Monday, September 28, 2020

49ers Complete Sweep of New York with Big Win vs Giants

Week 3 - Next man up. That was the motto on Sunday when the 49ers continued their two-week long pilgrimage in East Rutherford, New Jersey, following the numerous injuries the team sustained thru the first two weeks of the season. After recording their first win of the season a week ago at MetLife Stadium against the Jets, Kyle Shanahan's 49ers team was right back at it in the same stadium in Week 3 against the Giants. Something many of Shanahan's players were concerned about after the team suffered multiple key injuries on both sides of the ball due to what many blamed on the newly-installed artificial turf. But after league officials deemed the field safe in the days leading up to the game, the Niners expressed their frustration out on the scoreboard with a good ole shellacking of their opponent. 


Playing on Sunday without starters at a laundry list of positions including: quarterback, running back, wide receiver, tight-end, line-backer, cornerback and three defensive-linemen all due to injury, San Francisco was able to showcase their depth as the team received contributions from players all across the board, some for the first time this season. Case in point: rookie wide-out Brandon Aiyuk. Playing in only the second game of his career, the 2020 first-round pick out of Arizona State put a stamp on Sunday's game by hauling in a game-high five receptions for 70-yards. He would also add another 30-yards on the ground to go along with a rushing touchdown, the first of his career. Aiyuk was one of the many 49er players who helped make things easier for backup QB Nick Mullens who made his first start since 2018, getting the nod in place of the injured Jimmy Garoppolo. Mullens who was a hot commodity in the offseason as multiple teams inquired about his services in a possible trade, displayed exactly why coach Shanahan and GM John Lynch made the right decision in keeping him around in case of an emergency. Facing a subpar Giants team that is without their best player in running back Saquon Barkley and under a first-year head coach, the 49ers were still able to have their way despite their decimated roster as Mullens led the charge and took advantage of the opportunity by putting up solid numbers. 

After taking a 3-0 lead on their opening possession, the 49er defense was able to turn a Daniel Jones fumble into another Robbie Gould field goal before New York got on the board with a field goal of their own. Gould failed to give his team a six-point lead when his third field goal attempt was missed wide right, which opened the door for the Giants to tie the game at 6-all following another Graham Gano field goal. But the game wouldn't be close for long as the 49ers finally found the end zone thanks to Jerrick McKinnon's third touchdown in as many weeks for the first time in his career. An interception with just over a minute remaining in the first half by Fred Warner, would allow the 49ers to increase their lead to 16-6 heading into the locker room at halftime. Opening the second half with another Giants field goal, the 49er defense would put their foot down by pitching a shutout the rest of the way. Social distancing themselves from the Giants on the scoreboard, Aiyuk's touchdown on San Francisco's first possession of the second half made it a 23-9 ballgame. With tight-end Jordan Reed missing the entire second half after sustaining ankle and knee injuries in the early going, Mullens distributed the ball to ten different receivers, including fourth-string running back Jeff Wilson Jr. who followed up a turnover on downs forced by the 49er defense, with a 19-yard receiving touchdown to blow the game open, 29-9. 


Wilson Jr. would add to his busy day one possession later by tallying a rushing touchdown to his daily output as San Francisco increased their lead to 36-9. The final nail in the coffin would come in the form of a forced fumble on receiver Darius Slayton as the 49er defense added to their turnover total and held the Giants offense to their first game without a touchdown since Week 15 of the 2018 season. Coach Shanahan's 49ers team dominated the game in all facets, but perhaps none greater than in the time of possession category as the San Francisco offense controlled the tempo by nearly doubling New York's time of possession: 36:44 to 20:16. In fact, the Giant's 7:34 time of possession in the first half was their lowest in a half since 2000. Contributing to that major mismatch was the fact that the 49ers offense did not punt in the entire game for the first time since Week 16 of the 1993 season. By throwing for 343 yards, 1 touchdown and no interceptions in the dominant win, Nick Mullens tied a franchise record held by the great Joe Montana for tallying at least 220 yards passing in each of his nine career starts. Quite an impressive resume as Mullens entered the game having averaged 285 yards passing per game, a feat that puts him in elite company as only Patrick Mahomes, Andrew Luck and Cam Newton have averaged more through their first eight NFL starts. 

Week 4 Preview - Returning to the Bay Area from the east coast, the 49ers will attempt to log their first home win of the season when they host the Philadelphia Eagles (0-2-1) in front of an empty Levi's Stadium on Sunday Night Football. Coming off a 23-23 tie at home against the Cincinnati Bengals, the combination of quarterback Carson Wentz and head coach Doug Pederson will attempt to right the ship and shake off the funk as they seek their first win of the season in a lowly NFC Eastern Division. However, coach Shanahan has other plans as his team is expected to receive reinforcements on offense with the return of tight-end George Kittle, running back Raheem Mostert and receiver Deebo Samuel. A welcoming sight for whoever is at the quarterback position come Sunday, whether that's Nick Mullens or Jimmy Garoppolo. Keeping pace in the NFC West, the 49ers were able to follow up their Week 1 loss with consecutive wins to improve to 2-1 on the year, while also receiving some help in the division as both the Arizona Cardinals and Los Angeles Rams suffered their first losses of the season to also fall to 2-1. Meanwhile, the Seattle Seahawks sit atop the division as one of only three unbeaten teams in the NFC thru the first three weeks of the season. 


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Monday, September 21, 2020

Injury-riddled Niners ground Jets in blowout Win

Week 2 - Even before Sunday's game between the New York Jets and San Francisco 49ers, things have been grim for the defending NFC Champs who have had to deal with multiple key injuries in the first weeks of the 2020-21 NFL season. But nothing would have prepared them for what they would endure in Week 2. In a battle between two teams coming off Week 1 losses and seeking their first win of the season, the 49ers were once again quick to jump out to an early lead on Sunday when running back Raheem Mostert turned the first snap of the ball game into an 80-yard touchdown. It would be one of the few moments enjoyed by the team collectively as the Niners' luck quickly turned once again. After losing their superstar tight-end George Kittle in the first half in Week 1 to a sprained knee that also kept him out of this one, Kyle Shanahan's 49ers endured a myriad of injuries in the first half on Sunday. Perhaps none greater than the injury suffered by second-year defensive-end and last year's Defensive Rookie of the Year: Nick Bosa. During a 13-play drive that ate up 6-minutes and 43-seconds and ended in a Jets field goal, Bosa went down with an apparent left knee injury that required him to be carted off the field. Two plays later, fellow d-lineman and former first-round pick Solomon Thomas would also need to be carted off the field with a similar knee injury. MRI results would confirm what the team had feared for both players -- a torn ACL. Adding insult to injury to a banged up 49er defense that had already ruled out both Dee Ford (neck) and Richard Sherman (calf) in the days leading up to Sunday's game. 


Things on the offensive side wouldn't be a whole lot better as both Jimmy Garoppolo and Raheem Mostert went to the locker room before halftime with ankle and knee injuries respectively. Making matters worse, neither player would return in the second half. While it wasn't apparent when Mostert had suffered his injury, the injury to Garoppolo occurred during San Francisco's second possession of the game on a low-hit sack that brought Jimmy G to his knees. While he would play through it for the remainder of the half after team trainers wrapped extra tape around his ankle, Garoppolo took multiple hits and was shown limping around in obvious discomfort. Even then, he managed to find tight-end Jordan Reed for a pair of passing touchdowns on back-to-back drives in the second quarter. It would be a memorable day for Reed who filling in for injured Kittle, had went a total of 673 days in between touchdowns since his last score on November 2018 with the Washington Redskins. 

Opening the second half with backup QB Nick Mullens under center, the 49ers quickly found themselves in a 3rd and 31 situation before Jerick McKinnon exploded for a 55-yard run that got the 49ers into enemy territory and allowed them to kick a 46-yard Robbie Gould field goal. San Francisco's second drive on offense with Mullens at the quarterback position wouldn't be as lucky as he was intercepted on a tipped-pass intended for McKinnon, which the Jets would turn into another field goal. Any chances the Jets had of pulling off a late comeback were put to bed when McKinnon made a house-call from 16-yards out to give his team a 31-6 lead in the 4th quarter. New York would get a garbage-time touchdown late in the 4th quarter when QB Sam Darnold escaped pressure before finding receiver Braxton Berrios for a 30-yard score to make it a 31-13 final. 


While the 49ers' first win of the season would come at a great cost after losing multiple players to injury, the team saw a much different story play out on third down than the one that left them with a loss in Week 1. Kyle Shanahan's offense converted on 53% of third downs on Sunday, compared to just 18% a week ago. As expected with their starting running back Le'Veon Bell sidelined with a hamstring injury, the Jets went with a steady diet of Frank Gore in the run game as the long-time 49er and the franchise's all-time leader in rushing, carried the ball 21 times for 63-yards on Sunday against his former team. In comparison, San Francisco got 92-yards rushing on 8 carries from Mostert before his injury and another 77-yards on 3 carries from McKinnon in an all-around efficient performance for the 49ers run game. While Sam Darnold passed for 179-yards and a touchdown on 21-of-32 pass attempts, Garoppolo threw for 131-yards and two TD's on 14-of-16 passing before missing the entire second half. Mullens finished the game completing 8-of-11 passes for 71-yards and a pick. 49ers rookie receiver Brandon Aiyuk made his NFL-debut and finished with two receptions for 21-yards, but it was Jordan Reed who stole the show in the 49ers receiving game with 7 catches for 50-yards and 2 TD's, his first multi-TD game since Week 7 of the 2017 season. 

Week 3 - Several 49er players took to Twitter after the game to express their distaste for the newly installed artificial-turf at New Jersey's MetLife Stadium following the numerous injuries suffered in Sunday's win. Whether those complaints fall on deaf ears or not, it's virtually impossible that anything will be done before kickoff in Week 3 as the Niners will return to that very field when they face the New York Giants (0-2). Coming off a loss in Chicago to the Bears, the Giants clawed their way back from a 17-0 halftime deficit before running out of time and falling in regulation, 17-13. Similar to the Niners, the Giants also had a rough day in the injury department on Sunday as they lost their superstar running back Saquon Barkley for the year with a torn ACL, the same injury suffered by Bosa and Thomas. Both teams will be thin at running back when they meet next week, as the 49ers found out on Monday that they'll be without both Raheem Mostert and Tevin Coleman in Week 3 with knee injuries. Before having to leave Sunday's game, Mostert set another record with his speed. A week after clocking in at a speed of 22.73 mph, the fastest speed by a ball carrier since 2018, Mostert did himself one better by setting another record and reaching 23.1 mph on his game-opening touchdown run, the fastest since 2016. Shanahan and company hope Mostert is just one of the many players they're able to replace as they'll have no other choice than to live by the, "next man up" mantra for at least the next week. As for Jimmy G, it appears the team dodged a bullet and will make a game-time decision on whether backup QB Nick Mullens will need to start in his place or not. 



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Monday, September 14, 2020

Murray, Cardinals hand 49ers Loss in Opener


Week 1 - After suffering the heart-wrenching loss to the Kansas City Chiefs in Super Bowl 54, the San Francisco 49ers dubbed the 2020-21 season their self-proclaimed "Revenge Tour" in an effort to settle some unfinished business following their 4th quarter collapse that left a bad taste in the mouths of Niner players and fans alike. On Sunday, their season and so-called tour got off to a rough start as the 49ers were upended by Kyler Murray and the visiting Arizona Cardinals. With fires raging up and down the west coast and more specifically the state of California, the 49ers were forced to take extra precaution all week during practice with the air quality reaching unhealthy to nearly hazardous levels in the Bay Area. But if that wasn't enough cause for concern come game day, the team's depleted receiving corps would surely do the trick. With last year's rookie standout Deebo Samuel placed on the team's Injured List and expected to miss the first three weeks of the season while still recovering from a broken foot and 2020 first-round pick Brandon Aiyuk nursing a hamstring strain, quarterback Jimmy Garoppolo played every bit as uncomfortable as some feared he would without two of his starting receivers. And he nearly lost his superstar tight-end as the 49ers had an injury scare with Pro-Bowler George Kittle. 

As for the Cardinals who are much improved from a roster standpoint compared to where they were a season ago, Arizona was one of the busiest teams in the league over the offseason and easily made the biggest splash on offense with the acquisition of wide-out DeAndre Hopkins from the Houston Texans. Pairing an elite receiver in his prime with a bright young talent like Kyler Murray should pay dividends as well as cause fits for the 49er defense for many years to come. Hopkins would waste no time making his presence felt with his new team as he hauled in a career-high 14 catches for 151 yards. The newest member of the Cards dwarfed his teammates in receiving yards as no other Cardinal tallied more than 34-yards. But it was the play-making ability of Murray that ultimately led to the 49er defense scratching their head after Week 1. 

San Francisco got off to a good start on both sides of the ball as a Robbie Gould field goal from 52-yards out got the Niners on the board early following their first possession. After a forced punt on Arizona's first possession, Garoppolo made quick work of the Cardinals defense as he found running back Raheem Mostert with a pass up the middle for a 76-yard touchdown, a career-long for both parties. Blowing by Arizona rookie Isaiah Simmons for the easy score, Mostert was clocked at a top speed of 22.73 mph on his way to the end zone, the fastest by a ball carrier since 2018. With another stop on defense, this time on a three and out, the 49ers seemed to be in business yet again before Arizona forced a three and out of their own that resulted in a blocked punt. One play later, the Cardinals cashed in on the miscue for a 10-yard touchdown by Chase Edmonds. Looking to extend their lead, the 49ers marched all the way down to the 1-yard line before a gutsy decision by head coach Kyle Shanahan to go for it on 4th and goal. Electing to hand it off, Mostert was stuffed at the goal line for a turnover on downs. Luckily for the 49ers, Cardinals kicker Zane Gonzalez missed his first of three field goal attempts which failed to tie the game. After an interception by Niners safety Jaquiski Tartt on Arizona's next possession, both teams would exchange field goals as San Francisco took a 13-10 lead into the half, despite going 0-for-6 on third down. 

The Cardinals would open the second half by suffering a second missed field goal by Gonzalez, but the Niners would fail to get much going on offense themselves as their only two possessions of the third quarter resulted in punts. Starting things off in the fourth quarter, the Cardinals would benefit from a costly unnecessary roughness penalty on a bogus late-hit call on the sliding Murray on 2nd and 21. The speedy Murray would eventually make the defense pay by using his legs to rush for a 22-yard touchdown to give Arizona their first lead of the day. In need of an answer, the 49ers would get just that in the form of a 5-yard touchdown reception by running back Jerrick McKinnon. Setup by a 41-yard connection from Garoppolo to his fullback Kyle Juszczyk, McKinnon who had gone 966 days since playing in his last game following multiple injuries and setbacks, scored his long-awaited first touchdown in a 49er uniform to put his team back on top. Trailing 20-17, Murray and the Cardinals offense continued to chip away at the 49er defense in the fourth quarter as Arizona had a DeAndre Hopkins touchdown erased as the replay review determined the receiver was down just shy of the goal line. Unbothered by the reversal, Kenyan Drake ran up the middle on the very next play to punch in the go-ahead score. 

Given one final chance with just over five minutes remaining, the 49ers had the clock in their favor and all three timeouts remaining if they had a last-minute come-from-behind win at home against Arizona in mind for the second consecutive season. Garoppolo and company would march to the 16-yard line with less than a minute remaining, before a pair of incomplete passes intended for Trent Taylor were broken up, resulting in a game-sealing turnover on downs. Though Garoppolo steered clear in the giveaway department, he made a few errant passes and took three sacks before finishing 19-of-33 for 259 passing yards and 2 touchdowns, while his counterpart completed 26-of-40 passes for 230 yards, 1 touchdown and 1 interception. However, Murray's real damage came on the ground as he tallied a game-high 91 yards rushing to go along with his rushing touchdown. Kenyan Drake added another 60-yards on the ground on 16 carries. With the aforementioned DeAndre Hopkins leading the game in both receptions and receiving yards, Raheem Mostert lead the way in both receiving (95) and rushing yards (56) for San Francisco. 

Super Bowl hangover? Probably not, but it appears this unprecedented season without any preseason reps to help prep for could take longer to adjust to than initially thought for Kyle Shanahan's reigning NFC Champs. Also worth noting is just how much the team fed off of the raucous crowd of Levi's Stadium a season ago as the seats at Levi's were empty on Sunday and likely will be all season long due to the pandemic. The inability to convert on third downs early on and the team's failure to prevent Murray from running free and creating plays with his feet were ultimately what did the Niners in in the opener, not to mention their short-handed offense that clearly misses both Deebo Samuel and Brandon Aiyuk in the receiving department. 

Let the early season overreaction begin! 

Week 2 Preview - The 49ers (0-1) will take to the road for the first time this season when they pay a visit to MetLife Stadium in New Jersey to face the New York Jets (0-1) in Week 2. Coming off a 27-17 loss against the division rival Buffalo Bills, the Jets who will be without Le'Veon Bell (hamstring), will call upon future Hall of Fame running back Frank Gore whom 49er fans are quite familiar with as he spent 10 seasons with the franchise from 2005-2014 and was named to 5-Pro Bowls. The fan favorite who to this day still has a red and white photo of the No. 74 as his Twitter avatar to honor his former teammate and the recently retired Joe Staley, says he still holds the 49ers organization and their fans near and dear to his heart. The same could be said about Gore for the Faithful as the 37-year old back just surpassed Hall of Famer Emmitt Smith for the 3rd most games played in NFL history at the RB position (227). Having been at or near the bottom of the AFC Eastern Division standings for four of the past five seasons now, the Jets were absolutely obliterated in the time of possession battle in their Week 1 loss to Buffalo, as the Bills controlled the ball for 41:16 compared to New York's 18:44. However, if the Niners plan to have similar success with the ball in their possession, they'll need to do a much better job on 3rd down if they want to avoid falling in an early 0-2 hole, as they converted only 18% compared to Arizona's 50. After shipping away their best player in Jamal Adams to the Seattle Seahawks, the Jets are a rebuilding team that is still multiple seasons away from truly contending for a division title. That said, I'd expect a big day for the 49er defense and an all around bounce back performance for Kyle Shanahan's San Francisco team, even if they're without tight-end George Kittle who suffered a sprained knee and will be further evaluated for Sunday's game. 



Follow me on Twitter: @FraserKnowsBest