Chargers Training Camp is now eight days in after the Bolts held a non-padded practice Friday evening.
The Chargers practiced for roughly 90 minutes at The Bolt and will start again at 5 p.m. on Saturday.
Here is the Chargers Camp Report from Friday's practice:
1. Hart nabs pick 6
Numerous defensive players have stepped up through the first wave of camp practices.
It was Cam Hart's turn to do so on Friday.
The Chargers second-year cornerback notched the play of the day when he stuck to Quentin Johnston in coverage before jumping in front of a Justin Herbert pass near the left sideline.
And with nothing but green grass in front of him, Hart raced the other way for a 50-yard pick 6 that drew big cheers from the Bolt Fam.
Hart's highlight-reel play wasn't the only great one by the defense on Friday.
Daiyan Henley and Troy Dye started team drills with pass breakups, while Nikko Reed and Jordan Oladokun had PBUs later in practice. Reed, by the way, put together another nice practice after he had a pick 6 of his own on Thursday afternoon.
The Bolts defense also flashed against the run, too, as Justin Eboigbe and Tre'Mon-Morris Brash each had tackles for loss in team drills.
A final note: the Chargers nearly had a second defensive touchdown at the end of practice when safety RJ Mickens punched the ball free from Dez Fitzpatrick, which allowed Troy Dye to scoop and score from 55 yards out.
But photo evidence showed that the pass was incomplete as Fitzpatrick only took one step before Mickens jarred the ball loose.
2. Herbert-Johnston connect for 60-yard TD
Another practice, another touchdown from Johnston.
The Chargers wide receiver hauled in a 60-yard score Friday on a play that seemed to fool the defense as Johnston was left all alone on a deep pass from Herbert.
Johnston has put together a solid camp thus far and has found the end zone six times in eight practices.
While Johnston's catch was wide open, Dalevon Campbell had a reception that was among the best plays in camp so far.
Campbell, an undrafted free agent, battled against safety Kendall Williamson on a 50/50 and came down with it in traffic.
Campbell played collegiately at Illinois, Nevada and South Carolina, and had 1,463 career yards with three touchdowns.
Rookie Oronde Gadsden showed up again Friday as he pulled off a double move in team drills that earned him a catch down the seam against Derwin James, Jr.
Gadsden, a fifth-round rookie from Syracuse, later ran a smooth route on a deep cross to pick up an explosive play through the air.
Finally, Ladd McConkey drew a 40-yard penalty when Donte Jackson was flagged for defensive pass interference. The infraction would have put the Chargers offense inside the red zone.
3. The clock is ticking
The Bolts worked through a 2-minute drill Friday but didn't finish it to completion.
Even so, Chargers Head Coach Jim Harbaugh put his team in crunch time as each offense worked through a simulated drill as the clock was expiring.
Each offense had the ball around the 40-yard line with either seven or eight seconds left on the clock at the end of the half.
The offense ran a play and then called a quick timeout to set up a potential field goal for Cameron Dicker.
And while it may seem early ton run this types of drills, keep in mind that the Bolts are just six days away from their preseason opener in Canton, Ohio.