MINNEAPOLIS — Brandon Staley’s major decisions Sunday didn’t begin with the fourth-down call in the game’s final two minutes.
An hour and half before kickoff, the Chargers announced that big-money cornerback J.C. Jackson would be inactive despite being healthy.
“Just a coach’s decision,” Staley explained later. “We felt like this was the right group for this game.”
In advance of Sunday, Staley suggested Jackson, Michael Davis and Asante Samuel Jr. would be used in a rotation until the Chargers could determine their best pairing at outside corner.
Asked specifically if Jackson now would have an opportunity to work his way back into a rotation, Staley said the veteran’s status is “to be determined.”
While Jackson’s on-field struggles continue, he is dealing with another off-field problem after an arrest warrant was issued for him Monday in Massachusetts for an alleged probation violation.
He failed to appear in district court Friday in Attleboro for a hearing related to reckless driving and speeding charges he faced while still a member of the New England Patriots, according to court documents.
Staley said Monday that Jackson’s legal situation was not a factor in him being inactive against Minnesota. Staley also said he did not know if the team would take any disciplinary action against Jackson.
“It’s a private matter for J.C.,” he said, “and he’s working through it.”
In explaining where Jackson stands in regards to playing time, Staley twice referenced preparation as a factor. He was asked if Jackson has had problems readying himself to play.
“Nothing to look into [there],” Staley said, “just in terms of that overall product, from the beginning of the week to the end of the week, just giving us the best chance to win on Sunday.”
Staley called Jackson “a work in progress” and said his status for Sunday against Las Vegas would “be determined by what happens in practice this week.”
Jackson started the first two games, playing 66% of the defensive snaps in Week 1 and 63% in Week 2. Coming back from a significant knee injury, he appeared to be progressing.
Then Jackson spent Sunday in street clothes as the Chargers tried to stop All-Pro Justin Jefferson, the exact sort of receiver they hoped to assign to Jackson after adding him in March 2021.
The Chargers gave Jackson a five-year contract that guaranteed him $40 million and is worth up to $82.5 million. He was coming off four productive seasons with New England, Jackson intercepting 26 passes as a Patriot.
He struggled last season, however, first dealing with a foot issue that required surgery in August and then playing poorly enough upon his return that he was benched. Jackson then went down for the season in Week 7 because of a knee injury.
He made it back for the start of training camp and returned to the starting lineup but with the Chargers’ pass defense particularly porous, Jackson found himself without a role against Minnesota.