The Chargers were measured and strategic in free agency and theNFL draft,focusing heavily on the offensive and defensive lines while making subtler additions at wide receiver and in the secondary.

In fact, one of their biggest offseason additions was in the coaching ranks rather than personnel. The addition of newoffensive coordinator Mike McDanielcould provide as big a payoff as any player they added to the roster.

McDaniel’s arrival will go a long way toward sorting out some of the key positional decisions the club faces this offseason and in training camp.

Here are the three biggest battles to keep an eye on:

The Chargers are making wholesale changes to their interior offensive line, and both guard spots are up for grabs. Cole Strange was signed in free agency. While he has the inside track on one of those jobs, he should by no means be considered a sure thing based on his underwhelming four-year body of work.

Jake Slaughter, the club’s second-round pick out of Florida, projects as the long-range center. But with Tyler Biadasz signed in free agency, Slaughter will begin his NFL career at guard. The skill set is clearly there, but it would be presumptuous to believe he will make a seamless transition. If he’s slow to master the change, it could open the door for Trevor Penning and Kayode Awosika to earn a starting job.

The Chargers doubled down at guard in the draft,selecting Boston College’s Logan Taylor and Oregon’s Alex Harkey in the sixth round. Both will get every opportunity to compete for playing time.

For all of the candidates, proving they can excel in McDaniel’s offense will play a big part in the decision. And that process is already well underway.

On paper, this doesn’t seem like much of a battle with Ladd McConkey, Quentin Johnston and Tre’ Harris all returning. But the Chargers drafted Mississippi State speedster Brenen Thompson in the fourth round, and he feels like a perfect match for the scheme under McDaniel.

The easy comparison for Thompson is Tyreek Hill, a fellow 4.2-second 40 guy with a similar build to the 5-foot-9 Thompson, who posted an SEC-best 1,054 receiving yards last year. If he can be anything close to Hill, he will push for playing time sooner rather than later.

Source: California Post – Breaking California News, Photos & Videos