The Chargers’ offensive line endured a brutal, injury-plagued year in 2025, but the unit will look much different next season. Left tackle Rashawn Slater will return after a ruptured patellar tendon cost him the entire season. Right tackle Joe Alt, who missed 11 games with an ankle injury, will also be back. The Chargers overhauled the rest of the unit, meaning three new starters will join Slater and Alt in 2026.
A full-time starter in Los Angeles over the past two years, center Bradley Bozeman retired in February. The Chargers found a capable replacement in former Cowboy and Commander Tyler Biadasz, whom they handed a three-year, $30MM contract. Along with Bozeman, the Chargers waved goodbye to guards Zion Johnson and Mekhi Becton.
Johnson started in 65 of 66 games during his four seasons as a Charger, but he did not turn into the dominant force they wanted when they picked the Boston College alum 17th overall in 2022. The Chargers declined Johnson’s fifth-year option last May, setting him up for a trip to the open market this offseason. He accepted the Browns’ three-year, $49.5MM offer when the negotiating window opened March 9.
The Chargers handed Becton a two-year deal worth up to $20MM last March. Although Becton was a 14-game starter in the first year of the pact, the Chargers were not content to run it back with him. They released Becton before free agency opened. He remains unsigned.
With Johnson and Becton walking out the door, the Chargers made a couple of modest free agent investments at the guard position. The team had interest in Elgton Jenkins after the Packers released him, Daniel Popper of The Athletic reports, but the two-time Pro Bowler joined Johnson in Cleveland on a two-year, $24MM accord.
The Chargers signed Cole Strange to a two-year agreement worth up to $13MM and re-upped Trevor Penning for $4.5MM the day before Jenkins chose the Browns. At least for now, the plan is for Strange to replace Becton at right guard and Penning to take over for Johnson on the left side, according to Popper.
The Patriots surprised many (including Rams head coach Sean McVay and GM Les Snead) in taking Strange 29th overall in 2022. The Chattanooga product has started in 43 of 44 games since then, including 14 with the Dolphins last year, but he is already on his third team four years after Bill Belichick chose him. However, during his lone season in Miami, Strange won over head coach Mike McDaniel. The Dolphins fired McDaniel after the season, leading him to take the Chargers’ offensive coordinator job in late January. Adding Strange a month and a half later “was very obviously a McDaniel-driven signing,” Popper writes.
Penning joins Johnson and Strange as a former first-rounder who has fallen short of his draft slot in the NFL. The 19th overall pick of the Saints in 2022, Penning began at left tackle. Foot injuries limited Penning to six games and one start as a rookie. The 6-foot-7, 325-pounder started the Saints’ first five games at left tackle in 2023, but he played poorly enough that they benched him for the rest of the season. While New Orleans deployed Penning as a 17-game starter at right tackle in 2024, he led all O-linemen in penalty yards and gave up the second-most pressures in the league at his position.
The Saints shifted Penning to left guard last season, and while he started in his first six appearances, they traded him to the banged-up Chargers for a 2027 sixth-rounder at the Nov. 4 deadline. Penning started in four of seven games with the Chargers, who used him at right guard and left tackle. Pro Football Focus rated his play a subpar 64th among 79 qualified guards, though Johnson (54th) wasn’t much better. Becton (77th) was worse.
Armed with $48.68MM in cap space, the Chargers still have plenty of money to upgrade at guard. Free agency has thinned out over the past 12 days, but quality veterans like Kevin Zeitler and Joel Bitonio remain without contracts. Either may be a fit if the Chargers are willing to spend. Otherwise, with three picks in the top 86, they could turn to the draft for help.



Sign Zeitler
Sign Allen
Bring in a rookie 1st round guard