The Chargers are 11-5 after Saturday’s 20-16 home loss against the Texans.
Here are five takeaways from Week 17.
1. Chargers look toward Week 18
The Chargers chances for an AFC West title slipped away Saturday night.
The Bolts needed to win their final two games in order to claim the division, but a Week 17 Chargers loss handed the AFC West to the Broncos.
Players in the postgame locker room rued the opportunity to play for a division crown in Denver, but said the ultimate achievement is still attainable.
“Definitely leaves a bad taste in our mouth, but at the end of the day our end goal is still out there, winning that Super Bowl,” Derwin James, Jr. said.
Khalil Mack added: “That was the goal this year, to come out and win the AFC West. But we’re still in the right race.”
Veteran Donte Jackson also summed up the vibes heading into the regular-season finale.
“One day don’t go your way, you just don’t lose championship aspirations,” Jackson said. “You just don’t lose all championship swagger, elite defense or what we think of ourselves.
“We still have it, we just know that this time of the year the road is smaller,” Jackson added. “It’s like 14 teams trying to ride on the same road with only a couple lanes. Just to get a spot this time of the year is tough.”
Saturday’s loss means the Bolts will be a Wild Card team in the playoffs.
And while the Chargers playoff seed scenarios are numerous, the Bolts will either be the Nos. 5, 6 of 7 seed in the opening round of the postseason.
Week 17 was a frustrating one for the Chargers, who couldn’t complete a late rally against a fellow AFC playoff contender. Houston secured a postseason spot with its win Saturday night.
Down by double digits early, the Bolts pulled to within one score late in the fourth quarter, leading Chargers Head Coach Jim Harbaugh to praise his team’s resiliency after the game.
“Evey time I see our team take the field, I see a team committed to winning. We didn’t win today, but at no point — never, never, never — did we say, ‘No más,'” Harbaugh said. “Some things to clean up before the playoffs but we’ll use that … things today to get better tomorrow.”
Daiyan Henley added: “I feel like we battled. But although we battled, we all just didn’t do enough right. You know, it’s a team sport. We’ve got to do more. As much as we hate to lose, I’d rather do it now than later. Now it’s time to get on a run and let’s go.”