After forcing a three and out on defense during Seattle's opening-possession, the 49er offense then delivered on their end of the bargain. Following a slow start on offense at home in their previous game against Green Bay, Jimmy Garoppolo and company did the complete opposite on Sunday, moving the ball with ease before a 21-yard touchdown grab in the end zone from tight-end Ross Dwelley. Continuing to share the love on offense, the score by Dwelley would mark the Niners' 12th offensive touchdown scored this season, all of which by 12 different players. Forcing another three and out on defense, San Francisco again appeared to be in business. Instead, their second offensive possession would go up in flames as Jimmy G was intercepted on a pass intended for George Kittle. Again forcing a Seattle three and out, the 49er offense would move the ball into field goal range where Wishnowsky would attempt a 41-yard field goal that sailed wide-left. After forcing another pair of Seattle three and outs to give them five in as many possessions, Russell Wilson and company would get things going before the half. A pair of big plays on passes from Wilson to running back Alex Collins and wide-receiver D.K. Metcalf would setup the game-tying score as both teams headed into the locker room tied up at 7 at the half.
Continuing the never ending trend of injuries, the 49ers would open the second half with a new quarterback under center as Jimmy Garoppolo was listed as questionable to return with a calf injury. He would not see the field for the remainder of the game as rookie Trey Lance took over the QB duties. After exchanging punts to open the second half, Seattle would take a 14-7 lead on a QB scramble by Wilson who dove across the goal-line for the go-ahead score. Unfortunately, San Francisco's offense wouldn't even get a chance to answer as their costly mistakes made their way to the special-teams side when 49ers return man Trenton Cannon who was praised for giving San Francisco a jolt when they needed it most a week ago against the Packers, muffed and fumbled the ensuing kick. Giving Seattle the ball back inside the red zone, the Seahawks would need only two plays to capitalize on the costly turnover. Just when the 49er defense appeared to have Wilson dead to rights for a sack to bring up a third and long, the shifty QB squirmed free before lobbing up a pass into the end zone for a touchdown to receiver Freddie Swain.
With Russell Wilson and the Seahawks coming off back to back losses, the 8-time Pro Bowl QB has never lost three straight games in his career and he wouldn't fall victim to his first three-game skid on Sunday, especially against a 49ers team he's owned throughout his career (15-4 record against SF including playoffs entering Sunday). Like Wilson who seemingly plays his best against San Francisco, 49ers receiver Deebo Samuel has also enjoyed his most success when facing Seattle. With only six career games of at least 100+ receiving yards, three of those games have come against the Seahawks. After being up by a touchdown to trailing by two scores, the 49er offense would find an answer on their ensuing drive when Trey Lance dropped a pass over the top and into the lap of Samuel who ran up the sidelines untouched for a 76-yard score. Sadly, their kicking woes would continue as Wishnowsky missed the point-after. With defensive pass-interference on third down being a hot-topic for the Niners following a trio of pivotal calls in their loss to Aaron Rodgers and the Packers the week before, another P.I. call on third and 10 would hurt the defense and give new life to the opposition as 49ers newcomer Dre Kirkpatrick was flagged for a 23-yard penalty and automatic first down. Two plays later, Alex Collins would run up the middle for another Seattle touchdown.
Trailing 28-13 with under five minutes to go in the fourth quarter, San Francisco would pull within a touchdown as Trey Lance again found Deebo Samuel for the touchdown, but an unsuccessful onside-kick attempt would put an end to any chance of pulling off the comeback as Seattle milked the clock to a 28-21 final. Rookie running back Trey Sermon had his best game yet on the ground, rushing for 89 yards on 19 carries, but Deebo Samuel would lead the way on offense, hauling in game-highs with eight receptions for 156 yards and two touchdowns to join Jerry Rice and Dwight Clark as the only SF players since 1950 with 90+ receiving yards in three of the team's first four games of a season. Garoppolo finished with 165 yards, one touchdown and one interception on 14 of 23 pass attempts, while Lance threw for 157 yards and two touchdowns on 9 of 18 attempts. Seattle's Russell Wilson threw for 149 yards and two touchdowns on 16 of 23 passes.
Week 5 Preview: Continuing their gauntlet of facing formidable foes in the NFC West, the 49ers will attempt to bounce back from their current two-game skid while also continuing their winning ways on the road where they're 2-0 this year, with a trip to the desert up next to face the undefeated Arizona Cardinals (4-0). Sitting atop the division in first place after winning on the road and handing the L.A. Rams their first loss of the season, Cards QB Kyler Murray looks like an early favorite for the MVP Award. With Jimmy G scheduled for an MRI in the coming days to determine the severity of his calf injury, it's almost certain Trey Lance will make his first career start in Week 5. Hopefully he'll have his running backs and kicker back as San Francisco will need all the help they can get if they want to stop the bleeding and prevent themselves from falling below .500 on the season.
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