Move over Oronde Gadsden II and David Njoku. For the Los Angeles Chargers, the 2026 NFL season is free agent TE Charlie Kolar’s time to shine.The Los Angeles Chargers could have a new star in the making at tight end.Charlie Kolar, the former Baltimore Ravens tight end who signed a three-year, $24.3 million deal in free agency, is the latest Chargers player generating buzz as a breakout candidate for the 2026 NFL season. The Athletic’s Daniel Popper named Kolar as Los Angeles’ top breakout pick, and for good reason. The 6-foot-6, 265-pound pass catcher emerged as an elite run blocker in Baltimore but never received consistent targets in the passing game. That is expected to change in a big way with the Chargers this fall.AdvertisementAdvertisementAdvertisementKolar spent his time with the Ravens playing behind Mark Andrews and Isaiah Likely, which severely limited his opportunities as a receiver. He has never caught more than 10 passes in a single NFL season, and his career high in receiving yards sits at just 142. Those numbers don’t tell the full story, though. During his college career at Iowa State, Kolar totaled 157 receptions for 2,044 yards and 20 touchdowns in 36 games. The production was there before Baltimore. The talent has always been there.The worst-kept secret in the NFL is that teams are expected to shift even further toward 13 personnel (three-tight-end sets) during the upcoming season. It is the latest schematic evolution across the league, and one that plays directly into Los Angeles’ roster construction.Kolar will share the tight end room with Oronde Gadsden and David Njoku. That feels like more of the same opportunity problems as he saw in Baltimore. Njoku is a salty veteran with a lot of receiving success. Gadsden displayed explosive playmaking ability as a rookie last season, giving the Chargers a dynamic weapon in the passing game. Adding Kolar to that mix gives Los Angeles a three-tight-end grouping that few defenses will be equipped to handle.AdvertisementAdvertisementAdvertisementEven in his best season with the Ravens, Kolar logged only a 30% share of offensive snaps in 2025. He saw just 15 targets as a receiver during the course of the regular season. Mike McDaniel’s scheme is built to change that. The outside zone run game, paired with the explosive play of running backs Omarion Hampton and Keaton Mitchell, is designed to stretch defenses and create mismatches in the passing game. That is precisely the environment where a tight end with Kolar’s size and receiving background can thrive.Jim Harbaugh has often wanted to lean into the run game as the foundation of his offense, and the Chargers have the personnel to do exactly that. With defenses loading up to stop Hampton and Mitchell, Kolar becomes a nightmare matchup working out of the slot or from an inline alignment.Kolar has had a strong showing during OTAs and mandatory minicamp. Mainly, with opportunities to extend his work in the passing game and evol
Content Source: Yahoo News
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