The Chargers are reportedly kicking the tires on J.K. Dobbins. He's coming off a torn Achilles, the second time in three years he's had his season wiped out by a major injury. But he's healthy now (according to his doctor) and the landing spot would certainly get him on the radar.

The Chargers have long been a pass-first offense, but those days can be set aside for the moment. Jim Harbaugh takes over with a run-first scheme from Michigan, and the team wasted no time in getting rid of its best wide receivers, Keenan Allen and Mike Williams (salary cap-driven moves, but whatever). They'll definitely be emphasizing the run in 2024.

Right off the bat, Harbaugh hired Greg Roman as his offensive coordinator. Roman was out of football last year, but in four years running Baltimore's offense from 2019 through 2022, the Ravens ranked 1st, 1st, 3rd and 2nd in rushing. (29th or worse in passing in three of those seasons.) Those stats are influenced some by having the game's most prolific running quarterback in Lamar Jackson, but their running backs have been very effective -- in start contrast to what's been happening with the Chargers.

In Roman's last season in Baltimore, Ravens running backs averaged nearly 5.0 yards per attempt, tops in the league. That was with Dobbins, Gus Edwards -- who the Chargers have already signed -- and Kenyan Drake doing most of the rushing. Chargers running backs averaged about a yard less per attempt (4.0) that season, then were even worse in 2023 (3.5, better than only Tampa Bay), while Baltimore's Roman-less offense with remained one of the league's better groups. It's a new era coming to Los Angeles.

RUNNING BACK ONLY TEAM RUSHING, 2022-2023
YearTeamAttYdsAvgTD
2023Miami39821835.527
2023San Francisco39819735.019
2022Baltimore35217314.99
2022Buffalo29114184.97
2022Atlanta45522094.913
2022San Francisco39219024.913
2023Detroit44921574.824
2022Las Vegas37818094.812
2022Seattle35116794.811
2023Arizona33916154.89
2022Philadelphia36817454.718
2022Jacksonville35917014.711
2022Green Bay41019294.79
2022New England35416634.710
2023Baltimore36416964.720
2022Cleveland43820184.615
2022Carolina41518934.612
2023Pittsburgh40418194.512
2022Chicago36816504.59
2022Miami33515014.510
2022Kansas City33515004.510
2023Philadelphia34415324.57
2023Buffalo38116884.47
2022Dallas46220444.422
2022Tennessee41018134.413
2022Detroit42718844.423
2022NY Giants38016734.412
2023Indianapolis41618074.312
2023Tennessee38316314.314
2023Washington29812694.38
2023LA Rams41417524.217
2023Chicago36015194.29
2022Indianapolis38216054.27
2022Denver36715404.28
2022Minnesota35714974.215
2022NY Jets33814104.29
2023Seattle33714034.29
2022Arizona31612984.112
2023NY Jets32213204.16
2022LA Rams32013104.111
2023Atlanta45018404.18
2023Kansas City31812954.19
2023Cincinnati31812944.19
2023Green Bay36814974.14
2023Denver35314314.15
2022Pittsburgh38415544.010
2023Minnesota32613194.04
2022LA Chargers34413764.015
2022Cincinnati31112384.09
2023Cleveland43016853.914
2022New Orleans33012803.94
2022Washington43316763.95
2023Las Vegas35613763.98
2023Dallas37014253.99
2022Houston33212603.85
2023New England35613263.78
2023Houston37913753.67
2023Carolina38113803.66
2022Tampa Bay34312303.64
2023NY Giants33011833.67
2023New Orleans35012383.59
2023Jacksonville35812483.513
2023LA Chargers32711353.57
2023Tampa Bay36012313.46

When the Chargers signed Edwards, our suspicion was that more moves would be coming; that the team would not enter the 2024 season with Edwards as a feature back. Signing Dobbins, if that happens, would give the team a more intriguing lead back: Dobbins has averaged 6.0 and 5.7 yards per attempt in his two mostly healthy seasons, while Edwards is about a yard less for his career, and was at just 4.1 as Baltimore's main back last season. And the Chargers could still add to the team via the draft.

There's risk, obviously, in expecting much out of Dobbins. He needs to show he can stay healthy, and that he's still capable while just a year removed from an Achilles injury. But if LA signs him, he'll be the back I'll be interested in taking a stab at in the later rounds of fantasy drafts. If healthy, he's better than Edwards, and would have some potential in this offense.

--Andy Richardson