Just like they did in Baltimore, Edwards and J.K. Dobbins are sharing the backfield as a solid one-two punch in former Ravens coordinator Greg Roman’s run-heavy scheme. Dobbins sprinted out of the gates and is having his best campaign since his 2020 rookie season, but Edwards got off to a slow start in 2024, failing to earn more than 3.3 yards per carry in any of the Chargers’ first four games. He then missed four games with an ankle injury. In his return to action last week against the Titans, though, Edwards racked up 55 yards on 10 carries (5.5-yard average), which was more in line with the type of production that’s expected from the 6-foot-1, 238-pound downhill rusher. And the Chargers had their best day on the ground (145 rushing yards) since Week 2. Moving forward, Edwards might not get a huge amount of carries, with Dobbins also playing well, but his physicality should earn him a role late in games and in short-yardage situations. From Week 11 on last season, Edwards had the third-most carries inside the 3-yard line in the NFL with eight, and he scored five touchdowns, tied for the most among running backs in that span. His presence should give the Chargers’ 19th-ranked rushing attack a much-needed boost at this time of year.