How Chargers’ Ladd McConkey went from small-town Georgia to budding NFL stardom
Preston Poag had the night planned. The high school football coach looked ahead at the Georgia Bulldogs’ schedule to see when Ladd McConkey had a free weekend. He convinced the wide receiver to skip out on a hunting trip. The occasion called for it: North Murray High was going to retire McConkey’s jersey.
Poag nearly moved McConkey to tears, but two weeks later the receiver called his former coach and pleaded to not have his jersey retired. There are plenty of other great players who deserve the honor, McConkey said.
“Shut the crap up and get your butt here,” Poag responded.
Even as his star outgrows his small hometown in northern Georgia, McConkey has maintained his humble nature with the Chargers while the 22-year-old rookie leads the team with 30 catches for 376 yards and four touchdowns entering a road game against the Cleveland Browns (2-6) on Sunday at 10 a.m. PST.
NFL Week 9 picks: The Rams face NFC West rival Seahawks in Seattle and the Chargers also are on the road against the Browns, who now start Jameis Winston.
After his 111-yard, two-touchdown effort against New Orleans — a game in which he became the first Chargers rookie since Keenan Allen in 2013 to have 100 yards receiving in a game — McConkey smiled shyly at the faintest whiff of praise. He simply was happy to get into the end zone and make plays for his team.
His teammates were ready to sing his praises instead.
“Beast,” safety Derwin James Jr. said. “Dog. Y’all seen him. … Ladd that guy.”
As the Chargers (4-3) looked for replacements for longtime stars Allen and Mike Williams, McConkey quietly turned himself into one of quarterback Justin Herbert’s most sure-handed targets. A second-round selection who was the ninth receiver taken in last April’s draft, McConkey is third among rookie wide receivers in yards per game (53.7).
If McConkey reaches the century mark Sunday, he would join Allen as the only Chargers rookies to record back-to-back 100-yard receiving games.
Rewatching the film of McConkey’s plays against the Saints, coach Jim Harbaugh was struck by the way the receiver seemed to look one place and then catch the ball in another. It reminded him of former Carolina Panthers star Steve Smith Sr.
“They have a subtle way of catching it,” said Harbaugh, who was the Panthers’ scout team quarterback when Smith was a rookie. “They catch it like just a couple feet away from where they’re looking. It’s pretty cool.”
The receiver puts up big numbers by perfecting the smallest details. From the first days of training camp, Herbert noticed how precisely McConkey broke in and out of routes, how he positioned his body to prevent defenders from undercutting him and how he actively grabbed the ball when it came.
With skills that are hard to teach, McConkey is what Herbert called “a friend to the quarterback.”
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“He’s natural at it,” Herbert said.
McConkey always has had “the it-factor,” Poag said. The former North Carolina State quarterback and pitcher coached him as early as 9 years old when McConkey, despite his small stature, was untouchable against even older opponents.
He played receiver, running back, defensive back, punter and kick returner for North Murray, a school about 15 miles south of the Tennessee border. As a senior he led the Mountaineers to Georgia’s Class 3A quarterfinals for the first time as their starting quarterback.
Still, major colleges were slow to believe McConkey could be a legitimate prospect. Coaches loved his film then side-eyed the slight build of a 5-foot-11, 165-pound receiver in person. Even after he got interest from Georgia, coaches from smaller schools doubted he would play for the Bulldogs, asking Poag what would happen when a big Southeastern Conference defender lined up against him.
“They won’t touch him,” Poag said confidently.
Chargers Bradley Bozeman and his wife have served communities for years, and the center’s move to defend his quarterback also helped to feed their foundation.
McConkey helped Georgia to two national championships, catching five passes for 88 yards and two touchdowns in the Bulldogs’ blowout win of Texas Christian in the 2022 game in SoFi Stadium. Now catching the passes and scoring touchdowns in the same stadium, McConkey has made the transition to the NFL look seamless. He modestly shrugged at the suggestion, however, saying there are still “bad days that y’all don’t see.”
He credited the coaches at Georgia for preparing him to face the rigors of the NFL.
“I feel like coach [Kirby] Smart and everybody at Georgia kind of prepared me for this,” McConkey said. “We practiced hard at Georgia, we take game reps at practice, so now it’s just transitioning over here and continuing that, but taking it to another notch.”
Everything you need to know about the Chargers facing the Cleveland Browns at Huntington Bank Field on Sunday, including start time, TV channel and betting odds.
Haunted by some of the same minor injuries that interrupted his college career, McConkey has nursed a hip injury for the last three weeks as the Chargers have struggled to keep their receiver room intact. The team is hoping to get Quentin Johnston (ankle) back soon after a two-game absence. Signed as the veteran leader for the new-look group, free agent D.J. Chark Jr. went on injured reserve because of a hip injury that turned into a lingering groin injury.
While he toiled in the training room to return to the field, Chark watched with pride as the Chargers’ young receivers experienced their first breakthrough moments. After McConkey’s signature moment, Chark can’t wait to get in on the fun.
“I think the sky’s the limit for him,” Chark said.
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