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Kaepernick on playing in Seattle: “You have to try to project your voice.”

SANTA CLARA — Colin Kaepernick spoke in the locker room Wednesday afternoon. Here’s a transcript courtesy of the 49ers.

 

Let’s ask you about the commercial on EA Madden. Those are great. Is it a real deal? Are somebody’s eyebrows coming off after this game?

“I’m going to let to you ask [Seahawks QB] Russell [Wilson] about that one.”

 

How well do you know him? How did you get to know him?

“Just spent one day with him while we were shooting.”

 

That’s it?

“Yes.”

 

What was your take?

“He’s a good guy, a good football player.”

 

Did you talk a lot about football?

“Little bit here and there.”

 

Was the eyebrow thing one of your ideas or was that something they threw at you and you went for it?

“Not my idea.”

 

His idea?

“I don’t know.”

 

Was that in LA?

“Yes.”

 

As you go from Green Bay then looking at their DBs, CB Richard Sherman and back there, very physical. What’s the biggest change for the 49ers offense going up against Seattle’s D?

“Our receivers have to be more physical. As an offense, we have to be more physical. They’re a great defense.”

 

How tough is it on a quarterback with that noise up there?

“You just have to be prepared for it. You have to be on top of everything that you’re doing.”

 

Do you have to yell a little bit louder in the huddle or just use less words in the huddle?

“Yeah, you have to try to project your voice, make sure everyone’s hearing what’s going on.”

 

Did the deep run in the playoffs help you prepare for the noise in a road environment?

“You have to be ready for noise any road game.”

 

This is one of the most intense rivalries on the West Coast. Do you guys talk about that in the locker room or is that just the next game?

“Next game for us.”

 

That’s it?

“Need it to win the NFC West. That’s what we’re worried about.”

 

Speaking of WR Anquan Boldin, he said that the Green Bay defense gave the looks that he saw on film. When you go up against Seattle, do you see more improvisation against a defense like that where they’re more physical that you’ll need with your receivers and in this passing game?

“I’m not worried about our receivers. Our receivers have been doing a great job. They know how to get open, they know how to be physical.”

 

Do you enjoy this Seahawks week though?

“I enjoy every week. It’s football.”

 

What kind of relationship were you able to strike up with Russell Wilson?

“Just had a few brief conversations in between shooting.”

 

Has that continued since the shoots? Do you text each other, anything like that?

“No.”

 

Do you kind of admire him from afar, what he’s been able to do up in Seattle?

“I watch a lot of quarterbacks. I have a great appreciation for what a lot of people are doing.”

 

What do you like about his game?

“He makes plays. Ultimately that’s what it comes down to. He goes out there and he helps his team win.”

 

Do you have a confidence in Anquan that even when he’s being covered, if you throw it to him, he’s going to be the guy that comes down with the ball?

“Yeah, I think he’s proven that time and time again that he’s that type of receiver where if you give him a chance, more than likely he’s coming down with it.”

 

There was a play in Sunday’s game where you had to roll out right and find Boldin and RB Frank Gore threw a block to help give you some extra space. What does Frank mean to the offense overall?

“Frank’s an animal back there. He’s one to do anything and everything for this offense to try to help us win.”

 

Who do you think is going to look better with one shaved eyebrow?

“I’m not thinking about that. I’m worried about getting the win.”

 

When it comes to play clock management, preparing for this week, is it something that’s lightening the offensive calls that are going in or how are you addressing that this week?

“We just have to be more efficient in getting calls in and getting to the line of scrimmage. That’s not going to affect how we call plays.”

 

You don’t have to tell me, but do you have ideas about how to do that that you’re sharing with offensive coordinator Greg Roman?

“We just have to be faster.”

 

Those guys aren’t the only team that has guys that like to chirp and chatter during the game, how do you respond to that in big games?

“You play. You go out and you make plays, chirping stops.”

 

Did you ever get caught up in that as a kid or anything?

“It really depends.”

 

Your game up there last year wasn’t obviously your best. Was that a function of what they were doing defensively or what led to that?

“We performed bad as a team. We played bad that game. We’re going up there to try to prove that’s not who we are.”

 

On another note, your coach had a few words for Packers LB Clay Matthews, he said that his slap was not too manly, I’m paraphrasing. Do you appreciate the fact that he obviously has your back in those situations?

“You always appreciate when your coach and teammates have your back, any situation.”

Harbaugh: “I get a kick out of every week, watching our team compete.”

SANTA CLARA — Jim Harbaugh spoke in the media tent Wednesday afternoon. Here’s a transcript, courtesy of the 49ers.

 

WR Kassim Osgood is back on the team, what do you expect from him?

“He is. I expect major contributions on special teams.”

 

Will he be a gunner?

“He’ll be a core player.”

 

What weighed into the decision to put LB Nick Moody on short-term IR rather than maybe save that spot for an offensive or defensive starter down the road?

“We decided that that was in the best interest of the team, replace his, Moody a core special teams player, a very valuable player and we wanted no drop off. With Kassim’s proven ability and experience we feel like, that he’ll do a great job.”

 

How long do you expect Moody out?

“He’ll miss seven games.”

 

You talked on Monday about it’s the most important game because it’s the next game, this game against Seattle. Do you think your team buys into that as well?

“I hope so.”

 

Do you sense that this is, because of everything, the rivalry that’s developed here, that it means more than just the typical game?

“10 out of 10 your next game is your most important game of the season. So, I don’t know if you can make it 11 out of 10 you know, it’s 10 out of 10. Every time you play the next game that’s the way we look at it.”

 

Are you guys doing anything different to prepare for the noise?

“Different?”

 

Than you would in a typical road week?

“Very similar to how we prepare for all road games.”

 

And that’s bringing in speakers and working on the hand signals and things like that?

“We’ll have crowd noise yes.”

 

If memory serves, you guys struggled on third downs up there last season. You seemed to do OK in Sunday’s opener on that and obviously a big point of emphasis this offseason to improve in that area?

“Well, there’s definitely some improvement. We did a good job on third down in our opening game, and we’re working very hard to continue that.”

 

Back in the old days, like when you played, they always said that quarterbacks took two to three years or more to develop from when they came into the league they just couldn’t just, and yet now however many years later that offenses are more sophisticated, defenses, why do we see so many guys coming in like QB Colin Kaepernick and Seahawks QB Russell Wilson and just instant coffee?

“Instant what?”

 

Instant coffee, they’re just really good right from the, there’s no break-in?

“I think a lot of the people have talked about that, have done a really good job in talking about that. I think you’re seeing a time where there’s just a lot of good young quarterbacks coming into the league. You know the names and they’re doing a fabulous job right from the get-go, talent.”

 

Do you think some of it is like the better coaching like the high school and college level to get here do you think, quarterbacks?

“Probably, yeah sure it does.”

 

When you have trouble getting the play off and end up getting a penalty, typically where is the breakdown? I’m sure you’ve analyzed this.

“I think you guys have done a great job of analyzing that as well, and we’re working hard to improve it.”

 

You’ve been obviously on that sideline two years now, is the noise at Seattle, how difficult does it make it on an offense to function?

“In terms of communicating, it makes it harder, yes.”

 

Is it the loudest spot in the NFL?

“I don’t know. It’s very loud. They do a very good job of bringing a lot of noise up there. Not to compare it to anywhere else, but should be right up there.”

 

Do you have to limit what you do because of it?

“We strive hard not to.”

 

There have been allegations over the years that they artificially enhance that noise. Do you have any opinion on that, whether the loud speakers are contributing to the din?

“I really don’t know anything about that.”

 

Not to sell special teams short, but it’s played a big role in your games against Seattle over the years, is that a point of emphasis as well this week?

“Every week.”

 

When you look at the film from Seattle against Carolina, what did Seattle do differently that struggled in their running game with Seattle RB Marshawn Lynch that you noticed?

“I think Carolina’s got a very good run stopping defense, a very good defense overall. We know that Seattle’s a outstanding physical, running team. Outstanding up front. Outstanding physical backs and we will have our hands full. That’ll be a great challenge for our run stoppers.”

 

So much of your production in the passing game was two receivers, TE Vernon Davis and WR Anquan Boldin. Do you guys have the weapons, you think, to complement those two guys with the other guys on the team?

“Yes.”

 

Who in particular, do you think, can step up and make plays to pick up the slack?

“I’m not noticing the slack that you’re referring to. So, you know the names, [WR] Quinton Patton, [WR] Marlon Moore, [WR] Kyle Williams, [TE] Vance McDonald, [TE] Garrett Celek and our running backs. I’m glad I listened to your radio show last night. I just know exactly what you’re going to ask. I got to do that more often. I got to find out what –?”

 

Good prep, huh?

“Yeah.”

 

Quinton Patton only had four snaps, do you expect him to get more involved in the offense, more playing time, more –?

“I do.”

 

ME: Is there an ideal amount of time you’d like left on the play clock when the offense arrives at the line of scrimmage?

“I wouldn’t say that, an ideal amount of –, you’re saying an ideal amount of time when the offense goes to the line of scrimmage?”

 

ME: An ideal amount of time you’d like left on the play clock when your offense arrives at the line of scrimmage. 15 seconds? 14 seconds?

“I like it to vary, I would. I wouldn’t like it to be just, this is the time we’re going to be at the line of scrimmage, this is the time that we’re going to snap the ball, on the play clock. I like that that varies for our offense.”

 

Why?

“Because the defense doesn’t know exactly when the ball’s going to be snapped. If we announce a time, ‘It’s always going to be snapped at 5 seconds on the play clock, or 2 seconds on the play clock, or 12 seconds on the play clock,” then they would know exactly what time the ball’s being snapped in the play clock. So, I like the variation.”

 

But when you arrive at the line it obviously gives the quarterback more time to do things. So, is there an ideal time you like arriving then?

“Not necessarily, because sometimes we like to get up there and just snap it and not do anything at the line. Sometimes we’ll have the snap count vary, have the doing things vary.”

 

You get to speak to him until 10 seconds left on the play clock?

“15.”

 

And up to that point, are you constantly in his ear talking about defensive formation possibilities and different play calls?

“No, not constantly in his ear.”

 

On Monday you touched on this rivalry just a little bit and what it does for everybody involved. Do you get a kick out of this Seahawks week or do we make more of it than you’d like?

“I don’t know what you’re making out of it, but it’s the most important game on our schedule because it’s the next game on the schedule. I get a kick out of every week, watching our team compete. And very much looking forward to this game, big game.”

 

You might be aware, CB Richard Sherman and WR Doug Baldwin have had comments, it doesn’t seem like they’re too fond of you these days. Do you share any animosity towards those guys?

“Again, I don’t know what you’re talking about there. No, I have long and good memories, fond memories of both Richard and Doug when we were teammates. I understand now that we’re competitors, but I wish them both long and healthy careers.”

 

Are you aware of this eyebrow bet between Kaepernick and QB Russell Wilson?

“Just heard about that on Matt Maiocco’s show.”

 

Will you get one going between you and Seattle Seahawks head coach Pete Carroll, shave an eyebrow?

“No.”

 

What’s your reaction to the bet?

“I don’t have one. I didn’t have one when I heard it on Matt’s show. It’s irrelevant to me, in terms of the game.”

Similarities may be at the root of 49ers and Seahawks’ rivalry

The 49ers and Seahawks don’t seem to like each other. Could it be because they are so similar? “We’re trying to play as tough as we can play every time we come out,” Seahawks coach Pete Carroll said on a conference call Wednesday. “I think they kind of think the same way. I think you’re going to get a matchup of a pretty good approach from both sides.” Both coaches are downplaying the matchup and personal rivalry that dates to their days at Stanford and USC. Asked about having two of Harbaugh’s former Stanford players (wide receiver Doug Baldwin and cornerback Richard Sherman), Carroll retorted that he also had two Cal players, running back Marshawn Lynch and defensive tackle Brandon Mebane.

49ers preparing to tame ‘Beast Mode’ in Seattle

As much as Frank Gore and the 49ers running game sputtered in the season-opening win over Green Bay, the Seahawks running game fared worse in its 12-7 victory against Carolina in Week 1. How tough was it for Seattle? Marshawn Lynch, who led Seattle's third-ranked rushing attack last season with 1,590 yards, had only 43 yards on 17 carries against the Panthers. The Seahawks finished with 70 total rushing yards. "Not everything worked out the way that we¹d liked," coach Pete Carroll told The News Tribune (Tacoma). "We didn't run the ball very well. In our program, as you guys know, that's a huge focus and so we were disappointed." Carroll said before that game, his team altered a few things in the run game after spotting certain tendencies by the Panthers on video. The adjustments obviously didn't work.

WR Osgood will be next new face on 49ers’ coverage unit

After ranking 31st in the NFL in kickoff-return coverage in 2012, the 49ers revamped special-teams unit got off to an encouraging start in Week 1. Green Bay’s Jeremy Ross averaged 13.3 yards on three returns, Phil Dawson had four touchbacks and the Packers’ average drive started on their 19.5-yard line thanks in part to the unit’s exemplary play. Now, that overhauled coverage crew will be further re-tooled. The 49ers have signed wide receiver receiver Kassim Osgood, 33, a three-time Pro Bowler as a special-teams ace, who was released by the team on Aug. 31. Osgood will assume the roster spot of rookie linebacker Nick Moody, who will be placed on injured reserve with the designation to return. Moody’s right hand was heavily bandaged on Tuesday when he was observed in the locker room. Moody can’t practice until at least six weeks have passed, and he can’t be activated for at least eight weeks.

Boldin wins Player of the Week honor in 49ers debut

On Monday, 49ers coach Jim Harbaugh was asked which player would get his vote for NFC Offensive Player of the Week. “I’m partial so it’d probably be a 49er player,” Harbaugh answered. That did not exactly narrow it down. After all, 49ers quarterback Colin Kaepernick threw for 412 yards and three touchdowns, and wide receiver Anquan Boldin accounted for more than half of those yards with 13 receptions for 208 yards and one touchdown in the team's 34-28 season-opening victory over the Green Bay Packers. The NFL has spoken. And the answer is . . . Boldin. Boldin’s 208 yards receiving Sunday was the second-most productive game of his career. In his NFL debut in 2003, he caught 217 yards in passes for the Arizona Cardinals against the Detroit Lions.

Remembering 9-11

49ersParadise.com podcast interview with SeahawksFTW.com

Audio is a bit shaky, but click to listen to an interview 49ersParadise.com did on the SeahawksFTW.com website

Catch me if you can: 49ers have new way to prepare for Russell Wilson

The Panthers had Russell Wilson surrounded Sunday, and it seemed like the Seattle quarterback would be sandwiched between two fast-approaching defensive ends for a key, third-down sack.

Instead, Wilson retreated 17 yards, spun away from one defender, ducked under the …

B.J. Daniels: “I’m just trying to pick up everything at a fast rate. You can’t redshirt.”

SANTA CLARA – B.J. Daniels spoke at his locker Tuesday afternoon. Here’s what he said.

Q: So, are you Russell Wilson this week?

DANIELS: (Laughs) I don’t know yet. I’m honestly not even sure yet.

Q: Were you Aaron Rodgers last week?

DANIELS: No, I was B.J. Daniels last week (more laughs).

Q: Do you think that that is a logical assignment for you to do your best Russell Wilson impersonation in practice this week?

DANIELS: I don’t know. I’m going to do whatever the coaches ask me to do. I don’t know what’s going to happen. I just got done getting in some extra work with the young guys. Right now, I’m just trying to master this offense.

Q: What was your role during the Packers’ week?

DANIELS: Just helping out with the scout team. Still learning with the first-year offense. Trying to take mental reps and watch Kap do his thing and get ready for Green Bay.

ME: Do you have the playbook down pat yet, or how difficult is that process?

DANIELS: I’m just trying to pick up everything at a fast rate. You can’t redshirt. You have to hurry up and get in and make sure you’re studying. The coaches have high expectations of you, so each day in practice you have to go out and prove yourself, be consistent. One of the things Coach Harbaugh always talks about is not being an error-repeater, but to continue to improve and show progress.

Aldon Smith says the 49ers’ upcoming game in Seattle is “just another game.”

SANTA CLARA – Aldon Smith spoke at his locker Tuesday afternoon. Here’s what he said.

Q: What’s the advantage of playing you both on the right and left sides?

ALDON SMITH: It gives me a chance to move around a little bit.

Q: Does it give opponents to think about in a week, that you could be on either side?

ALDON SMITH: Yeah, it gives them something to game plan for.

Q: Are you as comfortable playing next to Ray McDonald as you are playing next to Justin Smith?

ALDON SMITH: We all know each other’s strengths and weaknesses. Being able to move around helps out.

Q: What did you see on film from the Seahawks in their first game of the season?

ALDON SMITH: We’ve just got to make sure we’re on top of our stuff – defending the run, defending the option and then defending the pass. This week we’ll make sure we focus on those things so when game time comes, we’re ready.

Q: What are your recollections from last year in Seattle?

ALDON SMITH: We lost the game.

Q: They were very physical last year. Does that stick out? Your team doesn’t get pushed around very often and that seemed to be happening.

ALDON SMITH: Yeah, I don’t think we got pushed around. We didn’t play our best football. This team we’ll have two physical teams meeting up, we’ll have enough time to prepare for each other so we’ll see the results after the game.

Q: You didn’t have Justin Smith against the Seahawks Week 16 last year. Do you think having him back and being fully equipped will be a big difference?

ALDON SMITH: The more time you have to game plan, the more it increases your odds of winning. We’ve got a good week to prepare, everybody is focused so we’ll see how it goes in the game.

Q: What kind of challenges does Russell Wilson present you?

ALDON SMITH: He’s a mobile quarterback who can run around and he can throw the ball also.

Q: Does having B.J. Daniels in practice give you a nice Russell-Wilson-type player to go up against this week?

ALDON SMITH: I think so. B.J. and Russell are kind of similar. They both use their arms and their legs. I’m sure we’ll find a way to get B.J. to give us a good look this week.

Q: Obviously every game is important, but is it cool to have the two division heavy-weights slug it out early, maybe set the tone a little bit?

ALDON SMITH: I think it was just kind of seeing where we were at, coming out and playing an opponent that was really good, a quarterback that was really good, a team that is two years removed from the Super Bowl.

Q: I’m talking about this week, you guys and Seattle going at it Week 2.

ALDON SMITH: What about it?

Q: Is it cool to have the two division heavy weights…

ALDON SMITH: It’s just another game.

Dobbs returns from suspension; 49ers to release Tukuafu

****UPDATE — The 49ers announced they put Tukuafu on the waived/injured list. He was not on the team’s injury report last week and he did not play in Sunday’s…

Quick-Strike Colin: Kaepernick’s big-play ability has transformed offense

One stat line from Week 1 was efficient: 21 of 34, 173 yards, 2 TDs, 0 INT, two completions of 20 or more yards. The other stat line was electric: 27 of 39, 412 yards, 3 TDs, 0 INT, nine completions of 20 or more yards. That first stat line belongs to Chiefs quarterback Alex Smith. The second, of course, belong to 49ers quarterback Colin Kaepernick. I offer this not to knock Smith, but to highlight a significant change since Kaepernick became the starter on Nov. 19, 2012: The 49ers now possess a big-play, quick-strike, scare-the-bejeezus-out-of-defensive-coordinators offense.

49ers work out OT Jason Smith; inquired about QB Quinn

The 49ers on Monday worked out offensive tackle Jason Smith, the no. 2 overall pick in the draft by the Rams in 2009, according to a league source. Smith (6-5, 308) dealt with injuries – most significant, concussions – while …

Amidst play clock issues, 49ers consider condensing playbook

SANTA CLARA – The 49ers have a varied offensive playbook with a multitude of formations. That wide spectrum of possibilities can cause problems for any defense. But it can also cause its share of problems for the 49ers’ offense. The 49ers called four timeouts on offense Sunday against the Green Bay Packers with the play clock winding down. They were also flagged for one delay-of-game penalty in the 34-28 season-opening victory. On at least two occasions, the 49ers had troubles lining up in a legal formation.

Harbaugh to Packers’ Matthews: ‘Come with some knuckles, not an open slap’

Coach Jim Harbaugh literally offered up some fighting words to Green Bay Packers linebacker Clay Matthews on Monday, a day after Matthews delivered a late-hit tackle on Colin Kaepernick that sparked a sideline scrum. “If you’re going to go to the face, come with some knuckles, not an open slap,” Harbaugh said. “That young man works very hard on being a tough guy. He’ll have some repairing to do to his image after the slap.” Harbaugh was referring to Matthews’ tussle with 49ers left tackle Joe Staley immediately following the second-quarter hit on Kaepernick in Sunday’s 34-28, season-opening win over Green Bay.

NFL: Staley shouldn’t have been flagged for grabbing Matthews

Upon even further review: The 49ers didn’t benefit from the officiating crew after Packers linebacker Clay Matthews decked Colin Kaepernick out of bounds in their 34-28 season-opening win Sunday. NFL vice president of officiating Dean Blandino has determined today that only Matthews should have been flagged for a personal-foul penalty after the second-quarter play. Instead, 49ers left tackle Joe Staley was given an unsportsmanlike-conduct penalty for grabbing Matthews in retaliation.

Snap judgments: Ray McDonald, Justin Smith get more relief

In last year’s season opener against the Packers, left defensive end Ray McDonald played 100 percent of the 49ers’ defensive snaps – 68 plays total.

McDonald again played extensively in Sunday’s rematch. But perhaps signaling that there will be more …

Not bad for starters: First-round pick Reid has INT in solid debut

Sure enough, 49ers’ first-round pick Eric Reid made a rookie mistake he was lamenting after his NFL debut Sunday. Fortunately for the hard-hitting safety, it had nothing to do with his on-field play: Reid forgot to keep the ball as a keepsake after his second-quarter interception in San Francisco’s 34-28 win over Green Bay at Candlestick Park. “I didn’t keep the ball,” Reid said. “I don’t know what I was thinking, but I wish I would have kept it.” That wasn’t Reid’s only error – he also missed at least two tackles – but his six-tackle performance strongly suggested the 49ers didn’t err when they traded up to select him with the No. 18 pick in April.

49ers deliver more problems for Packers than read-option

Ah, the read option. It’s an element of the 49ers’ offensive arsenal that the Green Bay Packers spent the better part of eight months studying for and plotting against. Chalk up a little victory for the Packers on Sunday. But there was a much larger defeat in store for them. The 49ers’ run game, in general, did not create a whole lot of issues for Green Bay’s defense. But, now, the Packers have found a new set of problems when it comes to dealing with the 49ers quarterback Colin Kaepernick. The 49ers rolled up 494 yards of total offense in a season-opening 34-28 victory over the Packers on Sunday at Candlestick Park.

Notes: Davis’ two TD raises his career total to most ever by tight end against Packers

No tight end in NFL history has scored more touchdowns against the Green Bay Packers than Vernon Davis’ six, including Sunday’s pair in the 49ers’ 34-28 season-opening win. Davis put the 49ers ahead 7-0 on a 20-yard touchdown completion in the first quarter, and he scored again in the third quarter on a 2-yard toss [...]

Harbaugh: Boldin ‘worth every penny’

Anquan Boldin ran off the Candlestick park pitch as soon as it was allowed, because he’s played 10 years and change, because he’s played 141 games, because he’s 32 going on 33, and because he’s caught this many balls and gained this many yards and scored this many touchdowns before. But mostly, because “I’m a pro. This is my job.” Boldin didn’t need to linger long after putting his handprint in the wet cement of the Colin Kaepernick Era. He’d made his point, 13 times, for 208 yards and a touchdown. He’d been asked to make his point four additional times, but nobody’s perfect. He was, next to Kaepernick himself, the most indelible figure in San Francisco’s 34-28 win over Green Bay, but he’d be damned if he was going to be made the hero.

(too funny) On the positive side of losing…

Too funny not to share this article – though not about the 49ers, check it out:
read now

Admittedly, I’m stretching here. However, I did realize one benefit of losing.
I’m sure most of you have your gameday rituals. (If …

Armed and dangerous: Kaepernick leads season-opening 34-28 win over Packers

Packers linebacker Clay Matthews got his hits on Colin Kaepernick. But the 49ers quarterback punched back. Repeatedly. In a season-opening 34-28 win over the Packers on Sunday at Candlestick Park, Kaepernick threw for 412 yards and three touchdowns while rarely using his legs. With the Packers determined to stop his scrambling and read-options run, Kaepernick had 22 rushing yards, 159 fewer than he had in last season’s divisional-playoff win over Green Bay. With the 49ers trailing 28-24 with 8:26 left, Kaepernick led a game-winning 80-yard drive highlighted by a 43-yard completion to wide receiver Anquan Boldin, who had 13 catches, 208 yards and a touchdown after he was acquired from the Ravens for a sixth-round pick March. The game-winning drive was capped by a one-yard run by Frank Gore to give the 49ers a 31-28 lead with just under six minutes left.

Do You Mind: Kaepernick’s mental approach has him ready for 2013′s great expectations

Colin Kaepernick’s been busy getting ready for this, the first season-opening start of his 49ers career: 1:25 p.m, Green Bay Packers, Candlestick Park. “Yeah, football is why I’m here,” Kaepernick said in an exclusive interview (full transcript below). “I’m not here to do commercials or anything like that, or photo shoots, interviews, all those things. Those are all things that are extra. “If you don’t handle what you have to on the field, none of that other stuff matters.” Kaepernick believes his “overlooked” mental preparation — the subject of today’s game-day feature — keyed his accent into the starting job last season, when he took over in November for a concussed Alex Smith and ushered the 49ers into their first Super Bowl in 18 seasons.

Anquan Boldin: Ravens’ loss serves as a warning

Anquan Boldin said this week the Ravens’ 49-27 blowout loss to the Broncos Thursday merely reinforces a theme in the 49ers locker room that everyone will be gunning for last season’s Super Bowl participants this year.

“That message always has …

Packers have a painful plan for 49ers, but a solution is in the strategy

Here is my Friday column previewing the 49ers-Packers game.

Jim Harbaugh has to understand Clay Matthews isn’t bluffing.

Matthews wants to take out Colin Kaepernick. Every Packer does. Matthews said so. If the 49ers run the read-option, the Packers will try to hurt Kaepernick.

They’d be nuts not to. It’s legal. It’s smart. Knocking him out is the Packers’ best chance to win, and the read-option play is the best opportunity to knock him out. On a read-option, the offense leaves one pass rusher unblocked. The read-option is supposed to trick the rusher, he doesn’t know if the quarterback or the running back has the ball.

But the Packers’ rushers may not care who has the ball. They may just take out Kaepernick while he’s handing off on the option-read, while he’s still pretending to be a runner. Sure, Frank Gore may take the ball and gain 15 yards. But if Kaepernick goes down, the game would be over. Colt McCoy cannot beat the Packers. Sorry, Colt.

The 49ers should not run any read-option plays against the Packers. There is no reason to expose Kaepernick to unnecessary bodily harm. He can put up 30 points against the Packers’ defense as a traditional drop-back quarterback. The 49ers scored 30 points last year in Green Bay with Alex Smith at quarterback.

If the 49ers fall behind on Sunday, maybe they can use the read-option in the red zone. That’s the only time. They’re subpar in the red zone, so the read-option may be their best option down there. They could use it in the red zone because if the Packers focus on Kaepernick, Gore could burn them for a touchdown up the middle.

But is it worth the risk to run the read-option at all? The Niners have no chance of making the playoffs without Kaepernick.

So, let’s assume the 49ers protect Kaepernick, and he barely uses the read-option, and he doesn’t get knocked out of the game. Can they still possibly lose?

Yes.

When the 49ers lose, they get bullied. Offenses run the ball right into Justin Smith and Patrick Willis and NaVorro Bowman. These runs usually aren’t big-gainers – the 49ers’ front-seven is excellent – but the commitment to a balanced offense is key.

The 49ers’ defense tries to make the opponent one-dimensional – passing only – and last season the Packers’ offense was happy to oblige them, to submit. Green Bay rushed 22 times in two games against San Francisco. Forty-Niners’ defensive coordinator Vic Fangio called those two performances “basketball on grass.” Not a compliment.

Basketball on grass – or ballet on grass, however you want to call it – is not how you beat the 49ers. Running the ball is what the Vikings did on September 23, 2012 when they unexpectedly beat the 49ers 24-13. Remember, you have to bully the 49ers, be the more physical team. The Packers have to run the ball about 25 times on Sunday or they have no chance.

Let’s assume the Packers commit to their rush attack. If they can average a measly 3 yards per carry – doable – Aaron Rodgers can use the play-action pass. He needs the play-action pass or he’s a sitting duck.

The 49ers also have to be prepared for Rodgers’ quick, three-step-drop passes. Rodgers delivers the ball as fast as any quarterback, maybe faster, and his slot receiver, Randall Cobb, gets open almost instantly. Carlos Rogers will have trouble with him.

I just laid out two scenarios where the Packers can beat the 49ers. Do I think either will happen?

No.

The Packers’ offensive line stinks. Green Bay can’t consistently grind out 4 yards per play like the 49ers’ offense can because the Packers’ can’t keep defenders out of the backfield.

The Packers’ offensive tackles – 21-year-old rookie LT David Bakhtiari and 24-year-old, second-year RT Don Barclay – can’t hold up against the 49ers’ edge rushers, Aldon Smith and Ahmad Brooks. It’s a matchup of scrubs versus All-Pros. Rodgers needs the run fake to momentarily distract the pass rush and buy time to get the ball down the field. Even that is unlikely to save him, especially on third-and-long when everyone knows it’s a pass. The 49ers’ pass rush will be all over him. Talk about Kaepernick getting hurt, Rodgers will be ducking and covering.

Checkmate.

The 49ers will win 30-27.

Grant Cohn writes sports columns and the “Inside the 49ers” blog for The Press Democrat’s website. You can reach him at grantcohn@gmail.com

Notes: Boldin defends WR corps, Asomugha readies for first Packers encounter, Brooks’ turn for sacks

It looked like the Ravens could have used Anquan Boldin and many other former players Thursday night when they opened their title defense with a 49-27 loss at Denver. Asked if that loss should resonate and humble the NFC Champion 49ers, Boldin replied Friday: “That message is always preached around here. No one is going to lay down because you were in the Super Bowl last year. It’s the opposite. Everyone wants to beat you.” Boldin defended the 49ers’ suspect receiving corps entering Sunday’s season opener, stating: “They’re talented. You’ll see for yourself come Sunday and each game after. They’ll definitely make plays and they’re ready to make their mark on this league. I’m not worried about them at all.”

49ers invest in Harper’s development

Chris Harper was ticketed for a spot on the Seattle Seahawks practice squad this season. But the 49ers wanted him nearly twice as much as the standard practice-squad player. Practice-squad players are paid a minimum of $6,000 a week for a season-long salary of $102,000. The 49ers this week guaranteed Harper $202,000 of his first-year minimum salary of $405,000 to jump from the Seahawks' practice squad to the 49ers' 53-man roster. Harper does not figure to be much of a factor in the 49ers' offense as a rookie. But the 49ers want to give him a long look to see if he can transition from college wide receiver to the all-everything tight end role that Delanie Walker held with the 49ers in the past. Walker was capable of lining up in the backfield, H-back, tight end, slot and wide receiver. He played more than 60 percent of the 49ers' snaps last season before moving on to a starting role with the Tennessee Titans as a free agent.

K Dawson believes rookie long snapper’s aim will be true

The 49ers saved some cash by releasing long snapper Brian Jennings last week, but they did they cost kicker Phil Dawson some sleep in the process? When Dawson signed with San Francisco in March, he cited the presence of two old hands, Jennings and holder Andy Lee, as being part of the 49ers’ appeal. Any why not? Jennings, 36, has set the long-snapping standard for reliability in his 13 seasons: Over 208 games, nine placekickers and four punters, he never flubbed a snap or missed a contest.

Is Asomugha back on top? Packers should provide quick answer

If Nnamdi Asomugha is the 49ers’ most prominent mystery heading into the 2013 season, the Packers passing attack ought to provide a quick answer.

In last year’s Week 1 meeting against the San Francisco, quarterback Aaron Rodgers attempted a season-high …

Smith named in second lawsuit over 2012 house party

San Francisco 49ers' All-Pro Linebacker Aldon Smith and his former teammate, Delanie Walker, are facing another lawsuit. The second lawsuit filed this week in Santa Clara County comes from an attorney for Aaron Reyes, who is a friend of Ronndale Esporles, the plaintiff in the first lawsuit filed earlier this week. Both lawsuits stem from a 2012 house party Smith hosted at his San Jose home.

What’s behind the NFL’s failure to protect read-option quarterbacks like Colin Kaepernick?

The NFL just settled a legal challenge from 4,500 former players and their families to pay an estimated $765 million in damages for concussion-related injuries. NFL Commissioner Roger Goodell is on record saying that football culture needs to change in order to secure player safety, particularly for quarterbacks. Yet, with all of that, the NFL [...]

Vernon Davis on the 49ers’ final four plays of the Super Bowl: “I can’t even recall that situation.”

SANTA CLARA – Vernon Davis spoke in the media tent Thursday afternoon. Here’s a transcript.

Q: You’re old teammate, Randy Moss, said he wasn’t sure about the rhythm or rapport you have with Colin Kaepernick. Do you feel like you guys have something beyond what you had last year?

VERNON DAVIS: I do. I feel like me and Colin are on a different level than we were last year. When a quarterback just steps in, it takes some time for him to learn his receivers. That’s all based on timing. But we’ve been through minicamp, OTAs and training camp. We’ve had more than enough time to build on what we started.

Q: Randy’s not here anymore. Are you surprised at his thoughts?

VERNON DAVIS: He’s an analyst. That’s his job. His job is to critique our offense and say whatever it is that he feels it right. But my opinion is totally different that what he is saying. I think that we’re on a different level, for sure.

ME: You caught five or six passes from Kaepernick in the Super Bowl, but on the final four plays near the goal line Kaepernick didn’t once look your way. Have you been able to work on that in practice, or is that something you can practice in a pressure situation only?

VERNON DAVIS: That’s last year. I can’t even recall that situation. All I can remember is the work we put in throughout training camp, the work that we put in throughout minicamp. That’s all I can remember at the moment. I don’t look back. I continue to look forward. I can only worry about right now because we do today will set us up for the future. I’m very confident in Colin Kaepernick as well as him connecting with the rest of the receivers as well as myself.

Q: If you were an analyst, would you agree with Moss’ assessment just based on last season?

VERNON DAVIS: I don’t think you can base everything on what happened last year. A lot can change in six months. We’re talking about a whole season. This is a while back. Colin is a different man. Some of the things I learned this training camp, I didn’t learn last training camp. So, we’re in different places right now.

Q: How did the Packers play you?

VERNON DAVIS: They tried to bang me up a little bit. They put Charles Woodson on me when they went man-to-man and they just tried to take me away downfield, they would have A.J. Hawk drop back and a DB looking at me. They switch it up.

Q: Without Woodson, what do you anticipate on Sunday?

VERNON DAVIS: Hmmm. Don’t know. Not sure. I’m pretty sure they’ll try anything. They’re very creative over there.

Q: What specifically did you learn this offseason that you didn’t learn last offseason?

VERNON DAVIS: Route running. Working with the wide receivers. They really challenged me this training camp. Whatever I see them do, I try to do it better. That’s how you grow. That’s how you become a better player. Last year, I didn’t really work the wide receivers as much, maybe five times during training camp.  But I’ve been working with them all training camp. I had a chance to really detail my routes and learn what they were doing.

Q: What’s your impression of Chris Harper?

VERNON DAVIS: He’s fast. He’s explosive. He seems like a really good route runner. Athletic. He definitely fits the mold of Delanie Walker. I’m excited to see what he can help us with.

Notes: Roman sends message to Green Bay; CB Asomugha will play Sunday

In his weekly press conference today, the 49ers offensive coordinator wanted to send some seeds of doubt to the Packers, who have surely been downloading intel from former San Francisco quarterback Scott Tolzien this week. Tolzien, of course, signed with the Green Bay’s practice squad Sunday and his role as an informant has been an entertaining storyline leading up to Sunday’s season opener at Candlestick Park. Former 49ers quarterback Trent Dilfer believes Tolzien could provide a significant competitive advantage (here). Roman, however, suggested large swaths of the Week 1 game plan could be foreign to Tolzien, who was released Aug. 27.

49ers coordinators view hits on QB from different sides

In his weekly press conference today, the 49ers offensive coordinator wanted to send some seeds of doubt to the Packers, who have surely been downloading intel from former San Francisco quarterback Scott Tolzien this week. Tolzien, of course, signed with the Green Bay’s practice squad Sunday and his role as an informant has been an entertaining storyline leading up to Sunday’s season opener at Candlestick Park. Former 49ers quarterback Trent Dilfer believes Tolzien could provide a significant competitive advantage (here). Roman, however, suggested large swaths of the Week 1 game plan could be foreign to Tolzien, who was released Aug. 27.

Oh Kaptain, my Kaptain: 49ers vote for team captains

Colin Kaepernick not only took over Alex Smith’s starting job. Now he takes over Smith’s team captaincy.

On the 49ers, team captain is a two-year term. Smith was elected captain last year along with Justin Smith. Smith, of course, is …

Aaron Rodgers Q&A: ‘It was never about revenge’

In Santa Clara, Kaepernick, typically tight-lipped with local scribes and pundits, established a new standard for brevity, offering 164 words in response to 21 questions (words used by reporters to pose those questions: 434). In Green Bay, Rodgers, known for his dry wit, quoted Val Kilmer’s character in “Tombstone.” Did he still consider the 49ers a “revenge-type” game after his boyhood team passed on him in the 2005 draft? Rodgers channeled Doc Holliday. “It was never about revenge. It was about reckoning,” he said. “That’s a Tombstone line right there, people. It was never about revenge.” Niners fans, of course, could care less about their quarterback’s Belichickian press-conference statistics. They’ll happily point out the stats from last year’s divisional-playoff win over Green Bay when Kaepernick outplayed the 2011 NFL MVP. On Wednesday, of course, Rodgers was asked about that 45-31 loss, among other topics. He also discussed the 49ers’ defense, the addition of Seneca Wallace, 33, after the quarterback’s brief stay with San Francisco and the challenge facing the Packers’ two young offensive tackles.

Aldon Smith possibly facing criminal charges for possessing illegal assault rifles

The San Jose Mercury News just reported the Santa Clara District Attorney’s Office “is leaning toward” charging Aldon Smith with possessing illegal assault rifles. If he’s charged and convicted, he could face probation or up to three years in prison.

To read more, click here.

Randy Moss skeptical off Kaepernick-Davis tandem, encouraged by Boldin addition

Randy Moss thinks the 49ers could be better overall this season despite massive turnover in a receiving corps that included him last year. But Moss remains unconvinced in the passing-game tandem of Colin Kaepernick and tight end Vernon Davis, who’s expected to help fill the receiving void while Michael Crabtree recovers from an Achilles injury. “From my time there last year, it didn’t seem Kaepernick and Vernon Davis had a rapport. They haven’t shown that yet,” Moss said on a conference call as Fox Sports’ newest analyst.

Willis mostly healed and ready for opener

Patrick Willis missed all four exhibition games, but he looked just fine on the practice field four days before the 49ers open the regular season.

Packers’ offseason included visit with Kaepernick’s college nemesis

On Oct. 16, 2010, Nevada senior quarterback Colin Kaepernick threw two interceptions, had his third-lowest passer rating of the season, averaged 2.7 yards on 11 carries and the Wolf Pack suffered their only loss of the season, falling to Hawaii, 27-21, in Honolulu. One of the stars of that game: Hawaii defensive coordinator Dave Aranda, who successfully game planned against Kaepernick and Nevada’s Pistol offense. “It’s a scary offense,” Aranda told the Honolulu Star-Advertiser. “There’s so many things you have to stop in that offense. It preys on guys being indecisive. Guys being cued to wrong alignments, tied to the wrong spot. So I give all the credit to the players. They really focused in, and there was a plan, it had some complexity, they bought in and the players had a great night tonight.”

Harbaugh concerned about ‘tough talk’ regarding hits on QBs

Jim Harbaugh played Colin Kaepernick sparingly in the preseason and went to extreme measures to keep his quarterback free from harm during practices this summer. Not surprisingly, he’s not thrilled about the message NFL referees delivered to players this summer regarding hits on quarterbacks. As umpire Garth DeFelice explained when he visited Santa Clara, quarterbacks can be hit when they hand off to a runner and carry out a read-option fake. That is, when there is still a question of whether a quarterback still possesses the ball. Their only protection in such circumstances is normal unnecessary roughness rules. It’s only when a quarterback drops back and sets up as a passer that he is afforded the added protections given to signal-callers.

Packers’ McCarthy weighs in on Tolzien’s informant capabilities

The Green Bay Packers may have poached two ex-49ers quarterbacks off the market, but coach Mike McCarthy played coy about it Wednesday. Not Colt McCoy, that is. Scott Tolzien, the 49ers’ No. 3 quarterback the past two seasons, surely has more intelligence he can offer the Packers than Seneca Wallace, who had only a week tenure [...]

Dilfer: Ex-49ers QB Tolzien could give Packers assist

Green Bay practice-squad quarterback Scott Tolzien won’t play a snap Sunday, but he could influence the 49ers’ season opener against the Packers. That’s the assessment of former 49ers quarterback Trent Dilfer, who believes Tolzien’s intelligence could make him an ideal informant.

Despite rise to stardom, Kaepernick just scratching the surface

In the moments after the crushing defeat, Colin Kaepernick accepted responsibility for what occurred. "I feel like I made too many mistakes for us to win," said a downcast Kaepernick in the aftermath of the 49ers' 34-31 loss to the Baltimore Ravens in Super Bowl XLVII. Kaepernick threw for 302 yards -- his first time eclipsing the 300-yard mark as an NFL passer. He also rushed for 62 yards, including a 15-yard touchdown run, the longest in Super Bowl history from a quarterback. But a couple of overthrown balls and a failure to get into the end zone on three pass attempts from the Ravens' 5-yard line in the closing minutes sent Kaepernick into the offseason with an unfulfilled checklist.

Report: Aldon Smith and Delanie Walker named in lawsuit for 2012 shooting at party

NBC just reported Aldon Smith and Delanie Walker have been named in a lawsuit for a 2012 shooting at Smith’s house party in the East San Jose hills.

Smith and Walker allegedly fired illegally possessed guns into the air to get people to leave Smith’s party. This is the same party at which Smith got stabbed.

To read more about this, click here.

Brent Jones: “I’m focused on where we’re going to get output offensively from our WR position.”

Brent Jones spoke on KNBR Tuesday afternoon. Here’s what he said.

Q: Will there be anything Scott Tolzien can tell the Packers that will make a difference?

JONES: I think generally there could be a nugget or two. You know what he can do – and maybe they’ll change this up, but when you change stuff up that has been consistent, you kind of mess up your own team – (Tolzien can tell the Packers) what’s a live color, what’s a check-with-me-at-the-line-of-scrimmage. There are certain nuanced things about the way plays are called and the way you try you attack certain types of fronts that maybe he can tell. I don’t know if it’s going to make that much of a difference, but one or two little nuggets can be helpful along the way.

I’m sure Scott has more to contribute than poor Seneca Wallace.

Q: Was he just a sacrificial lamb brought in to make Colt McCoy reduce his salary?

JONES: Absolutely. He was not happy, but that’s life. He was used. I don’t know if he thinks the Packers are going to keep him – I’d be kind of surprised, but needless to say he’s on the team right now. You’ve got to let your play do the talking. He’s frustrated, but come in and show something. But maybe he didn’t get a chance.

Q: What’s a bigger concern for you if it’s a concern at all – the 49ers’ secondary or receivers?

JONES: First and foremost, I think our front seven is the best in the league. We’re going to be able to cover while our secondary starts to mesh. I thought Dashon Goldson was a fantastic safety and I thought Chris Culliver was tremendously under rated. I thought that was a big blow. Having a rookie come in and start at safety, he obviously can do some great things. He was a first round draft choice. He’s looked very good in the preseason. But there are still things that happen over the course of the regular season. People start scheming against you and people start getting you out of position or biting on play action or what have you. It’s going to take time for those guys to mesh, but I think our front seven can handle that and cover for any issues in the secondary.

I’m a little bit more focused on where we’re going to get output offensively from our wide receiver position. I’ve been a big Anquan Boldin fan over the years. With the Cardinals, I thought he was a force. But he’s not a “Hey, let me carry the team on my back, let me be an 85-catch wide receiver,” a guy that’s going to always get open over the course of the season. He’s a guy that’s going to get the ball in traffic, he’s very physical, he runs very good routes but he’s not going to be the deep threat. You always think of your No.1 guy as a guy who’s going to stretch defenses and create room for other people. He’s not necessarily going to be that guy, which puts a lot of pressure on who’s going to be the No.2

Now, the good news is Vernon Davis can be that guy. I think the 49ers early on, while we’re figuring out who the No.2 guy is, are going to need to work Vernon not only inline but maybe in motion, maybe in the slot, maybe outside. I think they’re going to want to put him in different places on the field where you have to respect his speed and you can’t have defensive backs cheating and sitting at 10 yards. That’s the worst, for a defense to compact or compress the throwing lanes. You’re going to have to have somebody that can get down the field and defenses respect their speed getting over the top so you can’t just have everybody sit at 10 or 12 yards. That’s when you start to see tipped balls and interceptions and we don’t want to see that.

I don’t want to say I’m concerned. I am focused on what we are going to do at the wide receiver position. We have some young guys that look like they can do it, but once the season starts and people start scheming and people are disguising press coverage and you’re pressed – can you get off? Can you get open? When it’s serious, it’s a completely different animal. It will be interesting to see.

I still feel good about our chances (against the Packers). I just feel like we’ve got a lot of good players on the 49ers. We should be back in the Super Bowl, but what Vegas says doesn’t always happen, so we have to earn it. We’re going to get everybody’s best every week. It’s going to be a fun season. I’m really looking forward to it. It’s been a long, long, long, long offseason. A couple of the injuries, especially the Crabtree injury, haven’t helped us at all.

Q: Who do you see stepping up at that No.2 receiver spot?

JONES: I’ve been a fan of Kyle Williams. The kid has a big heart. We all know what happened a couple of years ago with the punt situation. I admired how he handled adversity. He fought back and made himself a better player.

Quinton Patton I was really impressed with. You don’t see a young guy have that confidence. I like the way that he ran his routes, I like the way that he got off the line of scrimmage, in and out of his breaks, but it’s tough to rely on a young wide receiver. You don’t want to put so much pressure on him that he has to be the difference.

I think we have options. It will be interesting to see who rises to the top, or if we start rotating a little bit or if we start doing different things.

All is not lost. I’m not throwing up the red flag like hey, we’re in trouble. But we have to set the stage early. I don’t think we want people to have a bead on what we’re doing and it’s all Frank Gore and it’s all Colin Kaepernick on the read option and we don’t have receiving threats down the field. We’re going to have to get people off their mark, so to speak.

Dixon turns down $24K from Asomugha for No. 24

Veteran cornerback Nnamdi Asomugha offered Anthony Dixon a hefty sum of money to take over as No. 24 on the 49ers.

49ers CB Tarell Brown pursuing legal action against ex-agent, staying positive

Cornerback Tarell Brown is staying philosophical about the loss of $2 million in his contract. His deal stipulated that a $2 million was contingent upon his working out with the team over the off-season. Instead he spent most of the off-season working in his native Texas. Without the $2 million, Brown will play for the [...]
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