still owns a home. 'I don't know anything about that. I never once heard the olive branch analogy used,' he said. 'We love our fans. We love our LA fans, we love San Diego fans, Santa Barbara, Fresno. We just want to go to our fans wherever they might be. Stockton. I want to go to Stockton. Just all those that come to see us, we want to go to them whenever we can.'
Harbaugh played for the Chargers in 1999 when he replaced injured quarterback Ryan Leaf and in 2000 when he started five games during a 1-15 season. He said he often visited USD for basketball and baseball games and befriended Monsignor Daniel Dillabough. 'One basketball game I asked him if we could go look at the football field,' Harbaugh said. 'I stood on the top of the hill and said, 'This is incredible. Someday when I get done playing I'm going to go into coaching and it would be incredible if this is where I coached.'' He was quarterbacks coach of the Oakland Raiders when the USD job opened in 2004. 'I saw they had an opening for head coach and called Monsignor Dillabough and said, 'Remember what I said about five years ago?' And he said, 'I was hoping you would call.'' He coached at USD for three seasons, going 29-6 overall. 'It was my first head coaching opportunity, and the thing I've asked Monsignor before, 'What did you see in me to make you think I'd be a good head football coach?' I'd still like to know.' He hasn't told me that.
Harbaugh said he wanted to get the blessing of Al Davis, who asked, 'Why would you do that? I thought you wanted to be a pro coach.' I said, 'Mr. Davis, I really want to emulate your career. I know you started as a college coach and I want to take the same path.' And he said, 'Yeah, but that was USC, not USD.' That's a fond memory for me. Harbaugh went on to coach at Stanford, the San Francisco 49ers, and Michigan. He led the Wolverines to the national championship to cap the scandal-plagued 2023 season. He was hired by the Chargers and led them to an 11-6 record last season before they lost to Houston in the wild-card round. He said being back at USD was incredible. 'As the buses came through, the little hairs on my arm were standing up.' Harbaugh praised Rivers, who on Monday announced in a video that he was retiring as a Charger. The quarterback played 16 seasons for the Chargers and last played for Indianapolis in 2020. 'Nothing but the highest respect for Philip Rivers,' Harbaugh said. 'He was so good, and I just appreciate him in every way. The thing that always stands out to me is coaching against Philip when the 49ers played the Chargers, his enthusiasm for the game is right there with Derwin James. His ability to talk during the play–sometimes he was directing it at the players, one time he directed it over at me,' Harbaugh said. 'Really, I guess 'talk smack,' as the young people say, and to do it without swearing is just another level of eliteness. Tremendous competitor. Everyone in the organization has love and appreciation for Philip Rivers. We're excited he's going to retire as a Charger.'
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Dewanna Bonner returns to phoenix: 'the love and welcome was very much needed'
Dewanna Bonner returns to phoenix: 'the love and welcome was very much needed'

Al Arabiya

time2 hours ago

  • Al Arabiya

Dewanna Bonner returns to phoenix: 'the love and welcome was very much needed'

DeWanna Bonner is happy to be back home in Phoenix. The veteran spent the first 10 years of her career with the Mercury before leaving for Connecticut and then a brief stint in Indiana to start the season. When that didn't work out, she signed with Phoenix earlier this month. 'I wouldn't do anything differently. I think my journey is my journey, and I'm going to accept that,' Bonner said. 'It carried me to where I am now in Phoenix, and it happened that way for a reason.' The 37-year-old wing was focused on her future with Phoenix more than dwelling on the past or what went wrong in Indiana that ended with the team releasing her. She did find the narrative that she was disgruntled to come off the bench amusing after starting the first few games for the Fever. In the opener, she moved into third on the WNBA career scoring list. 'That wasn't ever the issue; that's never been me,' said Bonner, who has won the WNBA Sixth Woman of the Year award three times. 'I have no problems coming off the bench. I have never been that player. I don't feel like I have that reputation.' Phoenix began a five-game road trip in New York on Friday night and lost 89-76. She had nine points. 'DB is a really good addition for us. She can play the two, the three, and four, and maybe even some five depending on different lineups that we'll look at starting here moving forward,' Phoenix coach Nate Tibbetts said. 'She's won championships. You know, her second game with us, we go on to Golden State, have some injuries, and she goes for 22 and 11. You know, we're not winning that game without her, so she's been a huge pickup for us.' The Mercury will head to Indiana on Wednesday, and Bonner said she wasn't sure what the reaction will be from the fans. 'I'm just going to go out and do my job,' she said. 'They have every right to go out and do what they want to do; I'm just going to go out and compete with my team.' It wasn't all bad in Indiana for Bonner, who was only a four-hour drive from her 7-year-old twin daughters who turn eight soon. 'I got to spend more time with them then before,' she said. Bonner hopes to lift the Mercury to another championship. She helped the franchise win two after getting drafted fifth by the team in 2009. 'Getting back to Phoenix after so long, the love and the welcome that I had was very much needed and appreciated,' Bonner said. 'Coming back to people that I know.' The biggest change she has seen in her time away has been in the building that the team plays in. 'I walk into the arena for game day, and I had no idea where I was going, and it was crazy because I was there for 10 years every day,' Bonner said. 'Everything is different, but the fans are still the same, a couple people in the front office are the same.'

Francisco Lindor homers, leading Mets past Giants 8-1 for fifth straight win
Francisco Lindor homers, leading Mets past Giants 8-1 for fifth straight win

Al Arabiya

time7 hours ago

  • Al Arabiya

Francisco Lindor homers, leading Mets past Giants 8-1 for fifth straight win

SAN FRANCISCO – Francisco Lindor homered in the third, Brandon Nimmo added a two-run single in the fourth, and Juan Soto drove in two runs as New York backed Clay Holmes, and the Mets beat the San Francisco Giants 8-1 on Friday night for their fifth straight win. Holmes (9-5) surrendered one run and six hits over five innings with two strikeouts and a walk for his first win in five starts since beating Atlanta on June 25. New York got on the board in a hurry against All-Star Logan Webb (9-8). Nimmo doubled leading off the game and scored on Soto's RBI groundout, while Lindor singled after Nimmo, and Pete Alonso drove him home on a sacrifice fly. Soto added an RBI single in the ninth. Webb has had back-to-back rough outings. He was tagged for a career-high tying 11 hits over six innings of a 6-3 loss at Toronto on Saturday, then gave up six runs and eight hits in four innings Friday. The Giants' lone run came on a groundout by Willy Adames in the first. New York kicked off a stretch of nine consecutive games against the NL West by extending its streak that has come on the heels of a three-game skid. The Mets are seeking their first series win in San Francisco since 2018. The Giants placed right-handed starter Landen Roupp on the 15-day injured list with inflammation in his pitching elbow, recalling righty Tristan Beck from Triple-A Sacramento. Beck relieved Webb to begin the fifth. Key play: With Adames at second with a two-out double in the third, Matt Chapman was originally ruled safe at first on a throwing error by third baseman Ronny Mauricio. But the Mets challenged the tag call, and Chapman was ruled out on replay review to end the inning. Key stat: Lindor wound up 3 for 5 with his 20th home run, a double, and three runs scored with a pair of strikeouts after snapping his 0-for-31 drought Wednesday against the Angels. Up next: LHP David Peterson (6-4, 2.90 ERA) pitches Saturday night's middle game for the Mets opposite Giants LHP Robbie Ray (9-4, 2.92) as he tries again for double-digit victories with a three-start winless stretch.

Zach Neto delivers walk-off hit in Angels' 3-2 victory over Mariners
Zach Neto delivers walk-off hit in Angels' 3-2 victory over Mariners

Al Arabiya

time7 hours ago

  • Al Arabiya

Zach Neto delivers walk-off hit in Angels' 3-2 victory over Mariners

Zach Neto capped his bobblehead giveaway night with a two-out RBI single in the 10th inning to lift the Los Angeles Angels to a 3-2 win over the Seattle Mariners on Friday night. Jose Rodriguez hit two solo homers for the Mariners, but Angels reliever Ryan Zeferjahn (6-3) escaped a two-on no-out jam in the top of the 10th, and Neto grounded his winning hit off the glove of diving second baseman Cole Young for the first walk-off hit of his career. Neto had two hits and scored a run, and Jo Adell drove in two runs for the Angels, who snapped a four-game losing streak. Mariners right-hander Casey Legumina (4-5) took the loss. Seattle starter Bryan Woo gave up two runs and four hits in six innings, striking out six and walking two. Angels starter José Soriano allowed two runs and four hits in six innings, striking out five and walking one. Rodriguez lined a 98-mph sinker from Soriano over the right-center field wall in the first for his 16th homer of the season and a 1-0 Mariners lead. Adell, who was mired in a 1-for-20 slump, lined a two-out two-run double to left in the bottom of the inning for a 2-1 lead. Rodriguez opened the sixth with a 408-foot shot to left for his fifth career multihomer game and a 2-all tie. Key Moment: With two on, Zeferjahn struck out Cal Raleigh looking with a 99-mph fastball to preserve a 2-2 tie in the 10th. Key Stat: Woo has thrown six innings or more with two or fewer walks in all 20 starts this season, the fourth-longest streak of its kind in major league history behind San Francisco's Juan Marichal (23 games in 1968), Seattle/Texas's Cliff Lee (21 games in 2010), and Arizona's Curt Schilling (21 in 2002). Up Next: Mariners RHP George Kirby (4-5 4.65 ERA) opposes Angels LHP Tyler Anderson (2-6 4.43) on Saturday night.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store