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Los Angeles Chargers Quarterback Justin Herbert Makes NFL History
Gary A. Vasquez-Imagn Images

Sometimes the football gods have a sense of humor. Just one play after nearly throwing a pick-six that would’ve had Chargers fans reaching for their blood pressure medication, Justin Herbert casually tossed a 17-yard completion to Keenan Allen that etched his name into NFL history books.

That Thursday night connection gave Herbert 2,129 career completions through his first six seasons, surpassing Hall of Fame quarterback Peyton Manning’s previous record of 2,128. Not bad company for a kid who was supposed to sit on the bench his rookie year until Tyrod Taylor’s punctured lung changed everything.

Herbert’s Record-Breaking Performance

The Oregon product didn’t just break the record – he obliterated the Vikings in the process, leading the Chargers to a 37-10 victory that had Los Angeles fans remembering what hope feels like. Herbert finished with 227 yards and three touchdown passes, looking every bit like the franchise quarterback the Chargers desperately needed when they selected him sixth overall in 2020.

What makes this achievement even more impressive is the context. The star QB entered Thursday’s game already leading the NFL with 1,913 passing yards through seven games, completing an absurd 67.5% of his throws with 13 touchdowns against just six picks. Those aren’t just good numbers – they’re “maybe this guy is actually elite” numbers.

Breaking Down the Numbers

Through 86 career games, Herbert has completed 66.6% of his passes for 23,006 yards, 150 touchdowns, and 51 interceptions. Compare that to Manning’s first six seasons, and you start to understand why this record matters. Manning was a sure-fire Hall of Famer when he retired, and Herbert just lapped him in one specific category that measures both accuracy and opportunity.

The timing couldn’t have been more perfect either. After dropping three of their last four games and watching their AFC West lead evaporate faster than a Los Angeles morning marine layer, the Chargers needed something to believe in. Herbert gave them exactly that, bouncing back from a brutal 38-24 loss to Indianapolis just four days earlier.

The Almost Disaster That Wasn’t

Let’s talk about that near-interception for a second because it perfectly encapsulates Herbert’s career so far. Isaiah Rodgers had what looked like a sure pick-six, the kind of momentum-killing play that haunts quarterbacks for weeks. But after a replay review, the pass was ruled incomplete, giving Herbert another chance.

One play later, boom – history. That’s either incredibly lucky or incredibly clutch, depending on your perspective. Given Herbert’s track record, we’re leaning toward the latter.

What This Means For Herbert’s Legacy

Breaking Manning’s record is more than just a statistical footnote. It is validation that Herbert belongs in conversations about the league’s elite quarterbacks, even if he hasn’t won a playoff game yet (we’ll save that discussion for another day).

The 2020 Offensive Rookie of the Year has consistently shown he can produce at a high level, but records like this separate good quarterbacks from potentially great ones. Manning went on to win two Super Bowls and five MVP awards. Herbert’s got the arm talent and accuracy to follow a similar path – now he just needs the team around him to catch up.

Looking Ahead

The Chargers (5-3) desperately needed this win to stay relevant in a competitive AFC West. With Herbert breaking records and the defense showing signs of life against Minnesota’s struggling offense, maybe this team has figured something out.

At 27 years old, Herbert has plenty of time to add more records to his collection. But this one will always be special: the night he passed a legend while leading his team to a statement victory. Not bad for a Thursday night’s work.

This article first appeared on Total Apex Sports and was syndicated with permission.

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