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Chargers like idea of moving safety Rayshawn Jenkins all over the field

Chargers strong safety Rayshawn Jenkins celebrates his interception against the Kansas City Chiefs last season.
Opposing quarterbacks could see Chargers strong safety Rayshawn Jenkins lined up in many different places this season.
(Eduardo Verdugo / Associated Press)
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He finally emerged last year, Rayshawn Jenkins becoming the Chargers’ starting free safety in his third NFL season.

Coach Anthony Lynn credited Jenkins for playing at an “elite” level at one point and then, on a recent podcast, said Jenkins finished the season among the league’s top five at the position.

A fourth-round pick out of Miami in 2017, Jenkins promised Thursday that he isn’t done climbing.

“I haven’t hit my ceiling yet,” he said. “I’m still going up.”

To aid in his continued ascension, Jenkins said he spent the offseason adjusting his diet, and eliminating fried foods, pasta and rice. He said he dropped his body fat percentage into single digits.

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Not that it was easy, particularly for someone born and raised in Florida.

Chargers’ cornerback Casey Hayward believers secondary can become something special now that Chris Harris Jr. is on board.

“I’m a Southern guy,” Jenkins said. “So, any time you threw some rice with gravy in front of my face, it was over with. That was going down.”

Defensive coordinator Gus Bradley has suggested the Chargers could increase Jenkins’ responsibilities this season, positioning him at times closer to the line of scrimmage in part to take advantage of his skill set.

Bradley said the adjustment, which would happen only in certain sub packages, also would allow Jenkins to combat the repetitive nature of backpedaling on every snap.

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“The biggest battle he has to fight back there is getting bored, just doing the same thing over and over again,” Bradley said. “It can get monotonous. We’re trying to do some different things with him just to keep him on edge.”

Said Jenkins: “It can get, I wouldn’t say boring sometimes, but boring sometimes. At the end of the day, you can’t get bored with it because you got some elite players in this league …

“I’m excited about it, just getting to move out of the post, that stationary post position. I should be able to show more of my ability. It will be cool to see how it evolves.”

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Ingram returns

Melvin Ingram rejoined the Chargers one day after being absent from the practice field.

The three-time Pro Bowl defensive end was in pads and participated in his first full-squad workout of training camp.

Before his absence, Ingram had been with his teammates and involved in meetings and walk-throughs but did not practice for undisclosed reasons related to his contract.

The latest episode of “Hard Knocks” centers on the Chargers’ and Rams’ rookies unusual situation due to the coronavirus pandemic.

He is entering the final season of a four-year, $64-million deal signed in June of 2017.

Lynn has refused to offer details on the situation, repeatedly calling it “company business.” Attempts to reach Ingram’s agent have been unsuccessful.

“It’s always fun having Melvin out here,” tight end Hunter Henry said. “He’s a tremendous player, a leader on this team. He’s been around for a long time. … Any time you get him out here, the energy goes up.”

The Henry tag

Henry will play this season on a franchise tag that brings with it a $10.6-million salary. He is eligible for free agency again in 2021, and the Chargers could franchise tag him a second time.

Whatever happens, Henry is certain to enjoy a sizable financial gain if he can have a healthy and productive season.

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Last week, San Francisco’s George Kittle (five years, $75 million) and Kansas City’s Travis Kelce (four years, $57 million) agreed to extensions that significantly reset the tight end market.

“I love it, man, super excited for those guys,” Henry said. “They definitely deserve it, and I think our position deserves it. … I feel like we were very undervalued compared to a lot of other positions. It’s good to see the market change a little bit.”

Nearly two years ago, Tyrod Taylor lost his starting quarterback job following a disastrous game. He’s ready to prove himself again with the Chargers.

The biggest knock against Henry has been health. He missed all of the 2018 regular season because of a torn ACL and was limited in 12 starts a year ago because of a knee injury.

Etc.

Among the players who did not practice Thursday were cornerback Chris Harris Jr., linebacker Kenneth Murray Jr. and defensive lineman Damion Square. Harris and Murray did some individual work on an adjacent field. Square suffered an undisclosed injury Wednesday. Undrafted rookie pass rusher Joe Gaziano also didn’t practice.

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