Tag Archives: Niners

Raiders’ Garoppolo energized by Niners reunion with ‘my brothers’ – ESPN – ESPN

  1. Raiders’ Garoppolo energized by Niners reunion with ‘my brothers’ – ESPN ESPN
  2. 49ers vs. Raiders live updates: Brock Purdy throws an interception Niners Nation
  3. Mailbag: Have the 49ers soured on Trey Lance? Biggest concern on both sides of the ball? What’s up with Kalia Davis and Jaylon Moore? Linebacker depth and more 49ers Webzone
  4. The Good and Not So Good from Day 1 of the 49ers-Raiders Joint Practices Sports Illustrated
  5. NFL position battles to watch in joint practices: Raiders WRs, 49ers CBs to be tested before preseason debut CBS Sports
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

Read original article here

Shanahan revisits how Lance’s finger injury impacted his development – Niners Nation

  1. Shanahan revisits how Lance’s finger injury impacted his development Niners Nation
  2. 49ers QB Trey Lance was ‘100 percent’ in March, says ‘it’s been an awesome offseason’ after battling injuries NFL.com
  3. Niners’ Trey Lance says he has been 100 percent healthy since March: ‘It’s been an awesome offseason for me’ CBS Sports
  4. What Trey Lance Thinks About a “Fresh Start” Trade From 49ers Sports Illustrated
  5. What 49ers QB Trey Lance has in common with Tom Brady, Aaron Rodgers, Russell Wilson and Dak Prescott The Mercury News
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

Read original article here

49ers draft: Football Outsiders gives the 49ers a “D” grade for failing to improve its roster during the Draft – Niners Nation

  1. 49ers draft: Football Outsiders gives the 49ers a “D” grade for failing to improve its roster during the Draft Niners Nation
  2. NFL draft grades 2023: How Mel Kiper Jr., other experts rate 49ers’ haul NBC Sports
  3. 2023 NFL Draft Recap: San Francisco 49ers FULL DRAFT GRADE | CBS Sports CBS Sports
  4. 49ers Draft reaction: It’s Colton Mckivitz’s world after Kyle Shanahan’s most recent vote of confidence in him Niners Nation
  5. 49ers post-draft depth chart: A 53-man projection and look at team strength The Athletic
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

Read original article here

Niners’ Nick Bosa warned Cardinals before 2019 draft he would ‘haunt’ them if they chose Kyler Murray over him – CBS Sports

  1. Niners’ Nick Bosa warned Cardinals before 2019 draft he would ‘haunt’ them if they chose Kyler Murray over him CBS Sports
  2. 49ers DE Nick Bosa reportedly warned Cardinals he’d ‘haunt’ them if they drafted ‘that little’ QB Kyler Murray Yahoo Sports
  3. Steve Keim on Kyler Murray’s motivation, talks QB talent in 2023 NFL Draft, Aaron Rodgers | THE HERD The Herd with Colin Cowherd
  4. Nick Bosa to Cardinals before 2019 draft: If you draft Kyler Murray over me, I’ll haunt you NBC Sports
  5. 49ers’ Nick Bosa warned Cardinals he’d ‘haunt’ them if they drafted Kyler Murray over him New York Post
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

Read original article here

‘What’s More Likely’ – Rich Eisen on Bucs, Dak, Pats-Jets, Packers, NFC West, Russ, Raiders & More! – The Rich Eisen Show

  1. ‘What’s More Likely’ – Rich Eisen on Bucs, Dak, Pats-Jets, Packers, NFC West, Russ, Raiders & More! The Rich Eisen Show
  2. Rich Eisen Previews the NFL’s Top Week 8 Games | The Rich Eisen Show The Rich Eisen Show
  3. Why Tyler Lockett Believes the First-Place Seahawks are Legit Contenders | The Rich Eisen Show The Rich Eisen Show
  4. Rich Eisen: Why Russell Wilson Deserves a Break from the “Pile on Russ” Trend | The Rich Eisen Show The Rich Eisen Show
  5. Eagles vs Bills as NFL’s Best Team: Who Ya Got, Joe Haden? | The Rich Eisen Show The Rich Eisen Show
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

Read original article here

‘What’s More Likely?’ – Rich Eisen Breaks Down NFL’s Super Wild Card Weekend | The Rich Eisen Show – The Rich Eisen Show

  1. ‘What’s More Likely?’ – Rich Eisen Breaks Down NFL’s Super Wild Card Weekend | The Rich Eisen Show The Rich Eisen Show
  2. Rich Eisen Reacts to Colts GM’s Less-Than-Glowing Endorsement of Carson Wentz | The Rich Eisen Show The Rich Eisen Show
  3. Aaron Rodgers or Tom Brady for NFL MVP: Who Ya Got, Rich Eisen? | The Rich Eisen Show The Rich Eisen Show
  4. Rich Eisen Ranks the NFL’s Super Wild Card Weekend Games from Best to Not-Best-But-Still-Pretty-Good The Rich Eisen Show
  5. Mike Del Tufo’s Weather Report: Super Wild Card Weekend Edition | The Rich Eisen Show The Rich Eisen Show
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

Read original article here

4 winners, 3 losers, and 1 IDK from the 49ers victory over the Bengals: The Niners superstars came to play

In the NFL, you have to learn to win ugly. In the NFL, you also have to put teams away. San Francisco failed to do the latter but managed to pull off the former against the Bengals Sunday.

Cincinnati lost two muffed punts. They should have never had a chance to be in the game. San Francisco faces a couple of inferior opponents in their final four games. As a team, they’ll need to learn how to start putting teams away if they want to make noise in the playoffs.

The 49ers received “A” games from their “A” players. At the most critical moments, their stars stepped up. When that happens, this team is tough to beat. But, unfortunately, there was too much stagnant offense and sloppy play outside of that. So let’s look at the winners and losers from Sunday’s game.

Winner – George Kittle

Kittle was not on the field on the first third down of the game. That would be the last time that happened. Kittle had a superstar performance with 13 receptions for 151 yards and a touchdown.

On the surface, those sound like spectacular numbers. Kittle had to contort his body, go outside his frame, and make several difficult catches look routine. You know you’re a playmaker when everyone in the stadium knows you’re getting the ball, and you still come through.

Deebo Samuel “only” played 77% of the snaps after missing a week with a groin strain. That added more pressure on the other offensive stars. As Brandon Aiyuk said after the game about Kittle, “man, that is a different dude.”

The 49ers don’t win this game without Kittle’s performance. He helped spring Samuel on his touchdown run. Kittle impacts the game without touching the ball. His value since returning from injury cannot be understated.

Nick Bosa

Bosa had another ho-hum ten pressure day. He lives in the backfield every game, and Sunday was no different. Bosa is an All-Pro because of when he makes plays. His first pressure of the game forced Joe Burrow to flee the pocket and run out of bounds short of the first down marker.

He would have had three sacks had it not been for a rookie mistake at cornerback. Bosa opened up the Bengals game-tying drive with a sack. His final sack came on a Bengals 3rd & 3 that made them settle for a field goal.

There are several other plays Bosa makes during the game that we can’t quantify. However, Bosa is among the best edge rushers in the NFL already, and this is his second full season of playing professionally. What’s even more impressive is he’s off a season-ending knee injury.

Deebo Samuel

The 49ers wasted no time getting Deebo involved as they handed him the ball as a running back on the game’s second offensive play. I wonder how much of the 49ers having a significant lead in the second half played a factor in a relatively low targeted/carry game. During the first half, Samuel was much more involved.

Deebo’s speed around the corner will always impress. However, few players provide the luxury of knowing you can hand it off to them on 2nd & 8 and the probability of them turning it into a big play is a coin flip.

On Samuel’s 22 yard-reception to open the third quarter, he comes back to the ball not only to protect himself but to ensure the defender can’t make a play on the pass. Samuel can do it all. The 49ers hit the jackpot with Deebo.

Losers – Daniel Brunskill/Tom Compton

When you talk about the 49ers dropback passing game, there’s plenty of discussion about whether Kyle Shanahan trusts his quarterback. Against the Bengals, the duo of Daniel Brunskill and Tom Compton were put through the wringer.

It was a surprise if a play went by where one of the two didn’t make a mistake. Brunskill allowed five pressures and a sack. Compton was beaten twice, including a sack and a quarterback hit.

Every offensive lineman gets beaten. The Bengals entered the game with one of the best edge rush duos in Sam Hubbard and Trey Hendrickson. Those two have made plays all season, and that wasn’t going to change Sunday.

It’s how Brunskill and Compton are giving up pressure. They were stomach to stomach on one play after Cincinnati ran a twist with their defensive line. The goal is to block the opposition, not your teammate.

They are both athletic enough to make plays on the perimeter and assist in the 49ers running game, but throwing the ball when the right side of your offensive line struggles with elementary twists or any competent pass rusher lowers the ceiling on this offense.

Robbie Gould/Mitch Wishnowsky

Wishnowsky had seven punts that averaged 41 yards. That would be the seventh-worst average in the NFL. I’m not giving Wishnowsky credit for the Bengals failing to catch his punts. I am blaming him for a 29-yard punt that gave the Bengals the ball at their 34-yard line in the fourth quarter down a touchdown. Sure enough, that field position led to a game-tying score.

On the final drive of regulation, the 49ers converted a 2nd & 10 and a 3rd & 10. They moved the ball to the 29-yard line. The game is over if Gould hits the 47-yarder. The reason you extend and pay Gould is to hit these kicks.

These are the same kicks that you should be able to take your headset off if you’re coaching, walk to the fridge if you’re at home because the kick should be automatic. Unfortunately, it’s been everything but automatic for Gould this season.

The kicking situation for the 49ers continues to haunt them. It didn’t cost them against the Bengals, but that doesn’t mean the issues don’t exist.

Rookie defensive backs

Ambry Thomas faced two top-20ish wide receivers in his first career start. Sunday’s result was always going to happen. He was thrown into the fire without much choice or enough time to prepare. DeMeco Ryans did everything he could to hide his cornerbacks Sunday.

Eventually, you have to close the middle of the field. Once that happens, your cornerbacks have to hold up on the outside. Thomas, and Talanoa Hufanaga, hardly put up a fight against Ja’Marr Chase and Tee Higgins. Those two had 191 receiving yards and two touchdowns.

Both Hufanga and Thomas gave up the touchdowns. Thomas had errors that were almost equally as bad as giving up a touchdown. He had two illegal hands to the face penalties that wiped out a Bosa sack and a Jimmie Ward interception that would have given the 49ers the ball, at the very worst, at midfield.

Thomas played a bad game, and Hufanga looks lost in coverage the further away he is from the line of scrimmage. I’m not going to talk down too much on the rookie defensive backs. Joe Burrow was lights out and gave his stud wideouts a chance to make a play.

The rotation at safety seems to happen at the worst possible time. Perhaps, don’t take Jaquiski Tartt out of the game? As for Thomas, you’re hoping for growth if he gets another opportunity.

Winner – Brandon Aiyuk

Aiyuk feels like a player that’s knocking on the door of stardom. He caught six of his 11 targets for 62 yards. Even if they aren’t turning into big plays, I like the idea of giving him the ball on screens and throws near the line of scrimmage. Those can be viewed as an extension of the running game.

Aiyuk couldn’t get a second limb in bounds on a money pass from Garoppolo on a 2nd & goal play where the 49ers had to settle for three points. Those are the plays — like last week when he couldn’t hold on after a big hit — that are preventing me from putting Aiyuk in the Deebo/Kittle tier.

But then you give him the ball on the final play of the game, and Airyuk jumps from just outside of the four-yard line and manages to somehow score. After the game, Aiyuk said, “They say you’re not supposed to reach the ball out, but nobody said anything because I scored.”

IDKs – Jimmy Garoppolo

The 49ers punted on three straight drives to begin the second half. Their two touchdowns in the first half were thanks to turnovers from the Bengals. Shanahan seems terrified of letting or trusting Jimmy G to throw the ball down the field. He had a brutal sack-fumble that ended a drive.

Then, of course, that near interception at the end of the game. But, before that, Garoppolo missed Kyle Juszczyk wide open in the end zone that would’ve iced the game.

Every week, the only thing that changes for Garoppolo is whether the defender catches the ball. They didn’t catch it this week, so the team was fortunate for another opportunity. Garoppolo gave Kittle and Aiyuk chances and also added a perfect back-shoulder throw to Jauan Jennings late in the game.

Inconsistent Jimmy is here to stay. He did come up limping after the dropped interception. Kyle Shanahan speaks Monday afternoon at 4:30 p.m. PT. We’ll see if Garoppolo is limited in practice or if anything pops up. He finished the game, likely on adrenaline. Garoppolo’s best throw of the game came when he threaded the needle to Kittle to convert a third down, setting up Aiyuk’s score.

Read original article here

Niners didn’t want to get ‘left at altar’ by staying at No. 12, believe Jimmy Garoppolo gives them best chance now

SANTA CLARA, Calif. — San Francisco 49ers general manager John Lynch and coach Kyle Shanahan came out of their offseason bunker Monday and shed light on their plans for the newly acquired third pick in next month’s NFL draft, what is to become of Jimmy Garoppolo and how they arrived at their decisions on all of it.

Speaking to the media for the first time since Jan. 4, Lynch and Shanahan spent 40 minutes detailing the how and why of the bold move they made Friday to acquire the No. 3 pick from the Miami Dolphins in exchange for the No. 12 pick this year, first and third-round choices in 2022 and a first-round selection in ’23.

Throughout, Lynch and Shanahan didn’t shy away from two widely held ideas: The Niners plan to draft a quarterback at No. 3 and they intend to hang on to Garoppolo, barring a significant trade offer for him.

“We’re in a situation where when you bring in a rookie quarterback, to me it’s always better, especially on the team that you have, if you’ve got a veteran starter there already who you like and you’re comfortable winning with, that’s usually the direction you want to go,” Shanahan said. “And not throw someone else out into the fire until they’re fully ready and that’s the situation we’re at … I think Jimmy, it’s going to be hard to find a quarterback who gives us a better chance to win than Jimmy right now, especially even a rookie in the draft… Now, if someone wanted (to give) something for (Garoppolo) and it could make our team better in a lot of other ways, you listen to that but it also depends on how good you feel about that rookie.

“And we’re not there yet right now. Odds are, we probably won’t be. That’s why we’re happy that we don’t have to be that way. We’ve got a guy in here who we know we can win with, a guy our players love, that we love and we’re excited to have him this year and we’re excited to have a hell of a quarterback right behind him learning for when the time is his.”

After San Francisco’s disappointing 6-10 season, Shanahan and Lynch and their respective staffs set a course in January to begin exploring all possible options at quarterback. While they believed in Garoppolo’s ability to win when healthy, they also knew they could no longer risk having entire seasons lost because he couldn’t stay on the field.

“It’s been tough the two years he’s missed, it’s been hard to compete the same way,” Shanahan said. “So, we knew we had to look into that this year.”

Among the options considered, Shanahan mentioned that the Niners looked at Matthew Stafford, who ultimately was traded to the Los Angeles Rams, and monitored Houston Texans quarterback Deshaun Watson’s potential availability.

The idea of trading up from No. 12 to take one of the draft’s top rookies and keep Garoppolo on board lingered but was largely dependent on a flurry of other things happening first. When free agency opened, their ability to keep many of their own key players such as left tackle Trent Williams and fullback Kyle Juszczyk offered the Niners two things they coveted: a roster that could compete immediately in 2021 and the unique position of having no glaring needs for the draft that would steer them away from a big move at quarterback.

Lynch said the Niners began talking to other teams near the top of the draft weeks ago in the belief that there were up to five quarterbacks who could become the future face of the franchise. Those quarterbacks — Clemson’s Trevor Lawrence, BYU’s Zach Wilson, North Dakota State’s Trey Lance, Ohio State’s Justin Fields and Alabama’s Mac Jones — all had at least some appeal to Shanahan and Lynch, who surveyed the quarterback landscape around the league and believed they would have no shot at any of them if they didn’t make a move quickly.

“We felt pretty strongly we were gonna get left at the altar sitting there at 12,” Shanahan said. “There are five guys that are kind of at this party a little bit and people are talking about them going everywhere. They’re all over in the first round. Our feeling is these guys were going to go a lot higher than people realize.”

Just before the deal became official, Lynch went to Niners ownership and laid out the plan to move all the way up to No. 3 and keep Garoppolo and his $26.4 million cap hit in 2021.

“We went to ownership and said, ‘Hey, things are looking good. We’d like to make this move but we also don’t want to say goodbye to Jimmy,'” Lynch said. “It was a stated goal that we needed to come out with the quarterback position being stronger this year and I think we’ve put ourselves in an opportunity to make that happen with this move.”

In the hours before the trade was announced, Shanahan spoke with Garoppolo, explaining to him what the Niners were about to do. According to Shanahan, Garoppolo wasn’t thrilled with the idea of the team drafting his future replacement, but Shanahan said he seemed to understand the plan to bring him back and to give it one more go and possibly rehabilitate his value in the process.

“I’m sure Jimmy was a little pissed off from it, just like I would be, too,” Shanahan said. “The more mad Jimmy gets, usually the better he gets. Jimmy just gets madder and stays healthy, this is going to be a good thing for Jimmy too, which could be a great problem for the 49ers.”

The next step for the 49ers is actually drafting their quarterback. Lynch and Shanahan said they have no intel on what’s going to happen in front of them aside from what’s viewed as the common knowledge — that Jacksonville will take Lawrence and the Jets will choose Wilson.

Shanahan acknowledged that the Niners are already comfortable with three quarterbacks on the list becoming the franchise’s future, though he obviously declined to say which ones, and that he could get there with four and five.

The Niners will spend the next few weeks doing their diligence on the top quarterbacks. Shanahan and Lynch are headed to Alabama’s second pro day to see Jones on Tuesday, while assistant general manager Adam Peters will be in Ohio to see Fields.

Shanahan said he plans to see Fields in person later after speaking with his agent, and there are plans for an up-close look at Lance, as well.

All of that, of course, will be happening in an odd offseason in which teams can no longer do private workouts, visits or dinners because of continued COVID-19 restrictions. If nothing else, the Niners at least no longer have to do any of it in secret.

“You get to three, you don’t have to mess with that stuff,” Shanahan said. “And I think that gives us a better chance now to do our due diligence because we don’t have to really play any games in that way.”

Read original article here