Tuesday, March 31, 2026

Top 5 This Week

Related Posts

Los Angeles Chargers vs New York Giants Match Player Stats (Sep 28, 2025)

Game Information

Date: September 28, 2025
Final Score: New York Giants 21 — Los Angeles Chargers 18
Venue: MetLife Stadium, East Rutherford, N.J
Attendance: 81,954
Duration: 3:13
Surface: FieldTurf
Conditions: 81°F, wind 4 mph
Vegas Line: LAC –6.5
O/U: 43.5 (Under)



Score by Quarter

TeamQ1Q2Q3Q4Final
Los Angeles Chargers0108018
New York Giants768021

Scoring Summary

QtrTimeTeamPlayScore
Q19:20NYGJaxson Dart 15-yd rush (McAtamney kick)NYG 7 – LAC 0
Q213:47NYGJude McAtamney 22-yd FGNYG 10 – LAC 0
Q28:06LACCameron Dicker 43-yd FGNYG 10 – LAC 3
Q21:52NYGJude McAtamney 31-yd FGNYG 13 – LAC 3
Q20:27LACQuentin Johnston 36-yd pass from Herbert (Dicker kick)NYG 13 – LAC 10
Q32:49NYGTheo Johnson 3-yd pass from Dart (Skattebo 2-pt run)NYG 21 – LAC 10
Q31:27LACOmarion Hampton 54-yd rush (Herbert 2-pt run)NYG 21 – LAC 18

The Los Angeles Chargers came into MetLife Stadium on September 28, 2025, at 3-0, favored by 6.5 points, and matched against a Giants team that had not won a game all season. New York was starting a rookie quarterback for the first time. The scoreboard at the end of the afternoon read Giants 21, Chargers 18.

Los Angeles outgained New York 338 to 250 in total yards. It did not matter. Justin Herbert threw two interceptions returned a combined 93 yards. The Chargers were penalized 14 times for 107 yards, consistently erasing drives at the worst possible moments. New York went the entire afternoon without a turnover and held the ball for just over 35 minutes.

Jim Harbaugh made no attempt to spin it.

“It stinks. Guys fought. Guys battled. We weren’t able to, and I wasn’t able to put us in position to win the game.” — Jim Harbaugh, Chargers head coach


Jaxson Dart’s NFL Debut

Dart walked out to a standing ovation on his first series and answered it immediately. His opening drive went nine plays and 89 yards, and he capped it himself on a 15-yard touchdown run. New York led 7-0 before Los Angeles had run an offensive play, and the Giants did not trail again.

He dealt with a hamstring issue at halftime and was briefly evaluated for a head injury in the third quarter after absorbing a heavy hit. He returned both times and finished the game without throwing an interception.

“It’s just a football game, that’s just the best way to describe it. Obviously, this experience was a special one, being my first one.” — Jaxson Dart

“Happy we got him. I know [No.] 6 is probably going to be sore. He gutted it out. Son’s a tough son of a you know what.” — Brian Daboll, Giants head coach

Quarterback Stats

QBTeamCmpAttPass YdsTDINTSacksRush AttRush YdsRush TDRating
Jaxson DartNYG1320111105–251054196.0
Justin HerbertLAC2341203122–17124057.3
Russell WilsonNYG118001–5———100.0

Herbert’s afternoon deteriorated after left tackle Joe Alt was carted off with an ankle injury in the first quarter. Austin Deculus replaced him, and the Chargers allowed six sacks and 27 total pressures the rest of the way, per PFF tracking.


Giants Defense Controlled This Game

Before anything else in this box score, the two turnovers.

Dexter Lawrence tipped a Herbert throw at the line of scrimmage in the second quarter, caught it out of the air, and returned it 37 yards to the Chargers’ 3-yard line. That led directly to a Giants field goal. Andru Phillips intercepted Herbert in the third quarter and returned it 56 yards, setting up a two-play touchdown drive that pushed New York’s lead to 21-10. Combined: 93 return yards, 10 points in field position and scoring consequences.

On the pass rush, rookie edge rusher Abdul Carter did not register a sack in his NFL debut but generated nine total pressures and five quarterback hits across 46 snaps. Brian Burns had the go-ahead defensive play late, sacking Herbert on third down in the fourth quarter to force the punt that effectively ended Los Angeles’ last serious threat.

On the Chargers’ side, Tuli Tuipulotu was the most disruptive individual defender on the field, finishing with four sacks, five tackles for loss, and five quarterback hits.

Defense Stats — Los Angeles Chargers

PlayerPosCombSoloSacksTFLQB HitsPD
Troy DyeLB1430010
Tuli TuipulotuED1074.0550
Daiyan HenleyLB980000
Derwin JamesS840.5010
Da’Shawn HandDL530100
Elijah MoldenDB510000
Tony JeffersonS520000
Alohi GilmanS420001
Bud DupreeED320000
Cam HartCB320000
Jamaree CaldwellDI310000
Naquan JonesDL320100
Tarheeb StillCB310000
Justin EboigbeDL221.0110
Caleb MurphyED200.5010
Benjamin St-JusteCB110001

Defense Stats — New York Giants

PlayerPosCombSoloSacksTFLQB HitsINTRet YdsPD
Darius MuasauLB620100—0
Brian BurnsED541.0140—0
Cor’Dale FlottCB550000—0
Dane BeltonS520000—0
Bobby OkerekeLB430000—0
Paulson AdeboCB430000—1
Tyler NubinS430000—0
Deonte BanksCB330000—1
Jevon HollandS310000—0
Kayvon ThibodeauxED221.0130—0
Andru PhillipsCB220001564
Dexter LawrenceDI110101371
Abdul CarterED110050—0

Interceptions

PlayerTeamINTRet YdsTD
Andru PhillipsNYG1560
Dexter LawrenceNYG1370
CombinedNYG2930

Ground Game Stats

Omarion Hampton’s 54-yard touchdown run in the third quarter was the defining offensive play of the game for Los Angeles. The rookie running back broke through a gap and outran the New York secondary to cut the deficit to 21-18, the closest the Chargers got. Per franchise records, it was the longest rushing touchdown by a Chargers rookie in team history.

It came too late. New York’s defense absorbed the hit, the Chargers never got the ball back in scoring position, and Hampton’s 128-yard performance went into a loss.

New York’s Cam Skattebo was the workhorse on the ground, taking 25 carries for 79 yards while Dart contributed 54 yards and the first-quarter touchdown on 10 designed runs and scrambles.

Rushing Stats

PlayerTeamAttYdsAvgTDLong
Omarion HamptonLAC1212810.7154
Justin HerbertLAC12424.0024
LAC Team Total1315211.7154
Cam SkatteboNYG25793.2016
Jaxson DartNYG10545.4115
Devin SingletaryNYG7284.008
NYG Team Total421613.8116

Receiving Stats

Quentin Johnston was the most productive pass catcher on either side. He finished with eight receptions for 98 yards and the touchdown that pulled Los Angeles within three at the end of the second quarter, a 36-yard throw from Herbert down the left sideline. Keenan Allen contributed five receptions for 37 yards, as did Hampton out of the backfield.

Malik Nabers caught two passes for 20 yards before leaving the game with a torn ACL in the second quarter on a free-play snap. He was carted off the field and placed on injured reserve, ending his 2025 season.

“I feel terrible for Malik’s injury. We’ll see where it’s at.” — Brian Daboll

On New York’s side, Darius Slayton led receivers with 44 yards on three catches. Dart spread the ball across six different targets and did not force throws into coverage.

Receiving Stats

PlayerTeamTgtRecYdsAvgTDLong
Quentin JohnstonLAC1389812.3136
Keenan AllenLAC75377.4010
Omarion HamptonLAC55377.4019
Oronde Gadsden IILAC32168.0011
Ladd McConkeyLAC611111.0011
Tyler ConklinLAC1133.003
Scott MatlockLAC1111.001
Tucker FiskLAC100—0—
Tre HarrisLAC100—0—
LAC Team Total38232038.8136
Darius SlaytonNYG434414.7018
Malik NabersNYG322010.0013
Theo JohnsonNYG53175.7110
Wan’Dale RobinsonNYG53144.708
Daniel BellingerNYG111313.0013
Cam SkatteboNYG22115.507
NYG Team Total20141198.5118

Full Team Stats

StatLACNYG
Total Yards338250
Net Pass Yards18689
Rush Yards152161
Total Plays5669
Yards per Play6.03.6
1st Downs (Total)1720
– Rushing 1st Downs611
– Passing 1st Downs86
– Penalty 1st Downs33
3rd Down Conv.4/12 (33%)7/15 (47%)
4th Down Conv.0/00/1
Red Zone (Made/Att)0/12/5
Turnovers20
Fumbles Lost00
Interceptions Thrown20
Penalties14 for 107 yds8 for 43 yds
Sacks Allowed26
Time of Possession24:3235:28
Total Drives1111
Avg Plays per Drive5.66.8

Los Angeles’ penalty total was the single largest contributor to their own undoing. Fourteen flags for 107 yards wiped out multiple first downs, pushed the Chargers backward on drives that were otherwise moving, and handed New York short fields on two separate sequences. The Chargers also went 0-for-1 in the red zone, which in a three-point game is significant.


Special Teams

KickerTeamFGPCTLongXPPts
Cameron DickerLAC1/1100%431/14
Jude McAtamneyNYG2/2100%311/17
PunterTeamPuntsTotal YdsAvgLongIn 20
JK ScottLAC524448.8603
Jamie GillanNYG524448.8693
PlayerTeamKRKR YdsKR AvgPRPR YdsPR Avg
KeAndre Lambert-SmithLAC24824.0———
Kimani VidalLAC12525.0———
Tarheeb StillLAC———4256.3
Deonte BanksNYG25427.0———
Devin SingletaryNYG25326.5———
Gunner OlszewskiNYG———2147.0

Injuries

PlayerTeamInjuryOutcome
Malik NabersNYGTorn ACL, right knee (Q2)IR — out for 2025 season
Joe AltLACAnkle (Q1, carted off)Replaced by Austin Deculus
Jevon HollandNYGNeck (Q2)Returned
Jaxson DartNYGHamstring (halftime); head evaluation (Q3)Returned both times

PFF Initial Grades

PlayerTeamPosGradeSnaps
Andru PhillipsNYGCB92.848
Abdul CarterNYGED90.346
Brian BurnsNYGED89.551
Dexter LawrenceNYGDI82.245
Alohi GilmanLACS81.851
Omarion HamptonLACHB80.456
Cam SkatteboNYGHB74.057
Greg Van RotenNYGG73.776
Justin HerbertLACQB66.563
Daniel BellingerNYGTE66.024

Grades initial, subject to review.


The complete Los Angeles Chargers vs New York Giants player stats from this Week 4 matchup tell a story that yardage totals alone do not. Los Angeles moved the ball. They out-snapped New York and generated better per-play efficiency. None of it translated. Two turnovers, 14 penalties, and a red zone conversion rate of zero percent against a team that was not supposed to beat them is the story of how a 3-0 team loses a game it controlled statistically.

Herbert understood it plainly.

“We just didn’t execute. The defense made some big stops and got us the ball back. It’s on us as an offense to go down there and score.” — Justin Herbert

The Chargers dropped to 3-1. The Giants earned their first win of the 2025 season on the back of a rookie quarterback who did not throw a single interception, a defensive unit that produced two turnovers for 93 combined return yards, and a performance from Andru Phillips that PFF graded at 92.8 — the highest on either roster. In the NFL, three points is three points regardless of how the yardage chart reads.


Sources: Pro Football Reference, Pro Football Focus, ESPN, Associated Press

Bobby Smith
Bobby Smithhttps://thesportie.com/
Bobby A. Smith is a Senior Sports Analyst with over nine years of professional experience, specializing in forensic analysis of game strategy and player performance. His work provides a definitive lens on a broad spectrum of professional sports, delivering expert commentary on the NFL, NBA, MLB, WNBA, Soccer, Boxing, Cricket, F1, and NASCAR. Unlike surface-level reporting, Bobby’s analysis is known for identifying the critical, game-deciding patterns that raw statistics often obscure. Every article is grounded in rigorous, fact-based research and an unwavering commitment to journalistic integrity.

LEAVE A REPLY

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here

Popular Articles