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Baalke: “We have to have a good draft. We have to have a good free agency period.”
Trent Baalke held a press conference on Thursday, and here is a transcript courtesy of the 49ers.
[Question inaudible but was in regards to the 49ers use of the read option offense.]
“You’ve got to do what the skill sets of your quarterback allow you to do. As long as you do that, I think you’ve got a chance.”
Did QB Colin Kaepernick scream “franchise-caliber” to you when you first drafted him? I mean, it seems like you guys worked hard to develop his consistency as a passer once you got him, but in terms of identifying franchise guys, I’m just curious as to your initial thoughts when you chose him in Round 2 a few years ago.
“Well, it’s a lot easier to sit up here after a young man’s had success and say, ‘Yes, we pictured that,’ but there are a lot of unknowns when you draft anybody. You look at the skill sets, you look at the character of the individual, you look at the intangibles that they bring to the table and you try to see if they fit. If they fit what you’re looking for in that particular player, in that particular position. He’s a young man that brought an awful lot to the table, as we know, came out of an offense that was not a quote, pro-style offense. And, just a guy that our coaching staff really believed in. We believed in from a personnel standpoint and then it was just letting him develop and giving him an opportunity. [Head] coach [Jim] Harbaugh’s done an outstanding job with him, as has [quarterbacks coach] Geep Chryst and [offensive coordinator] Greg Roman. He’s still learning, still developing.”
What are you looking for from WR A.J. Jenkins this offseason?
“Production, like we do with all our players. We’ve always said, you go into the draft and you draft guys and you know what they’re strong suits are, you know what their weaknesses are and then it’s up to them. And A.J.’s a young man that has worked awfully hard. He’s going to continue to work hard. I believe he’s either in Atlanta right now or on his way to Atlanta where our quarterback is and some of our other players, and they’re going to go at it this offseason. And, the biggest growth of players is always between year one and year two. We expect that that’s going to happen with A.J., just as we do with all our young players.”
Have you guys had any conversations with QB Alex Smith and his representation since the Super Bowl?
“We have. In fact, I was out to dinner with [wife] Liz [Smith] and Alex when we got back from the Super Bowl, had a great conversation, had a great dinner and just a chance to sit down with him and go through what our thoughts were and listen to what their thoughts were as a family and really get an understanding of what direction we wanted to go.”
[Question inaudible but pertained to how high a priority the re-signing of safety Dashon Goldson may be.]
“We’ve always maintained we want to keep as many of our core guys together as we can. So, it’s definitely a priority. Are we going to be able to do it? We don’t know that. We’re going to work awfully hard to make that happen.”
How do you review your 2012 draft class? A lot of talent. You made the Super Bowl. But, not a lot of starts from the draft class.
“Well, you know, I think it was [New England Patriots head] coach [Bill] Belichick or [retired NFL] coach [Bill] Parcells who said if you’re getting a ton of production and you’re having a lot of guys make your team from your draft class, you’re probably not in the position to play in the Super Bowl, so maybe there is something to that. I don’t know. But, we feel very good about the class. We didn’t get a lot of production out of the class, but we had a lot of … if you look at the players that we drafted and the positions we drafted in it, they were coming into some loaded depth at certain positions.”
[Question inaudible but pertained to the 49ers 2012 draft class.]
“I think the question always comes back to the higher picks. We feel very good about A.J. We feel very good about [RB] LaMichael James. We feel good about that group of guys. [G] Joe Looney, who came in off an injury into an offensive line that’s a pretty good group. We weren’t expecting a ton of production to be honest with you. Did we get what we expected? That’s yet to be determined. There’s a lot of years left in those guys’ playing careers.”
[Question inaudible but pertained to the key to a successful draft.]
“I don’t know that I have a magic answer for what the key is. I think you set your board. You work diligently at it. You try to find football players. And, we’ve always let the film speak for us. The hype, the weight, the speed. The Combine’s nice, it’s a part of the picture, but it’s a small part of the picture. The big part of the picture is the film, and what they’ve put on film over their career.”
The timing of former director of player personnel Tom Gamble’s departure is unusual, coming just before the Combine with the Draft coming up. Could you just talk about why you guy’s allowed that and is there a side of it that’s [inaudible]?
“Well, there’s a lot that went into that decision. Tom and I had been friends for a long time and have worked together for an awful long time. It was a chance for him to get home. It certainly is a difficult time to lose somebody, especially of Tom’s caliber. But, at the same time, sometimes in life, you’ve got to make those decisions and you’ve got to let people go home. It was something that him and I had talked about for over a year. It had come up again. So through those discussions we were able to allow that to happen. Tough timing, obviously, but I think both sides feel good that the decision was made.”
What are you going to miss by not having Tom?
“Well, you miss an awfully loyal, awfully qualified individual that helps you set your board, helps you through free agency and the like. But at the same time, it’s never one person. It’s not me, it’s not Tom. There’s a bunch of qualified individuals, [director of college scouting] Joel Patten, [national scout] Matt Malaspina, the rest of the scouts. We just got through 17 days of draft meetings and setting the board, so it’s never one. It’s just like we say with players, it’s next man up, let’s go.”
How much are your coaches involved in the draft process and do you like to keep the separation of church and state there between coaches and scouts?
“I don’t know if we want to keep it a separation of church and state. We’re all in this thing together. And coach Harbaugh, I’ve got a lot of respect for his ability to evaluate talent just as I do with all of our coaches. So, it’s a team approach. Now, the coaches aren’t sitting in the draft meetings with us. But, at the same time there is a stage when they are brought into the process. And that stage starts with the combine. So, we look forward to bouncing ideas off of one another, getting viewpoints. Because it’s all about finding players that fit the system. That’s what we’re looking for. There are a lot of good players out there. This draft is no different than other drafts. But, at the same time we’ve got to get players that fit the system. There’s going to be good players that don’t fit us, whether it’s from a character standpoint, a skillset standpoint, there’s just going to be players that don’t fit us. So, we’re looking for the fit.”
What did WR Randy Moss bring to the table this year for you guys? And is he in your plans for 2013?
“Well, Randy’s a pro. And I can’t say enough good things about Randy. And I think if you ask anyone within our organization they would say the same thing. One of the first guys to work every day. One of the last to leave. A guy that takes great care of his body. That is probably one of the smartest football players, if not the smartest football player I’ve been around. Grasped the offense very quickly and was a real leader in that group, in that room. So, we’re certainly happy that he was there. Is he going to return this year? I don’t know that yet.”
You’re a Super Bowl team, what do you do with 14 draft picks?
“Draft them.”
Well, theoretically you’re good. Do you need 14 rookies?
“Well, I don’t know that we need 14 rookies. We need good football players. And we’ve always maintained that we’re not afraid to move up, we’re not afraid to stand pat and pick where the selection is. And we’re certainly not afraid to move back. We’ve been successful doing all of the above. So, how we’re going to use them, that remains to be seen. But, certainly enjoy the fact that we’re in position to have 14.”
Can you characterize how that dinner with Alex was? Was it a good give and take, or was it kind of one sided or anything you can say?
“No, it was Alex and his wife Liz and myself. We had a great meal. We had a great discussion. I can’t say enough good things. And I think if you ask anyone in our organization they would say the same thing, he is a pro’s pro. And I have nothing but great respect for him, his family, and we’re certainly going to do everything in our power to make the best decision for everyone involved.”
[Question inaudible but pertained to whether a decision has been made whether or not the team will trade Smith.]
“I think that’s part of it. We’re going to look at all options available. Are we going to trade him for sure? No, that hasn’t been decided.”
Will you be looking at a kicker in free agency?
“We’re going to be looking at every position in free agency. We’re going to be looking at every position in the draft. And we’re going to address the needs that we have through one of those two options.”
[Question inaudible but pertained to the possibility of signing Browns free agent kicker Phil Dawson, who worked with 49ers assistant head coach and special teams coordinator Brad Seely in the past.]
“Once again, we’ll look at all options.”
What are your thoughts on changing landscape in NFC West? How does a team like the 49ers stay competitive next season with the Seahawks obviously pretty close right there, and Rams kind of an up-and-coming team in that division, too? What are your thoughts on that?
“Well, we’re going to have to go back to work. It’s an awfully good division. It’s a competitive division. It’s a physical division. All four teams play a physical brand of football. They play very well on the defensive side of the ball. Offensively, there are a lot of playmakers within the division. And it’s a well-coached division. So, in order to stay on top of that division, we’ve got to get better. We can’t stay the same and we certainly can’t take a step back because those other teams are coming. We have to have a good draft. We have to have a good free agency period. But, we also have to go back to work. And that’s a tough thing to do. Our guys are down a little bit, a little bit discouraged, a little bit disappointed. But, we’re certainly going to get back on the horse and ride. And I’ve got complete confidence in our players to do that.”
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Tom Gamble to Eagles
Former 49ers Director of Player Personnel Tom Gamble is going to the Eagles to be their Vice President of Player Personnel. Gamble was an assistant for the Eagles’ personnel department fro 1988 to 1994, and his father was the president of the Eagles from ’86 to ’95.
Gamble has a sterling reputation in the league. It will be very interesting to see what this does to the 49ers, because he obviously had a lot of influence on which players the 49ers acquired over the last eight seasons.
This was Gamble’s job description on the 49ers: “While working closely with General Manager Trent Baalke, Gamble oversees both the college and pro personnel efforts.”
The Philadelphia Eagles’ website describes his new job like this: “Gamble will report directly to General Manager Howie Roseman and work in both the college and pro personnel departments.”
The job descriptions are remarkably similar. I don’t what to make of this. Does it seem to you like a lateral move? I’m not sure. Perhaps he got more money.
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Young: “You could make a case that this was the season that the 49ers, with Colin Kaepernick, needed to win the Super Bowl.”
Steve Young spoke on KNBR Thursday afternoon. This is what he said.
Q: Let’s start off with the first half. What did you see that had the 49ers behind for a second straight week?
YOUNG: It was little stuff. It was things that you hadn’t seen before. You got the feeling like, not only the penalties, but the miscues and even the plays getting in. We’ve talked about this for a while. Every play seemed to be running down to the end of the play clock. Balls were just off the tips of fingers. It was just a combination of a lot of things.
Eight quarters of championship play – Atlanta and New Orleans – and three of them, offense and defense, were kind of wasted quarters. It’s just so hard to come back from it, especially in the Super Bowl.
That’s the classic blunder. You go into the Super Bowl and for whatever reason, whether it’s the moment or the game itself, a lot of teams, especially teams that end up losing the Super Bowl in my mind, don’t get started quickly. They get into halftime and they’ve wasted a bunch of time. There’s no rhyme or reason why it happened, but it was just a classic Super Bowl where you don’t get started. Believe me, I’ve been in championship games and wasted quarters, and I regret it and rue the day. That’s what ended up happening to the 49ers. The time that they spent fiddling around ended up costing them.
Q: How about the first play of the game, having an illegal formation penalty.
YOUNG: It was just ragged. It was ragged play from a team that’s never ragged, and that’s the part that’s unnerving. Jerry Rice and I sat together watching the game, and he was just emotional. He was getting fired up. He was like, “You’ve got to be kidding me!” He was highly emotional.
Every football game happens quickly, but a Super Bowl just flies by, and if you’re not careful it will just leave you behind.
Q: Does the fact that the slow start happened two games in a row give you a clue as to why it happened at all?
YOUNG: It’s details. It’s the little things. It’s the things great teams do without thinking about it. We got penalized way too much.
Did the coaches ask too much, or was the emotion of the game too much? They have to figure out what the root is, but what we saw was kind of ragged football until after the lights went out.
Q: As a quarterback, were you upset with Randy Moss not making an effort on the interception, or was that ball not catchable?
YOUNG: Jerry Rice, literally, we were sitting in the front row of the suite so the drop would have been a precipitous drop, I mean maybe a hundred feet. I had to restrain him. I was watching the ball and I knew it was high because it sailed when it was intercepted. I hadn’t really noticed Randy. Jerry was so fixated on Randy and his lack of effort toward the ball. He had to replay it: “You should have seen what he did.” And he kind of kept telling me how he didn’t even try.
Later on I saw it. It reminded me of Rex Grossman when he threw the interception against the Colts when they still had a chance to win the Super Bowl. They were down four points, and they were driving and he basically threw a little lollipop up, didn’t even look – a little double move – gets intercepted and he starts running it back, and it ends up being for a touchdown. And Rex kind of watches it. The Super Bowl is going by him, not figuratively but literally going away from him, and he’s watching it. In training camp that would frustrate me, but in the Super Bowl that’s maddening.
So I said to Jerry, maybe he thought someone was behind him. But Jerry didn’t buy that one. He was like, there’s no way.
You can’t declare yourself the greatest of all time. Other people do that.
Q: What did you think of the final four plays?
YOUNG: Two minutes to win the football game – that’s another part of the game that’s completely separate – how it’s dealt with, how the plays are called, how you deal with the dilemmas. That is literally just reps. In the ten games that Colin played, did he really have that many end-of-game reps? My brain is saying no.
We’ve asked Colin to do a lot, and it’s incredible in many ways.
Everyone would want to redo those four plays – Jim, Greg Roman. The explosive team that they were, they ran plays that a team that’s not explosive would run, especially the last one.
It wasn’t that the moment got beyond them. It’s that you have to have a lot of reps at that. The guys that are really famous at the end of games are the guys that did this regularly. It was a great learning experience, but that doesn’t help you in the Super Bowl.
When Frank ran to the seven, we all sensed that we were in. We were there, and now it’s just going to go in.
And then that next play, LaMichael for two – you’re putting yourself in a little bit of a jam, and I think that’s where the defensive coordinator for the Ravens really had it. He backed off on second, and then came both times on third and fourth. The Ravens are great tactically at the all-out blitz because they have done it a ton of times and they take every angle at it and they know what they’re trying to accomplish.
They put Colin in a jam. He saw he only had a split-second to throw it, so he decided and threw it. And that’s typical. That’s OK. But if you’ve done it a bunch of times and had these things happen before, then you dictate to teams. That’s what, unfortunately, didn’t get done. But I understand it.
Q: What do you think Jim Harbaugh should learn from this game?
YOUNG: Jim has proven to be a great coach. One of the little things that he can improve on, obviously the team getting out of the gate became something to work at. That’s something we can watch for, especially in the later rounds.
More than anything, I just feel Jim is creating dilemmas where he doesn’t need to with the media. Not giving them a little something. Just suck it up, go out, you know what they want, just tell them a couple of quotes, give them what they want. So people don’t gather more and more reasons to be upset at you. You’re life is so much easier and less complicated when you just do the little things and put up with it. Deal with the hassles a little bit better. It takes more energy to keep avoiding the hassles than to go through them and deal with it. I think that would help him a lot. But Jim is a tough cookie. I can hear him right now, “This is me, and like it or lump it.” Clearly, we’re talking about fringe thing. The meat of what he does is phenomenal. There’s no question.
Q: At the Friday press conference before the Super Bowl, his brother was with his family taking pictures, and Jim was off to the side checking his watch.
YOUNG: It’s physically painful for him, and that’s why I’m not sure it’s going to change. My advice to him would be take a deep breath for 30 seconds, do the things that you know they want, give it to them and move on. What happens is sooner or later if there’s a 6-10 season out there or a retooling, there will be a lot of people that want to get him back. You don’t need that hassle.
Even on the sidelines, I think in the long run the apoplectic stuff will eat you up over time. You can be white-hot, tip-of-the-spear competitive and still manage through those difficult moments that you know you’ve been jobbed.
Q: Do you have any problem with the refs not calling defensive holding or pass interference on the 49ers’ final offensive play?
YOUNG: I was right there. I was standing on the field. It was out of bounds from the time it left his hand. My opinion was it was not even close. So what happened on the field to me was less important. Plus, on a fourth down you know – like the last shot of a basketball game – you’re probably not going to get the foul when you throw the three-point shot up. You’re going to have to get really hacked to get a call. With that context, you’re probably not going to get the call, especially when the ball is headed out of bounds.
Colin had two plays from what I understand, and once he saw the all-out blitz, that was the planned reaction. There’s got to be a better play than just throwing a lollipop up to one guy. That play is really capitulation. In the context, you’d certainly want something more dynamic, the ability to put Colin on the move and see what would happen. That’s part of planning. The 15th time you go through that, you get really good at it. That’s the part that you look forward to with Colin and Jim.
Q: How do you think Kaepernick will do in his first full season as the starter?
YOUNG: You could make a case that this was the season that the 49ers, with Colin Kaepernick, needed to win the Super Bowl, because the window was as wide open as it will ever be for the Pistol to be as much of an advantage as it could be. The question is how much that window will close once defenses start to get used to it. That’s what happens in the league. Tactically, to me it’s something that can get figured out. Something people think it will get closed completely. I don’t believe it. I think it will always be a useful thing as long as you’re willing to put your quarterback at risk and run him.
Think about RGIII. His job got significantly more difficult for next year because of his injury. The team won’t want to put him in that spot. He’s a franchise quarterback. He’s going to have to find other ways to be successful. But they used the Pistol so well. They’re going to have to retreat a little bit. That’s going to force RGIII to play more traditional quarterback, which is a tough job. Delivering the ball from the pocket, full-field reads, dictating to defenses – it’s an art. It’s advanced calculus. It’s going to be a challenge for RGIII.
And Colin, if he’s going to play for 15 years – if I’m wrong, then so be it – but the job in the end, in the long run is to deliver the ball from the pocket. Can I use the Pistol as a bridge to get there? Colin used it as bridge, not only to get there but to take them to Super Bowl and really one play away from winning it. I believe that it will be difficult to use that bridge into the future. In the end, I think Championship quarterbacks will be what we see as more traditional.
Q: How great was the Ravens’ job of killing seven seconds on that punt safety at the end of the game?
YOUNG: That was phenomenal clock management. Every second that could be taken was taken. When they did that, that was a tremendous coaching move. And to have everyone aware enough to tackle them. And the guy was able to run around and literally end the game. That was great clock management.
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Cosell on Kaepernick: “He had brain freezes on two of those final three plays.”
Greg Cosell spoke about the Super Bowl on KNBR Thursday morning. Here’s what he said.
Q: What did you think of the 49ers’ final four offensive plays?
COSELL: Here’s a perfect case where because the plays failed, everybody thinks that they’re bad play calls, therefore something was horribly wrong.
The first play was perfectly understandable because Gore had just run 33 yards and he was not in the next play. So they handed to James from the Pistol, something they’d been very successful with all second half.
The second play, and only Colin Kaepernick could answer this, he rolled out and Michael Crabtree was wide open. If he throws him the ball, it might have been a touchdown. I can’t tell you why Kaepernick didn’t throw him the ball. That was the design of the play. Michael Crabtree was wide open. The third play, I’m convinced that Kaepernick was throwing the ball to Crabtree out of the huddle because (Delanie Walker) was wide open on that side of the field, part of the reading progression.
Here’s the issue we’ve all faced – and I love Colin Kaepernick and I think he’ll be a great player – but because he’s already ascended in people’s minds to this hall of fame level, he’s at the point where he does no wrong. In fact, he had brain freezes on two of those final three plays, either one of which likely would have been a touchdown if he had executed the play properly, but no one will talk about that except me because I’m telling you this from watching the film, so therefore because the plays didn’t work they must have been bad play calls.
And the final play of the game was just Cover Zero blitz, which was the same blitz concept the Ravens did on the two-point conversion, which clearly forced Kaepernick to get rid of it before he wanted to. The same thing happened on the final play. I thought it was going to be a back-shoulder fade, that’s just my sense from watching Crabtree’s route. Kaepernick had to hurry himself because of Ellerbe getting in clean, so the defense won on that play. But the second and third down plays were plays in which Kaepernick simply didn’t execute well-designed plays, either one of which could have been a touchdown.
Q: Shouldn’t the 49ers’ coaches tried to eliminate the young quarterback’s brain freeze by handing the ball off to No.21?
COSELL: What happened was the first half, the Ravens’ D-line dominated. The 49ers couldn’t run the football. They couldn’t get Ngata blocked. They couldn’t get Ellerbe blocked. Gore in the first half only had 11 for 29.
In the second half, they didn’t run the ball real well either until the fourth quarter. Gore had 104 yards, but he had 54 of those yards on two runs. They were both Full House Pistol runs – one was 21 yards and the other was 33 yards – but if you’re talking about sustaining a run game throughout the game, that did not happen. The 49ers did not do that.
Q: Didn’t people think the 49ers’ run game would win that matchup?
COSELL: Yup, and quite frankly they didn’t. Ngata went out late in the third quarter. He was very, very effective in this game through three quarters. They couldn’t get him blocked in the run game consistently. That was a big loss for the Ravens and positive for the Niners.
Q: How did the Ravens jump out to an early lead?
COSELL: I think the secondary had some issues. One thing the Ravens did, which I thought was very smart, was their pass game was a lot more sustaining, a lot shorter throws. They threw the ball in the flat quite a bit, and I think the 49ers never really handled that well. The Ravens were able to make first downs, sustain drives, or make nice gains on first down with throws into the flat.
And then there were some break downs. The long touchdown at the end of the first half to Jacoby Jones, that kind of play can never happen. And it did in a Super Bowl. What they did on that was they singled up Culliver on Jones, they doubled Boldin in the slot and Smith on the other side, and Culliver just played the in cut and was totally out of position with no help over the top. He got beat. It wasn’t a great throw, but he was beat so badly that Jones was still able to catch it get up with room. It was just one of those plays, but a play like that can’t happen in the Super Bowl.
Q: Did Culliver have as bad of a game as it seemed?
COSELL: When you give up a play like that that becomes a touchdown, obviously that play is magnified. I didn’t come away from that game saying, “Oh my God, Culliver was awful,” there was just a couple of plays. There was a pass interference call on a third down.
But there were some plays that the Ravens made – that third and inches play after the challenge by Harbaugh where Flacco audibled. Rogers was all over Boldin. They executed the play at a really high level against unbelievable coverage. That was arguably as big a play in the game as any.
You can’t say they got out-coached. Plays like that help you win games.
Q: Do you ever evaluate officials or have opinions on calls?
COSELL: No. I don’t, and if you’re asking about the final play of the game, my immediate response was that was holding just like NaVorro Bowman held Roddy White two weeks ago. I don’t get into that.
Q: Wasn’t Bowman within the five yards though?
COSELL: You still can’t hold him when the ball is in the air. I don’t get into that stuff. It goes both ways all the time. That stuff to me doesn’t mean anything.
Q: I’m not sure that Bowman held when the ball was in the air.
COSELL: You’re not even allowed to hold within the five yards. You’re allowed to push and shove and be physical, but you can’t hold a guy.
Q: I though Bowman was just being physical, but anyway.
COSELL: I’m sure Falcons fans are saying the same thing 49ers fans are saying now.
Q: Why was the 49ers’ offense so much better after the blackout?
COSELL: I thought they had some success in the first half. Don’t forget, James fumbled after a long drive. I’m not sure we’d be having this conversation if he didn’t fumble.
I told you they would go after Ray Lewis, and they did. If the 49ers had come back to win the game, Ray Lewis arguably could have been the goat in the game. They went after him and had great, great success.
I don’t know if the 49ers’ offense was ever truly shut down. I think as the game went on, Greg Roman got a real good feel for where he could be successful, and then in the second half they were not stopped.
It was a great game. I think with Kaepernick, who’s going to be a really fine player, there’s a lot of positives here. I think the same discussions were had as last year after they lost, although I think there’s probably a more optimistic feeling now because of Kaepernick.
Kaepernick, Crabtree had prophetic fourth-quarter conversation
Culliver, Whitner don’t agree on what went wrong on 56-yard touchdown
Two days later, the 49ers secondary still wasn’t on the same page. The biggest play in the first half of the Super Bowl came on third and 10 at…
Walker’s uncle, aunt killed in crash morning after Super Bowl
Donatell calls system that denied his promotion fair
Ed Donatell wants to be a coordinator again, but he won't get that opportunity next season thanks to an NFL rule he deems fair.
Full transcript: Harbaugh looks back at Super Bowl XLVII, looks ahead to next season
Why the 49ers defense faltered at the end of the season
A.J. Jenkins to train with Kaepernick; wants to return ‘a totally different player’
Receiver A.J. Jenkins today said that wants to return next season as “a totally different player” and that he planned to work out with buddy Colin Kaepernick in Atlanta…
Harbaugh wishes final play calls were different; Goldson strongly opposes franchise tag
Harbaugh strongly suggests 49ers won’t release Smith
Candlestick Park to be demolished within year
Plans were announced Monday to blow up the 53-year-old, 69,000-seat stadium once the 49ers finish up their 2013-2014 season and move south to Santa Clara.
49ers look to promising future after ‘devastating’ loss
Kaepernick from crystal ball to reality
Niners’ final drive will be replayed, analyzed criticized
Justin Smith faces three-month rehab after triceps surgery
Defensive tackle Justin Smith will require three months of rehabilitation after undergoing surgery this week to repair a partially torn triceps, a league source told CSNBayArea.com.
49ers feel sting from bitter Super Bowl defeat
As the 49ers struggled to come to grips with their loss, they suffered the double indignity of listening to the Ravens celebrate only a few feet away.
Looking ahead to offseason plans after taking ‘baby step’ to Super Bowl
Harbaugh’s truest self?
Jim Harbaugh’s public image and personality always ran close to the third rail, but a Super Bowl has a way of turning an impression into a tattoo.
Gore: ‘You can’t second-guess’ final series
NEW ORLEANS — Frank Gore hit a hole and rumbled 33 yards to set up the 49ers with first-and-goal from the Baltimore 7-yard-line, trailing by five points with 2:39 remaining.…
Matt & Mindi: 49ers’ final sequence will be questioned forever
Matt & Mindi break down the 49ers' 34-31 loss to the Ravens, and discuss why San Francisco fell short in Super Bowl XLVII.
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