After lackluster effort in loss to Arizona, the 49ers get a much-needed break

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Arizona Cardinals running back David Johnson (31) runs from San Francisco 49ers linebacker Nick Bellore, bottom, and defensive end Taylor Hart (96) during the second half of an NFL football game in Santa Clara, Calif., Thursday, Oct. 6, 2016. (AP Photo/Ben Margot)

By Morris Phillips

Nobody looks good on Thursday night football.  Not the winner, and certainly not the loser, in this case the 49ers, who fell 33-21 to the Cardinals at Levi’s Stadium.

Whether it was the abbreviated week, the shortened preparation and recovery time, or just the static nature of the team’s offense, the 49ers stunk up the joint in dropping their fourth straight, after opening the season with an impressive win over the Rams.

But the victorious Cardinals didn’t look much better.  Just better than their opponent.

“The biggest thing was whatever it took to get this win,” Arizona defensive lineman Calais Campbell said.  “Find a way to get it done and try to figure it out from here.”

Campbell was a big part of the small part of this football game that was smartly executed, that being the Arizona defensive effort.  The Cardinals made life miserable for 49ers’ quarterback Blaine Gabbert, picking him off twice and sacking him seven times.  After the 49ers took an early 7-0 lead, all lanes closed, as the turnovers and mistakes doomed the home team’s effort, which saw them trailing by as much as 31-14 after David Johnson’s two-yard touchdown with 4:44 remaining in the game.

While the 49ers struggled on both sides of the ball—allowing 157 yards rushing to Johnson alone—Gabbert was the lightning rod for the team’s failures, as the calls for Colin Kaepernick intensified as the game went on.  Gabbert finished 18 of 31 for 162 yards and one touchdown.  He targeted deep threat Torrey Smith once without a completion, and ran the ball himself 10 times, just two examples of how unfocused the team’s attack was on Thursday.

But make no mistake this wasn’t just Gabbert’s fault, Carlos Hyde didn’t run well and briefly lost his cool drawing an unsportsmanlike conduct penalty, the blocking up front wasn’t effective, and the team as a whole failed to take advantage of Arizona’s snail-like start to the game in which they punted on seven consecutive possessions to start the game.

“I don’t think anybody played well on offense. Nobody.  I don’t think we protected well enough, I don’t think we threw it well enough and we had too many drops and two interceptions,” Coach Chip Kelly conceded.

Most glaring was the 49ers inability to take advantage of early momentum, a problem on Sunday as well in the loss to the Cowboys.  In both games early 49ers’ leads meant too little, and were all but forgotten after halftime of both losses.  In this one, the Cardinals punted seven times to start, but they finished with 26 points after halftime while punting just twice.

All of that with the absence of normal starter Carson Palmer, who was replaced by Drew Stanton, who frankly wasn’t that good.  Stanton completed 11 of 27 passes for 124 yards but didn’t turn the ball over.  While both Stanton and Gabbert had the national television audience and the crowd at Levi’s squirming with their incomplete passes, Stanton at least had the support of his teammates, who didn’t panic with the slow start.

Defensively, the 49ers missed emotional leader NaVorro Bowman, who underwent surgery and will miss the remainder of the season.  In his place, Nick Bellore had nine tackles and was serviceable, but no match for the elite running of Arizona’s Johnson.  Behind Bellore, the 49ers’ secondary had their hands full with wily veteran Larry Fitzgerald, who caught a pair of touchdown passes despite facing frequent double teams.

Both teams entered the game in last place in the NFC West at 1-3, and the Cardinals’ win allowed them to look ahead confidently with games against Seattle, Minnesota and the Jets coming up.  For the 49ers, not having to admit the shortcomings to the media after the game might be a reasonable, short-term goal.

“I’ve got to play better,” Gabbert admitted.  “I have to do a better job executing this offense.  That’s the way it goes.”

“We’re going to get this thing right.”

The 49ers travel to Buffalo following their extended week of preparation.  They’ll face the Bills, who also are looking for improvement after a slow start to their season.  They did get good news, getting defensive standout Marcell Dareus back from suspension, then shutting out the Patriots on Sunday, who were playing without Tom Brady for the last time.

49ers jump to a quick start, then get pushed around by the Cowboys and lose for the third, straight game

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By Morris Phillips

Holding an early 14-0 lead, and facing a team without three, offensive stars, the 49ers figured to be in fine shape on Sunday at home against the Cowboys.  But instead, just the opposite was true, as the Cowboys fought back before halftime, then seized control in the second half on their way to a 24-17 win over the 49ers.

Now 1-3 for the second, straight season, the 49ers have to win Thursday against Arizona or fall into an unenviable hole, and they’ll have to do it without emotional leader and defensive standout NaVorro Bowman.

Bowman suffered a lower leg injury during the second half without there being a physical event with another player.   With an MRI scheduled for Monday, the team could be without Bowman for an extended period of time.  Whether they have Bowman or not, the 49ers have to find a way not to get pushed around physically as the Cowboys did to them in the second half.

Or better handle adversity, which against the Cowboys started with a questionable roughing the passer penalty.  That penalty on Jaquiski Tartt led to Dallas’ first touchdown three plays later.  With rookie quarterback Dak Prescott corralled by two defenders, Tartt rushed in with a push to Prescott’s chest prompting a critical flag.

“We talk about it all the time, penalties that keep drives alive are things that hurt you,” Coach Chip Kelly said.  “I didn’t see it.  They said they blew a whistle.  I didn’t hear a whistle on the field.  I know no one on our side heard a whistle on the field.  If they called it, it happened.”

More adversity would follow in the form of Bradley Pinion’s short punt, and a second, lengthy Cowboys drive that tied the game before halftime.   Prescott hooked up with receiver Brice Butler on a 4-yard scoring play with 12 seconds remaining in the half to get the Cowboys even at 14.

The 49ers started the game on a roll, converting seven straight third down opportunities, a week after they failed in each of their first, ten such situations at Seattle.  In the second half, quarterback Blaine Gabbert couldn’t replicate that early success, throwing short on two, critical third down plays, as well as a costly interception when speedster Torrey Smith broke free deep in the fourth quarter, and the 49ers needing a go-ahead score.

“I have to throw him to the middle of the field, I have to throw him to the hash and I just cut it a little too early and missed him wide,” Gabbert said when asked about the pivotal play.

The Cowboys played without Tony Romo, and All-Pros Dez Bryant and offensive tackle Tyron Smith.  With those three out, everyone in the stadium from Kelly to the peanut vendor knew the 49ers had to stop the Cowboys’ run game then zero in on the inexperienced Prescott.  But the Cowboys’ talented offensive line—even without Smith—won out, first in their speedy comeback, then late when the 49ers were without Bowman for the games’ final 20 minutes.

On the Cowboys first play after Bowman departed, rookie back Ezekiel Elliott enjoyed his second, longest run of the afternoon, a 23-yarder that went right at Bowman replacement, Nick Bellore.  Elliott would finish with 138 yards rushing on 23 carries, including the Cowboys go-ahead score late in the third quarter.

“They got a Hall of Fame tight end, they got an outstanding running back, they have three other offensive lineman I think are really good so I wouldn’t shortchange them from a talent standpoint,” Kelly responded when asked about the 49ers inability to capitalize on the absence of Dallas’ key three players.  “I know Dez didn’t play, but it wasn’t like if Dez is out, there’s no one else to go to.”

Gabbert finished 16 of 23 for 196 yards and a touchdown pass to Jeremy Kerley to open the scoring.   But that 33-yard pass was Gabbert’s longest of the afternoon, and he failed to get the ball to Smith, who caught one pass for three yards and had no chance on the ball that was picked off by Dallas’ Morris Claiborne.  Gabbert’s QB rating of 57 illustrated how limited the team’s attack was under his leadership, but Kelly insisted that his quarterback played well, and dismissed suggestions that Gabbert be replaced by Colin Kaepernick.

Prescott extended his rookie record of 131 passes without an interception, and finished 23 of 32 for 245 yards and two touchdowns.  While the rookie never wavered when trailing by two scores, the 49ers were guilty of not putting an extra layer of pressure on Prescott with a third, first half score or by forcing a key turnover.

The 49ers will get a second opportunity to do just that on Thursday against the Cardinals, who will be without injured Carson Palmer, and led instead by backup quarterback Drew Stanton.

 

“Oh, Oh, Where’s the O?”: 49ers outclassed by Cam and Carolina in 46-27 loss

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By Morris Phillips

Two weeks into the 2016 season, the 49ers appear to be an improved club under new coach Chip Kelly.  But in the NFL, real credibility begins and ends with star players.

On Sunday, the Carolina Panthers had star players, the 49ers did not.

Cam Newton, the league’s MVP in 2015, threw for 353 yards and four touchdowns as the Panthers raced past the 49ers, 46-27 in Charlotte.  One week, after the 49ers shut out the Rams in Santa Clara, they were competitive but outclassed by Carolina and their biggest stars: Newton, tight end Greg Olsen, and intuitive linebacker Luke Kuechly.

Newton had never thrown for more than 353 yards in a game and won.  In his 80th NFL start on Sunday, he accomplished that feat after throwing a pick on his initial throw of the day.  While the Panthers and Newton gifted the 49ers with four turnovers, which were turned into 20 points, Carolina’s quarterback never relented, hurting the 49ers with deep passes and his legs at critical spots.

Olsen, as good as any pass-catching tight end the 49ers have ever had, came up with five catches for 122 yards, including a career-best 78-yard catch and run that put the Panthers ahead for good, 14-10 in the second quarter.

Kuechly, the NFL Defensive Player of the Year two seasons ago, led the Panthers with 11 tackles and a fourth quarter interception that helped quell a late Niners push for respectability on the scoreboard.  Most importantly, Kuechly’s efforts stalled the 49ers’ Carlos Hyde, who ran for just 34 yards and lost a fumble in the third quarter.  Hyde, the closest thing the 49ers have to a star player, saw his eight-yard run in the first half rank as his longest of the afternoon.

The 49ers were saddled with a short week of preparation and the cross-country travel, but played competitively in spurts.  They led 10-7 in the second quarter, and got within 34-27 in the fourth.  But the counters to those two high points, were telling.  Trailing just 17-10 at the half, the 49ers went three-and-out on the initial two possessions of the second half, and fell behind 31-10 after three quarters.

After Gabbert and the offense fashioned a response, pulling within seven points of the Panthers with 7:51 remaining after a 75-yard score on a pass to Vance McDonald, things fell apart.  Gabbert threw picks on each of the team’s next two possessions, and the Panthers pulled away, scoring the game’s final 12 points.  Along with the picks, Gabbert had a star-crossed day, missing several open receivers, often missing high on deeper routes, and throwing too low on the shorter routes that were frequently contested by the active Carolina back seven.

A closer look of the Carolina turnovers, including former 49er Ted Ginn’s muffed kickoff return that set the 49ers up on the Carolina 1-yard line, showed just how generous the Panthers were, and how stingy they were outside those moments.   On the possessions following the three Carolina fumbles and Newton’s early pick, the 49ers gained a cumulative 67 yards and turned those possessions into 20 points.

Outside those moments of largesse, the 49ers struggled.  Gabbert finished 17 of 36 passing for 243 yards, many of those missed throws leading to Bradley Pinion punts, especially in the telling second and third quarters.  The offensive line held up, allowing Gabbert to be sacked just twice, but beyond McDonald’s big play and Torrey Smith’s 28-yard touchdown catch in the second quarter, the 49ers had no big plays.

The longest play of the day outside the two long touchdowns?  Shaun Draughn’s 18-yard run play.  The 49ers longest pass play outside the two big plays?  A pair of 13-yard receptions by Rod Streater and Jeremy Kerley.

Meanwhile, Newton aired it out, showing off his big arm with the results to match.   The big hits Newton suffered in the opener at Denver didn’t completely disappear, but the quarterback got solid protection up front and made plays.  The 49ers’ defense, while not powerless, had a difficult time keeping up.

“We had over 500 yards of total offense so we obviously did something well,” Coach Ron Rivera said.

The 49ers travel to Seattle next week to face the equally frustrated Seahawks, who managed only a field goal and lost 9-3 to the Rams in their home-opening return to Los Angeles.

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.