Monday, January 16, 2023

49ers pull off Rout of Rival Seahawks in Wild Card Round

Playoffs - Kicking off Super Wild Card Weekend, the San Francisco 49ers played host to the division rival Seattle Seahawks in the first game of a busy playoff weekend that featured three action-packed days of postseason football. After sweeping the season-series against the Seahawks and clinching the NFC Western Division in Seattle in Week 15, Kyle Shanahan's 49ers team went into their first round match-up with plenty of confidence while riding the longest active winning-streak in the NFL with 10 straight wins. But as history has shown, beating any team three times in one season is no easy task. That proved to be true through the first two quarters as Seattle went blow for blow with the Niners in the first half. 

After opening the game on defense and holding Seattle to three and out punts on each of their first two drives, San Francisco got on the board early with a field goal on their opening-drive, followed by a touchdown pass from quarterback Brock Purdy to running back Christian McCaffrey. The Niners running back broke for a big gain on a 68-yard run before being awarded a few plays later with an easy touchdown. Dancing around a pair of rushers, Purdy stepped forward and hit a wide-open McCaffrey to his right for the 3-yard score. Refusing to go away early, Seattle answered right back with a long 16-play, 78-yard drive that lasted nearly 7-minutes and ended with a 7-yard touchdown run from rookie running back Kenneth Walker III. The Niners would add to their lead on their next possession with another Robbie Gould field goal, but back came Seattle with another trip to the end zone. After getting the better of Seahawks receiver D.K. Metcalf in their first two match-ups, 49ers cornerback Charvarius Ward was bullied all afternoon long by Metcalf who hauled in a 50-yard touchdown reception to put Seattle ahead, 14-13.

With both teams exchanging punts, the 49ers had thought they would be heading into the locker room with a 16-14 lead after Robbie Gould connected on his third field goal of the first half from 46-yards out with 17-seconds remaining, but a boneheaded play by San Francisco's Jimmie Ward helped gift Seattle an extra 3-points and a 1-point lead at the half. The unnecessary roughness call on Ward for hitting a sliding Geno Smith allowed Seahawks kicker Jason Myers to nail a 56-yard field goal as time expired. Staying alive in the first half by keeping the 49ers at bey in the red zone with only one touchdown in three trips, Seattle's defense was unable to say the same in the second half. Coming out of halftime with a chip on their shoulder, the 49ers' intensity only grew after a dirty play by Seattle defensive-back Johnathan Abram. After a 21-yard reception from receiver Deebo Samuel on the first drive of the second half, Abram made the tackle on Samuel and gave him an extra ankle twist after the play which infuriated both Deebo and his 49er teammates. After a little fisticuffs, the team rallied behind their teammate and punched in the go-ahead score several plays later with quarterback Brock Purdy lunging forward and into the end zone from a yard out. The drive that put the Niners back on top would be their longest scoring-drive of the season at 7-minutes and 45-seconds, spanning 75-yards over 13-plays. 

Seattle appeared to be headed for a score of their own on their ensuing-drive, but their trip inside the red zone would go up in flames after a turnover by the duo of Charles Omenihu and Nick Bosa who got to Geno Smith to force and recovered the fumble. The 49er offense would turn the turnover into points as Brock Purdy hit running back Elijah Mitchell for a 7-yard touchdown and George Kittle on a successful 2-point conversion. San Francisco would get their longest touchdown of the day on their next drive when Purdy hit Deebo Samuel on a 74-yard touchdown. After feeling the frustration following the dirty play, Deebo got the last laugh, tallying 66-yards after the catch on his way to paydirt thanks to a nice block by Brandon Aiyuk. The forced fumble by Geno Smith would open up the floodgates for the 49ers who scored 25 consecutive points. A second turnover would come in the form of a Deommodore Lenoir interception, who jumped in front of a Geno Smith pass for the pick. Following the fourth field goal of the day from Gould to extend the Niners' lead, Seattle did find the end zone again with a garbage time touchdown from Geno Smith to Metcalf, but the game was well over by then as San Francisco walked away with the 41-23 victory. 

With Seattle keeping up through the first 2+ quarters, the two key moments that lit a spark for the 49ers that allowed them to pull away with the 18-point rout was the fumble recovery by Bosa and the dirty play by Seahawks DB Johnathan Abram. Both would take place on consecutive drives and helped breathe life into the 49ers who jumped ahead and never looked back. Making his postseason debut, 49ers quarterback Brock Purdy shook off some early jitters and showed that even the big stage of the postseason did not bother him, finishing with 332 passing yards and 3 passing touchdowns while rushing for another. Breaking a few records along the way -- Purdy became the youngest QB all-time (23 years, 18 days) with 2+ passing TD's & 1+ rushing TD's in a playoff game. His 4 total touchdowns vs Seattle would be the most in NFL history for a rookie in a playoff game and his 332 passing yards were the most for a 49ers QB in the postseason since Joe Montana's 357 yards against the Cincinnati Bengals in Super Bowl XXIII. Overall, the San Francisco offense tallied 505 total yards, their most in any single game in the last three seasons. Converting 24 first downs and punting only once, the duo of Christian McCaffrey and Deebo Samuel helped the 49er offense shine. McCaffrey recorded 119 yards on 15 carries and also added a receiving touchdown, whereas Deebo logged a playoff career-high of 133 yards on 6 catches a day before his 27th birthday. 

Playoffs Division Round Preview: Continuing their road to Super Bowl LVII, the 49ers will welcome the Dallas Cowboys to Levi's Stadium. In a playoff rematch of last year's NFC Wild Card round where San Francisco pulled off a 23-17 road win in Dallas as a Wild Card team, Kyle Shanahan's 49ers will look to knock off Dak Prescott and company for a second consecutive year, this time as a division-winner. The Cowboys made light work of Tom Brady and the Tampa Bay Buccaneers with a 31-14 win on Monday Night Football in the last of six match-ups over the busy Super Wild Card Weekend, but are coming off short rest, whereas the 49ers got their playoff feet wet rather early in the first game played over the weekend on Saturday afternoon. Coach Shanahan will hope to work the extra two day advantage in his team's favor as the San Francisco defense prepares for the challenge that will be provided by a balanced Cowboys offensive attack with weapons both on the ground and thru the air. With San Francisco's offense clicking on all cylinders as well over their NFL-leading 11 consecutive wins, Dallas' defense is not to be taken lightly led by linebacker and Defensive Player of the Year candidate Micah Parsons who is likely to be the runner-up to the Niners' Nick Bosa. All things considered, the game will likely go one of two ways: a low-scoring defensive struggle with neither team letting up or an all-around shootout with both offenses going blow for blow in a high-scoring affair. Either way, there will be no shortage of star talent and it should be a good one with a ticket to the NFC Championship on the line to face the winner of the Philadelphia Eagles & New York Giants contest. 


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