He is the heart and soul of the team’s offense and for good reason.
Advertisement
To highlight his excellence, the former Alabama standout still had 937 rushing yards even if he only played eight regular-season games last season.
It took some games before another running back overtook him in rushing yards, meaning that he would have dominated the competition if he did not suffer a foot injury.
The Titans brought him back during their Divisional Round game against the Cincinnati Bengals but he came out flat-footed.
While 62 yards and a touchdown during that game is nothing to be sneered at, it’s nowhere near his full capability.
For that reason, Henry will be back with a vengeance in 2022 and he will continue to break tackles to gain yards and touchdowns.
Advertisement
That scenario makes him an early favorite for one of the NFL’s individual honors.
Which player do you think will have the biggest comeback during the 2022 season?
The NFL has been changing and evolving over the years, as it has become more of a pass-friendly league through the past decade or two.
Part of that evolution has been the offensive philosophy on fourth down, which was, until recently, strictly a punt-only situation.
Advertisement
But now, more and more teams are going for it on fourth downs, and Los Angeles Chargers head coach Brandon Staley is one of the men who is leading the way in that department.
Last season, his team went for it on fourth down 34 times, which was third in the NFL.
But the Chargers went for it on 31.5 percent of their fourth downs, the highest percentage in the league.
Staley explained his mindset regarding such situations in an interview with Daniel Popper of The Athletic.
“There has to be a fearlessness to play in this game, and what I wanted to establish was that,” Staley says. “The history of this team when I got here, it was like someone’s going to get hurt, they’re going to blow a lead, something catastrophic is going to happen. There’s this ‘Chargering’ thing. There’s all of these external factors that I know in my life, they’re just all excuses. They’re just all excuses.
“And so, how do you change that? Well, you have to do things different, you have to have a different approach. … Our mindset’s going to be on us, it’s not going to be on the opponent. It’s going to be on us. So creating that fearless mindset of, we are going to be aggressive, we’re going to put the ball in our hands, we’re going to trust our guys to make plays.
Advertisement
“If we lose, we’re going to do it on our terms, not someone else’s terms.”
There is certainly an argument to be made for leaving your offense on the field during a fourth down, but some feel the Chargers overdid it last season, and in doing so, possibly cost themselves a playoff berth.
Live By The Sword, Die By The Sword?
For most of the NFL’s century-plus history, teams usually only went for it on fourth down if it was in a desperate situation at the end of a game where it was down to its last chance.
But over the last several years, that has been changing, as fourth-down attempts have been rising, as have fourth-down conversion rates.
Advertisement
Analytics, which have taken over multiple team sports over the past decade-plus, has been a big factor in this change in philosophy.
Staley is absolutely right when he says that fearlessness must be present in order to win in the NFL, even more than in baseball, basketball, hockey or any other team sport.
But sometimes, one’s aggressiveness can go from his greatest asset to his greatest flaw, as it can be a double-edged sword.
With quarterback Justin Herbert running and gunning his way to a Pro Bowl appearance in just his second pro season, L.A. forged an 8-5 record and had a real shot at finishing first in the AFC West.
Its next contest in Week 15 versus the Kansas City Chiefs was billed as the that would likely decide the division winner.
Advertisement
But in the first half, the Chargers failed to convert on two fourth-down situations inside the Kansas City 10-yard line, and they trailed 14-10 at intermission.
They failed on another fourth-down conversion attempt in the second half, and given that they lost 34-28 in overtime after leading 21-13 in the fourth quarter at one point, those failed attempts look bad in retrospect.
Then came the season-finale versus the Las Vegas Raiders, which was a doozy.
The Chargers converted six of seven fourth-down attempts, but the one they failed on was one even Staley may have wanted to take back.
The argument in his favor is that Herbert is an MVP-caliber QB who is turning into a clutch signal-caller, as evidenced in that contest against the Raiders.
(2/3) #Chargers game-tying TD drive vs #Raiders by Justin Herbert as time expires:
Drive 2: 19 plays, 83 yds, 2:06 6/19 completions 7 (!) QB pressures Missed play by Ekeler 4 drops pic.twitter.com/JCJL3Xqcz0
According to Marc Stein, an NBA executive was hearing that Kevin Durant was more apt to retire than play for the Brooklyn Nets again. However, Durant went to Twitter to shoot down that notion, tweeting quote: ‘I know most people will believe unnamed sources over me but if it’s anyone out there that’ll listen, I don’t plan on retiring anytime soon.’ Durant would go on to say the situation as a whole is quote: ‘comical.’ Shannon Sharpe weighs in on the soap opera-like reports, including why it is not a good look on KD.
Since the start of the second half, they have stumbled out of the gates and have lost a few very important series, the most notable ones being the series losses to the Seattle Mariners and the sweep they suffered at the hands of the St. Louis Cardinals.
Advertisement
That recent slide has caused them to lose their hold on the best record in baseball and in the American League.
However, there is one silver lining to all of this, as pointed out by Bob Nightengale.
The Yankees remain at the top of the AL East and lead it by 10 games.
The #Yankees' slide continues, losing for the 10th time in the last 12 games, 4-0 to the #Rays. Their offense has gone AWOL. They have been shut out 4 times in their last 9 games, scoring just 8 runs in the last six games. The good news: They still lead the AL East by 10 games.