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SUPERCHARGER IS READY TO BLAST
Barry McDermott
August 20, 1979
As the San Diego aerial circus revs up for the new season, John Jefferson, the top receiver at lighting the scoreboard last season, expects to shine even brighter now that No. 1 draft choice Kellen Winslow is on hand
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August 20, 1979

Supercharger Is Ready To Blast

As the San Diego aerial circus revs up for the new season, John Jefferson, the top receiver at lighting the scoreboard last season, expects to shine even brighter now that No. 1 draft choice Kellen Winslow is on hand

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In the interests of conserving energy, the following information is provided gratis to the coaches of those NFL teams scheduled to play the San Diego Chargers this season. When the Chargers have the ball, men, don't bother to rig any elaborate defenses to stop the run. Don Coryell, the San Diego coach, doesn't buy the shibboleth that you've got to establish the running game before you can do anything else. No, sir. Coryell's master game plan consists of just one word: pass. Or as Dan Fouts, the Chargers' bearded quarterback, puts it, "We're going to throw the ball and we don't care who knows it."

The Minnesota Vikings and a crowd of 49,037 learned that firsthand Saturday night in San Diego Stadium as Fouts and his backups, James Harris and Cliff dander, completed a total of 18 passes to 11—count 'em, 11—different receivers in the Chargers' 19-0 preseason victory. With one ultimate weapon, in the person of the estimable John Jefferson, already conspicuous among his horde of receivers, Coryell unveiled in the Minnesota game a player who may well be what he needs to complete his aerial circus—rookie Tight End Kellen Winslow.

Desperate for a tight end in the Dave Casper-Russ Francis mold—one who could make life easier for Jefferson, who last year as a rookie made life miserable for defensive backs by catching 56 passes for 1,001 yards and led all NFL receivers with 13 touchdowns—Coryell did some furious last-second maneuvering during the draft in May and came away with the 6'5", 250-pound Winslow as the Chargers' No. 1 pick.

Jefferson's eyes almost pop out of his plastic goggles—he wears them to keep the prying fingers of defensive backs out of his eyes—when he considers how he expects Winslow to augment the Chargers' already potent passing attack. "I've been telling the other guys that we got the best football player in the draft," Jefferson says. "I played against him in college and I know what he can do."

As Jefferson no doubt sees it, Winslow can do only good things for Jefferson—and, of course, for all the other Chargers. Winslow is so fast—he does 4.6 in the 40, and Coryell believes he could be utilized as a wide receiver if necessary—that on certain plays his mere presence as a deep threat will prohibit defensive backs from double covering Jefferson.

Not that Jefferson, who went to Arizona State and was also a first-round draft choice, needs much help from Winslow or anyone else. He has run the 100 in 9.6 and his hands are like suction cups. He flat-out dropped only one pass last year, but on the same play he suffered a slight shoulder separation. He turned the first pass Fouts threw to him into a 29-yard touchdown play, and converted Fouts' last pass of the season into a 37-yard scoring play. The folks in San Diego have not seen anything like Jefferson since the glory days of Lance (Bambi) Alworth. But when Charger publicists started to call him "The Jefferson Airplane," he told them to forget the nicknames: his initials, JJ, would suffice for now.

As for Jefferson's pass-catching style, Charger Wide Receiver Charlie Joiner, a 10-year veteran, says JJ does not merely catch the ball, he "attacks" it. Last season Jefferson became the first NFL rookie to "attack" more than 1,000 yards worth of passes since Bobby Hayes did it for Dallas in 1965.

For his part, Winslow is naturally delighted that Coryell made the draft-day deal with the Cleveland Browns that assured him of a place in the San Diego sun. "If I'd gone to Buffalo or Cincinnati," he says, "I'd have had to buy a four-wheel-drive Cadillac."

Winslow was driving a new Datsun when he showed up in San Diego in mid-June to begin familiarizing himself with the Chargers' playbook and the bombs-away offensive philosophy that Coryell had imparted to the Chargers last season after replacing Tommy Prothro four games into the schedule. The Chargers were 1-3 and typically boring under Prothro, but they were 8-4—with seven wins in their last eight games—and wildly exciting under Coryell. San Diego scored an average of 41 points in its final three games.

Fouts gives all the credit for San Diego's resurgence to Coryell; not coincidentally, St. Louis was a high-scoring offensive machine, featuring Jim Hart's passes to Mel Gray and Terry Metcalf's triple-threat explosiveness, when Coryell was the Cardinals' coach and had present Charger assistants Jim Hanifan and Joe Gibbs as aides. Says Fouts, "The three of them are like one huge efficient mind, always thinking of ways to win football games."

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