Despite coming into their Nov. 16 date with the Jacksonville Jaguars (6-4) on a three-game winning streak, the Los Angeles Chargers (7-4) were steamrolled at EverBank Stadium on Sunday afternoon to the tune of a 35-6 loss.

With the result in no way pleasing to Chargers fans, the following breakdown of the “Good, Bad, and the Ugly” will be very much “straight to the point”.

Good: Intercepted Lawrence once

To be quite honest, there is nothing good that came out of this game outside of the Chargers picking off Trevor Lawrence. Although the turnover led to a Cameron Dicker 46-yard field goal, that might be the only positive from an ocean of negativity.

Bad: Chargers’ offense was atrocious

While a poor offensive outing is never out of the possibility for any NFL squad on a given week, the offensive execution from Los Angeles was grotesque against the Jaguars.

In total, the Chargers recorded 135 yards of offense, with 93 yards through the air and 42 yards on the ground.

Making that stat even worse, the team went 3-for-12 on 3rd down conversions and recorded only 8 first downs.

Ugly: Jacksonville was almost unstoppable

While the Chargers held the Jaguars in check for the opening quarter by allowing only one touchdown (although it would eventually be the game-deciding touchdown), Jacksonville essentially got whatever it wanted on offense during the second and third quarters against a Chargers defense that resembled the unit coached by Brandon Staley.

At the end of the day, Jacksonville registered 345 yards (153 passing, 192 rushing) for 5 touchdowns and 30 first downs, while converting on 5-of-10 third-down opportunities.

This, of course, was one of the possible concerns for the Bolts heading into the matchup after the Jaguars’ embarrassing loss against the Texans a week earlier.

Given that the Chargers could not get anything done offensively, the putrid defensive performance made Sunday’s game virtually unbearable.

Also adding salt to the wound, Denver’s (9-2) last-second 35-yard field goal to defeat the Kansas City Chiefs (5-5) now widens the Broncos’ head over the Chargers for the AFC West division lead to two games (Los Angeles owns the tie break by virtue of a 23-20 win on Sept. 21).

The Changers will look to get back on track following their Week 12 bye when they welcome the lowly Las Vegas Raiders (2-7) to SoFi Stadium on Nov. 30. That game will begin at 1:25 p.m. PST on CBS.