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Exclusive: Contract figures for 49ers rookies

The 49ers must allocate between 5.1 million and 6.9 million this year for their rookie pool. CSNBayArea.com obtained documents from a league source that outlines contract parameters for each of their 10 picks.

49ers undrafted free agent tracker

It didn’t take long for the 49ers to snag some undrafted free agents. While the team can’t officially sign them until Tuesday morning, they can begin negotiating today. And the 49ers apparently have been busy already. Here’s a list that …

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Harbaugh: “It’s on.”

Jim Harbaugh strode into the press room at 4949 Centennial Blvd. with a big, confident smile on his face and announced: “Hello, it’s on.”

He had an aura and a twinkle in his eye reminiscent of Willy Wonka opening his chocolate factory for the lucky little boys and girls of the world. Harbaugh even quoted Wonka, explaining that the 49ers have “so much to do, so little time to do it.”

When it came down to business, he avoided specific questions about Alex Smith and free agency like he used to avoid the pass rush back when he was a quarterback.

But he did open up about what worries him, what excites him, and what the team gained from Camp Alex.

Here’s the full transcript of Harbaugh’s first 49ers press conference of the 2011season.

Enjoy.

P.S. Chris Mortenson is reporting that Steve Young believes quarterback Matt Hasselbeck will sign with the 49ers. I like the move – I think Hasselbeck will be a better quarterback in 2011 than Smith. What do you think?

HARBAUGH: Hello, it’s on.

Q: What are the first things you do?

HARBAUGH: Opening the building. Our building will be open at 7 a.m. and players will be welcomed back in.

Q: What’s your priority list?

HARBAUGH: The next week is going to entail a lot of things. You’re talking about practice starting. You’re talking about signing undrafted players, college free agents, our own drafted players, unrestricted free agents, meetings. All that’s going to take place simultaneously. First order or business is start seeing our players, getting knee to knee and eyeball to eyeball with them. Honestly that’s the thing I’m most excited about. I think there’s going to be an equilibrium there that’s going to be good for me personally, to be back with these guys.

Q: Have to you talked to the players since the lockout lifted?

HARBAUGH: That’s what we’re doing right now, getting those guys on the telephone, letting them know where things stand as of now, where things will stand as of July 26 tomorrow. To the best of our ability let them know what the rules are as we know them and then let them know they’re welcome to come back.

Q: With a free agent like Alex, will he be allowed to be here?

HARBAUGH: As I understand it, our own unrestricted free agents will be allowed in the building tomorrow right up until the time that we start training camp on Thursday then they will not be in the building until Friday when they can sign. That’s the way I understand the rule.

Q: Can you work with players before training camp, out on the field?

HARBAUGH: They’re saying we can have meetings. Right now that’s what I know. There can be conditioning. We can work with them in the weight room once they have a physical.

Q: With the lockout going on, what did you think of “Camp Alex?”

HARBAUGH: I was excited to see what was going on, that the players were taking the initiative and organizing workouts and practice. Hopefully that bodes well for us and everybody that participated in those workouts will have a leg up. I hope that’s the case.

Q: Alex said he might send you some video. Did you get that?

HARBAUGH: No, I did not get any video from Alex.

Q: How many players have you yet to meet in person?

HARBAUGH: Quite a few. I don’t know the exact number. It’s 10, 15, 20. I’ve spoken to a few of those guys today. It feels more like football talking to those guys, even on the phone. I can’t tell you how good it’s going to be having those guys in the building, face to face, knee to knee, smelling their breath, just getting to know them, let them get to know me. That’s what I’m looking most forward to.

Q: Does it feel like a long time since your hyped hiring back in January?

HARBAUGH: It does. There’s no doubt about it. A lot has taken place since then. Everybody that’s had to navigate these uncharted waters. Everybody knows what that feels like now and how that’s affected each and every one of us. I’m happy for the people that got this done and we can finally say we’re back to football and the sacrifices they made: the owners, the executive committee, the players, De Smith. I’m thankful they put in that work and they got this deal done. Now it’s still uncharted waters and there’s a myriad of obstacles that are out there right now. The good news is that we can get back to work. We’ve got a timeline for this endeavor now. I’m excited as heck to get working on it. Yeah, I’m nervous. I’m worried. That’s a part of my job to be that way. Me personally, it keeps me on my toes. Anxious, all those feelings, to get started and get going. That’s the good news: We can now start.

Q: Will you get all the rookies in tomorrow?

HARBAUGH: We hope so. That’s something we’re allowed to do now, call them and make that available to them on a voluntary basis to come in. The way I understand the rules we can pay for their flights, we can house them when they get here. Not a minute to lose from my perspective. There’s so much to do and so little time to do it in.

Q: Do you know how many you’ll have?

HARBAUGH: Tomorrow? When the doors open? I don’t.

Q: When camp opens, how long before you can get out onto the field and put pads on?

HARBAUGH: Camp will open Thursday the 28th to physicals and conditioning and meetings. Friday will be Day 1, that will be helmets-only practice. We’ll be on the field practicing Friday and Saturday. Pads will come in Day 4, Sunday.

Q: You’ve spent a lot of time mapping out training camp, did you rearrange when you found out only 1 padded practice a day?

HARBAUGH: We had scheduled two-a-days as part of our plan. That’s changed. Obviously there are things that are important to the players and there are new rules that will go into effect this training camp. We’ll honor that. We’re going to play by the rules. A lot of the thinking will be how to best manage the time that we have. It will really come down to that, the teaching, the quality reps on the field and who can do that the best will eventually get a leg up. I’m not concerned with getting around the rules because those rules are important to our players and our team and our organization. We’ll honor those. It takes some thinking through. Think it through at how best we can get ourselves prepared for the season.

Q: Do these new limits on padded practicing change the basic thinking of what training camp is?

HARBAUGH: It’s different. It’s different. You know, it’s still going to be our intent to get our team ready to play for the preseason games, for the opener on Sept. 11. It’ll be four hours on the field, and that’s really… that’s pretty much dead on what we had scheduled for training camp. Sometimes in a two-a-day, sometimes in a one-a-day with a walk-through. I just feel good knowing the parameters now. And once you know the parameters, then you can start thinking through to what fits your team the best. And the main thing is getting to know our team, because we haven’t been around them. Haven’t been around them on the field, haven’t been around them in the classroom, so that time, whether it’s in the meeting room or on the field is very valuable. Do I even have to talk about being on time, how important that’s going to be this year?

Q: As you head into free agency, what’s your thinking on the quarterback situation? Are you considering adding another veteran QB, maybe to compete with Alex, or are you thinking maybe about a QB just to back him up?

HARBAUGH: We’re going to, at every position, address all avenues that are out there. And not give away any plan. Almost think of it like schematically, going into a game, you’re just not going to talk about what your plans are, how do you plan to attack a defense or an offense.

We’ll treat free agency and building our roster in the next week, 10 days exactly the same way. Just keep it as our plan and not really…

Q: How can we know if you succeeded or failed?

HARBAUGH: You’ll see. You’ll see. Oh yeah, you’re always going to judge us on how we do, right? That’s the nature of the business.

But don’t think it’s in our best interest to be talking about, hey, here’s how we’re going about it, here’s what we’re going to do, here’s the… in all instances, position and specifically each and every guy, we just won’t talk about it. We’ll keep that close to the vest.

Q: How do you handle it now not knowing what kinds of shape the guys will come in?

HARBAUGH: Everybody’s got to do just a great job of teaching and understanding where guys are. Because guys are going to come in tip-top shape, there’s going to be some guys that come in close to tip-tip shape and you just don’t know. There’s the unknown with every single guy on your team, with every rookie free agent, drafted guy, that you sign, you just don’t know.

So the idea of the unknown, now you know why I’m nervous. You know why I’ve got some angst on a lot of different fronts.

Like I said, just keeps you on your toes. Heightened awareness of where everybody is, physically, emotionally, mentally, all those different areas.

Q: Where’s Frank Gore in that?

HARBAUGH: I have not talked to Frank yet, so… like everybody, we’re waiting to find that out, we’re waiting to see him. Like I said, get knee to knee and eyeball to eyeball with him and answer some of those questions.

Q: You haven’t even seen your staff work together yet. You’ve got to be interested to see that.

HARBAUGH: I am. Myself, the players, our coaches… I think we’re all just sitting on a spring and we are ready to go. Had a chance, not to work on the field with all of our coaches, but there’s been a real trust that’s built-up in this long period where we’ve had more extra time to be together and get to know each other and see how each other operates.

Hopefully, that’s going to be beneficial. I’m sitting on a spring excited to watch them coach. Watch myself coach. And coach.

In talking to some of the players, they’re echoing that. They’re feeling the exact same way. So… that’s all good.

Q: Might you have a little advantage coming from college because there you get some players in August and you have to get them ready to play games in September? Is this a similar situation?

HARBAUGH: Interesting and definitely have thought that line of thinking through. Also have talked to Jim Tomsula about his experience in NFL Europe where it was even more so that way, a whole team reports to training camp and you start right there from Square Zero.

A lot of those things have been factored in and make up our plan.

Q: How eager are you to meet with Alex Smith and figure out exactly what he taught during the Camp Alexes and how much bearing does that have on what you do at the start of camp?

HARBAUGH: It’s going to be a scorched earth plan of teaching and coaching when this gets started. I’m happy that the players organized those workouts and took the initiative to learn and understand. I’m sure they’re going to have questions and details that need to be answered and ironed out.

But I think it gives us a leg up and we’ll find out just how much of it does.

Q What did you glean from Camp Alex?

HARBAUGH: I don’t know about gleaning, but as far as reading it…I had a lot of time on my hands, so I was interested, and I think the thing that interested me the most, I don’t know if this is right or wrong or if I should have been gleaning more or less than I was but I was just happy for these players, this generation of guys to be able to organize their own workouts, their own games, their own workout sessions, because it’s a generation that’s been in a lot of ways over-supervised, over-officiated, and over-scrutinized. It’s not the generation where the leather on the baseball starts getting soft and starts coming apart, and you figure out to get some gray electrical tape and wrap it around real tight so you can keep playing. (These days) somebody’s parent’s coming in with a new ball. So I was excited for those guys in that regard, and I feel like it will bode well for us, and I don’t know if I’m right or wrong.

Q: How has the waiting been for you?

HARBAUGH: I get anxious about things. I get worried. And it spurs me on to do more so that we’re not going to be unsuccessful. Maybe that’s a double negative – we don’t want to be unsuccessful. So you’re constantly thinking of things to do. How can we do this better? How can we do it if it’s a full training camp? What if it’s only ten days? What if it’s three weeks? What if we get them ten days before training camp starts? So it’s been kind of a constant planning for all of those scenarios. Now that we have that timeline, a lot of those things that we were doing and thinking about are working well now that we have the plan. So long story short I’m just glad we have a timeline and we can plug a plan in and get started. Once that’s in place, then let’s go. Let the low part drag and we’ll think our way through it and figure it out. So, that’s the good news. I’m happy that football is back on and that we have a timeline.

Q: You’ve made a lot of plans and schedules for this scenario or that one. What schedule are you on?

HARBAUGH: We’re on the full training camp (schedule) minus some off days. And the new rules, in terms of time limits and one-a-day, two-a-day, etc. It’s a new-rules version.

Q: Your GM and owner said you won’t be big players in free agency. Are you going to be big players next year instead?

HARBAUGH: Define major player. We’re going to look at all avenues. Hopefully we’ll think our way through it and do what’s best for our organization. We do have a plan, and now it’s a matter of trying to execute it, just like the players when they jump on the field trying to execute that plan. Let it begin.

Q: How much patience are you going to have for players who aren’t in shape?

HARBAUGH: Well I think that’s all part of the teaching, the organization, the planning. Realize that everybody’s got to get from A to Z. You got to get them to Z. Everybody may be on a different stage along that line, whether it’s physical conditioning or understanding the playbook or the way we do things, so it’s just a matter of getting guys immersed in how we do things, and showing them and telling them how we do it, and then let them do it. Tell them what they did right, tell them what they did wrong, and see if we can’t get better tomorrow than we were today. Better today than we were yesterday. That’ll be what my patience level is and how we judge success.

Q: How much will you be working with the quarterbacks specifically?

HARBAUGH: The good thing about being the head coach is you get to work with all the players, you get to coach them all. My plan is to immerse ourselves in football every day. Make it as much about ball as possible and we have a structure for how we’re going to coach and I’m involved in that. I can’t give you a specific amount of minutes but pretty much all day we’ll be attacking ball.

Q: Guesstimate of how many undrafted guys will be 49ers tomorrow?

HARBAUGH: No I don’t. I don’t have a guesstimate on that. We’re going to work really hard. We can’t sign anybody today, but getting on the phones and talking to guys and seeing if we can get the best possible guys to bring in her.

Q: Is that where your college recruiting skills come in?

HARBAUGH: Yeah, somewhat. These young men are savvy. They want to go to a team that gives them an opportunity to make the team, to win, to play early. All those things are what’s on their mind, so we’ll talk to them about the merits of coming to the 49ers.

Q: What did you glean from Camp Alex?

HARBAUGH: I don’t know about gleaning, but as far as reading it…I had a lot of time on my hands, so I was interested, and I think the thing that interested me the most, I don’t know if this is right or wrong or if I should have been gleaning more or less than I was but I was just happy for these players, this generation of guys to be able to organize their own workouts, their own games, their own workout sessions, because it’s a generation that’s been in a lot of ways over-supervised, over-officiated, and over-scrutinized. It’s not the generation where the leather on the baseball starts getting soft and starts coming apart, and you figure out to get some gray electrical tape and wrap it around real tight so you can keep playing. (These days) somebody’s parent’s coming in with a new ball. So I was excited for those guys in that regard, and I feel like it will bode well for us, and I don’t know if I’m right or wrong.

Q: How has the waiting been for you?

HARBAUGH: I get anxious about things. I get worried. And it spurs me on to do more so that we’re not going to be unsuccessful. Maybe that’s a double negative – we don’t want to be unsuccessful. So you’re constantly thinking of things to do. How can we do this better? How can we do it if it’s a full training camp? What if it’s only ten days? What if it’s three weeks? What if we get them ten days before training camp starts? So it’s been kind of a constant planning for all of those scenarios. Now that we have that timeline, a lot of those things that we were doing and thinking about are working well now that we have the plan. So long story short I’m just glad we have a timeline and we can plug a plan in and get started. Once that’s in place, then let’s go. Let the low part drag and we’ll think our way through it and figure it out. So, that’s the good news. I’m happy that football is back on and that we have a timeline.

Q: What schedule are you on?

HARBAUGH: We’re on the full training camp (schedule) minus some off days. And the new rules, in terms of time limits and one-a-day, two-a-day, etc. It’s a new-rules version.

Q: Your GM and owner said you won’t be big players in free agency. Are you going to be big players next year instead?

HARBAUGH: Define major player. We’re going to look at all avenues. Hopefully we’ll think our way through it and do what’s best for our organization. We do have a plan, and now it’s a matter of trying to execute it, just like the players when they jump on the field trying to execute that plan. Let it begin.

Q; How much patience are you going to have for players who aren’t in shape?

HARBAUGH: Well I think that’s all part of the teaching, the organization, the planning. Realize that everybody’s got to get from A to Z. You got to get them to Z. Everybody may be on a different stage along that line, whether it’s physical conditioning or understanding the playbook or the way we do things, so it’s just a matter of getting guys immersed in how we do things, and showing them and telling them how we do it, and then let them do it. Tell them what they did right, tell them what they did wrong, and see if we can’t get better tomorrow than we were today. Better today than we were yesterday. That’ll be what my patience level is and how we judge success.

Q: How much will you be working with the quarterbacks specifically?

HARBAUGH: The good thing about being the head coach is you get to work with all the players, you get to coach them all. My plan is to immerse ourselves in football every day. Make it as much about ball as possible and we have a structure for how we’re going to coach and I’m involved in that. I can’t give you a specific amount of minutes but pretty much all day we’ll be attacking ball.

Q: Guesstimate of how many undrafted guys will be 49ers tomorrow?

HARBAUGH: No I don’t. I don’t have a guesstimate on that. We’re going to work really hard. We can’t sign anybody today, but getting on the phones and talking to guys and seeing if we can get the best possible guys to bring in here.

Q: Is that where your college recruiting skills come in?

HARBAUGH: Yeah, somewhat. These young men are savvy. They want to go to a team that gives them an opportunity to make the team, to win, to play early. All those things are what’s on their mind, so we’ll talk to them about the merits of coming to the 49ers.

Follow me on twitter @grantcohn.

Which free agents the 49ers should sign

Now that the lockout is over, let’s look ahead to free agency, which starts this week. Who will the 49ers sign?

Alex Smith, for starters. Smith stated in a text message this morning he won’t hesitate to sign with 49ers. So we can count on him.

Who else? The 49ers first have to decide which of their own players to resign. The big names are: MLB Takeo Spikes, S Dashon Goldson, C David Baas, NT Aubrayo Franklin, and LDE Ray McDonald.

Trent Baalke also has to either restructure CB Nate Clements contract or cut him, and he if he has any room under the new $120.4 million cap, he can sign an unrestricted free agent or two.

If you were Trent Baalke, what would your strategy be for free agency? How would you prioritize your moves? What would you do first? Who would be the most important player to sign?

I would sign Baas and McDonald first, because they’re relatively cheap, and I’d let Franklin and Goldson walk. Franklin is good, but he’s going to be expensive, and I’d rather move the 330 lb. Isaac Sopoaga to NT and play McDonald at LDE.

Instead of paying Franklin and Goldson big bucks, I’d try to resign Manny Lawson. If signing Lawson meant the 49ers would also have to lose Spikes and Clements, I’d sign him. Lawson is terrific at “setting the edge” against the run and at covering tight ends. He’d be a perfect complement to Aldon Smith as an 3-4 outside linebacker, because Smith’s specialty is rushing the quarterback.

Two unrestricted free agents I’d try to sign are CB Richard Marshall from Carolina and WR James Jones from Green Bay. If the 49ers cut Clements they need to replace him, and Marshall is young and inexpensive. He’ll do until the 49ers draft the real replacement with their No. 1 pick in 2012. As far as Jones goes, he’d fit perfectly on the 49ers, who desperately need a bigger, more explosive wide receiver.

I would not spend a lot of money on a backup quarterback. I think Colin Kaepernick will pick up the offense quicker than expected and he’ll give Alex Smith all the competition he can handle.

Do you agree? What would you do?

Harbaugh is talking to the media at 3:00 p.m. today. I’m on my way to Santa Clara, and I’ll get back to you later.

Follow me on twitter @grantcohn.

Lockout ends – 49ers players are ready

It's over. Players and owners have agreed on a new CBA. It means the 49ers could open training camp on time, meaning Thursday. The club will have a few days to negotiate with their own free agents and undrafted and drafted rookies. Full free agency will commence on Friday. Additionally, the...

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San Francisco 49ers’ York Addresses Fans

The NFL owners and players have come to an agreement, ending a four-month lockout. Here's what 49ers President and CEO Jed York has to say to the faithful: Dear 49ers Fans, It brings me great pleasure to inform you that today a new Collective Bargaining Agreement was reached between the...

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49ers’ deal with Alex Smith ‘pretty well set in stone’

When the NFL lockout officially lifts and he is allowed to sign a contract, Alex Smith will return to the 49ers for a seventh season.

Exclusive: NFL lockout transition rules

Comcast SportsNet Bay Area has obtained a copy of the NFL's Transition Rules for the 2011 League Year, a key component in the labor solution, expected to be reached Monday.

The 49ers’ five sure things

Thanks for your generous responses to my earlier post. Our discussion of the top 49er storylines turned into a lengthy list of concerns. Adam, among other readers, pointed out the defensive backfield and the offensive line as two more areas of anxiety for the 49ers. Thank you, Adam.

Let’s look at the team from the opposite angle now.

Injuries aside, what are the Niners’ locks? Where are they strong? What areas of the team are of no concern? What aspects of the team inspire the most confidence?

Here’s my list and please give yours in the comment section.

1. Punter – Andy Lee was All-Pro in 2007 and 2009, averaging more than 47 yards per punt each season. Last year he averaged 46.2 yards per punt – fourth-best in the league. The past four years Lee and Raiders punter Shane Lechler have alternated the honor of All-Pro punter, with Lechler winning in ’08 and ’10. Lee will be 29 this season, and he should be the preseason All-Pro favorite.

2. Middle Linebacker – The Niners are loaded here. Patrick Willis is the best player in the NFL at this position, and his counterpart Takeo Spikes recorded 109 tackles in 2010. Spikes is a free agent but he’ll almost certainly re-sign when free agency starts. Backup Navarro Bowman was a third-round pick last year and he has a ton of talent.

3. Tight End – Vernon Davis is the best athlete on the team and the best athlete at the tight end position in the NFL. Delanie Walker is talented but he’s never caught more than 30 passes in a season, mostly because the past coaches couldn’t figure out how to use him. Jim Harbaugh should be able to figure out how to attack defenses with both of them – he’s a whiz with tight ends. The 49ers could have the best tight end group in the NFL.

4. Right End – Meaning Justin Smith. Is there a better 3-4 RDE than Smith? Despite constant double teams he led the team in sacks last year with 8.5. His presence alone upgrades the entire defensive line.

5. Tom Rathman – He’s a top-of-the-line running backs coach, and he has a great reputation around the league. Will the other coaches – all of them – be on his level? We think they will, but we don’t know.

The people I’ve named are a praise-worthy group, and 49er faithful should be happy with them. One thing, though. This is not a core group in a franchise – it is an ancillary group. Running backs coach is not the same thing as the quarterbacks coach or the head coach. Tight end is the least important receiver on a team, although he’s important as a blocker. Middle linebacker might be the least important position on a modern defense. Some people don’t even consider punters to be football players. Well, you get the idea. No one is saying other 49ers, coaches and players, won’t turn out great. It’s just that we don’t know yet.

Anyway, that’s my list. What’s yours?

Follow me on twitter @grantcohn

Herzlich says 49ers are on his list of landing spots

The roles promise to be reversed – kind of – for Boston College linebacker Mark Herzlich later this week. Three months ago, NFL general managers passed on Herzlich during the draft. When free agency finally opens up, Herzlich and his …

Top 5 49er storylines

This is Grant Cohn, but some people call me Iggy. You can call me whatever you’d like. I’m your new 49ers blogger. I’ll be reporting and tweeting every day from training camp in Santa Clara as soon as it opens, whenever that may be.

Until then, I’ll join Bob Padecky and Phil Barber in providing you with some blogging snack food to whet your appetite for the upcoming NFL season.

And away we go!

Let’s start by asking the relevant questions: What are the top five storylines for training camp?

Here’s my list first. Please post your own in the comment section.

5. Can Frank Gore still bring it? He broke his hip last November against Arizona and missed the rest of the season. His agent, Drew Rosenhaus, says the hip is 100 percent healthy. Is it? Has Gore lost a step? If he has, the 49ers are toast.

4. Can rookie pass rusher Aldon Smith get to the quarterback? New defensive coordinator Vic Fangio wants to pressure the quarterback. Trent Baalke drafted Aldon Smith to do just that, dreaming one day Smith will become the 49ers’ next Charles Haley. But is he really better right now than Manny Lawson, the outside linebacker he’s replacing? Remember, Smith played defensive end last year at the University of Missouri, and the Niners are asking him to be an outside linebacker. Can he make the transition?

3. Can Michael Crabtree become a part of the team? We know he likes to work out on his own. Can he find it in himself to attend team practices this August? Will he actually play in the preseason games? It’s time for Crabtree to show he’s a No.1 wide receiver and a grownup. If he isn’t, the 49ers need to replace him.

2. Can Alex Smith beat out rookie Colin Kaepernick for the starting quarterback job? Smith has never won a quarterback competition in his professional career – he lost out to Shaun Hill in 2009 and J.T. O’Sullivan in 2008. Will Alex Smith actually win for once this August? Will he look better than mediocre in the process?

1. Can the new 49er coaches coach? There’s already been a coronation for the triumvirate – Jim Harbaugh, Greg Roman, and Vic Fangio. But all three coached in college last year, and while Vic Fangio has been a defensive coordinator in the NFL, Roman has never been an NFL offensive coordinator, and this is Harbaugh’s first NFL head-coaching job. As we know, the transition from college to pro is enormous. How good will Harbaugh and Roman be? How do they conduct their practices? Who calls the plays in games? In what ways are they better than the Singletary bunch?

Bonus Question: How does Jim Harbaugh deal with the media? He’s never had to face the amount of scrutiny he will face every day this year, so how will he handle it? We know he has a mercurial personality. Will he deal with a loss better than the head coach he replaced? Can he keep his pants on?

Those are the questions pre-training camp. Let’s talk after training camp to see if the questions have changed.

Follow me on twitter @grantcohn. I’ll be tweeting like a magpie once training camp opens.

Of lockouts, stadiums and nickelbacks

By the end of the week, 49ers players working out at San Jose State seemed irritated and annoyed by the continued lockout. The players seemed to know very little about the parameters of the new deal owners ratified on Thursday, even quarterback Alex Smith, who seems to keep abreast on everything...

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49ers notebook: Lawson discusses his future

When the new league year begins, Manny Lawson will be free to sign with any team. He told former teammate Michael Robinson on "The Real Robinson Report" that he would be happy anywhere free agency takes him.

Two key issues, among others, need to be addressed.

One is a 7-year opt-out clause the players seek in the 10-year contract. The owners won’t go for it. Expect the players to buckle on this one, everything else being equal.

The second is much more problematical. The owners want the players to recertify as an union before allowing camps to re-open. The owners can say the recertification can be done electronically, in a matter of a day. The players have thus far refused, saving their need signatures on a ballot, and it would take a week they say for that to happen.  They cite electronic mis-use. To that all this: Many players do not want to recertify, believing, mistakenly, they can strike better deals as indepedent operators.

Beyond those two issues there’s workman’s comp and the Doty case. Sure, all that could be solved with a hard-earned day in a smoke-filled room with no windows.

But if you are at a bar right now, taking bets, make the one that has at least a week of exhibition games cancelled.

The deal, once apparently so clear, now has issues piling up on issues, like so many airplanes circling in a holding pattern over O’Hare in Chicago.

Justin Smith: No playbook is no concern

While the 49ers offensive players have been pouring over their new playbook since April 29, it’s been a different story for their defensive teammates. There have been no defensive minicamps and no one has been practicing specific plays because there …

If Takeo Spikes reflects the rest of the players….

The 49er linebacker told ESPN, “What do you expect us to do? Be a fool and sign something that wasn’t discussed among us?”

So the players didn’t rubber-stamp Thursday the owners’ version of the CBA. Good for them. “It’s a straight power play, no doubt about it,” Spikes said. “But at the same time in this game some stuff you can’t take personally. It’s part of the procedure.”

In past labor disputes owners have applied pressure successfully on the players. This seems different. In part because of the bold-faced aggression the owners displayed Thursday. The owners used the hammer to crack the nut. But it was so obvious, so heavy-handed, it has potential to really backfire.

“As players we are not tied to anybody’s time-line,” Spikes said.

Oh yes you are, the owners have said in so many words. Agree, recertify, fall in line by Tuesday. Just once, I would like to see NFL owners pushed back. It is the most exclusive men’s club in the world and even if you have been clueless like John York, you still make a small fortune each season. There has to be some accountability on their part even if, as Spikes said, it’s part of doing business.

49ers’ Spikes: ‘We’re going to take our time’

Takeo Spikes, the 49ers' player representative, told CSN Bay Area on Thursday night that the players were "not even close" to making that happen. He elaborated on the players' stance Friday morning.

49ers notebook: Travails and travels in labor dispute

Josh Morgan, a regular attendee at the 49ers' get-togethers at San Jose State, said he has a good knowledge of the receivers' responsibilities -- but not much else -- from the new playbook.

Maiocco: Players ‘not even close’ to taking action

Shortly after leaving the NFL Players Association Wednesday, shown above, 49ers player representative Takeo Spikes texted Matt Maiocco that a resolution to the current NFL labor situation is 'not even close.'

The first three things, and the only things, the 49ers need to do when the lockout ends

1) Release Nate Clements and sign Nnamdi Asomugha

2) Release Nate Clements and sign Nnamdi Asomugha

3) Release Nate Clements and sign Nnamdi Asomugha

49ers ready to scoop up undrafted players

The 49ers currently have 18 undrafted players on their roster, including 11 who spent time on the active roster last year: T Alex Boone, CB Tramaine Brock, TE Colin Cloherty, LB Keaton Kristick, S Chris Maragos, K Joe Nedney, K …

No two-a-days? Why not?

As part of the new CBA, the league may eliminate two-a-day practices during training camp. I remember Gene Upshaw telling me once he wanted two-a-days because his body needed to be contact-conditioned. Can’t get that in the weight room.

Uppy, however, played in a time in which offensive guards such as himself were considered huge at 255 pounds. Now guards are 100 pounds heavier and just as quick. To throw that kind of tonnage against each other twice-a-day in training camp is wasting a valuable resource.

Stamina always has been more important to develop in training camp than full-body contact. Contact is second-nature to NFL guys. Better to get them in shape so they don’t fatigue because a fatigued player is more likely to be hurt.

Push them hard once a day. Run those plays over and over. Do all the things you need to do to make any call a second nature response.

Jets linebacker Bart Scott is dead wrong. Eliminating two-a-days will NOT make football players soft. A guy doesn’t make it to the NFL being soft; his instinct is to go hard. And there’s nothing soft about a 16-game schedule.

Save bodies for the regular season.

The corner market: Assessing the available free-agent CBs

I spoke to NFL Films’ guru Greg Cosell today about the crop of free-agent cornerbacks – arguably the 49ers’ biggest problem area with training camp around the corner – including a player who is not technically a free agent but …

What Jed York is really saying about signing free agents

At a NFL event Monday in Los angeles, Niner president and CEO Jed York said what his general manager, Trent Baalke, said a week ago: The team will not be major players in signing free agents once a CBA is signed.

Reading between the lines are these words: The front office is expecting Jim Harbaugh to take basically the same team Mike Singletary had and coach ‘em up.

To not make a concerted push for a nose tackle or a defensive back, York and Baalke have put it all on Harbaugh, the inference being quite clear: We believe he is a better coach than Singletary.

Sure, they are saying they want to build a team through the draft but the 49ers’ first two picks are projects. They very well may turn into having huge upsides but no one except his mother expects rookie quarterback Colin Kaepernick to be an effective starter this season.

Maiocco: Examining the 49ers’ salary cap

After a one-year hiatus, the salary cap will return to the NFL this season. The cap ceiling is expected to be 120 million per team. Right now, the 49ers cap value is 102 million. Check out where it all goes.

Jed York: 49ers won’t be big players in free-agent market

Unless the Niners are doing some serious bluffing, it appears safe to kiss those Nnamdi Asomugha dreams bye-bye. And don't waste your time imagining Sidney Rice in red and gold, either. At the NFL 101 fan event in Los Angeles on Monday night, San Francisco president and CEO Jed York ,...

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Alex Smith: 49ers don’t need two-a-days, but full training camp is a must

Joe Staley says he’s endured two-a-day padded practices since he was five years old. They are as much a part of football as goal-line stands and shoulder pads. But that isn’t to say that Staley and his teammates necessarily will …

Expect a different role for Frank Gore this season

Frank Gore is only 28 years old but he has carried the ball 1,371 times already in the NFL. His career average of 4.7 yards per carry is superb. But Gore is entering a time in which much-used running backs start to wear down.

To that, apparently, Niners coach Jim Harbaugh has an answer.

“It’s not that my running style will change,” Gore told SI.com. “He’s just going to get me catching the ball more and getting me a lot of space. He’ll be doing a lot of different things instead of (running against) eight or nine men in the box. He’s just trying to get the box loosened up for me.”

Former head coach Mike Singletary didn’t believe in such nuance. It was smash ‘em and then smash ‘em again and kept doing it to they wither. Gore suffered a season-ending hip injury last season and was it a coincidence? I don’t think so.

Gore is fearless but there’s nothing wrong with playing smarter and keeping such talent on the field more because of it.

Gore’s 4.2 avertage per carry last season was his lowest seasonal average of his career.

‘Coach’ Jennings eager to learn from special-teams guru Seely

Brian Jennings has typically dedicated part of his offseason to educating himself. In past years, the 49ers' long snapper and longest-tenured player has attended the NFL's Business Management and Entrepreneurial programs at Harvard and Stanford. He's become a certified yoga instructor. And he's...

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Wide-open spaces? Gore anticipates less congestion in 2011

Frank Gore's hip is reportedly healthy. And so is his outlook as he anticipates a season free of we're-going-to-play-smashmouth-try-to-stop-it offensive football. In this interview with SI.com , the Niners' running back expressed confidence in Jim Harbaugh's ability to make opposing...

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In good hands: Rookie Miller learning passing game from Kaepernick

Rookie quarterback Colin Kaepernick already has picked up one thing from Alex Smith: hospitality. During the lockout, Smith bought a plane ticket to California for sixth-round draft pick Ronald Johnson and then lent Johnson his wife’s car while he …

49ers’ free agency: The signing they need to make

49ers general manager Trent Baalke told Tim Kawakami that he didn't think the 49ers would be active when free agency dawns. Should the lockout talks continue, the word is the team would have three days to sign their own free agents before the market opens. July 28 is one date mentioned for the...

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All you need do is be on the sidelines for two minutes

That’s all. Just spend two minutes on the sidelines of any NFL game, be it exhibition, a blow-out, in the rain, snow or hot sun. Just spend two minutes on the sidelines and listen and watch.

If you ever doubt whether the players need lifetime health care, that will clear up the mystery. Fans can’t appreciate the force and the violence of the game from the stands. “The sound of a train wreck” that’s what Steve Young called it. And he’s right.

As John Madden once told me, “Play one down in a NFL game, and your body will never be the same for the rest of your life.”

It’s not just the sound of bodies thumping. You hear groaning. You hear what appears to be bones cracking. You see guys with matching 4.4 speed collide with each other.

No one forces them to do this, it’s true, but they are out there for our amusement, and they do so knowing every play could not only be their last, but also the last time they walk or run.

 I have seen Dave Casper, the superb Raider tight end of the ’70s, walk like an old man five years after his retirement. I have seen so many retired players in such bad ways, it’s criminal that the NFL penny pinches.

With the kind of ever-present health care they will need, including hip, shoulder and knee replacements, not to mention dementia, the NFL owners need to be a responsible partner. I see it, in fact, as a moral imperative.

I don’t always side with players, especially baseball players. But the beating a pro football player takes, no other athlete can match it.

Media are allowed on the field during the final two minutes. That’s why I can say what I have said. I’ve seen it first-hand.

Soon-to-be-busy Baalke addresses 49ers’ hot topics

With a new labor agreement looming on the horizon, it will not be long before 49ers general manager Trent Baalke's plan for the 2011 season is put into action.

Everything’s in place except, well, the stadium

Joe Montana is heading a business group that has received permission to lease some land in Santa Clara to build a luxury hotel project.

The Hotel To Be Named Later will sit next to The Stadium That Has Yet To Be Financed, Much Less Built.

Joe, you’re known for miracle finishes. But this will be your toughest opponent. The new stadium is scheduled to open by 2015. About the time Alex Smith wins a Super Bowl.

The whole point of Tuesday’s announcement was to provide some energy to push the stadium deal along faster. With Eddie DeBartolo Jr. and Montana on board, their high profile names will go a long way to making the stadium a reality. That’s the theory anyway.

We’ll find out how much their names are worth. The price tag for The Stadium That Has Yet To Be Built is nearing a billion dollars. How much will the love for the good ol’ days translate into hard cash? Stayed tuned. Remember, the 49ers’ last Super Bowl champiopnship was 17 years ago.

Rookie wage scale: Aldon Smith focused on performance, not paycheck

One of the major issues during this week's NFL labor negotiations is a non-issue for one player whose bank account will be affected. Niners rookie linebacker Aldon Smith , the No. 7 overall pick in the NFL draft, said he's not worried about the implications of a rookie wage scale. ESPN...

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Bob St. Clair would like lifetime health insurance for the retired players.

St. Clair, the 49ers Hall of Fame offensive tackle, is not bothered by the lockout taking this long. However, he is very angry at how the NFL continues to disregard the players who came before.

“What really disappoints me,” St. Clair said, “is that we are not represented by the NFLPA. They only deal with the active players. They have even come out and said they don’t represent us (retired players).”

The root of the problem is long-term health care. Former Detroit Lion offensive tackle Lomas Brown said that the NFL should provide lifetime health care for its retired players. Some think that is excessive. Not St. Clair.

“Absolutely (they should),” St. Clair said. “Hell yes. That’s what we are fighting for. I am really lucky, luckier than most of the guys. The helmets when I played didn’t provide any protection at all. Concussions? We’d get concussions every game. I know I am having trouble with my memory.

“But I go to golf tournaments and I see guys I played with and against in wheelchairs, unable to walk. Dementia, crippled bodies, there’s no question it’s caused by the sport. No question.”

What also angers St. Clair is the current NFL health insurance plan: It covers a player for only the first five years after retirement. For most players that’s around 30. The disabling injuries don’t surface, typically, until later.

Considering what the retired players have done for the league, lifetime health insurance for players is not an insipid request. The owners owe the players that. It’s called respect.

Even a modified plan would be better than what is currently in place: Five years of health insurance for every year played.

Video-taping a player with dementia is not the kind of publicity the NFL likes.

More Miller: DE-turned-FB could be special-teams stalwart

Due to an elaborate game of phone tag, I didn't speak with Central Florida defensive line coach Jim Panagos before this story ran this week on his longtime pupil, 49ers rookie Bruce Miller . But after finally connecting with Panagos today, I thought his insights were worth passing along....

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Q&A: Quick resolution on Clements contract favors 49ers

@RichardWoodbury (Richard Woodbury) What are the odds Clements re-signs?

A: Well, he’s not a free agent. He’s signed for 2011, but at a salary that is unworkable for the team. So the question is whether he renegotiates a deal or …

Why there is hope for Michael Crabtree

Remember two seasons ago when a talented 49er was criticized for being inconsistent and not a team player? Remember how we all moaned that Vernon Davis had such untapped talent that if applied properly, he would become an All-Pro?

Last year Davis had the highest average-per-catch of any tight end in the NFL, 16.3 yards. He was the first tight end in 49er history to lead the team  in catches, receiving yards and touchdowns. Yes, Mike Singletary had something to with whipping Davis into shape; it may have been Singletary’s only major and lasting contribution to the 49ers.

Fact is, Davis took his game out of the dumper and is now a team leader.

Crabtree, of course, is inconsistent, me-first, who disappears in games. He needs to mature just as Davis did.

Even though Crabtree has frustrated Niner fans, ponder this: Crabtree’s numbers through the first 27 games of his NFL career are better than Terrell Owens and J.J. Stokes. OK, OK, Stokes was a bust of huge proporitions.

Still Crabtree has 103 receptions, T.O. 84 through their first 27 games. Crabtree has 1,366 receiving yards, Owens 1,306. Owens has more Tds, 11-8.

Stokes numbers BTW: 103 receptions, 1,330 yards, eight touchdowns.

So while Crabtree has been a frustrating disapppointment thus far, he has shown talent. He hasn’t completely disappeared. And, if he could have just a good sit-down with Davis, he might learn something, something that would give the 49er offense a strong boost toward respectability.

It would be a surprise, given his past, but surprises do happen. Look at Vernon Davis.

After Smith and Baas, which offensive free agents will return?

Yesterday we looked at the 49ers defensive free agents who are most likely to return in 2011. Today, we turn our attention to the offense, including the two players who promise to handle the ball most this season:

Welcome back:…

Maiocco: Uncertainty abounds on 49ers’ defense

The 49ers' defense includes four starters -- and one potential starter -- up for free agency. San Francisco is prepared to lose nose tackle Aubrayo Franklin and outside linebacker Manny Lawson.

Normally I wouldn’t agree with much of anything Deion Sanders says

Deion Sanders is a Hall of Famer and was a colorful quote as a player but restraint, well, I never saw much of it. Deion made it a point to be outrageous.

Yet, what Deion told WCNN, via SportsRadioInterviews.com, I couldn’t disagree.

“Everybody around them (are) ‘yes men’,” Sanders said. “You gotta start hiring ‘no man’. Somebody is going to tell you no. Someone who is going to tell the truth and a lot of these guys don’t.”

An entourage for a NFL player is a sight to see, from bodyguards, trainers, agents, handlers, blah, blah. What Sanders said made sense and is necessary.

Consider this: Sports Illustrated recently reported that 78 percent of NFL players are either bankrupt or are in severe financial distress two years after retiring.

It’s clear the owners don’t care. With the average playing career less than four years, a NFL player is a commodity to be used, then discarded and forgotten.

It’s also clear that it’s the rare agent who can restrain a player from being the fool, investing poorly or otherwise put the breaks on I’m-23-and-I-got-the-world-wrapped-around-my-finger.

Both owners and agents would do themselves a big favor by taking care of the players. The second-best advertisement for pro football is an ex-player who contributes to society, rather than one who appears on a police blotter or files bankruptcy.

The best advertisement, of course, is the current player who doesn’t appear on a police blotter or files for bankruptcy.

Free-agent DE McDonald hopes to find his sacks in San Francisco

Niners free-agent defensive end Ray McDonald ranked second on the team last year in quarterback pressures and finished third in quarterback hits. Sacks? That's a sore subject for McDonald, whose teammates still tease him about the sea of signal-callers that got away. For all his time spent in...

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What to do with Nate Clements?

How can the 49ers justify keeping Clements around this season for $15.2 million ($7.25 million base salary, $7.95 million reachable incentives)?

After a CBA is reached, NFL teams will have three days to deal exclusively with their own free agents. Clements, an average-producing cornerback, will be the first name on the what-do-list.

Yes, Clements was third on the team in tackles last season. He did have three interceptions, and forced three fumbles. But those numbers aren’t impressive, especially those tackles. The only way cornerbacks are close to leading a team in tackles is because the pass defense is weak.

And that the 49ers were in 2010, 24th in pass defense. Since Clements signed as a free agent on March 3, 2007, he has not played up to his 8-year, $80-million contract.

You wouldn’t call Clements a bust. He has 10 interceptions in his four 49er years. But when you sign someone for that long for that kind of money, he better be a shutdown corner and a Pro Bowler. Clements has been neither.

Either Clements agrees to take a huge pay cut or the 49ers release him. He may agree to be released and shop his services but it says here that if he does, Clements won’t be getting Pro Bowl money somewhere else.

Jim Harbaugh’s toughest job this season

How many incomplete passes from Alex Smith will it take for the head coach to yank him?

How many looks of indecision will Smith give him before Kaepernick starts?

How many times will he wish Andrew Luck was taking the snaps?

NFL conventional wisdom always has had the promising rookie quarterback waiting, developing, maturing. Don’t throw him in there right from the get-go like the Patriots did once to Jim Plunkett; took years for Plunk’s body and mind to get over the battering.

That’s conventional wisdom, of course. Harbaugh, on the other hand, is not a conventional guy, not afraid to push the outside of the envelope.

From the second the 49ers open practice the Alex-Colin dynamic is the elephant in the room. How much latitude will Harbaugh give Smith, if Kaepernick shows even the slightest amount of success? 

If Harbaugh is too patient with Smith as he struggles, the vets on the team will shrug, sigh and begin to lose faith in their rookie coach.

If Harbaugh has a quick trigger with Smith, if he feels the impatience of fans drawing hot on his neck, he’ll alienate Smith if Harbaugh has to come back to him if Kaepernick struggles.

And if neither one work out, will people say, “Andrew Luck made Jim Harbaugh a better coach than he really is”?

49ers free agents: Who stays? Who goes?

The 49ers might get a three-day window to negotiate with their own free agents before the start of what promises to be a Wild West free-agency period. The team has 15 free agents on the roster. I’ve divided the list …

49ers wideouts: They give as well as receive

If the 49ers' receivers were a family, they'd fall nicely into the "functional" category. Certainly, Michael Crabtree's sometimes strange behavior and comments can give one pause, but the rest of the group comes off as earnest, hard-working and yes, normal. This despite being thrust into an...

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Kyle Williams prepared to prove himself after painful rookie year

Niners wide receiver Kyle Williams didn't have a chance to celebrate the lone highlight of his rookie season. Last year, in the 49ers' first preseason game, the shifty Williams returned his first punt 36 yards and ... tore a toe ligament in the process. He was sidelined for eight weeks,...

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