reflections
San Francisco 49ers should give up the farm for…

Watching Andrew Luck pick apart Oklahoma State’s ball-hawking pass defense in the Fiesta Bowl without star receiver Chris Owusu and tight end Coby Fleener had to secure his position as the all-but-certain No. 1 pick in April’s NFL draft.

Now imagine Luck re-united with Jim Harbaugh and playing for the 49ers? Sure, it will take an enormous offer to lure Luck away from the Indianapolis Colts, who secured the top pick with an abysmal 2-14 season. But Indianapolis could be open to trading the top pick because selecting the Stanford quarterback would likely mean a parting of the ways with Peyton Manning.

While Manning still awaits medical clearance to play following three neck surgeries and is due a $28 million roster bonus on March 8, the soon to be 36-year old-quarterback remains the face of the Colts’ franchise and is revered by team owner Jim Irsay.

Of course, smart football decisions regularly trump sentiment (see: 49ers trading Joe Montana or Packers cutting ties with Brett Favre), but if the Colts truly believe Manning will make it back, why not fill other more pressing needs with the two first-round picks or more you could get for Luck?  

Which brings us back to the 49ers.

While Harbaugh remains Alex Smith’s greatest supporter and openly talks about plans to re-sign his free-agent-to-be quarterback, Smith has yet to appear in a playoff game where careers are ultimately made or broken.

A serviceable offense has been good enough to return the 49ers to prominence. It will take more than that to rekindle San Francisco’s football glory. If Smith struggles to match throws with the likes of Drew Brees or Aaron Rodgers, 4949 Centennial Blvd. in Santa Clara will be buzzing with contingency plans for the 2012 season, and it should start with Luck.  

KGO (810 AM) Sports Director Rich Walcoff can be heard weekdays from 5 to 9 a.m. on the KGO morning news. He can be reached at RichWalcoff@gmail.com.

That’s all for today.

Posted in 49ers-news | Comments Off
Jim Harbaugh “Coach’s Notebook: January 2”…

The San Francisco 49ers played a tough game against the St. Louis Rams on January 1 and came out with a 34-27 victory. The 49ers were already heading towards the playoffs but that victory locked up the two-seed in the NFC for them, handing them the luxury of a first-round bye and time to rest some players.

As far as Jim Harbaugh is concerned, this probably isn’t going to be a vacation of any sorts. He and his team will watch film on teams they could possibly face and prepare themselves by facing each other during this week at practice, since they don’t know who they are playing yet.

In Harbaugh’s weekly press conference, he made a few important points and answered some questions that reflected exactly how he felt about the win and the playoffs.

Media: Late in the season, your team had been on a three for 20 slump in the red zone. You’re 6-8 in scoring touchdowns in the last three games. Is that encouraging going in to this playoff game?

Jim Harbaugh “It is. We had hit a little bit of a slump there, three or four weeks back. But, I think it’s been improving and that’s encouraging.”

The red zone offense was something that had been lacking prior to the last three games, but Harbaugh knows that teams go through slumps. It’s not something that he was going to lose sleep over, but I’m sure it is something he addressed with his team. There is never a more crucial time to remain efficient in the red zone and that time is drawing near when the 49ers head into their first playoff game in nearly a decade on January 14. Knowing that, Harbaugh will have his team ready for anything they have to face.

M: Any things you guys will do the same (referring to Jim Harbaugh talking to his brother John Harbaugh)?

JH: “Yeah, there will be some similar things. Basically, we’re on a similar schedule. Some things, like I said, we both have a bye this week. Compared notes, some things are the same, some are different.”

As a fan, I have to admit it’s pretty cool to see that Jim is able to reach out to his older brother John despite essentially being in competition. There is a possibility that these two teams meet in the Super Bowl, especially with both teams being two-seeds in their respective leagues and having first-round byes. John has been to the playoffs before with the Ravens and Jim has to feel more confident that he can reach out to his brother for some advice in his first go as an NFL head coach.

M: You always hear about playoff experience. This team kind of reminds me of the 1981 Super Bowl team: 13-3, you’ve got a bye, virtually no experience on the roster in the playoffs. Underrated or overrated, playoff experience?

JH: “I think it’s good to have experience. It’s good to have been there before. I’m not overrating it or underrating it.”

Continuing down the course of having experience and this being Jim Harbaugh’s first year, he knows that experience is important. Talking to his brother can only offer him so much in terms of experience. The 49ers being there and playing in the playoffs is the only way to gain experience and for this group of guys, very, very few of them have playoff experience. Not to mention Jim Harbaugh is in his first year as an NFL coach, meaning that this is new territory for many of the 49ers. Hopefully everything the 49ers have been able to do all year to win games with be amplified in the playoffs—including their bond as a team.

David is co-founder of wrapupp sports blog where they post fresh content daily and present sports blogs and sports opinions – all with a West Coast bias. Growing up in the Bay Area, David is a huge supporter of all the local sports teams; the Giants, Athletics, Warriors, Sharks, 49ers, and Raiders. His one fault, admittedly, as many of his friends and family would say, is his love for the Los Angeles Lakers. Growing up, Magic Johnson was his favorite basketball player and he fell in love with the team. He chalks it up to, “Not knowing any better”. Now his love for sports has turned just as academic as it is intuitive and he follows most all sports all over the nation.

You can follow David on Twitter: @officialwrapupp

Sources:

49ers.com. Coach’s Notebook: Jan. 2. NFL 2011.

More from David Mehrwein and the Yahoo! Contributor Network:

San Francisco 49ers Vs. St. Louis Rams: Fan Preview

Oakland Raiders Vs. San Diego Chargers: Fan Preview

San Francisco 49ers Have Eight Players Selected to Pro Bowl: Fan Reaction

Top 2012 Pro Bowl Snubs: Fan Opinion

49ers Release WR Braylon Edwards: Fan Reaction

Note: This article was written by a Yahoo! contributor. Sign up here to start publishing your own sports content.

Running low on time today, i’ll be back tomorrow hopefully with some more news.

Posted in 49ers-news | Comments Off
49ers OC Greg Roman finalist for Penn State job

SANTA CLARA, Calif. (AP)—San Francisco 49ers offensive coordinator Greg
Roman is a finalist to replace Joe Paterno at Penn State, his agent said Monday.

Mike Harrison told the AP by phone that Roman interviewed for the position
in November and is on the “short list” to take over the embattled program,
rocked in recent months by the sex-abuse scandal.

Harrison said he expects to know soon whether Roman will be hired, but
declined to offer further details, such as whether Roman would finish out the
season with the playoff-bound NFC West champion 49ers (13-3). San Francisco is
the NFC’s No. 2 seed and earned a first-round bye, with its first game Jan. 14
at Candlestick Park.

“We should know in a week or so, that’s our best guess,” said Harrison, of
the Los Angeles-based agency Advantage Sports & Entertainment. “He interviewed
quite a while ago.”

Penn State’s season came to an end Monday with a 30-14 loss to Houston in
the TicketCity Bowl in Dallas.

Harrison said Roman—who came to the 49ers from Stanford along with coach
Jim Harbaugh last year—was offered the Tulane job to replace Bob Toledo. The
school hired Curtis Johnson last month.

Penn State officials have insisted it doesn’t have a leading candidate

USA Today and ESPN reported Sunday that New England Patriots offensive
coordinator Bill O’Brien is the top contender for the Nittany Lions job.

Acting Athletic Director David Joyner cut said there isn’t anybody who could
be classified as a leading candidate in its nearly two-month long search for a
football coach.

The program has been without a permanent head coach since Nov. 9, when
university trustees fired Hall of Famer Paterno in the aftermath of child sex
abuse charges against former assistant coach Jerry Sandusky. He is awaiting
trial and pleaded not guilty after waiving a preliminary court hearing last
month.

Longtime defensive coordinator Tom Bradley, who has been leading the team on
an interim basis, has interviewed for the job. Defensive line coach Larry
Johnson is also among the candidates who have interviewed.

Roman became the 49ers’ ninth offensive coordinator in as many seasons when
Harbaugh hired him. While the offense has hardly been flashy, quarterback Alex
Smith and San Francisco ended an eight-year playoff drought—with the 49ers’ 10
total turnovers ranking fewest in the NFL this season.

Smith, the 2005 No. 1 overall pick out of Utah, threw just five
interceptions—fewest in a single season in franchise history and tied for
fewest in NFL history.

The 39-year-old Roman, who was Stanford’s associate head coach and is
working his 15th NFL season, tutored two Heisman Trophy runners-up while
coaching the Cardinal: current Minnesota Vikings running back Toby Gerhart in
2009 and projected No. 1 draft pick Andrew Luck in 2010.

That year, Roman guided a Cardinal offense that ranked ninth nationally in
points scored this season at 40.3, 14th in total yards per game (472.5), 17th in
yards rushing per game (213.8) and first in time of possession (34:34).

——— —

AP Sports Writer Genaro C. Armas contributed to this story from Dallas.

What do you guys think about this.

Posted in 49ers-news | Comments Off
Purdy: San Francisco 49ers earn their much-needed…

ST. LOUIS — Those last few minutes of Sunday’s game, as their fingernails turned to powder holding onto a one-touchdown lead, meant everything to the 49ers.

Meant earning the No. 2 seed in the NFC for the playoffs.

Meant that they don’t have to line up for a playoff game next week while eight other NFL teams do.

Meant that all the 49ers players with injuries — some of whom were inactive here against the St. Louis Rams and some of whom gamely pushed through their pain to play — will now have a much-desired extra week to recuperate.

Meant that coach Jim Harbaugh will no longer have to search for adjectives when asked how important the eventual 34-27 victory was.

“How bad did we need the bye week?” Harbaugh said afterward, repeating a question, sounding almost irritated that it had been posed. “I can’t quantify it. We needed it bad, needed it very bad, needed it really bad … you can plug in whatever you want.”

OK, thanks for the offer. We’ll plug in the word “acutely.” How’s that sound? The 49ers needed acutely to win Sunday.

“It’s a big deal,” said 49ers tight end Justin Peelle, who filled in admirably for the ailing (jaw injury) Delanie Walker. “It doesn’t guarantee anything. But it’s a step toward where we want to go.”

Most important, it was not a step backward — although for a few furious minutes in the fourth quarter, a backward fall seemed more than a remote possibility. The Rams, after

falling behind by three touchdowns with 6:30 left in the game, demonstrated their professionalism by mounting a comeback almost out of nowhere — in front of the perhaps 15,000 moderately loud customers who were still left inside the Edward Jones Dome.

The flurry all happened within 13 seconds, thanks in part to 49ers mental lapses — a Rams touchdown, then a recovered onside kick, then a pass-interference flag, then another Rams touchdown. Suddenly, the 49ers were ahead by only seven points.

But at that point, Harbaugh’s team remembered that this was not 2009 or 2010. The players remembered to stay disciplined. This group of 49ers deserves credit for so many things. But it has often been the largely unnoticed decision or subtle play, the discipline to stay with the program laid out by Harbaugh and his staff, that has counted the most.

For instance: Have you wondered why quarterback Alex Smith has thrown just five interceptions in his 16 starts, half as many interceptions as in 2010 when he started only 10 games? It is because of decisions such as the one he made with 3:53 remaining, when the 49ers faced a third-down play as they were nursing their one-touchdown lead, trying to run out the clock.

In other words, Smith desperately needed a first down. But when he dropped back and saw nothing available, Smith chose to take a sack — even though it meant the 49ers would have to punt the ball away and leave the game in the defense’s hands. In previous years, Smith would have recklessly forced a pass and wound up with an interception. He would have scrambled wildly and fumbled away the ball.

“Potentially in the past, I might have tried to make something happen,” Smith conceded. “But the play wasn’t there to be made. And with our special teams and defense … I made the decision I did.”

Thus, Smith allowed himself to be hauled down by the Rams, 7 yards behind the line of scrimmage. The 49ers punted, and their defense did indeed hold the Rams, stopping St. Louis on a fourth-down incomplete pass. It was broken up by defensive backs Reggie Smith and Tramaine Brock, who stayed — that’s right — disciplined in their coverage. The 49ers offense then rushed for a first down before Smith took a knee as the clock expired.

“These are long, physical seasons,” said a relieved Smith. “To get a bye is big.”

And here’s one way to look at it: The 49ers received their bye exactly because of those last few minutes Sunday. The Saints and 49ers finished with identical 13-3 records. But the tiebreaker for the No. 2 seed turned out to be wins and losses within the conference — and the 49ers had one more conference victory than the Saints.

Where did that crucial extra victory take place? Let’s check the records. In October, New Orleans lost to the Rams at the Edward Jones Dome. The 49ers didn’t lose here Sunday.

Thirteen games in the win column is a difficult number for any team to reach in the NFL. Before we get too deep into playoff-matchup speculation, we should pause and salute the achievement. The last time that the 49ers won 13 regular-season games was in 1997. Wide receiver Michael Crabtree was in fourth grade. Team owner Jed York was in high school. Harbaugh was playing quarterback for the Indianapolis Colts. That’s a long time ago.

The 49ers were not pleased with how they almost blew Sunday’s game. That’s understandable. But on a day when they were without two or their top three wideouts and one of their top two tight ends, Harbaugh and offensive coordinator Greg Roman were as creative as ever with their personnel. The banged-up 49ers defense, with an obviously limited linebacker Patrick Willis (hamstring), gave up a season-high 27 points in regulation but stifled the Rams when it mattered most. And a fake field goal on special teams worked brilliantly.

Who’s got it better than the 49ers? Only the Green Bay Packers, who are the No. 1 seed in the NFC bracket. But Sunday’s victory put the 49ers in the best possible position to reach the conference title game. To paraphrase their coach, the 49ers needed to be in that position — needed it bad, needed it really bad, needed it very bad.

And now, they get to plug in where it all goes from here.

Contact Mark Purdy at mpurdy@mercurynews.com or 408-920-5092.

Thanks for visiting our blog =).

Posted in 49ers-news | Comments Off
San Francisco 49ers notebook: Michael Crabtree’s…

ST. LOUIS — Michael Crabtree enjoyed his first career game with two touchdown receptions Sunday, and he couldn’t have done it without some fine acting on a fake field-goal attempt.

Crabtree pretended he was leaving the field before stopping a couple of yards shy of the 49ers’ sideline. Kicker David Akers then lined up to try a field goal, took a direct snap and chucked a 14-yard touchdown pass to an uncovered Crabtree.

That third-quarter score gave the 49ers a 27-10 lead in their eventual 34-27 victory over the St. Louis Rams.

Coach Jim Harbaugh said the 49ers have been practicing that trick play for 10 weeks, during which time Crabtree said he has told Akers: “Just throw the ball and I got you.”

Akers wasn’t expecting special-teams coordinator Brad Seely’s call for the fake, but it resulted in Akers’ first career touchdown pass. It was also Akers’ second completion in two attempts — he had an 11-yard pass in 2006 for the Philadelphia Eagles.

“I looked over and Crab was wide open. I was like, ‘Oh my,’ ” Akers said. “I underthrew him, but he ran a little slant in there and made it look real smooth for me.”

Crabtree caught a 28-yard touchdown pass from Alex Smith in the second quarter for a 14-7 lead, a play Crabtree finished by high-stepping to the goal line. “It was the little bit of Deion (Sanders) in me and I had to slow it down,” said Crabtree.

Sunday’s team-high nine receptions for 92 yards made Crabtree the 49ers’

leading receiver for the first time in his three-year career. He has 73 receptions for 880 yards, just enough to beat out tight end Vernon Davis (67 catches, 792 yards).

  • Linebacker Patrick Willis looked healthy but had just four tackles in his first game since Dec. 4, when he strained his right hamstring against the Rams. “It felt like my feet were real heavy,” Willis said. “It was different, like it was new all over again.”

    Harbaugh thought Willis, a five-time Pro Bowl selection, looked strong but a little rusty. Willis said he wanted to return to action as quickly as possible rather than rest up for the playoffs.

  • Running back Frank Gore (seven carries, 9 yards) didn’t play in the second half. Harbaugh said Gore “had something that was bothering him.”

    Gore said he stayed on the sideline because of a coaching decision, adding: “He just said I was good. We were up three touchdowns, so I guess … I’m cool. I’ll be ready to play.”

  • Crabtree’s output, along with Davis’ eight catches for 118 yards, helped compensate for a thin receiving corps. Ted Ginn (ankle), Kyle Williams (concussion) and tight end Delanie Walker (jaw) did not play, and Braylon Edwards was released Tuesday. Brett Swain made his first start of the season and contributed a 6-yard catch for a first down.
  • Punter Andy Lee set an NFL record with a net average of 43.99 yards per punt. He had five punts Sunday for a net of 51.4, and two punts were downed inside the 10-yard line. The Raiders’ Shane Lechler held the previous record (43.85 net average, 2009).
  • Practice-squad call-up Joe Hastings debuted and had no receptions. But the undrafted rookie wearing No. 13 enjoyed playing in the 49ers’ 13th win. “I felt butterflies at the beginning, but they went away fast. It was fun,” said Hastings, who was targeted only once and made a valiant attempt at an underthrown pass.
  • Fullback Bruce Miller aggravated a knee injury late in the first quarter and didn’t return until the final five minutes. Defensive tackle Ray McDonald missed time in the second half because of an unknown injury.
  • Defensive tackle Justin Smith boosted his case for NFL Defensive Player of the Year. Slated to rest a leg injury in the second half, he returned to provide pressure on the Rams’ final series. He also had a third-down sack at the Rams’ 5 in the first quarter. “In my opinion, he’s our most valuable player,” Harbaugh said.
  • Kendall Hunter had 16 carries for 76 yards, and Anthony Dixon had eight for 21 yards. Dixon had three strong runs on the final series to help kill the clock.
  • Alex Smith finished the regular season with career highs: 274 completions, 446 attempts, 61.4 completion percentage and 3,150 yards. His 17 touchdown passes and five interceptions gave him a 3.4 ratio that ranks behind only Steve Young’s marks of 3.57 in 1992 and 3.5 in 1994 in team history.
  • The 49ers matched a franchise record by allowing only 23 touchdowns in the regular season, none by way of a return. They gave up 14.3 points per game, the third-best mark in team history.
  • Aldon Smith came close a couple times but did not add to his team-high total of 14 sacks, leaving him a half-sack shy of Jevon Kearse’s league rookie record.
  • Chris Culliver (left knee) came out in the fourth quarter, and Tramaine Brock to took over as the third cornerback.
  • The 49ers’ six road wins are their most since 1996. For the first time since 1990, they won five games that had 10 a.m. (PT) kickoffs.

    For more on the 49ers, see Cam Inman’s Hot Read blog at blogs.mercurynews.com/49ers.

  • What do you guys think about this.

    Posted in 49ers-news | Comments Off