Chargers Coaches | Los Angeles Chargers - chargers.com

Chris Beatty
Wide Receivers
College: East Tennessee State
Hometown: Centreville, VA
Biography
Chris Beatty enters his second season with the Chargers as wide receivers coach in 2022. In his first year with the Bolts, Beatty's group featured a pair of 1,000-yard receivers — Keenan Allen and Mike Williams.
Chris Beatty enters his second season with the Chargers as wide receivers coach in 2022. In his first year with the Bolts, Beatty's group featured a pair of 1,000-yard receivers — Keenan Allen and Mike Williams.
Williams enjoyed a breakout season under Beatty in 2021, setting single-season career highs in catches (76) and receiving yards (1,146) while hauling in nine touchdowns. He registered a single-season NFL-record five go-ahead touchdowns in the fourth quarter or overtime in 2021. Meanwhile, Allen recorded a single-season franchise-record 106 receptions for 1,138 yards and six touchdowns en route to his fifth Pro Bowl in a row. The season marked his fifth straight with at least 95 catches, good for the second-longest streak in NFL history. Beatty was tasked with onboarding rookie wide receiver Joshua Palmer, who caught four touchdowns on the season. Of Palmer's four scores, three came in the fourth quarter, ranking second among all rookie wide receivers in fourth-quarter touchdown catches.
The Los Angeles offense ranked No. 4 in the NFL in total offense (390.2 net yards per game) and paced the AFC in passing offense (282.4 net passing yards per game) with Beatty tutoring the receivers. The unit scored 181 points in the fourth quarter, the second-most in a single season in NFL history. Los Angeles ranked fifth in the league in third-down efficiency (45.2 pct.) and paced the NFL with 22 fourth-down conversions and seven two-point conversions.
Beatty joined the Chargers in 2021 after serving as wide receivers coach at the University of Pittsburgh from 2019-20. On top of developing premier talent on the perimeter for the Panthers' offense, Beatty held a prominent role in Pittsburgh's recruiting efforts. In 2019, two of Beatty's wide receivers, Maurice Ffrench and Taysir Mack, combined to record the most receptions by a pair of receivers in the Atlantic Coast Conference (159). With the help of Beatty, Ffrench's 96 catches in 2019 broke former Arizona Cardinals wide receiver Larry Fitzgerald's single-season school record. Beatty also recruited and developed future Biletnikoff Award-winner Jordan Addison.
Prior to Pittsburgh, Beatty coached three seasons (2016-18) at the University of Maryland, working with the wide receivers and handling associate head coach and co-offensive coordinator responsibilities over his final two seasons in College Park, Md. During his time with the Terrapins, Beatty was integral in the development of eventual first-round draft selection D.J. Moore, who was named 2017 Big Ten Wide Receiver of the Year. On the recruiting landscape, Beatty's presence helped Maryland secure top-30 nationally-ranked recruiting classes in both the 2017 and 2018 recruiting cycles.
A native of Centreville, Va., Beatty played wide receiver four seasons (1991-94) at East Tennessee State, ending his career as the program's all-time leader in receiving yards. He earned All-Southern Conference honors as a senior and graduated with a bachelor's degree in the spring of 1995. Beatty then went on to play in the Canadian Football League, signing with the CFL-expansion Baltimore Stallions in 1995. Two seasons later, he signed with the Hamilton Tiger-Cats before retiring and beginning his coaching career.
Beatty broke into coaching as the head coach at three Virginia high schools — North Stafford High (1998-2000), Salem High (2001-02) and Landstown High (2003-05). In those nine seasons, his teams combined for a 78-18 record. At Landstown, Beatty led the Eagles to three-straight state championship game appearances, winning the Virginia 3A State Championship in 2004 with future NFL wide receiver Percy Harvin III. He was named Virginia 3A Coach of the Year following that season, after coaching Landstown to a 14-0 record and a No. 9 national ranking.
His first opportunity as a college coach came in 2006, serving as offensive coordinator/quarterbacks coach at Hampton University. In Beatty's lone season with the Pirates, the team posted a 10-2 record and won the Mideastern Atlantic Conference to secure a Football Championship Subdivision playoff berth. His offense averaged 34.2 points per game, ranking No. 7 in the FCS. Hampton's 2006 team featured six players that eventually earned NFL contracts.
Beatty then spent one season (2007) as the running backs coach at Northern Illinois University, working alongside Chargers Head Coach Brandon Staley when he was a graduate assistant for the Huskies. Beatty coached running back Justin Anderson to total 1,245 rushing yards that season.
From 2008-10, he coached the running backs and slot receivers at West Virginia University. Beatty tutored running back Noel Devine to accumulate over 3,600 rushing yards in their three years together. Over his final two seasons with the Mountaineers, Beatty developed and instructed wide receiver Tavon Austin, who was the eventual No. 8 overall selection in the 2013 NFL Draft.
Beatty spent the 2011 season at Vanderbilt University as wide receivers coach/recruiting coordinator, helping tutor future second-round draft choice Jordan Matthews. Following that year, he went to the University of Illinois, serving as co-offensive coordinator/quarterbacks coach for the Fighting Illini.
Over the next two seasons (2013-14), Beatty coached wide receivers at the University of Wisconsin. He added recruiting coordinator responsibilities for his second year in Madison, Wis. In those two seasons, the Badgers won 20 games and appeared in New Year's Day bowl games to cap each season. The 2014 Wisconsin team went 11-3, won the Big Ten West and defeated Auburn in the Outback Bowl. After his time in Wisconsin, Beatty spent the 2015 season as the assistant head coach at the University of Virginia. Working primarily with the Cavaliers running backs, Taquan Mizzell totaled nearly 1,500 scrimmage yards.
Beatty and his wife, Kris, have a son, Aaron.