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Chargers' Jalen Guyton is making every catch count

INGLEWOOD, CA - OCTOBER 25: Chargers quarterback Justin Herbert, right, celebrates with wide receiver Jalen Guyton after he caught Herbert's 70-yard touchdown pass in the third quarter against the Jaguars at an empty SoFi Stadium on Sunday, Oct. 25, 2020 in Inglewood, CA. The rookie quarterback finished 27 of 43 for 347 yards and three touchdowns. He also led the Chargers in rushing with 66 yards on nine carries and scored a touchdown on the ground. Herbert's 66 yards set a franchise record for rushing yards by a quarterback. (Allen J. Schaben / Los Angeles Times)
Chargers quarterback Justin Herbert, right, celebrates with wide receiver Jalen Guyton, who caught a 70-yard touchdown pass Sunday against the Jacksonville Jaguars. (Allen J. Schaben / Los Angeles Times)

Through six games, Jalen Guyton has only eight receptions, but he’s made them productive.

The former undrafted free agent out of North Texas has totaled 258 yards receiving and scored three touchdowns. That’s an average of 32.3 yards per catch.

Guyton hauled in a 70-yard score from Justin Herbert late in the third quarter Sunday to tie the score against Jacksonville in a game the Chargers would win 39-29.

“Obviously, we really needed that one,” Guyton said afterward. “It felt good to just be in the game, relearning how to finish out the game. Winning in the league is hard.”

The victory snapped a four-game losing streak for the Chargers.

Guyton appeared in three games last season but made no catches. He earned a spot on the roster this season because of his speed, which Herbert also exploited for a 72-yard touchdown in Week 4 against Tampa Bay.

“I like being on the field playing ball,” Guyton said. “I love being out there working, winning football games.”

The Chargers also got a touchdown Sunday from another young receiver, Joe Reed. He returned after being inactive for two games, something he called “definitely frustrating.”

Versatile enough to also play running back, the rookie scored in the closing seconds of the first quarter on a seven-yard sweep.

“Breaking the huddle, I told myself whatever it took, I had to get in,” said Reed, a fifth-round pick out of Virginia. “Just trust the blocking in front of me.”

This story originally appeared in Los Angeles Times.