American Football Database
Advertisement


2000 San Diego Chargers season
Owner(s) {{{owner}}}
Head Coach Mike Riley
Home Field Qualcomm Stadium
Results
Record 1–15
Place 5th AFC West
Playoff Finish did not qualify
Pro Bowlers 2
Timeline
Previous season Next season
1999 2001

The 2000 San Diego Chargers season began with the team trying to improve on their 8–8 record in 1999. It is the worst record of any Chargers team in history. They earned the 1st overall pick in the 2001 NFL draft in which they would later trade to acquire LaDanian Tomlinson. Punter Darren Bennett lead the league in average yards with 46.2.

Personnel[]

Staff[]

2000 San Diego Chargers staff

Front Office

  • Chairman of the Board – Alex Spanos
  • President/Vice Chairman – Dean Spanos
  • Executive Vice President – Michael Spanos
  • Vice President of Football Operations – Ed McGuire
  • Director of Player Personnel – Billy Devaney
  • Director of Pro Personnel – Greg Gaines
  • Director of College Scouting – Jimmy Raye

Head Coaches

Offensive Coaches

 

Defensive Coaches

  • Defensive Coordinator – Joe Pascale
  • Defensive Line – Wayne Nunnely
  • Linebackers – Jim Vechiarella
  • Defensive Backs – Rod Perry
  • Defensive Assistant/Secondary – Mark Banker
  • Defensive Assistant/Quality Control – Andrew McClave

Special Teams Coaches

  • Special Teams – Bruce Read

Strength and Conditioning

  • Strength and Conditioning – John Hastings
  • Assistant Strength and Conditioning – Mike Schleelein

[1]

Schedule[]

Week Date Opponent Result Game Site Record Attendance
1 September 3, 2000 at Oakland Raiders L 6–9 Network Associates Coliseum 0–1
56,373
2 September 10, 2000 New Orleans Saints L 27–28 Qualcomm Stadium 0–2
51,300
3 September 17, 2000 at Kansas City Chiefs L 10–42 Arrowhead Stadium 0–3
77,604
4 September 24, 2000 Seattle Seahawks L 12–20 Qualcomm Stadium 0–4
47,233
5 October 1, 2000 at St. Louis Rams L 31–57 Trans World Dome 0–5
66,010
6 October 8, 2000 Denver Broncos L 7–21 Qualcomm Stadium 0–6
56,079
7 October 15, 2000 at Buffalo Bills L 24–27 Ralph Wilson Stadium 0–7
72,351
8 October 22, 2000 Bye
9 October 29, 2000 Oakland Raiders L 13–15 Qualcomm Stadium 0–8
66,659
10 November 5, 2000 at Seattle Seahawks L 15–17 Husky Stadium 0–9
59,884
11 November 12, 2000 Miami Dolphins L 7–17 Qualcomm Stadium 0–10
56,896
12 November 19, 2000 at Denver Broncos L 37–38 Mile High Stadium 0–11
75,218
13 November 26, 2000 Kansas City Chiefs W 17–16 Qualcomm Stadium 1–11
47,228
14 December 3, 2000 San Francisco 49ers L 17–45 Qualcomm Stadium 1–12
57,255
15 December 10, 2000 at Baltimore Ravens L 3–24 PSINet Stadium 1–13
68,805
16 December 17, 2000 at Carolina Panthers L 22–30 Ericsson Stadium 1–14
72,159
17 December 24, 2000 Pittsburgh Steelers L 21–34 Qualcomm Stadium 1–15
50,809

Standings[]

AFC West
Team W L T PCT PF PA
Oakland Raiders 12 4 0 .750 479 299
Denver Broncos 11 5 0 .688 485 369
Kansas City Chiefs 7 9 0 .438 355 354
Seattle Seahawks 6 10 0 .375 320 405
San Diego Chargers 1 15 0 .063 269 440

Awards and honors[]

See also[]

References[]

  1. 2009 San Diego Chargers Media Guide. pp. 326–327. http://www.chargers.com/team/media-guide.html. Retrieved 2009-12-01.
  2. 2.0 2.1 NFL 2001 Record and Fact Book, Workman Publishing Co, New York,NY, ISBN 0-7611-2480-2, p. 362
  1. REDIRECT Template:Los Angeles Chargers

 


This page is a redirect from a page that has been moved. This page was kept as a redirect to avoid breaking links that may have been made, internal and external, to the old article title. For more information, see the category.

AFC East Central West East Central West NFC
Buffalo Baltimore Denver Arizona Chicago Atlanta
Indianapolis Cincinnati Kansas City Dallas Detroit Carolina
Miami Cleveland Oakland NY Giants Green Bay New Orleans
New England Jacksonville San Diego Philadelphia Minnesota St. Louis
NY Jets Pittsburgh Seattle Washington Tampa Bay San Francisco
Tennessee
2000 NFL DraftNFL PlayoffsPro BowlSuper Bowl XXXV
Advertisement