The night before Round 1 of the 2025 NFL Draft, the Chargers held a gathering at a restaurant in El Segundo.
Chargers General Manager Joe Hortiz was there, as was Head Coach Jim Harbaugh and his staff, the entire scouting and personnel team and several other departments within the Bolts front office.
The event was to celebrate months of hard work and commitment that would culminate over the next three days beginning with the No. 22 overall pick, which the Chargers held in the first round.
"It's a cool thing to just bring people together," Chargers assistant general manager Chad Alexander said of the get together. "After going through the process and debating with each other about this player or that player in our draft meetings, we're still all in this thing together. It always comes from a good place. Everyone was excited. You look around at each other and it's like, 'We're going to go all in this weekend!'"
As he mingled about at the get together, Alexander couldn't shake a premonition that Omarion Hampton was going to end up as a Los Angeles Charger the next night.
Alexander, of course, knew that the uber-talented and productive North Carolina running back might not even be available at No. 22 overall.
Others in the front office felt the same way.
"You hope," said James MacPherson, a Chargers regional scout whose area includes North Carolina.
"But there was no certainty and no guarantee because other teams are looking at the same film and same things we're looking at," MacPherson added. "I felt like he was an elite player, and those guys usually go early."
Even so, Alexander simply had a hunch and wanted to find a way to pass the intuition along to Hortiz.
Alexander was slated to give Hortiz a ride back to the team facility after the event and figured that was as good a time as ever.
"We were at the restaurant and I was thinking, 'OK, how can I tell Joe this?' But he actually brought Hampton up on the way home first," Alexander recalled with a laugh.
"I was dropping him off back at the facility and said, 'I think it's going to be Hampton.' We all just loved him," Alexander added.
Roughly 24 hours later, the Chargers turned in a card that made Hampton their first-round pick in 2025.
"When it was him, we were thrilled," Alexander said.
"Fired up to get him," Hortiz said in a press conference after the first round.
Over the past few weeks, Chargers.com spoke to various scouts within the Bolts front office for a deep dive on Hampton as a player and a person.
Here's the inside story of how Hampton ended up in powder blue.