Kings Can’t Contain Plumlee, Drop To Brooklyn

By Shawn Whelchel.

The Sacramento Kings dropped the first game of their four game roadtrip to the Brooklyn Nets on Monday night, after sloppy play and a lack of bench scoring neutralized a big night from DeMarcus Cousins and Rudy Gay.

Gay led all scorers in the game with 25 points on 9-of-21 shooting, while Cousins continued his strong play, following closely behind with 24 points on an efficient 9-of-12 shooting from the field, accounting for 49 of the Kings 99 total points.

But while four out of five starters finished Monday’s contest in double digits for the Kings, the bench failed to provide the necessary support during their minutes on the court, adding just 19 points while contributing to the losing effort.

Nets center Mason Plumlee continues to shine in place of Brook Lopez, who has been reserved to a bench role as of late, as he dumped in 6-of-7 attempts good for a team high 22 points on the night.

The Kings continue to hurt themselves with sloppy play, as a total of 21 turnovers on the night led to 25 points for the Nets at home. Brooklyn’s bench also outscored the Kings by 19 points.

Despite the lack of bench play, the Kings pulled to within 5 points with just over five minutes to go in the fourth quarter. But the defense couldn’t hold off the Nets, who used a pair of runs to solidify their victory over the visiting Kings for their 14th win of the season.

The Kings will take on the Celtics on Wednesday, December 31 at 10 a.m.

Cardinal Poised for Pac-12 Play With Romp of Arkansas Pine Bluff

By Matthew T.F. Harrington

STANFORD, Calif. — If Monday night’s contest against the University of Arkansas at Pine Bluff was the barometer to gauge the Stanford’s readiness heading into the start conference play, consider the Cardinal prepared…and then some.

The Cardinal romped its guests from the Southwestern Athletic Conference 74-39 at Maples Pavilion, at one point leading 19-1, riding an absurd shooting touch and airtight defense to the blowout victory.

Stanford (8-3) has now made statements in back-to-back contests after losing to BYU earlier this month. In the most recent outing, the Cardinal picked up the biggest decision it has posted this season. Stanford upset ninth-ranked Texas 74-71 in overtime in Austin the day before Christmas Eve.

“With Texas, it was more than getting a resume win, it was knowing we belong,” said Cardinal guard Anthony Brown. “Knowing we’re a tournament team, especially for the younger guys. It’s their first opportunity to get a big signature win. It gives you a little bit more confidence.”

Monday night, the men in home whites made it far less interesting.

“Coming off the Christmas break, you never know what’s going to happen,” said Stanford coach Johnny Dawkins. “You never know where your team is going to be. We were pretty sharp.”

Stanford, prepping for its initial Pac-12 contest against Washington State on Friday, displayed all the hallmarks of a dominant squad against UAPB (3-11), exceling on both sides of the ball.

“Defensively we did a good job,” said Brown. “Obviously it’s nice to get a win before heading into conference. It’s important to have momentum heading into the Pac-12.”

In terms of confidence, the Cardinal shot 51 percent from the field.

“You have nights where you hit them all and nights where you miss them,” said Dawkins. “That’s just part of our game. I’m just looking at the quality of shot, that’s what I grade. I thought our guys took great shots, not good shots.”

Defensively, Stanford suffocated the Golden Lions to only 13 baskets on 41 attempts from the floor, forcing 25 turnovers while swiping 13 steals.

“I’m really proud of us defensively,” said Dawkins. “That’s something we really hang our hat on. They have a lot of guards, perimeter guys who can beat you off the dribble and make plays. We did a really good job on containing penetration. We challenged a lot of shots. To hold any team to 39 points, I don’t care who you’re playing against, you’re doing a heck of a job defensively.”

Want three-point shooting? The Cardinal received it in droves, hitting 11 shots from beyond the arc. Worried Stanford’s depth behind the starting five won’t produce if called upon? Five different reserves combined to post 24 points, including a thunderous dunk from junior Rosco Allen that drew many a gasp of awe from the Maples crowd.

“Every minute is important,” said Brown. “There will be games where the score is close and we can’t give up runs. There might be a time in the game where people are in foul trouble and the bench has to produce.”

About the only thing Stanford didn’t do well was manage the ball, turning it over 14 times. That may just have been because the Cardinal owned the rock all night and had more chances to cough it up by sheer volume or due to some bench players gaining an increased role.

“I think they’re in the top ten or so in steals even though they play zone,” said Dawkins of Pine Bluff. “I thought we did a really good job of valuing the basketball against a team that plays the zone as good as anybody.”

Fifth-year senior Anthony Brown led the baller barrage with 16 points, including an eye-popping four treys hit on five attempts. In fact, Brown came just one first-half three shy of matching Pine Bluff’s total field goals made in the entire period (5).

Teammates Stefan Nastic (13) and Chasson Randle (11) joined Brown in double-digit scoring, all despite seeing somewhat limited minutes with the rout firmly on. Golden Lions star Marcel Mosley posted a game-high 25 points, including 17 second-half tallies.

The Cardinal don’t expect to have it this easy when the welcome the Cougars to The Farm Friday afternoon, nor do they expect Sunday’s contest against no. 19 Washington to be uneventful.

“In our conference, every night is going to be the same,” said Dawkins “It’s going to be a grind every night. All these coaches and teams have pride. They come to compete, so we have to do the same.”

Thanks, but no thanks: 49ers win, then dismiss Harbaugh after four seasons

Harbaugh goodbye

By Morris Phillips

First, the 49ers attempted to trade Jim Harbaugh in the off-season, hardly a gift after three straight conference championship games and a Super Bowl appearance.  Then they didn’t quell the talk during the season, saw the team suffer injuries and falter, and Jed York sent that pointed tweet after the loss to the Seahawks.

So the complicated stage was set for Sunday when after the season-concluding win over Arizona, 20-17, the organization announced coach and team would split via mutual agreement after four seasons together.  Harbaugh, just minutes prior to the announcement, said this of his tenure:

“I thought we accomplished great things. Tremendous football.  So many people to thank for that.  So many people worked so hard to construct where this football team is.  Feel great to be a part of it.  Feel it’s been signature years in my life and I have much gratitude for everyone involved.”

Now that it’s over, how did things deteriorate so within the inner sanctum of the team?  Although it’s who knows for sure with all of the players involved being so tight lipped, it probably centers around critical personnel decisions regarding players and assistant coaches that did or didn’t go as the disposed coach would have liked.  Supposedly, the organization wanted offensive coordinator Greg Roman released, while Harbaugh demanded he stay.

If that disagreement indeed took place, it was one of only many.  Throughout, Harbaugh gained the reputation of being argumentative and dismissive, in direct issue with the organization’s other stars, GM Trent Baalke, owner Jed York and likely team president Paraag Marathe as well.  Over time, a division grew wider and Baalke, York and Marathe decided they would undertake the challenge of replacing Harbaugh with someone just as good–and as unlikely as it will be–just as successful.

Who that someone will be is tomorrow’s news, just as the fates of Frank Gore, Justin Smith, Michael Crabtree and others who have been critical players in the team’s previous three seasons will be major storylines.  What’s undeniable is that in a 32-team league where the stakes are this high, and the resources this even, the 49ers could just as easily lapse into mediocrity over the coming years as continue an upward arc and form a Super Bowl champion.

Gore knows all too well.  He spoke eloquently (for him) about how Harbaugh allowed him to develop from a great player into a great player that won.  The last four years have transformed Gore from a cornerstone player on subpar teams into a likely Hall of Famer.  Along the way, through Harbaugh’s admiration for Gore, we learned how brilliant a leader and prepared a competitor the veteran running back is.

“I like how he approached the game of football.  My best years, they were with him,” Gore said of Harbaugh.  “He was here and we won.  I just wish him the best.  I know whatever team he goes to, whether it’s NFL or college, he’s going to be fine.”

On Sunday, Gore made a definitive pitch for another contract by giving the Cardinals’ defense fits with 25 carries for 144 yards rushing.  It was the second straight week Gore was fantastic, following a concussion he suffered three weeks ago in Seattle.  Not surprisingly, the offensive line without Alex Boone, but with Joe Staley, Mike Iupati and Anthony Davis was settled and staunch.

Accordingly, Colin Kaepernick played unencumbered, finishing with two touchdown passes, no picks and just one sack.  In a season in which the 49ers’ established a new franchise worst for sacks allowed, the protection afforded their quarterback against a ferocious defensive front may have been the most hopeful sign of the day.

Trailing 7-0 in the first quarter, it was Kaepernick extending a play by escaping the pocket, who found Anquan Boldin on a pass-run play that would cover 76 yards and tie the game.

Then in the third quarter—after the 49ers were made to trail again by an Arizona quick-strike drive before the half—Kaepernick threw to a wide-open Bruce Miller in the back of the end zone for the game’s only scoring play after halftime.

The 49ers’ defense came up with a pair of timely interceptions of Ryan Lindley, who started for Coach Bruce Arians after the Cardinals put up a smoke screen during the week that said rookie Logan Thomas would go for a struggling offense that was outclassed twice by Seattle in recent weeks.  Lindley made some big throws to Michael Floyd and was productive for a half, but he was picked off by Chris Culliver in the third quarter, and then again by Craig Dahl as the Cardinals sought a late, game-tying field goal or more.

The 49ers finished 8-8, giving Harbaugh and team four consecutive non-losing seasons and a much-needed send off into the off-season.  As expected, the announcement of Harbaugh’s fate was almost immediate, following his departure from his post-game press conference by less than two minutes.

The former Stanford coach is expected to accept a lucrative offer to coach Michigan, his alma mater, with an announcement that could come as early as Monday.

Cal Upset By CSU Bakersfield in Pac-12 Tuneup

By Matthew T.F. Harrington

BERKELEY, Calif. – Entering play Sunday evening the California Golden Bears had only felt the sting of defeat twice this season, with the pair of losses coming against teams ranked in the top ten in the country. Add to the likes of Wisconsin and Texas another team that may never again find themselves in the same sentence as these two perennial powerhouses of the hardwood; CSU Bakersfield.

Cal (10-3) fell behind early, then watched as Bakersfield clung to the advantage for dear life, pulling off the 55-52 upset win at Haas Pavilion for just their third victory of the season. Bakersfield (3-10) adds Cal as a strange bedfellow alongside previous conquests Delaware and Idaho State.

“I always talk about ‘You respect all your opponents’,” said Bears coach Cuonzo Martin. “Don’t get consumed with what’s on the front of the jersey or the record. I told our guys before the game, I wrote it on the board, all it takes is one night. Don’t fall asleep We paid for it.”

Cal suffered due to its inability to hold onto the ball, turning the ball over 18 times.

“That’s unacceptable,” said Cal forward David Kravish on his team’s ability to handle the ball. “That’s 18 possessions we didn’t have. That’s 18 shots we didn’t get to put up. They took advantage of it.”

Also of consequence was a lackluster effort from the charity stripe where the Bears went 14 for 24.

“You shoot 14 of 24 from the free throw line, that’s a problem,” said Martin. “It’s a matter of confidence and feeling good. The best way to feel good about your shot is to see the shot go in.”

The Roadrunners dominated California in the early going, yielding only two home field goals over the first ten minutes of play for a 17-5 Bakersfield lead. Cal managed ultimately went into the locker room trailing by ten points at 30-20 at the half.

“We came out flat in the first half,” said Kravish.”That’s been a pattern we’ve set for ourselves for a while now. We came out flat, we .put ourselves in a whole and then we think we can just turn it on.”

Kravish and his teammates don’t know what the cause is for their slow start, but didn’t want to put the blame on a short break for the holidays.

“IT’s not in our DNA,’ said Kravish. “It’s not in what we do in practice every day. The energy level has to be there every day. I don’t understand why. The energy was high.”

Over the first period, the Bears turned the ball over 13 times. They went 7 for 19 from the field in their second worst first half point output this season. Cal previously struggled to a 15-point first half in a 45-42 win against Wyoming earlier this month in an 8-turnover total victory. They scuffled with the shooting touch in that contest as well, hitting 6 of 23 attempts from the field.

Bakersfield’s center Aly Ahmed dominated in the first half, notching 14 points over the first 20 minutes to put him well on pace to break his career-high of 26. The junior from Alexandria, Egypt managed to bully his way in the post, dominating Christian Behrens in isolation. Over the final 20 minutes, the Bears managed to find the solution to stop Ahmed, limiting him to just 5 second-half tallies.

“It’s post defense,” said Martin. “Being aggressive, being physical. In the second half, we did a good job defending the post. That’s what it is. You have to be physical, be aggressive, set a tone, do your job. Do your work early.”

With Bakersfield’s star stymied and turnovers cut down from 13 in the first half to 5 in the second, the Bears slowly chipped away at the ten-point deficit. The home team found themselves trailing by only six at 50-44 with just over a minute left to play.

Kravish got the ball and put up a lay-up, then Sam Singer stole the inbound pass and dished the rock to Tyrone Wallace for the bucket to bring Cal within two at 50-48 with 1:11 left.

Wallace finished the night with a Bears best 17 points, but his foul on Brent Wrapp with 28 seconds left allowed the Bakersfield guard to net a pair of free throws and push the lead back to four points.

Wallace then hit a pair from the Charity stripe of his own, but Wrapp was sent to the line once again. He converted on one of two to keep Cal within three with 17 seconds left and the final game-tying chance. Jordan Mathews instead turned the ball over, forcing Cal to foul to regain possession.

Aly Ahmed hit both free throws to put Bakersfield up by five, but Wallace dunked home the final basket for the 55-52 final.

When piecing together the schedule, Martin wanted to use this game to build confidence heading into Pac-12 play against Washington. Instead, the Bears will be using January 2nd as a reset button.

They won’t be the only team looking to put non-conference play behind them though. The Huskies fell to Stonybrook in a monumental upset Sunday night.

“Washington lost a game at home tonight,” said Martin. “Every game is important. You take it one game at a time. That’s what I consume myself with. You want to win the game, you want to protect home court. But it’s back to the drawing board against Washington.”

49ers podcast: Niners ready to move on without Harbaugh; sources say assistant coach Shanahan could be in the mix

by Morris Phillips

SANTA CLARA–Jim Harbaugh who completed coaching his final game as head coach with the San Francisco 49ers defeating the Arizona Cardinals to close out a four year run and is headed to Michigan to coach there next season and will be the highest paid college coach in the NCAA at $49 million for six years worth of work. Harbaugh lands on his feet and he did not get along with the 49ers brass and thus one of the biggest reasons why he’s out as coach.

In a unusual way to say goodbye to someone that bickered with the head coach on and off during Harbaugh’s tenor the 49ers CEO Jed York and General Manger Trent Baalke came on the sidelines after the game to give Harbaugh a huge goodbye hug. Not bad for someone whose bosses’ felt didn’t deserve a contract extension. The 49ers have a front office of stars with Baalke, Jed York, owners John York and Denise DeBartolo, and team president Paraag Marathe.

The 49ers brass feels justly that they’ve been a big part of what the 49ers have enjoyed in the last four years under Harbaugh and they are going to challenge themselves to get a better football coach or just as good as one as Harbaugh. Kyle Shanahan the Cleveland Browns offensive coordinator whose in his first year with the Browns has been name dropped according to sources as a candidate. The choice won’t be easy but that’s what the 49ers are challenging themselves to do.

As far as the biggest distractions are concerned you just can’t get away from former 49er Ray McDonald who was arrested this season for domestic violence and eventually released by the team for allegations of sexual assault and Aldon Smith was suspended by the team for nine games for illegal weapons charges and DUI. If your trying to win a championship and if your trying to be a great football team professionalism is first and McDonald and Smith really let the team down.

The 49ers really need to do some soul searching in terms of where their heads really are at in terms of getting the job done on the field based on what their doing off the field. Distractions are huge, it’s a distraction for the team and greater than the distraction you just wonder how you play championship football when you have all this other stuff going on. The real simple observation in terms of distraction maybe what outweighed them is just that this football team is fast. The 49ers are fast based on the way that they played which was physical and just like what Harbaugh wanted them to do by injuries and it all added up. Injuries had a real cumulative effect of what the team did on the field with it’s physical play to get to where they are now.

Stanford Cardinal in the Foster Farms Bowl at Levis Stadium: With Stanford University you just feel like great things are coming head coach David Shaw has made it very clear that he’s staying on board and he’s not going anywhere. He’s coming back and his first three years as head coach have been dynamite. He got the Rose Bowl championship in 2013 and won and then a second trip to the Rose Bowl in 2014 and lost that one. The NFL are looking at the Cardinal and to see if they can retain some of those guys.

The Cardinal are going to make a run at the championship and the Pac 12 Championship next season again in 2015, this is a really solid college football program their having the game at Levis Stadium and for hosting the Foster Farms Bowl and the future is looking very bright. The size of the crowds when comparing venues for the Foster Farms Bowl hasn’t changed between AT&T Park and Levis Stadium. So with the venue change (this being the first year at Levis Stadium) your going to have a partially empty football stadium on Tuesday night.

An empty stadium doesn’t necessarily look good with the local team involved and they might draw around 40,000 fans for that game and maybe they’ll get 50,000. Once again Levis Stadium in Santa Clara is not a hotbed for college football and Maryland who faces Stanford doesn’t draw the local sports crowd. So it’s a match up on Tuesday between the Stanford Cardinals and the Maryland Terrapins at Levis Stadium for the Foster Farms Bowl.

Click below as Morris Phillips continues his podcast and covers the San Francisco 49ers and Cal Bears for http://www.sportsradioservice.com

Local kid does great in win

By Jeremy Kahn

With the playoffs all wrapped up, there was only one more thing that the Denver Broncos needed to accomplish in their season finale, a first-round bye.

Vallejo native C.J. Anderson score three touchdowns, as the Broncos simply demolished the Oakland Raiders 47-14 at Sports Authority Field at Mile High.

With the victory, the Broncos clinched a number two seed in the AFC and a first-round bye after the 33-point victory.

Connor Barth kicked four field goals, while Peyton Manning failed to throw a touchdown for the second time in the last four weeks.

Despite not throwing a touchdown, Manning went 21-for-37 for 273 yards passing on the afternoon.

This was the Raiders 11th consecutive loss on the road, as they finished the season with an overall record of 3-13.

Anderson carried the ball 13 times for 87 yards, while Ronnie Hillman returned for the first time since November 9, as he carried the ball 15 times for 56 yards.

Hillman was out with a sprained left knee.

It was a record setting day for Demaryius Thomas, as he caught eight passes for 115 yards.

Thomas ended the season with 1,619 yards receiving, breaking Rod Smith’s 14-year old of 1,602 that was set in 2000.

Derek Carr’s rookie season ended with a subpar afternoon, as he went 18-for-36 for 158 yards, a touchdown and a interception.

Latavius Murray carried the ball just 10 times for 37 yards.

Cardinal End Non-Conference Schedule on High Note, Crush UCSB 90-34

By: Joe Lami

The Stanford Cardinal finished off their non-conference schedule on Sunday afternoon with a blowout win over the UCSB Gauchos 90-34. The win ups the record of the 16th ranked Cardinal to 8-4, including their fifth win at Maples Pavilion.

12 of the 15 players who saw action scored for Stanford, as Lili Thompson led them with 12 points. Three other Cardinal got into double digits, Karlie Samuelson and Briana Roberson each had 11, and freshman guard, Brittany McPhee added ten. Freshman forward, Eric McCall, once again led the team in rebounds with 12 on route to destroying UCSB on the boards 50-21.

The shooting was impressive for the Cardinal, as they finished 56% from the field, and 42% from three-point range.

The winless Gauchos got the first bucket on the game, but would immediately fall behind, as Kaylee Johnson would get the next bucket for the Cardinal, which kick started the Cardinal to a 8-2 run. UCSB was held to only 20% shooting in the first half, and finished the night 26% from the field. Jasmine Ware led the Gauchos with eight points.

Stanford will wait until the new year before they tip-off their Pac-12 schedule, as they host the Colorado Buffalos on Saturday.

Stanford Cardinal podcast and commentary: Dawkins will be watching non-conference schools to draw reference for Pac 12 play

by Matt Harrington

STANFORD–The Stanford Cardinal (7-3) host the UAPB Golden Lions (3-10) on Monday night at Maples Pavilion. The Cardinal are coming off an overtime win against the Texas Longhorns (10-2) 74-71 in an upset win that was played in Austin last Tuesday the Cardinal’s last game. A big performance by Chasson Randle who scored 22 points, Anthony Brown led Stanford with 25 points in that game. The win was the statement of this season so far to this point.

Arkansas is coming in Monday night with that 3-10 record and it’s one of those games that’s going to be hard to get out of bed for in a sense. Stanford had struggled a little bit with Denver which they won 49-43 earlier in the year they were trailing for most of the game in that one. They just beat Loyola Marymount (3-6) 67-58 who didn’t have as strong of a record as some of the Pac 12 teams their going to be playing. The one thing that head coach Johnny Dawkins always says as he lines up teams in the non conference schedule that play a similar style to other Pac 12 teams it will be interesting to see what kind of school Pine Bluff is going to be to a Pac 12 school.

Washington State (5-6) and Washington (11-0) are coming to Maples on the weekend of January 2nd and 3rd it will interesting to see how Stanford does for the start of Pac 12 conference action. Also it would be interesting to see what school that Dawkins uses as a model for Pac 12 play as they head into conference play especially against a team like the Huskies coming to open. The Huskies might have the same style as the Cougars in time for Stanford to get ready for Pac 12 play.

When you look around the Pac 12 right now Stanford and the bottom five and their records after non conference play which is a whole lot different when you see schools like Oregon State and Utah above them. It’s going to be a strong conference. It was really a case of BYU where it was frustration where the shots were falling in the last minute Randle hit a couple of threes to tie but Stanford lost it 79-77. The Cougars knew that game was winnable, Randle didn’t get to the line much and shot two out of three free throws in that game.

The Cardinal are a team that are going to live and die by the free throws, they work really hard on the free throw shooting when they go to practice and in warm ups. If your missing the free throws it is going to hurt you and that will be a key role in scoring points. Brown didn’t have a strong game against Texas, it was one of those things that their guards produce now. The game against Denver Randle has only nine points scored. The Cardinal struggled for most of the game and found a way to pull it out and get the victory.

Against BYU with Brown he struggled and they weren’t able to find the victory, the Texas game however Randle and Brown combined their 47 points that was the difference right there. You know the Cougars Tyler Haws is going to hit you with 15-20 points and he got 24 and maybe he would get ten on another night. So it’s about the production level from the guards, Randle was on that BYU game with the 24 points and it looked like Brown was struggling a little bit who finished with six points.

Listen to Matt’s analysis of Stanford below on his podcast. Matt Harrington covers Stanford basketball for http://www.sportsradioservice.com

NCAA Bowl games commentary & podcast: Way too many bowl games diluting the product

by Michelle Richardson

Please let it be known if your team isn’t anything great your team probably had at around a .500 schedule and I’ll be honest I grew up in the 70s and we didn’t have this many games. So for the NCAA to play bowl games beyond Christmas you can be just an average team and you can get in somebody’s toilet bowl. It’s sad but I can appreciate that some of these kids get to play a little bit longer, but to me it really dilutes the product.

Your just playing to be playing these games why don’t you just play king of the mountain and throw it up in the air it’s really diminishing. It used to be about the Cotton Bowl, the Rose Bowl, Peach Bowl, Sugar Bowl, and the Orange Bowl. Those were the bowl games that you had to be a part of. There were only about five of them and then after that that was it and now it’s like way too much. I do understand for the mid majors I do understand it.

Two weeks of this utter garbage football I must say the Central Michigan-West Kentucky game was a tough fought game as W.Kentucky got by 49-48 for the win. If it wasn’t for the two points West Kentucky would have lost that game on Wednesday. It was all Central Michigan in the fourth quarter of the game and they fell short at the final gun now that was a bowl game. West Kentucky was up by 40 points and then the game was tied up.

Were simply not getting the best product and it used to be when you were kids New Year’s eve and New Year’s day that’s what you did you sat and watch college football because these were nothing but the best games. That’s pretty much how it is now with a lot of extra games to watch before that if your that much more of a football junkie God bless you. Please watch and watch until your heart’s content, but there are fans who are getting disappointed in the utter commercialization of what it’s suppose to be.

NCAA and the conferences it’s kind of spinning to an end but yet you can’t pay the athletes, your getting off on a non-profit status because of everybody wants to make a buck. Please understand all these schools of the athletics department they fall under the university’s non-profit 501-3 status. They are non-profit, you have all these extra bowl games and in defense of those of you who have not been to a bowl game and you buy your tickets through Stub Hub the schools do not get any part of that money.

Schools are forced to buy a certain amount of tickets to feed a bowl game, a lot of times schools end up losing money because they want to be in the bowl game. Yes, that’s true they lose money in going to a bowl game, so they’re not all making money their losing money so why do we have so many bowl games if were actually losing money? I would gladly take that money and give it to the student athletes not to the football players and not just to the basketball players but all the student athletes.

Hear the rest of the podcast with Michelle by scrolling down and clicking below, Michelle Richardson does NCAA commentary each week on http://www.sportsradioservice.com

49ers report: 49ers and Harbaugh agree to end contract after last game and coach at Michigan next season

by David Zizmor

SANTA CLARA–It’s not often that you will see a head coach either in the NFL or the NCAA announce that he’s up for a new job before his old job ends. As San Francisco 49ers head coach Jim Harbaugh was saying for weeks on end that he wants to focus on the games on the 49ers schedule and that he’s only focusing on preparing the team, the coaches, and the personnel each week and didn’t want to talk about any offers from Michigan his new found employer for next season. That policy ended when it was announced on Friday night that Harbaugh will coach at Michigan next season.

Harbaugh who is coaching his last game of the season against the Arizona Cardinals at Levis Stadium had no idea when the season started and the new stadium was first opened that he would be the subject of possibly leaving the team. As the season wore on he never got the contract extension he was expecting and their were problems internally with the team aka Ray McDonald’s domestic issues, Aldon Smith’s nine game suspension for illegal fire arms possession and drinking. There was also talk during the season that Harbaugh lost the locker room too.

Harbaugh through it all held his head high and navigated the team with the best of his ability but there were some tough loses the team had to suck up during the course of the season losing twice to Seattle, losing tough games to Arizona, Denver, and a close three point loss to St.Louis, and some might have questioned if he lost the team when they lost to the Oakland Raiders at Levis 24-13.

Either way Harbaugh was heavily pursued during the ending of the season by Michigan who running up during the week of the Raiders game there was an offer to Harbaugh to sign on with his former alma mater for six years and $49 million. He had come to an agreement with the 49ers this past week to let him out of the last year of his five year deal which his last season was scheduled for next season and go to Michigan. Harbaugh was getting $5 million a year on this current $25 million deal with the 49ers.

Harbaugh will be introduced at Michigan this week during a press conference that should take place either on Monday or Tuesday. Harbaugh goes back to his roots where he quarterbacked for legendary head coach Bo Schembelcher in 1982-86. It was also no secret that Harbaugh was having front office issues with his bosses from last season and likewise this season with 49ers team CEO Jed York who actually apologized on twitter to the fans for losing a game to the Seattle Seahawks on Thanksgiving day 19-3.

49ers running back Vernon Davis said at the time of the apology which some viewed as an embarrassing moment for the coach to have the team CEO apologize on social media “there are a lot of distractions around here, all season long there have been a lot of distractions. But we tried our best to fight through them. Even now, there’s a lot of talk about Harbaugh not being here.”

Trent Baalke the 49ers general manager’s daughter Cassie tweeted that 49ers offensive coordinator Greg Roman should be fired after the 49ers Thanksgiving loss and later Baalke and Cassie both issued an apology to Roman stating from Baalke “my daughter and I both regret that her feelings got the best of her after last night’s game and that she chose social media to express her feelings. While disappointed, as a father I will use this as a teachable moment to help my daughter grow.” said Baalke

David Zizmor covers the NFL for http://www.sportsradioservice.com