The Chargers hit the road again on Sunday, meeting the Dolphins in Miami to try to end their two-game losing streak.

Here’s what LA needs to do on offense to get things done.

Find a running rhythm

With Omarion Hampton and Najee Harris on injured reserve, the Chargers are down to Hassan Haskins and Kimani Vidal at running back. Offensive coordinator Greg Roman indicated both would have a big role on Sunday, but the Chargers will need at least one of them to play functional football. Luckily, the Dolphins just gave up 206 rushing yards to Panthers backup Rico Dowdle and have struggled in run defense all year.

Get the ball out quickly

For as poorly as the Dolphins have been defensively, they still have a reasonable group on the edge between Jaelan Phillips, Bradley Chubb, and Chop Robinson. Los Angeles might be starting Austin Deculus and Bobby Hart at tackle on Sunday, with Rashawn Slater, Joe Alt, Trey Pipkins III, and Jamaree Salyer all injured in various capacities heading into this game. With five Dolphins corners on injured reserve, there should be a matchup somewhere on the field to exploit. Let Justin Herbert fire the ball quickly and trust the Chargers receivers to do the rest.

Start hot

The best thing the Chargers can do on Sunday is get out to an early lead and lean on the strength of their current team, which is unquestionably the defense. LA did give up a comeback to the Commanders last week, but the Dolphins’ offense has fewer answers when their back is against the wall. The Chargers also can’t really afford to get into a negative game script with the current state of their offensive line and running back rooms.

Don’t beat yourselves

Los Angeles currently commits the fifth-most presnap penalties in the league, a new low watermark for a Jim Harbaugh squad. One sequence from last week sticks out in particular: a Pipkins holding penalty wiped out a Justin Herbert rocket over the middle, then the following dime from Herbert to Keenan Allen on a hole shot throw was brought back by a Pipkins illegal formation call. It’s not just penalties, though: Quentin Johnston also fumbled to turn the tide in that game, and all four of Herbert’s interceptions this season have been tipped at the line.