He's back: Wide receiver Keenan Allen agrees to deal with Chargers
The Chargers are reuniting with a former franchise star to bolster their receivers unit.
Keenan Allen, who racked up more than 10,000 receiving yards during an 11-season stint with the Chargers before being traded away in a salary-cap move, agreed to a deal with the team Tuesday.
The one-year deal is worth $8.52 million, according to NFL Media.
Allen spent last season in Chicago after the Chargers traded their then-longest tenured player to the Bears in an attempt to become salary-cap compliant after the start of free agency. He caught 70 passes for 744 yards and seven touchdowns in the Caleb Williams-led offense but was not re-signed by Chicago.
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Allen worked out with the Chargers on Friday, with coach Jim Harbaugh remarking that Allen did "a lot of Keenan Allen things." Responding to a viewer on Twitch stream over the weekend, Allen said his meeting with the team "went good, man. The meeting was straight."
After the sudden retirement of Mike Williams at the start of training camp, the Chargers were in need of a wide receiver, and Allen was among the top options remaining on the free-agent market. At 33, Allen's best days are probably behind him, but the six-time Pro Bowl selection proved last season he is capable of staying healthy and being productive.
Second only to Hall of Famer Antonio Gates atop the Chargers' all-time receiving yards list, Allen joins a pass-catching corps led by second-year standout Ladd McConkey and former first-round pick Quentin Johnston, who had a promising sophomore season in 2024 after struggling as a rookie.
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Allen will be the graybeard of a Chargers receivers group that has several promising pass-catchers. Jalen Reagor is the only receiver other than Allen on the roster with more than five years of NFL experience. Highly touted rookies Tre' Harris and KeAndre Lambert-Smith, in addition to Reagor, Derius Davis and Brenden Rice, will be competing with Allen for targets.
The wild card in all of this might rest on how well Allen can reestablish chemistry with quarterback Justin Herbert. In four seasons together, Allen caught 380 passes for 4,125 yards and 25 touchdowns.
If Allen can get close to the numbers he posted in 2023 (108 catches, 1,243 yards, seven touchdowns), the rest of the AFC West should be wary.
This story originally appeared in Los Angeles Times.