Report: Modkins emerges as top 49ers’ OC candidate
49ers’ Kelly fires offensive coordinator Geep Chryst
Report: ‘Strong possibility’ Mangini returns as 49ers DC
49ers choose Kelly for some reason
The 49ers announced that they have hired Chip Kelly as Head Coach. They have yet to hold a press conference on the new Head Coach… …
The Post-Wembley Wave
By the end of this year 24 NFL teams – 75% of all teams – will have travelled to London to play an international game. …
Pick ’em: 49ers search reportedly down to Kelly, Shanahan
Kelly was the second known candidate interviewed, a week after getting fired before he could complete his third season as the Philadelphia Eagles coach.
Shanahan was the 49ers offensive coordinator from 1992-94, in between his head-coaching stints with the Raiders, Denver Broncos and Washington, where he last coached in 2013. ESPN reported that his interview with the 49ers took place Tuesday, the same day former New York Giants coach Tom Coughlin met with 49ers general manager Trent Baalke.
Coughlin has withdrawn his name from consideration for the Eagles opening, according to ESPN.
Others who've met with the 49ers are Anthony Lynn (Buffalo Bills assistant head coach), Dirk Koetter (Tampa Bay Buccaneers offensive coordinator), John DeFilippo (Cleveland Browns offensive coordinator) and Hue Jackson, who the Cleveland Browns hired Wednesday.
The post Pick 'em: 49ers search reportedly down to Kelly, Shanahan appeared first on 49ers Hot Read.
Hue Jackson is a Brown, so who’s next for the 49ers?
Jones: ‘I’d hire Shanahan or Holmgren 10 times faster’ than Coughlin
Kawakami: 49ers coaching search entering new mode
49ers get permission to interview Tom Coughlin, reports say
Walsh vs. Parcells: Which Hall of Famer’s coaching tree will influence 49ers search more?
Brent Jones: With York family, ‘words ring hollow; talk is cheap’
49ers request Hue Jackson interview, report says
Jed York takes blame for miserable 49ers season
Baalke: ‘When you’re 5-11, it’s not all coaching’
Jed York: “We want a leader.”
You said that the results of this season rest squarely on your shoulders.
“They do.”
Let’s be specific. As you look back, was it a mistake to part with former 49ers and current University of Michigan head football coach Jim Harbaugh and in addition was it a mistake to hire Jim Tomsula as his successor?
“Jim Harbaugh is a good football coach. His success at Michigan doesn’t surprise me at all. We need to make sure that we look forward to the next head coach. In terms of Jimmy T, we took a chance on somebody that we believe strongly in, certainly his character, his leadership ability, what he was able to do. And ultimately that didn’t work out. And I feel like watching what my uncle did, watching what my grandfather did, you have to learn from mistakes. You have to learn from failure. And we didn’t get this one right and we need to make sure that we get the next one right and we need to make sure that we learn from this season.”
If you didn’t get this one right and Trent is going to hire the next coach, what makes you think that the next one will be right? I assume that you’re not going to be bringing anyone else in the decision making process?
“I mean, Trent’s staff will be in part of it. But, it will be Trent leading the process.”
Wait, can you answer that though, follow-up? Why are you confident that he’ll make the right decision this time?
“I mean, I think he’s done it in the past and I think he can do it again.”
The Cleveland Browns have hired a search firm to help them with the coach. Have you considered doing that given the situation or not?
“I talked to my uncle this morning for a while. He texted me around 5:15. I called him around 5:20 when I got up and I don’t think there’s anybody better to help me as a mentor, as somebody that’s been there, as somebody that’s done it than my uncle. We talked for a long time this morning. And I know that if I need direction, if I need guidance, if I need somebody to help, I’ve got a person I think is the best owner in the history of sports that’s on my team, that’s on my side, that I can turn to anytime.”
ME: What mistakes did you learn from during the past year?
“I’d say the biggest thing, I think I’ve taken things too personally. Interactions with the media, some of the criticism from fans, I think I’ve internalized that too much and I’ve taken it too personally. I think I’ve done things and we can get into tweets that I’ve sent and thank god you can’t see tweets that I didn’t send. Those things aren’t helpful for the team. As much as I’d like to share how I feel about the team, it’s not helpful for our club for me to talk about how I feel when we win, how I feel when we lose. It’s ultimately a distraction. It’s hard enough to win football games in the National Football League. It’s harder when you have somebody that tweets something that’s a distraction to the club and I can’t do that. I think you’ve seen me take a step back from twitter and from other social media and I think it’s important for our team and that it’s important for our fans to have a good clear communication with the club. But, I’m emotional. I learned that from my uncle. Both of us put holes in walls. Both of us have screamed and yelled and said things that we wish we could take back. Some behind the scenes, sometimes in front of the public and I can’t be a distraction to this team. The world is so much different today than I think when my uncle ran the team. It’s not a one-day news cycle. It’s a 24-hour, literally a second-by-second news cycle and I can’t add to that.”
Do you have a short list of who you want as coach moving forward? Is there a short list?
“We have a clear understanding of what we want. We want a leader. We want somebody that has a clear strategic vision. We definitely have a short list. This is going to be a very, very competitive offseason, so I hope you understand I’m not going to get into the details of that list. But, we have a clear understanding of what we’re looking for.”
Is an offensive mind a part of that priority?
“Again, I don’t want to tip our hand in terms of where we’re going. It’s going to be a very competitive offseason. You can certainly speculate however you would like on that, but I don’t want to get into specifics in terms of what we’re looking for.”
Do you think that the roster was the biggest issue on this team, maybe not coaching, that this is not a very good roster? So, the guy who has put this roster together is remaining in charge of it? I guess probably a lot of fans want to know why that is?
“I’ve seen Trent build a championship-caliber roster. As his time as director of player personnel, as his time as general manager, I believe in Trent’s ability. We have a lot of opportunity in front of us. I don’t know exactly where we stack in cap room, but I think we’re top-five in the league in cap room today. We’ve got the most draft picks. I’m fairly certain that it’s set that we are picking seventh. I don’t know, you guys give me nod that is correct. So, we are picking seventh for sure. I’ve watched Trent build this roster and I have confidence that he can get it done. There are very few general managers that have built championship-caliber rosters and I think it’s important that we have somebody with that experience and having a good staff around him, like [senior personnel executive] Tommy Gamble, like guys like that that have been there and done it that we can continue to build this thing because this is going to be a very important offseason for us. Again, we haven’t been the most active in free agency in years past. We need to figure out what the right talent is outside of this building, what the right talent is inside of this building and make sure that we knock it out of the park this year in the draft.”
You said Trent has a very clear understanding that the roster is not, the team is not where it needs to be. Does that mean Trent is on the clock as it were or on a job-security watch?
“Trent’s our general manager. We need to make sure that we go together and find the next head coach. We then make sure that that fit is there and works together and they’re going to be working together to build this team back to championship caliber.”
The previous four years you had a very successful head coach. Looking back on it, do you regret not making a bigger effort to keep Jim here as your head coach?
“I think it’s well understood what effort that we made to keep him here. I’m not going to dive into that. I’m not going to get into things that happened behind the scenes and I can’t look backwards. We can’t win games that we’ve already played. We can’t undo decisions that have been made. We need to make sure that all of our effort is focused on the next head coach of the team.”
Do you have a time in mind as to when you would like a coach in place?
“There’s not a specific timeframe. We want to make sure that we identify our candidates and go after them and when the time’s right, we’ll make an announcement.”
Trent has complete, 100-percent control over the roster. Now, if a new head coach comes in and wants that, will that be something Trent has to work out with that?
“I think it’s got to be something that those two work together on. It’s very clear you can’t have one person have 100-percent say and not have input from the other. You need to make sure that there’s a great relationship between your head coach and your general manager and they need to sit down and figure out how do we evaluate the roster together and how do we make sure that we continue to improve this team.”
Your last two coaching hires were very different personality-wise. Jim Harbaugh, huge fish that had a big resume of winning as a head coach. The next hire was a name who had never been a coordinator much less an NFL Europe head coach. Two disparate personalities. Two disparate results. Can you tell us, is there a description for the next head coach? Is it a big fish with an NFL head coaching experience resume?
“Again, this is going to be a very competitive offseason. I’m not going to get into specifics on where we are and what we’re looking for. You can certainly speculate all you would like, but I’m not going to get into that right now. Again, we want somebody that has leadership ability and a clear vision of what the San Francisco 49ers are and a clear vision on how to get us back to a championship caliber.”
With an experienced resume?
“Again, I think we’re not going to get into the specifics of what we’re looking for. There’s a lot of teams that are looking for a coach. I don’t want to tip our hand and give away any information that I think shouldn’t be divulged right now.”
You’ve spoken about holding yourself accountable. What was the timing for today and not speaking up to this point? Was it just get through this season and–?
“No. I think more than anything, with not speaking, I don’t want to be a distraction. I think our head coach needs to be the face of this team on a normal basis in terms of dealing with the media. I try to interact with fans as much as I can on social media. I’m going to continue to do that, but I want to do that in a way that doesn’t distract from the team. So, as much as I’m sure you love hearing from me and having me up here, that’s not my role and it’s not my role to sit and tweet all of my feelings and things like that because you just can’t share everything completely and I think if you can’t share everything completely, which I’m just not able to do in my position, I don’t think it’s the best thing for our team. I think you have to be very careful about how you communicate with fans and make sure that everything that I’m doing is letting our football people build this team and letting our fans be proud of what team is on the field.”
Where is this organization right now compared to where you were a year ago at this time?
“Again, I’m not a football expert. So, I’m not going to get into evaluating the roster. I think we have some good young talent. I think we have some pieces that are there. But, we need to continue to grow. We need to continue to improve and I’m glad that we have a lot of ammunition this offseason to be able to continue to build it.”
Are you further away from where you wanted to be?
“8-8 and 5-11, neither one of them is acceptable to me. I’d rather take a swing like we did on Jimmy T and if you miss, the nice thing about the NFL is they reward you for missing. We have a high draft pick and that’s the thing that I don’t want to be drafting high, but if we don’t compete for championships, I’d much rather be drafting high and be able to add the top-tier talent in the draft to this roster. So, that’s where we are today. It’s not good enough. Trent understands it’s not good enough and we need to continue to add talent to this roster and make sure that we can compete for championships.”
Will the new head coach be able to pick his entire staff?
“Yes, and that’s always been the case here.”
Your tone obviously is far different than it was a year ago. Is it fair to say you’ve been humbled by this season?
“Yeah, absolutely. And I don’t think it’s just this season. I think it’s a collective approach and looking back on being in this role. The world is different than when my uncle was in this role. We were about the same age when we started running the team and I think you need to adapt as the world adapts. I think I’ve learned a lot. This season wasn’t fun. It wasn’t fun for me, it certainly wasn’t fun for the fans and I truly am sorry that we had to go through this year. But, you have my word that I’m going to do everything that we can to get this team back.”
Can you talk about why president Paraag Marathe was reassigned and what his role will be in the organization moving forward?
“Yeah. So, we had talked to our staff well before the season started and I think our staff saw that [COO] Al [Guido] was taking on more of a role in terms of business ops. As my family looks at other things that we’re doing, Paraag has been somebody that’s been an advisor to me and somebody that’s worked with me for a long time. So, Paraag and I will be doing things that are outside of the 49ers. His role in terms of football will not change. He’s going to negotiate salaries and negotiate contracts and he’ll be in charge of the salary cap and he’ll be working within the organization the same as he always has.”
A follow up on that. There’s been steady rumors that you are interested in selling the team, that your family is interested in selling the team. Have you? Are you in the process of? Will you sell the 49ers?
“My family’s owned this team since before I was born and they’ll own this team after I’m gone.”
You follow social media. Did you happen to see what Jim Harbaugh tweeted out yesterday?
“Yeah. I’m definitely aware of it, but I can’t focus myself on things that are outside of our head coaching search right now.”
What do you think is the future for QB Colin Kaepernick? What’s your feeling on that?
“I love Colin. He’s been a great piece of this team for a long time. He has certainly helped us get to the level of success that we’ve had. I’m not going to make any decisions on players. A new head coach is going to come in here. He’s going to evaluate the roster. Right now, I want to make sure that Colin gets back healthy. We have a few guys that have been hurt. I want to make sure that he continues to improve. It was great seeing him and seeing a lot of other guys yesterday. The roster will be left up to the head coach and the general manager.”
What did your uncle tell you this morning?
“I’ll leave profanities out. Ultimately, it’s continue to work and get this team where you want it to be. Even if you have a bad season, don’t settle. There’s a lot of things that you can do to tweak a roster to go from 5-11 to 9-7. But, you’re never going to break through that barrier. I think that’s always been the message of my family. Don’t be afraid to make mistakes. Don’t be afraid to fail. Continue to push for what you want to push for for your ultimate goal. I think those are the messages that he’s consistently sent.”
I’m just curious if you feel that because of what’s happened, both before you hired Harbaugh and since the way that relationship devolved, all the others things, that this might be a tough sell for an experienced, high-powered coach, qualified coach, that they might not be interested in coming to work here?
“I’m not concerned about that.”
You said you have a short list. Is that something that you want to act quickly on because you said it’s going to be competitive and is it something, are you going to share with the public who you’re bringing in because other teams will announce who they’re bringing in for interviews?
“I think information, whether it’s coming from agents or from people, we will try to keep this as close to the vest as possible. I don’t want to tip our hand to everyone else that’s looking for a head coach. I think we want to make sure that we have a clear communication with our fans, but I don’t want to do anything that’s going to potentially put us at a disadvantage for hiring the next head coach.”
Last year at this time there was concerns about leaks all over the building and Sunday morning Pro Football Talk had it at five in the morning that Jim Tomsula would be fired. Are we back to square one where you’re concerned about leaks in the building?
“Having things come out of the building and having the leaks like that that are harmful to the team, harmful to Jimmy T, somebody that’s been here for a long time, harmful to our players, harmful to our fans, that’s not in my best interest. That didn’t come from this organization. You’re going to have lots of speculation around this time of the year. And you guys are well aware that there’s speculation and people that you think are going to get fired or not thinking are going to get fired. We have no interest in leaking information out of this building. If I find people that are leaking information, they are not going to be a part of this team.”
The second one is, you said in your opening statement that you hear the criticism loudly. So, we might as well air it out that the harshest criticism is that you guys built this stadium on the backs of Jim Harbaugh’s wins, sold the corporate suites, jacked up the value of the franchise, tripled it and now don’t really care that much about anything else other than the money. And the evidence would be that you paid Jim Tomsula one of the lowest salaries in the league and you left a lot of money under the cap. So, how would you address that criticism that fans consistently bring to us in the media?
“I would say this; we’ve got several years of Jimmy T’s salary left and we’re going to eat it. Whether he’s coaching somewhere else or not, we owe him that. That’s not a concern. I could have easily come out here and said, ‘Hey we had a lot of injuries this year. A lot of things didn’t go our way. We’re going to stick with this.’ That’s not where we are. We’re willing to spend what it takes to get everything right to get back to a championship culture. In terms of salary cap, just because you have room doesn’t mean that you have to spend the room. You can transfer that room over to this year. We’ve got a lot of salary cap room. So, you can’t just spend money to spend money. You want to make sure that you’re spending money wisely. So, we will always continue to manage the cap. Trent and his staff know that if they need to spend the entire room, they can do it. If they need to roll it over, they can do it and we will do what it takes to get back to a championship level.”
This is not a 49ers question, but it’s an important Bay Area football question. You’ve got an owners meeting coming up next week at which the future of the LA market is going to be debated and the Raiders are involved in that. What is the 49ers and your stance on that? How will you vote in that and what do you feel about the Raiders future, perhaps involving this stadium even?
“I don’t want to speak for [Oakland Raiders owner] Mark Davis or for anybody else and I’ll leave their future and what they’re looking at to them. I’m not going to speculate on that. Obviously LA is front of mind for the National Football League right now. I’m on the stadium committee, so I will certainly be in committee meetings this week. I have to make sure that all the information that’s out there we figure out is there a reason for teams to relocate and if so what are the best teams and the best projects to move to Los Angeles. And there is a lot of information to get through. I certainly haven’t made up my mind yet. I don’t want to speculate on to where I think it’s going to go, but I think it’s important first and foremost that we were in an old stadium. Just going from my point of view, we did everything that we could to stay first in San Francisco and if that wasn’t possible absolutely in the Bay Area. I think it’s vitally important that the National Football League, that we do everything that we can to stay in markets that we’re in. And if it’s proven that we can’t stay there and the markets aren’t viable or if there’s a reason to leave, we need to make sure that if we go back into a market such as Los Angeles, the second largest market in the country, we do it the right way and we do it where it’s not going to be like it was before where you had two teams there that ended up leaving in, I can’t remember the year but I think it was the early to mid-90s. You need to make sure that if you’re going to go back you’re there to stay. This is not going to be an easy decision.”
Do you think a team should be playing in LA next year? Would you be in favor of that?
“In general, I’m in favor of teams being in markets that work. And, if you can prove that Los Angeles works and that the existing markets are tough and they’re not workable for long-term stadium deals, then I think you have to do what’s best for the overall league. But, you have to exhaust every effort possible to make sure that teams are staying in their own markets.”
There are some big names that have reached out on the market for coaches. Did anyone reach out to you, like former NFL head coaches Mike Holmgren or Chip Kelly? Their names have been floating around for days now.
“Again, you guys have been here before. There’s going to be a lot of rumors until all the coaching vacancies are filled. I’m not going to get into who has reached out and what those conversations have been. I want to make sure that everything that we do is focused on working our list and making sure that we do everything that we can to get the next head coach in here.”
Do you wish you hired Chicago Bears offensive coordinator Adam Gase last year?
“I’m not looking back at anything. You can’t undo those decisions. I’m looking forward.”
And has the entire coaching staff, have they all been released?
“So, only Jimmy has been released. The new head coach will be evaluating the staff and it will be up to him to decide if he wants to keep folks. And if not, as we’ve told our guys, if you have something, we’ll certainly listen to it. But, it’s hard to put a staff together. I think we have some good coaches on this staff and I want to make sure that our head coach has every opportunity to evaluate the guys that are here and make sure that he has all of the resources and everything that he needs to hire whoever else he wants to bring in.”
Another big picture question. We only get these like once a year, so we’ve got ask the big, big ones, the macros. The perception was that Jim Harbaugh was extremely difficult to get along with and that was a large reason why you guys parted ways, that you personally did not like him or get along with him, that Jim Tomsula was the easiest guy in the world to get along with and that’s why you hired him. Can you address that issue? Every owner, every team has the personality of its owner. Are you in need of somebody who you’re comfortable with, who makes you feel good when you’re in a room with them?
“We’re in need of somebody that can win Super Bowls.”
So, personality doesn’t matter?
“We’re in need of somebody that can win Super Bowls.”
Didn’t you have that guy?
“We haven’t won a Super Bowl since 1994.”
York: 49ers need head coach ‘who can win Super Bowls’
Tapping Stanford pipeline for Shaw is hard for one 49er to imagine in coach search
QB Gabbert must learn sixth system in six years
49ers GM Baalke apparently owns eternal hall pass from York
Kap diagnosed with torn thumb ligament, surgery possible
Snap decision? 49ers ready to deploy Kilgore at center
RB Shaun Draughn making Browns ‘wish we kept him’
The 49ers are Draughn’s eight team in five years. He’s averaging 89 yards rushing and receiving combined per game.
He joined the Browns last December, had no carries in their final four games, and after breaking his hand in training camp, he appeared in five games this season (two carries, 10 yards; two catches, one yard) before his Oct. 20 release.
“When Shaun Draugn was here, we knew he was a good football player and he got caught up in the numbers game a bit and we had other backs we wanted to get out there,” Browns coach Mike Pettine said on a conference call. “It doesn’t surprise us he’s having the success he’s had.”
The Browns haven’t won a game since Draughn left, as they instead turned to running backs Isaiah Crowell, Duke Johnson and, albeit briefly, Robert Turbin.
“Anybody that knows Shaun knows he’s a great kid with high character, works hard and will do everything you ask,” Pettine said. “There’s a lot of people in this building that root for Shaun Draughn, though nobody this weekend. We’re glad he was able to land on his feet.”
Andy Lee’s move closer to home ‘a good thing’
Ex-49ers star Whitner: ‘You never realize how special a situation was until you re gone’
Injury report: 49ers’ Lynch, McDonald sit out with concussions
Blaine Gabbert on facing the Browns: “The ball’s going to be in my hand a lot…I’m going to have to deliver the ball.”
After you scored the touchdown on the run, all the teammates mobbed you. Obviously, you did the same with WR Torrey Smith. What’s it mean to you to have your teammates support? When’s the last time you felt that joy among teammates?
“Yeah, that was a lot of fun. I think when we won the game in overtime, the whole team was down there in the end zone. That was a lot of fun. That was a special moment and hopefully we can have a lot more of those here. But, it was just something that we enjoyed. We had a great time in the locker room after the win. It’s always good having a happy flight home.”
Is it a lot easier to be a leader at 26 than a 20-year old at quarterback?
“I would say it’s the same. I would say I’m a better leader now from the experiences that I’ve had the last five years being in the NFL. But, like I said all along, being a quarterback, you’re in a position of leadership and it’s what you do with it. I think we’re handling my leadership well as a football team right now and we just got to keep moving forward with it.”
What lessons did you learn that taught you to be a better leader and a better player?
“I think just fighting through the ups and downs. You got to be the same guy everyday at work. Come in with the same mindset, the same work ethic, the same attitude so your teammates see that on a consistent basis. That’s what I’ve tried to do the last four weeks being the starting quarterback and hopefully I’ll continue to do that.”
When you look back at this, you mentioned the shell coverage they played. When you look at it, do you think you guys managed it right from a standpoint of taking what the defense gave you or could you have taken more shots?
“I think we handled it the right way. I would have liked to see myself personally get to the backs a little bit more, a little bit quicker. But, for the most part, we did take what they were giving us for the majority of the game and when we needed a big play, we got one. They were just kind of a polar opposite defense then we played Arizona the week before. We had a lot of explosive plays that week but that’s what they were giving us. And our guys did a good job that week breaking tackles in man coverage and this week, it was more of a dink and dunk, sit in the zone, stay in second and third-and-manageable.”
With that being said, what is Cleveland trying to do? What are they trying to force the offense–?
“They attack the box. They try and stop the run with seven, eight, nine guys. So, the ball’s going to be in my hand a lot and our guys are going to have to go out there and make plays and I’m going to have to deliver the ball.”
You mentioned the running backs and it just seems like you had a near instantaneous chemistry with RB Shaun Draughn. Is that the case? Have you guys really worked on third downs and outlet passes and things like that over the last couple of weeks?
“Yeah. It’s something that we’ve worked on daily. You guys see us during the individual period throwing routes to the running backs and that’s something that you have to build over time. With him coming in four weeks ago now, it wasn’t there overnight. It was something that we’ve had to work diligently at and I say we’re getting better at it on a daily basis.”
How good is he as a target? He seems like he makes himself known to you.
“Yeah, he is. He’s awesome at catching the ball out of the backfield. He’s made some tough catches in some tight windows. What really stands out is what he can do after the catch. Breaking tackles, making guys miss, turning five-yard gains into 15, 20-yard gains. And when you can do that out of the backfield, that’s just another dimension that we have on this offense.”
I kind of imagine quarterbacks in the NFL are a tight fraternity anyways. What do you think when you look over and see kind of the trials and tribulations of what Cleveland Browns QB Johnny Manziel has gone through early in his career?
“It’s kind of the deal. Those experiences, you learn from. You grow up as you’re in the NFL. He’s kind of in that maturation process right now. Every quarterback goes through it. Every player goes through it.”
Do you see any of yourself in him as far as being a young guy kind of thrust into it or–?
“I think everybody’s a different person. Everybody has their own personality. So, I would go that far at all.”
What do you see in him as a playmaker though, as a playmaking quarterback?
“He does a lot of good things on offense. Runs around, makes plays but recently he’s been delivering the ball from the pocket and was doing a good job while he was the starter.”
You obviously had some rough seasons in Jacksonville. At 4-8, is the vibe on this team any different from what you’ve experienced before?
“I think we’re just looking at it as a four game season. That’s kind of how you’ve got to focus. It’s each and every week is kind of a mini-season and that’s the only way you’re going to improve and stay focused at the end of the year. We’re worried about the Cleveland Browns right now. We’re really worried about having a good practice today.”
Do you believe that success at the end of one year can translate to the next or is there so much different and change in an offseason that–?
“I think it’s just about being consistent in your routine. Having success one year doesn’t mean you’re going to have success the next year. Not having a good year has no effect on if you’re going to go out and play well the next year. So, there’s some things that you want to build on in the offseason, but I think being consistent in your routine year in and year out is what really sets you up for your long term goals.”
What’s it like playing with a receiver like Torrey Smith? He doesn’t get the ball that much, but when he does, it seems like he can change a game.
“Yeah, and he changed the game last week, of course, with the game winning catch. Being a wide receiver, it’s just about having patience, taking what the defense gives you. Everybody wants to have to five, 10 catches for 200 yards every week, but in this business that’s not going to happen because the defense gets paid too. And they take speed guys away. They take certain guys away on certain coverages, certain down and distances but when his opportunity came in the game, he definitely capitalized on it. I think we can use that as a stepping stone moving forward and grow from that.”
You mentioned earlier about how the Browns like to stack the box. What does Cleveland Browns S Donte Whitner to as part of that? Is he a guy that you have to kind of look at and see where he is?
“He’s a hard hitting safety. Likes to stick his nose in there in the run game. You have to be cognizant of where he’s at on the football field. But, at the same time, we’re just going to go out there and focus on the things that we can control. Go out there and execute at a high level.”
You mentioned taking what the defense was giving you and I think you only had a couple throws, completions that went longer than 10 yards. Is that the next step for you in absorbing this offense and being able to be more aggressive on those throws?
“It’s all game to game. Like I said, the Arizona game, we had eight completions over 25 yards. Last week, we maybe had a couple. It’s so week-to-week in the NFL, predicated on what that defense is giving us that week. So, you can’t try and make something more than what it is. They were dropping eight guys in coverage, playing a high shell. So, they were putting me in a position to take underneath throws, where like I said, Arizona was a man coverage, blitz you, cover zero and gave us the opportunity to get big plays after the catch.”
How much has quarterbacks coach Steve Logan meant in your development and what you’ve done so far this year?
“He’s great, especially on game day. Kind of when he came here, he said his personality will never change on game day. It’s just another opportunity for him to go out and teach. He’s stayed true to his word week in and week out. He’s been a great sounding board for the quarterbacks when we come off of the field. He kind of asks us what we see, so we can all just diagnose it together when we’re looking at the pictures.”
49ers’ Dawson follows emotional kick with emotional trip
49ers’ Bowman yells out ‘Screen, screen’ before Ward’s pick-six
Ian Williams dominated the Cardinals
Purdy: Gabbert staying in conversation to be 49ers’ QB of the future
49ers notebook: Celek hurt, but other tight ends step up
You make the call: 49ers irate over season-high penalties in 19-13 loss to Cardinals
First-time eligible Terrell Owens, dual-threat Roger Craig among Hall of Fame semifinalists
Brent Jones: 49ers-Kap situation ‘give-up on both sides’
Surgery looms for Glenn Dorsey after MRI reveals torn ACL for 49ers lineman
Tomsula transcript: 49ers coach hits rewind on 29-13 loss to Seattle
Kaepernick going ahead with shoulder surgery Tuesday morning
The rehabilitation process is expected to take four to six months, a timeline that overlaps with an April 1 clause in Kaepernick's contract in which he'll be guaranteed his 2016 salary ($11.6 million) if still on the roster then.
After making 53 consecutive starts (playoffs included), Kaepernick was pulled from that role Nov. 2 as the 49ers turned to fellow fifth-year veteran Blaine Gabbert.
Gabbert won his Nov. 8 debut against the Atlanta Falcons and then threw for 264 yards in Sunday's losing effort to the Seattle Seahawks.
Undrafted rookie Dylan Thompson was promoted Saturday from the practice squad and has not played since the preseason.
McLeod Bethel-Thompson, who had briefs stints as a 49ers backup in 2011 and 2013, was signed Monday to the practice squad, according to multiple reports.
Kaepernick suffered his shoulder injury Oct. 4 against the Green Bay Packers and played through the injury in starting the next four games.
The 49ers first revealed Kaepernick's shoulder issue on last Monday's injury report, which is when coach Jim Tomsula says he first learned of the injury.
"That’s the first time that showed up," Tomsula said Monday. "Obviously, he’s got something there that he’s got to get fixed.”
General manager Trent Baalke said Sunday that the 49ers trainers looked at Kaepernick's shoulder after the Packers game, and that after he reported persisting pain in it last Monday, that's when they sent him to get an MRI, which revealed the torn labrum.
"It was an injury our medical staff looked at and treated," Baalke said Sunday. "He didn't seek any extra treatment. It was ongoing. ... He went in, got checked, felt good and kept playing. Those are injuries that are nagging and get worse. The medical staff said it was in the best interest to step back and get (surgery) done."
Baalke has not ruled out Kaepernick's return to the team in 2016, though that seems unlikely.
The post Kaepernick going ahead with shoulder surgery Tuesday morning appeared first on 49ers Hot Read.
49ers’ Gabbert will get another start
Esiason: Kaepernick ‘done’ as 49ers quarterback
Offensive line dubbed as ‘key’ to 49ers victory over Falcons
Notes: Draughn produces 96 yards in surprise start; young DBs persevere; run defense excels; Lynch battles through injuries
A week after Draughn was on his couch in Cleveland eating Chipotle and watching NFL games on television, he had 16 carries for 58 yards and four receptions for 38 yards.
“I’m humble, grateful and happy to be back working,” Draughn said. “I’ve been praying for this opportunity for so long. To go through eight teams, then come in during the week and you’re starting, that just doesn’t happen.”
Draughn said running backs coach Tom Rathman is the one who told him pregame that, “by the way, you’re starting.”
Gaskins, promoted a week earlier from the practice squad, produced for a fourth-and-one conversion to keep alive the 49ers’ first touchdown drive. He finished with eight carries for 20 yards, including a 3-yard carry on third-and-2 which allowed the 49ers to kill off the game’s final minute.
“I just put my head down, ran hard like I always do and got the result,” Gaskins said.
Thomas had four carries for 12 yards in his first game action since last season with the Saints. Hyde sat out his second straight game as a result of an Oct. 11 stress fracture in his left foot.
-- Defensive coordinator Eric Mangini sighed with relief as he exited the 49ers locker room, having persevered with a patchwork secondary against Matt Ryan (30-of-45, 303 yards, one TD). “We had some young guys out there today, real young guys, and they did a nice job,” Mangini said.
The 49ers managed without suiting up three cornerbacks: starters Tramaine Brock (shin) and Kenneth Acker (chest, concussion), and backup Keith Reaser (ankle). The replacement starters were Dontae Johnson and Marcus Cromartie, the latter having been summoned Saturday off the practice squad along with Chris Davis, who saw time in the dime package Sunday.
Cromartie suffered a facial laceration while making a second-quarter tackle but got stitched up and finished with a team-high seven tackles. Nickel back Jimmie Ward also started, and he overcame an ankle injury to finish with six tackles.
Brock tested out his leg in pregame warm-ups, and he didn’t appear happy with the verdict to not suit up after he consulted with Tomsula and vice president of football operations Jeff Ferguson.
-- Devonta Freeman, who entered as the NFL’s leading rusher, has 6 carries for 1 yard in first half, and he finished with 12 carries for 12 yards. Freeman did more damage as a receiver (eight catches, 67 yards) and produced the Falcons’ only touchdown on a 17-yard reception 13 seconds before halftime.
“For us to really get them in that one-dimensional spot, it helped the DB’s with expecting the pass on passing downs,” said linebacker NaVorro Bowman, who had seven tackles and a third-down sack.
Freeman said Bowman told him afterward that the 49ers’ film study showed Freeman’s tendency to dart outside. “Much credit goes out to that defense, man,” Freeman said. “They have some great players (and) nice schemes.”
-- Aaron Lynch produced his team-leading sixth sack. He played through an ankle injury and a dislocated finger.
-- Bush reportedly plans to sue the city of St. Louis as a result of his season-ending knee injury, which he suffered last Sunday when he slipped on the concrete behind the 49ers sideline on a punt return. Bush, a 10th-year veteran, has retained attorney Shawn Holley and the KWIKA law firm to represent him, CBS Sports reported. The Edward Jones Dome is owned and operated through the city of St. Louis.
-- Rookie Trent Brown made his NFL debut in the second quarter, coming in at right tackle while Erik Pears slid over to right guard in place of Jordan Devey, who earlier rotated out with Andrew Tiller. Following that field-goal drive, Tiller re-entered at right guard and Pears returned to right tackle.
-- Defensive tackle Tony Jerod-Eddie recorded two pass breakups on third-down attempts in the first half.
-- Defensive tackle Mike Purcell was active for the first time this season. Also inactive for the 49ers are offensive linemen Brandon Thomas and Ian SIlberman.
-- Linebacker Philip Wheeler, a 49ers training-camp castoff, started for the Falcons in place of Justin Durant. Wheeler had a team-high 10 tackles but got penalized for a helmet-to-helmet hit on Gabbert on a pivotal fourth-quarter play.
The post Notes: Draughn produces 96 yards in surprise start; young DBs persevere; run defense excels; Lynch battles through injuries appeared first on 49ers Hot Read.