O’Neil schemed defense outshines Chip Kelly’s offense in season-opening shutout of the Rams

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By Morris Phillips

SANTA CLARA–Los Angeles’ professional football renaissance–23 years in the making–will have to wait one more week.  The 49ers saw to that.

A stifling defense effort, packed with strategical wrinkles courtesy of new defensive coordinator Jim O’Neil, kept quarterback Case Keenum and dynamic running threat Todd Gurley under wraps for 60 minutes in the 49ers 28-0 victory.

The Rams, bereft of points, had to settle for first downs instead, managing just 10 of those on the night.  Keenum failed to keep his offense on the field, throwing for just 130 yards and converting 3 of 15 third down opportunities.  Forced to beat the 49ers through the air with Gurley (17 carries, 47 yards) bottled up, Keenum failed miserably. Afterwards, the veteran quarterback tabbed by coach Jeff Fisher over Sean Mannion and No. 1 overall pick Jared Goff, credited the 49ers and their crafty looks.

“Especially on third down, a lot of looks we hadn’t seen before,” Keenum said.

Maybe the most effective of those looks schemed by O’Neil had safety Eric Reid crashing the line of scrimmage in search of Gurley and others. While credited with only three tackles, Reid was a focal point, along with linebacker NaVorro Bowman, for a defense that swarmed to the ball and was rarely caught out of position.

“He is physical and he is fast,” O’Neil said of Reid.  “He did a good job of timing it up. We tell our guys that we are only going to blitz the guys that are going to win.  Eric is a guy that can go win.”

While Reid starred along with Bowman, the San Francisco defensive line with emerging stars  Arik Armstead and Quinton Dial did the dirty work, staying in their lanes to combat Gurley, and getting enough penetration to bother Keenum. Armstead was declared a guy to watch early on in training camp, but rarely played in the pre-season because of a shoulder injury.  On Monday, O’Neil deployed his 6’7″ disrupter sparingly, but effectively.

“We had a game plan for how to use me in the game,” Armstead said.  “I  played a lot of passing situations and I rotated in there on first and second downs, too.”

Dial played directly in front of Bowman and kept him “clean” as radio color man Tim Ryan described.  But Dial did even more, deftly splitting double-teaming linemen in run situations.  First round draft pick DeForest Buckner rotated with college teammate Armstead, giving the 49ers an edge in combating the Rams’ top offensive tackle Rodger Saffold.

“I think that’s a good thing about the players we have on our team.  We can give you different personnel and give you different looks.  Guys can play their positions well.  It’s definitely going to pay dividends for us in helping us disguise our looks for opposing quarterbacks,” safety Antoine Bethea said.

The shutout was the team’s first since 2012, and they protected it fiercely as the satisfied Levi’s Stadium crowd headed for the exits in the fourth quarter.  The Rams longest drive of the night–11 plays–brought them to the 49ers 24-yard line.  But with no interest in a face-saving field goal attempt, Keenum was flushed and scrambled unsuccessfully on 4th-and-10 with 2:41 remaining.

For O’Neil, it had to be a redemptive moment.  Picked after several higher profile coordinators rejected the 49ers, the former Browns OC accepted the unenviable task of working opposite Kelly’s high octane offense that frequently leaves its defense fatigued from too many stints on the field.  But on Monday, the mix was just right as Kelly was politely upstaged in his debut.

On Sunday, the 49ers travel to Carolina with, for now, the NFL’s top-ranked defense for a more telling meeting with Cam Newton and the reigning NFC champion Panthers.

 

 

Protest and perform: Kaepernick stance continues in San Diego as the 49ers close the pre-season with a win

Kaep kornered

By Morris Phillips

Colin Kaepernick might not have been red, white and blue enough for Chargers’ fans, but he appeared to be red and gold enough for the 49ers’ coaching staff on Thursday night.

Kaepernick again refused to stand for the national anthem before the game, this time kneeling with teammate Eric Reid, during Steven Powell’s singing of the Star Spangled Banner.  The Chargers celebrating their 28th annual “Salute to the Military” had 240 members from each of the four branches of the military on the field for the anthem, displaying flags as Powell, a Naval officer sang.

Before and after the anthem, Kaepernick was greeted with boos and strong language, but in a statement before the game, he remained resolute.

“I’m going to continue to stand with the people that are being oppressed,” Kaepernick stated.  “To me, this is something that has to change.  When there’s significant change and I feel like that flag represents what it’s supposed to represent, this country is representing people the way that it’s supposed to, I’ll stand.”

Reid, a native of Baton Rouge, Lousiana has been publicly supportive of his teammate, while expressing concern for his hometown, a flashpoint for violence between the police and the black community over the summer.

Less controversial was Kaepernick’s play on the field in his lengthiest and best stint of the pre-season.  The 28-year old quarterback started, led the 49ers to a touchdown on their initial 16-play, 85-yard drive that consumed more than half of the first quarter.  DuJuan Harris culminated the drive with a one-yard run, while Kaepernick completed 6 of 8 passes on the drive, and contributed two productive run plays. 

Kaepernick would go on to play the entire first half, finishing 11 of 18 for 103 yards.  He played behind a backup offensive line, and against San Diego’s second string defense, but impressed by moving the team, and not suffering any sacks or turnovers. 

Blaine Gabbert, the presumed starter for the regular season opener on September 12, sat out as announced before the game.  Kaepernick was followed by sixth-round draft pick Jeff Driskel and free agent signee Christian Ponder.

The 49ers led at halftime, 9-7, after Kaepernick led the team on a late drive before the half that ended with Jeff Dawson’s 32-yard field goal.   Driskel’s stint was marred by two interceptions as the Niners fell behind 21-9 in the third quarter.  But Ponder was at the controls in the fourth when the club scored 22 points and regained the lead.

Among those that impressed, running back Kelvin Taylor had nine carries for 56 yards and the final score of the night, a 10-yard run with 55 seconds remaining that put the game away.  Marcus Rush’s interception off a deflection set up that final score.  Rush, the former Michigan State linebacker continued his impressive pre-season play with the pick, and a forced fumble.

Je’Ron Hamm led the 49ers with four catches for 65 yards.  Jeremy Kerley, a trade acquisition from the Jets in the last week, caught two passes and returned a punt.  Kerley appears to be the needed veteran presence among the receiver corps with Bruce Ellington felled by a season-ending injury two weeks ago.

The 49ers must reduce their roster to 53 in the coming days, and Kaepernick’s presence among that final group isn’t assured.  Most prognosticators believe the team will retain the veteran as their most experienced and capable backup, but his considerable contract, and the anthem controversy, make that far from a sure thing. 

The team reported no new injuries after the game, although Aaron Lynch was briefly hobbled in the first half.  Lynch started at outside linebacker, but will not be available to play or appear at the team facilities during the first four weeks of the season due to a league-mandated suspension.

Gabbert, NaVorro Bowman, Reid and Joe Staley were among a group of 17 presumed starters and key reserves that did not suit up or play.

The 49ers open the regular season on September 12 against the Rams at Levi’s Stadium.

Kaepernick makes season debut, but does little on the field in 49ers’ loss to the Pack

Kap scrambles

By Morris Phillips

SANTA CLARA–Colin Kaepernick’s big shot—and likely his only opportunity—to be named the 49ers’ starting quarterback came and went with a whimper.

The 28-year old who spent the off-season recuperating from thumb, knee and shoulder surgeries, then experienced arm fatigue in training camp, made his 2016 debut on Friday against the Packers, and he didn’t do much to impress in slightly less than a quarter of action.

After watching Kaepernick complete two of six passes, two of which were batted at the line of scrimmage, along with some nifty scrambling on broken plays, only one conclusion could be drawn: maybe Kaepernick’s ability to unseat Blaine Gabbert as the starter may have been too much to ask.

According to Kaepernick, the starting job remains up for grabs.  Afterwards, he was plotting his gameplan for the final exhibition.

“I think next game we have to be more productive, put points on the board,” Kaepernick said.  “Ultimately, that’s what you want to do as an offense and as a quarterback.”

The 49ers’ ran seven plays on Kaepernick’s first possession, then went three and out twice. The quick, fruitless possessions put pressure on the 49ers’ defense, who allowed Green Bay to score early in the second quarter. The Pack would go on to add two more touchdowns in the second half, and win 21-10, to improve to 3-0 in the pre-season.

The 49ers possessed the ball 20 minutes, 31 seconds, losing the time of possession battle nearly two-to-one, and threw for just 61 yards while falling to 1-2 with one final exhibition on Thursday at San Diego.

While many teams use the third pre-season game as their regular season dress rehearsal, Coach Chip Kelly elected to sit several of his defensive stars, while limiting the time for both Gabbert and Kaepernick.

The Packers held 13 players out, most notably receiver Jordy Nelson, safety Morgan Burnett, and backup quarterback Brett Hundley. Aaron Rodgers played two series in the first half, his pre-season debut and likely his conclusion as well. Rodgers finished six of nine for 60 yards, leading the Pack on a 14-play drive that tied the score at 7 in the second quarter.

Gabbert started for the 49ers and led the team to a touchdown given a short field on their second possession. But Gabbert wasn’t much on the wow meter either, finishing two of three for 14 yards passing.

“Had some good drives, had some bad drives,” Gabbert said. “Shot ourselves in the foot a couple times and when you’re inconsistent on the offensive side of the ball, you don’t execute at a high level. It shows when you don’t move the ball, you don’t score points, drives stall. We put our defense in some tough positions and ultimately you lose the game.”

If any San Francisco unit bore watching on Friday, it was the offensive line where both guard spots appear to be still up for grabs with the September 12th season opener looming. Andrew Tiller had held the starting spot at right guard through camp, but was replaced in the starting lineup on Friday by Anthony Davis. Center Daniel Kilgore and right tackle Trent Brown flanked Davis, opposite left tackle Joe Staley and left guard Zane Beedles. Rookie first round pick Joshua Garnett played extensively, but may not be far enough along to unseat Beedles for the opener against the Rams.

Carlos Hyde saw his most extensive pre-season action but was removed when he exhibited concussion symptoms in the second quarter. Hyde finished with 30 yards rushing on four carries, including a 27-yard jaunt in the first quarter.

Bruce Ellington started in the slot receiver spot but was felled by a hamstring injury while fielding a punt, leaving his availability for the opener up in the air. If Ellington can’t go, DeAndrew White could be the starter at that critical spot.

“I don’t know what the medical diagnosis is nor am I going to talk about one of my friend’s injuries, who knows how severe it is. But I know DeAndrew and Bruce have been working their tails off all throughout the summer and training camp learning that position in the slot,” Gabbert said.

Veteran defensive starters NaVorro Bowman, Ahmad Brooks and Antoine Bethea watched the game in street clothes, as did lineman Arik Armstead and Glenn Dorsey. First round pick DeForrest Buckner got the start at defensive tackle, but has yet to be teamed with former college teammate Armstead along the defensive front.

No timetable was given by Kelly, but the 49ers appear set in the secondary with Eric Reid and Bethea at the safeties, along with corners Tramaine Brock and first-time starter Jimmy Ward.

 

 

49ers win in Denver, quarterback competition still unsettled as Gabbert plays unspectacularly

By Morris Phillips

The 49ers quarterback competition tooks twists and turns in Denver on Saturday night.

Blaine Gabbert given the opportunity to run with the ball all the way up until the season opener on September 12, took a couple of baby steps forward. Colin Kaepernick, still working through arm fatigue, threw before the game and also made positive strides. And Christian Ponder, signed off the street and thrown into the fire with little preparation, looked like the second coming of Joe Montana.

Needless to say, after the 49ers’ 31-24 exhibition win over the Broncos, the competition has yet to be decided.

“I think he’s gotten better and better each day,” Kelly said of Kaepernick after he threw 40 passes, some up to 50 yards, before Saturday night’s game. “And we’ll just see. The biggest thing is how he responds, in terms of it there are any residual effects when he wakes up in the morning.”

Kelly went on to say that Kaepernick is expected to resume practice on Monday, and play in Friday night’s home game against the Packers. If so, the competition between Gabbert and Kaepernick could be decided at the conclusion of this upcoming week. As for sixth rounder Jeff Driskel and free agent signee Ponder, both appear poised to make extended appearances in the final two games, if for no other reason to ensure the team has its health at the position heading into the beginning of the season.

Ponder did turn heads against the Broncos entering the game late in the third quarter and leading the team on a pair of touchdown drives that turned a tie game into a 14-point 49ers’ lead. First he scrambled for a 22-yard touchdown run, then on the next possession threw a 30-yard touchdown pass to Dres Anderson. Not bad for a guy for was prepared to run roughly half of the 40 offensive plays the team had installed for the game, not including his touchdown pass, which was reportedly drawn up on the sideline during the game.

The former Vikings’ quarterback didn’t play in the NFL in 2015, but his calling card, passing accuracy, didn’t escape in during the inactivity. Ponder, who was signed after Thad Lewis was injured in the first pre-season game, finished 7 of 8 for 86 yards, and appeared to be having the time of his life in his return to action.

Gabbert certainly didn’t wow anyone, but through two games he hasn’t taken a sack or committed a turnover. After several series of blah, blah, Gabbert led the 49ers on a scoring drive in the second quarter, culminating with four-yard run that put the team up 14-7 in the second quarter. Gabbert also put up decent, if not spectacular numbers, finishing 6 of 9 for 69 yards.

 

49ers drop pre-season opener to the Texans, but leave a positive, first impression under Coach Chip Kelly

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By Morris Phillips

AP photo: The Houston Texans KJ Dillon breaks up a pass intended for the San Francisco 49ers Bryce Treggs in the second half of Sunday’s first exhibition game at Levis Stadium

SANTA CLARA–It might not seem like much, but on the occasion of the 49ers’ pre-season opener against the Texans, we found out Coach Chip Kelly’s real name is Charles, and contrary to the prevailing thought, the new ball coach isn’t so serious that he can’t make us laugh.

And what about the football? All in all, despite the 24-13 loss, not a bad first impression.

Kelly’s high-paced offense debuted with 50 offensive plays, and 302 yards in total offense… in the first half. Those numbers accompanied a 13-7 halftime lead, and dwarfed those of the Texans, who ran just 25 plays and gained 89 yards. Evaluating a pre-season football game places significant weight on what happens early, when the starters are on the field, and from that perspective the 49ers showed that with a healthy, experienced offensive line and Carlos Hyde running behind it, this Chip Kelly offense could be pretty good.

“I think someone said we had 50 plays or something like that,” tight end Vance McDonald said. “It’s really awesome to see. Again, you wish you could come out with a victory in the pre-season game, but it was still really fun to see what we could do tempo-wise and see how it wore the defense out.”

How things will look a month from now in the season opener against the Rams is far from settled. Colin Kaepernick was a last minute scratch due to arm fatigue, so the quarterback competition between Kapernick and Blaine Gabbert didn’t come any closer to a resolution. Kelly explained that in fairness to Kap, who could have played, it was better to hold him out, and give him an opportunity to make an impression in Week 2 at Denver. In his absence, Gabbert admitted he was up and down, but definitely up in throwing a 43-yard touchdown pass to McDonald, which ranked easily as the most impressive offensive play of the day by either team.

The key for either quarterback, according to Kelly, will be the ability to make snap decisions that keep the offense humming, and in position to wear down the opposing defense, much like the offense did on Sunday against the Texans in the opening half.

So good was the running game early, Mike Davis, the team’s third round pick from a year ago, looked like a first rounder, in accumulating 72 yards rushing on five carries, including a 44-yard run that was longest play from scrimmage all day. All five of Davis’ carries came in the second quarter, where a huge chunk of the team’s 161 yards rushing in the first 30 minutes were realized.

Hyde looked good too, rushing for 27 yards in the first quarter, most of those on a 22-yard run that ended with Hyde attempting to run over his Texan tackler. Along the offensive line, Daniel Kilgore was back in his familiar role as center, flanked by young pros, Andrew Tiller and Zane Beadles, who at least for now, are ahead of better known Anthony Davis and rookie first rounder Joshua Garnett.

Defensively, the 49ers showed significant depth in their front seven, where Erik Armstead, arguably the team’s most improved player, resides at left defensive end. Armstead, also was held out as precautionary move, which allowed the team’s top draft pick, DeForrest Buckner to see significant time. Ahmad Brooks had a sack from his outside linebacker spot, and the competition between Michael Wilhoite, Ray Ray Armstrong and Gerald Hodges for the inside backer spot opposite NaVorro Bowman, saw Armstrong and Wilhoite make several impressive plays.

Without the spirited quarterback competition, Thad Lewis and Jeff Driskel followed Gabbert, and the team’s offensive output suffered as a result. The 49ers ran just 28 plays after halftime, and never hit a rhythm, amassing just 107 more yards in offense. Also, the penalties that were pleasantly absent in the first half, cropped up with the team committing six of their eight miscues after halftime.

J.J. Watt, Brian Cushing, Jadeveon Clowney and Jonathon Joseph were the most prominent Texans to not suit up and play, and besides Kaepernick and Armstead, the 49ers also held out receiver Torrey Smith and safety Eric Reid.

Afterwards, Kelly, thought to be aloof especially with the media, answered every questions posed without pretense, drawing laughs when he couldn’t offer injury information for quarterback Lewis and others, saying he was in such a rush to greet the media and offer his thoughts, that he bypassed the training room and the injury updates.

Given where the 49ers were a year ago, under Jim Tomsula, a coach who almost everyone questioned in terms of his competency, and the seemingly endless personnel losses and defections, the tone was much lighter in the home locker room. The team’s overall health has a great deal of importance in that regard, but also there’s a sense that Kelly has a sound scheme and the foundation is in place for the team to make a significant jump from last year’s 5-11, last place finish.

On Saturday, the 49ers travel to Denver to take on the Broncos with the game time set for 6pm.

 

 

As the 49ers turn: team wins in overtime, then fires coach Jim Tomsula

Tomsula fired

By Morris Phillips

The NFL’s lowest scoring team in overtime in Week 17 against another offensively-challenged squad in a half-empty stadium?

That’s unwatchable.

Consequently, the 49ers’ brass has opted to change the channel—again–firing head coach Jim Tomsula after one season at the helm, just hours following the team’s 19-16 win over the Rams in overtime.

“Jimmy has been a valuable member of the 49ers organization for the last nine years,” said CEO Jed York. “We all know he is a man of high character, and his contributions on the field and in our community have always been greatly appreciated. This entire organization is proud and grateful to have worked so closely alongside Jimmy. We all wish him and his family great success in the future.”

The 49ers hired Tomsula a year ago to replace Jim Harbaugh, and the former defensive line coach immediately found himself in a toxic situation. The 49ers were decimated by retirement (Patrick Willis, Justin Smith, Chris Borland, Anthony Davis) and free agency (Frank Gore, Mike Iupati, Michael Crabtree) in the off-season, pushing the team further away from its’ Super Bowl season in 2012.

On August 7, during the pre-season, things took a depressing turn when pass rusher Aldon Smith was arrested after a driving incident outside his home in San Jose, and subsequently released by the team the next day. Tomsula gave an impassioned speech after the announcement, vowing that he and the team would continue to support Smith personally in his battle with repeated personal issues.

Then after starting the season impressively in a Monday night win over the Vikings, a four-game losing streak ensued, bringing scrutiny on Tomsula and faltering quarterback Colin Kaepernick. After the team fell to 2-6 in a lopsided loss in St. Louis, Kaepernick was benched, replaced by backup Blaine Gabbert in the next game at home against the Falcons.

Throughout, the team struggled to score points, finishing last in the NFL in scoring at 14.9 points a game. Tomsula was specifically singled out for the team’s chronic slow starts—they scored just one first quarter touchdown all season (in Week 16)—unusually high numbers of penalties, and a lackluster loss at Cleveland to the lowly Browns.

Loved by his players, but criticized for his lack of experience as a head coach, and an inability to win in-game strategic battles, Tomsula drew unanimous support in the 49ers’ locker room after Sunday’s game.

“I’ve been with Jimmy my whole career. I love Jimmy. It’s always been a good time with him,” NaVorro Bowman said after the game, and before the announcement of Tomsula’s firing.

When Tomsula took the postgame podium following the game, he was not in the mood to address his future, determined to keep the focus on the team and the overtime win.

“I have not talked to ownership,” Tomsula said. “I haven’t had any conversations of the such. I wouldn’t expect to until the season’s over. What I would like to say to everybody is, I’m not going to make this about Jim and Jim’s job status here today. Okay? And I got a group of guys here, players that just won a football game. They’ve been through a very tough season. They’ve stuck together. They went a won a game in overtime. And they fought like crazy. And today is all about those players. My job status and anything going forward there can be handled in the rest of the week.”

As recently as this week it was thought that the team would opt to bring Tomsula back for a second season, but reports surfaced over the weekend that the team would release him to pursue a higher profile coach with offensive leanings. Among the names that have been mentioned to replace Tomsula: Chip Kelly, Sean Payton, David Shaw and Mike Holmgren.

With that backdrop, the 49ers took the field on Sunday with an optimal chance to finish their season on a high note, facing the Rams with backup Case Keenum at quarterback, and without rookie sensation Todd Gurley, who was held out with a foot injury.

The game featured a spirited 49ers’ defensive effort and two exceptional plays in overtime: Dontae Johnson’s block of Greg Zuerlein’s 48-yard field goal attempt that would have won it for the Rams, and Quinton Patton’s zig-zagging catch and run that set up the 49ers for the game-winning field goal with 3:27 remaining in overtime.

Gabbert finished 28 for 44 for 354 yards and one 33-yard touchdown pass to Anquan Boldin. DuJuan Harris led the team offensively with 154 yards running and receiving.

By winning in overtime, the 49ers finish the season 5-11, slightly lessening their draft position that could net them a franchise quarterback in Cal’s Jared Goff or Memphis’ Paxton Lynch with the fifth-to-eighth pick.

 

 

 

 

 

 

Empty seats and spotty play: 49ers rough season continues in loss to the Bengals

Burfict bounce

By Morris Phillips

Once the painfully slow start on offensive was factored in with the unusually high number of turnovers, it was just another day at the office for the 49ers and their league-worst scoring offense on Sunday at Levi’s Stadium.

While the AFC North-leading Bengals supported A.J. McCarron, their backup quarterback making his first NFL start with opportunistic defense, short fields and a first half lead, the 49ers asked their guy, Blaine Gabbert to throw 50 passes and fashion a highly-improbable, double-digit fourth quarter comeback.

For the 49ers (4-10), it didn’t work out. The 49ers fell, 24-14 to the Bengals, their third loss in five games with Gabbert at the helm.

For the Bengals (11-3), a critical win that brings them to the precipice of a division title and a leg up on a bye in the tightly-bunched AFC playoff picture.

“In four minutes and 23 seconds, it went from 0-0 to 21-nothing,” Coach Jim Tomsula said. “We have got to understand that we cannot make those fundamental mistakes. When the ball is thrown we need to catch it. We need to hold on to it. We need to punt the ball. We need to make those plays.”

The speed with which the 49ers lost their grip on this one was as dramatic as Tomsula described. Cincinnati’s Carlos Dunlap started the process with what might have been the most impressive play of the afternoon when he stripped Anquan Boldin of the ball after the receiver appeared to have a 12-yard gain good for a first down. But Dunlap yanked the ball out of Boldin’s hands with such force that the receiver was rag-dolled and thrown out of position to make a tackle on the Bengals’ defensive end. Dunlap jumped up and ran 21 yards to set up a Bengals’ first down at the 49ers’ 11-yard line.

“They got the first down and Carlos happened to strip it,” Cincinnati’s Vontaze Burfict said. “I thought the runner was down so I stopped running, but they looked at the review and it was our ball so it was a blessing.”

Six plays later, and despite a great deal of resistance from the 49ers’ goal line defense, Jeremy Hill was awarded a touchdown after a review showed he was not stopped prior to crossing the goal line.

On the ensuing possession, Gabbert was sacked on a play that lost 10 yards. After the three-and-out, rookie Bradley Pinion badly shanked a punt that went out of bounds after only 18 yards. Five plays later, the Bengals led 14-0 having to only cover 36 yards after the poor punt.

Two plays into the next possession, Gabbert’s pass to the flat was mishandled by tight end Vance McDonald, who already had bobbled two earlier, the first resulting in a Adam Jones interception.  This time, McDonald bobbled the ball, and then sent it skyward on a subsequent touch. A few yards ahead of the bobble, Burfict settled under the ball for an interception that again set up the Bengals in 49ers territory.

McCarron threw a 20-yard touchdown pass to Tyler Kroft on the next play, and Cincinnati had a trio of touchdowns in fewer than five minutes.

The 49ers have been outscored by 55 points in the first quarter, and a whopping 81 points in the second quarter in an aggregate of the 14 games thus far this season. The home crowd acknowledged as much delivering a hearty round of boos as the home team ran off the field for halftime.

Facing numerous third-and-long situations, the 49ers would fail to convert any of their first 12 third down opportunities on Sunday, including Boldin’s catch for first down yardage prior to the Dunlap’s strip.

“Like I’ve said in the past, when you’re in third-and-14, third-and-15, third-and-12 versus a talented defense, the odds of that third down are extremely low,” Gabbert said when asked about the stalling offense. “It’s up to the players to not put ourselves in that situation.”

While the 49ers got Daniel Kilgore back in his familiar center spot (just in time to face Cincinnati’s All-Pro nose tackle Geno Atkins), they lost guard Mike Martin and starting running back Shaun Draughn to injury.  Trent Brown, the behemoth rookie drafted in the seventh-round, finished the game in Martin’s spot. Former free agents, Kendall Gaskins and Travaris Cadet are the team’s only remaining healthy tailbacks.

All the missteps allowed the Bengals to manage just fine on only 242 yards in total offense. The 49ers trailed 24-0 late in the third quarter before a pair of late touchdowns brought a measure of respectability.

Phil Dawson’s 41-yard field goal attempt midway through the fourth quarter would have brought the 49ers within two touchdowns, but was blocked by the ever-present Dunlap, leaping behind the line of scrimmage. That squandered opportunity gained significance after the 49ers recovered an onside kick with three minutes remaining down ten points instead of seven.

49ers fans sent a statement to ownership by staying home in droves. When the game kicked off at 1:25pm, only half of the stadium’s seats appeared to be filled for a game that was originally scheduled for the 5:30pm Sunday night telecast, but was bumped in favor of a more compelling matchup of the first place Cardinals and Eagles. While the time change probably cost the team a few attendees, the team’s 4-9 record, lackluster play, and surprisingly lopsided loss in Cleveland last week seemed to be the primary cause.

McCarron threw for 192 yards on 15 of 21 passing, while Gabbert was 30 of 50 for 295 yards. Gabbert threw three interceptions, and both quarterbacks were sacked four times.

The Bengals won at San Francisco/Santa Clara for the first time since 1974, when they handed the 49ers their first loss in a 6-8 season.  That one took place at Candlestick Park, and the 49ers’ loss was the first in what would become six in a row.

The 49ers’ final road test comes next week at Ford Field in Detroit against the Lions.

 

 

 

Nine sacks and the return of Johnny Football too much for the 49ers to overcome in Cleveland

Manziel moves

By Morris Phillips

On a day that 49ers Coach Jim Tomsula and quarterback Blaine Gabbert wanted everyone to know that they were accountable, the victory on the field in Cleveland went to Johnny Manziel, a guy who hasn’t been accountable at all.

So much for accountability. And with it, so much for the 49ers beating a beatable opponent.

“You have to give credit to the Browns,” Gabbert said after the 49ers lost to Cleveland, 24-10 and were whipped in all phases. “They came ready to play today, and we didn’t. And you can’t put your finger on one certain thing. We have to watch the film to process what happened, and get back to the drawing board.”

That Gabbert could even process his thoughts was a victory in itself. The backup-turned-starter threw for a non-impactful 194 yards and didn’t throw (or score) a touchdown until less than two minutes remained in the game, and the 49ers trailed by three touchdowns. That final hurrah came after Gabbert was sacked nine times, a number so high and unfathomable you have to question whether the signal caller and his way-too-accommodating offensive line are even NFL-level performers.

Either that, or the 49ers’ offense came to Cleveland without spending the week preparing for battle. If so, that falls on the head coach and his staff.

Tomsula felt his team generally failed to execute, saying, “It starts up front. We didn’t block. Our line didn’t play well. We didn’t play well up front. We didn’t tackle well on defense; missed tackles, not wrapping up. The concepts in our routes were off. We played a poor football game.”

Without a doubt, the 49ers had plenty to play for. First off, a two-game win streak could have been realized, a powerful force even for a team out of the playoff picture concerned about selling tickets to its two remaining home games. Also, the momentum gained last week in Chicago meant that certain players were establishing that they could be in the team’s plans for 2016. But after losing to a team that hadn’t won since early October in such a decisive manner, all of that is called into question.

How bad was this loss? Much worse than the eye-popping nine sacks, or losing to an immature, second-year pro quarterback that was 1-9 in his 10 appearances coming in.

Defensively, the 49ers were run over by a Browns’ run game that ranked last in the NFL and hadn’t had a 100-yard rusher in the last season-and-a-half. Isiah Crowell turned Jim Brown, rushing for 145 yards on 20 carries with two scores. Crowell had runs of 50 and 54 yards, gashing a defense that was without speed-rusher Aaron Lynch and inside linebacker Michael Wilhoite. While the 49ers offense didn’t do its defense any favors by holding the ball for only 22 of 60 minutes, and converting just twice in 13 third-down situations, this was hardly the performance expected of a defense that had been effective more often than not coming in.

“You must be prepared. You must be ready,” defensive leader NaVorro Bowman said.   “You know the games are coming every single week. It’s an individual thing to bring your own energy.”

While the Browns ran all over the place, the Shaun Draughn-led 49er run game was stuck in the mud. Draughn finished with just 43 yards on the ground, and his 15-yard run was undoubtedly the only highlight. Overall, the 49ers mustered a paltry 221 yards in offense, an acceptable figure for a half, but not a whole football game.

Leading the Browns this Sunday was the aforementioned Johnny Football, who returned from a two-game benching due to his dishonesty about his activities during the Cleveland bye week. For a platform for his continued employment in Cleveland, on this Sunday, the 49ers provided shiny pamphlets trumpeting Manziel and spotlights illuminating the Heisman Trophy winner turned bad.

Manziel threw for 270 yards and a touchdown, and saw the forgiving Browns Stadium crowd chant his name in the second half. The 49ers did their part, by not fully taking advantage of Manziel’s one big mistake, an interception thrown just before halftime. The 49ers’ offense followed the interception by going three-and-out, preserving the Browns 10-3 halftime lead.

“I’ve only gotten to play six or seven games,” Manziel said afterwards.  “I know the number is starting to climb, but for me, these mean a lot to me.  I still have a lot to prove.  I feel like I’m just getting started.  I’m going to continue to play, continue to fight.”

The 49ers return to Levi’s Stadium on Sunday to take on the Cincinnati Bengals, who will likely be without injured quarterback Andy Dalton.

 

 

Gold touch: 49ers get breakthrough road win in Chicago against the Bears

Torrey scores
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By Morris Phillips

It’s been so long since the 49ers won a road game, winning teammates seemed like they were celebrating together for the first time. In a lot of ways, they were.

Torrey Smith, who caught the game-winning 71-yard pass in overtime, was mobbed by offensive tackle Joe Staley and safety Eric Reid, who was in the end zone so fast after the game’s conclusion it felt like he was on the field for the final play.

“It’s been a year of patience building for me. I’m actually kind of thankful for it because it makes you appreciate the things that happen,” Smith said afterwards.

Smith, the high-profile free agent acquisition from Baltimore, came to San Francisco to make big pass plays with Colin Kaepernick. But that didn’t happen, and Smith stewed along the way, feeling he had the done his part to get the moribund 49ers offense going. As much as anybody, the 26-year old speedster has sacrificed, following his breakout,11-touchdown season with the Ravens by catching just two touchdowns prior to Sunday with the 49ers.

“We didn’t really take too many shots this game,” Smith said, describing the Bears’ defensive strategy cooked up by Vic Fangio, as always, with a premium on limiting big plays. “They were sitting on us. We knew it. And what are we waiting for, let’s go get it. We got a great look. Everything happened the way we wanted it to happen.”

During regulation, the 49ers offense—to be kind—struggled. Smith was a virtual no-show, with one pass catch for five yards. The offensive line had its signature on seven third-down conversions, but the nine third-down failures were more prevalent, especially in the fourth quarter. The run game featuring Shaun Draughn and Travaris Cadet? 36 yards total.

Blaine Gabbert would end up with a merely credible QBR of 69.6, hardly what will be expected going forward if the 26-year old wants to extend his career as a starter in San Francisco, but on this Sunday in blustery Chicago, unexpectedly good enough.

“You really saw kind of the peaks and valleys of NFL football right there,” Gabbert said of the game’s surprising conclusion.

Given the offensive blackout, the 49ers’ focused, effective defensive effort was about to go for naught in the fourth quarter when the Bears pushed across the tie-breaking touchdown with 3:32 remaining. At that point, the Bears and 49ers had gone more than half the game, and all of the second half, without a single point scored. Whatever offense the Gabbert-Draughn-Boldin-Smith quartet could muster seemed to be exhausted.

Then disaster struck for the Bears in the form of Robbie Gould’s missed field goal, and two nightmare gaffes courtesy of safety Adrian Amos. Gould had formed a rock-solid reputation as one of the NFL’s most accurate kickers for more than a decade. Amos, a rookie drafted in the fifth-round from Penn State had a rapid ascent to become the Bears’ starter at free safety in Week 1.

With the 49ers facing 3rd-and-3 at the Chicago 44-yard line with 1:42 remaining, Gabbert transformed the 49ers rushing output for the day with a near immediate, scrambling run up the middle that went from a 20-yard gainer to a touchdown when Amos slipped in front of Gabbert near the 30-yard line.   Amos well-timed slip came just a fraction of second before Gabbert needed to decide to slide or subject himself to an explosive tackle, freeing the quarterback to gain steam on his Steve Young-like uninterrupted scamper.

Gabbert’s touchdown tied the game at 20, but the Bears appeared to respond with a game-deciding kickoff return.

Deonte Thompson’s 74-yard return and six conservatively-run plays later, Gould was gifted a chance to win it on the last play of regulation with a 36-yard field goal, but his kick was off to the left.

Then after six plays in overtime—three by each team—that gained a very uneventful two yards, the game ended suddenly. After a Bears’ punt, Smith blew down the left side of the field and past Amos who gave up his deep position, and Gabbert got a rare break from the Bears’ pass rush, hitting Smith in stride. The 26-year old passer and the 26-year old pass catcher had fashioned a bit of team history with Smith lifting the ball in victory through the final 12 yards of his run.

“It was set up by all the throws we had underneath early on in the game, all the runs we ran out of that formation,” Gabbert gushed. “It worked perfectly.”

Gabbert hadn’t won a road game as the starting quarterback since 2012. Outside of Indianapolis’ Lucas Oil Stadium and his two home bases in Jacksonville and Santa Clara, Gabbert had been 0-13.

Smith hadn’t won a road game in exactly a year, when in he was visiting Miami with the Ravens. And Coach Jim Tomsula finally broke through after losing his first five road coaching assignments.

“To see them in (the locker room) with a smile and enjoying each other that’s why I do what I do,” Tomsula said.

The 49ers visit Cleveland on Sunday where the 2-10 Browns may again turn to Johnny Manziel as their starter.

49ers competitive with first-place Cardinals, but still suffer narrow, 19-13 loss

 

Cardinal spikeBy Morris Phillips

Every trying football season has a loss like this. Of course, the hard-luck 49ers have had several, just not one with such a heavy contribution from the referees, who flagged the team 13 times, including a controversial call against Quinton Dial on Arizona’s game-winning drive.

Playing arguably the NFC’s best team, and a division rival that embarrassed them in September with a 40-point loss, the 49ers battled the NFC West-leading Cardinals on even terms for 3 ½ quarters only to lose late, 19-13. A roughing-the-passer penalty against Dial allowed the Cardinal’s game winning drive to continue as Carson Palmer rumbled into the end zone to break a 13-13 tie with 2:28 remaining.

On the pivotal play, Dial sacked Palmer, rapping both hands around the quarterback for an eight-yard sack. But the referees maintained that Dial had tackled Palmer using the crown of his helmet, giving Arizona a critical first down. Nine plays later, Palmer scrambled into the left corner of the end zone for the game-deciding score.

“He hit me right in my face with the crown of his helmet,” Palmer maintained when asked about the play afterwards.

Dial felt that Palmer ducked his head at the point of contact, inadvertently selling the call to the referees. Had the call not been made, the Cardinals would have faced 3rd-and-18 at their 24-yard line with less than seven minutes remaining in a tie game. To that point, the 49ers’ defense had held the NFL’s highest rated offense to one touchdown and two, first-half field goals.

Blaine Gabbert-in his third start in place of the injured and benched Colin Kaepernick—kept the 49ers in it with his 25 of 36 passing for 318 yards. Gabbert led the 49ers on a 12-play drive just before halftime that closed the Arizona advantage to 6-3. Then after the Cardinals opened the second half with a nine-play drive that ended with David Johnson’s one-yard touchdown run, Gabbert kept the 49ers in it with a 77-yard drive and an 8-yard touchdown pass to Vance McDonald that made the score 13-10.

“I think Blaine has continuously gotten better as he’s been in here,” Coach Jim Tomsula said, far more responsive about his quarterback than he was willing to discuss the refereeing. “I thought he ran the offense well today.”

The 49ers outgained the Cardinals on the day with 368 yards in total offense, but couldn’t strike early and they saw their final drive of the day end when Anquan Boldin’s 18-yard catch left him two yards short of a first down at the Arizona 22-yard line. Gabbert had some success with his deep ball, hitting Torrey Smith on a 41-yard pass play that set up the game-tying field goal in the fourth quarter.

Overall, better than those Kaepernick days, but still not good enough.

“I believe there’s progress, but we’re in the business of winning games and we have to win games,” Tomsula admitted.

While the 49ers battled the referees as much as the Cardinals, Arizona overcame the loss of two running backs to stay atop the NFC West. Starter Chris Johnson and key reserve Andre Ellington were both lost during the game to injury, but Carson Palmer kept the Cardinals driving, often with the help of veteran receiver Larry Fitzgerald. Fitzgerald finished with 10 catches for 66 yards, and added some perspective from Arizona’s viewpoint afterwards.

“It wasn’t pretty,” Fitzgerald admitted. “But I’ve been around enough to know that any way you can get a win is a good one.”

The Cardinals won in San Francisco/Santa Clara for the first time since 2008. The 49ers were officially eliminated from the division race with the loss, falling to 3-8.

The 49ers are on the road the next two weeks, first visiting Chicago, then Cleveland, before returning home to face the Cincinnati Bengals.