Recent Forum Topics › Forums › The Rams Huddle › 49ers gathering steam
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December 19, 2017 at 11:52 pm #79191znModerator
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All of a sudden, the #49ers claim the 14th-ranked offense in the NFL.
By comparison:
2016: 31st
2015: 31st
2014: 20th
2013: 24th— Joe Fann (@Joe_Fann) December 19, 2017
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December 19, 2017 at 11:53 pm #79192znModerator49ers players didn’t know Jimmy Garoppolo “was this special”
Josh Alper
49ers players didn’t know Jimmy Garoppolo “was this special”
From the start of the 2016 season through their 11th game of this season, the 49ers managed three wins.
Sunday’s 25-23 victory over the Titans means they’ve now won three games in the last three weeks and it isn’t hard to find the guy getting the credit for that change of fortunes. Quarterback Jimmy Garoppolo has started all three of those wins and he’s leading an offense that’s gone over 400 yards in consecutive games for the first time since 2011.
All three wins have come after the 49ers trailed in the second half and Sunday’s win saw Garoppolo complete three quick passes to move the team in position for Robbie Gould‘s field goal as time expired.
It’s the kind of run that leads to big reactions from teammates and the 49ers are falling right in line. Left tackle Joe Staley said he wishes the team was closer to playoff position because “we could carry some momentum and do some damage if he got in the playoffs” and center Daniel Kilgore said it felt great to see the usually placid Levi’s Stadium with life in it.
“I knew he was a great player; we all did,” right guard Brandon Fusco said, via the San Francisco Chronicle. “We didn’t know he was this special.”
There are still contract matters to work out before Garoppolo’s future with the team is totally squared away, but everything else has fallen into line quickly since the trade that brought him to the Niners.
December 19, 2017 at 11:56 pm #79193znModeratorIn short order, Jimmy Garoppolo showing 49ers the way to win
Nick Wagoner
SANTA CLARA, Calif. — Before the San Francisco 49ers got the ball back at their 25-yard line with one timeout, 1 minute, 7 seconds left and a one-point deficit to overcome, there was nothing to be found on their sideline except an overwhelming sense of calm.
To a man, every Niner on that sideline had faith that quarterback Jimmy Garoppolo would deliver his team its first three-game winning streak since 2014.
“At this point, we shouldn’t be surprised,” guard Brandon Fusco said. “We should kind of expect it now. He’s a special player and we have a good group of guys. We’re just learning how to win and I think we’re only going to get better.”
Considering that Garoppolo is a grizzled 10-year veteran with a litany of comeback wins under his belt, it should definitely be expected. What’s that you say? Garoppolo was making only his fifth NFL start and third as a Niner on Sunday?
Even in the wildest dreams of coach Kyle Shanahan, general manager John Lynch and the vast majority of the 49ers’ locker room, they couldn’t have pictured what took place in Sunday’s 25-22 win over the Tennessee Titans or what happened in the two weeks before that. Heck, they probably never even imagined they’d be able to acquire Garoppolo from New England for a second-round pick, a draft choice that looks like no more than a pittance for what the Niners got in return.
But here we are, three games into the Garoppolo era and the 49ers have three wins with Garoppolo already firmly in command in the huddle and in the locker room. It speaks to just how far the Niners have come in such a short period of time that in just Garoppolo’s third start, a veteran such as Fusco has such unrelenting belief in his quarterback that it should be expected for him to go out and win a game in difficult circumstances against a legit playoff contender.
“With a guy like Jimmy, he asserted himself as a leader the first week that he was here,” tight end George Kittle said. “That’s just the type of guy that he is. He’s a guy that you want to follow. He puts himself up there. Jimmy breaks us down before we get on the field every single day. … It’s really awesome to see that, and it’s easy to follow him. You want to play well for him.”
Before every 49ers drive, Garoppolo makes it a point to speak to his teammates. He usually offers some sort of message relevant to that particular moment in the game. Sometimes, it’s something as simple as “keep it up.” Such was the message from Garoppolo in the closing moments of Sunday’s win as he went up to each offensive player and told them to “stay locked in” even as the Titans drove for a go-ahead field goal.
When the Niners’ offense took the field, Garoppolo made Fusco look like a prophet, quickly steering the Niners down the field. On first down, Garoppolo hit receiver Trent Taylor for 7 yards. He followed with a 24-yard strike to Kittle and a 14-yard throw to wideout Marquise Goodwin. Three plays, 34 seconds and 45 yards later, the Niners were suddenly at Tennessee’s 30, well within kicker Robbie Gould’s range for a game-winning field goal.
That quickly, the 49ers went from hurrying up to milking the clock to set up Gould’s game-winner. It was a stunning turn of events against a Titans defense that has allowed the sixth-fewest yards per play in the NFL.
“[Garoppolo] is very calm, collected and focused,” left tackle Joe Staley said. “Not to say that wasn’t here before, but it definitely has a different aura around him.”
Earlier this season, the Niners set an NFL record that they didn’t want any part of, becoming the first team in the Super Bowl era to lose five straight games by three points or less. The difference in those games usually came down to a play or two that went the other direction. A lack of difference-makers repeatedly left the Niners on the short end of that stick.
For as much talk as there was from the Niners about learning how to win — and there’s validity to that as well — the easiest way to swing games their direction was to get someone who could make those one or two plays on their behalf. In Garoppolo, they found him.
“He’s very composed,” Shanahan said. “Doesn’t seem too high or too low. I think for the quarterback position, there’s a lot of thinking involved. You’ve got to stay poised under pressure. You’ve got a lot of guys coming after you too, so you need the grit to hang in there and everything, but there’s a lot of thinking that’s involved and sometimes you get a little too amped up and your brain doesn’t work quite as well. He does a great job of balancing both.”
Against the Titans on Sunday, Garoppolo finished 31-of-43 for a career-high 381 yards and a touchdown for a passer rating of 106.8 and a 90.3 QBR. In the fourth quarter, he was 11-of-14 for 180 yards for a passer rating of 119 and one of those incompletions was a spike.
Impressive numbers, to be sure, but maybe Fusco was onto something when he said it should be expected. In his four games as a Niner, Garoppolo in the fourth quarter is 23-of-29 for 305 yards with a touchdown and no interceptions for a passer rating of 122.
Those numbers alone are enough to have the Niners and their fans excited about what Garoppolo could mean for the long-term future of the franchise. If that’s not enough, however, consider that Garoppolo believes there’s still plenty of room for improvement.
“I set pretty high expectations for myself and I hold myself to a pretty high standard,” Garoppolo said. “It’s a work in progress. We still have two games left in this season. We’ve got a really good team coming in here next week. So, we have to keep preparing. Going out to practice, having good practices. I think that’s playing a huge role in this. We go out Wednesday through Friday and we really put in the time. It’s starting to pay off.”
In more ways than one, it already has.
December 20, 2017 at 6:50 am #79198joemadParticipantJimmy G’s coach compares him to Marc Bulger….
Jimmy Garoppolo’s leap upon the NFL stage has been so spectacular, he’s drawn comparisons to great quarterbacks of the past, including former teammate Tom Brady. Some have even gone so far as to mention Joe Montana.
However those close to him have compared Garoppolo to some quarterbacks no one would suspect. Coach Kyle Shanahan told a Fox television crew before the 49ers played the Texans that Garoppolo reminded him of Marc Bulger.
Even though Bulger kept the “Greatest Show of Turf” going for the St. Louis Rams after Kurt Warner’s departure, not many fans remember Bulger as a fantastic quarterback. Yet in Bulger’s nine years with the Rams, he kept the team competitive (2001-9).
What Shanahan said was that Bulger’s ability to throw with a quick-twitch upper body reminded him of Garoppolo. Garoppolo can also stand in the pocket and release the ball fast without a firm base with his feet.
Meanwhile, 49ers’ radio game analyst Tim Ryan likens Garoppolo’s ability to shield himself from big hits to Warner.“He throws off the foot, and dips his head right out and goes with the hit rather than getting smashed in the grill,” Ryan told Murph and Mac on Monday morning. That technique reminded him of Warner.
“What made (Warner) who he is and why he’s in the Hall of Fame, he would hang back there knowing he was getting to get tattooed waiting for Torry Holt or Isaac Bruce to run that 16-yard dig, or 16-yard in-cut. He would repeatedly deliver it on time on the money off his back foot and get smashed, and he always got up.”
He sees Garoppolo using the same move.
“(Garoppolo) throws off the foot, and dips his head right out and goes with the hit rather than getting smashed in the grill.”The best of Bulger and the best of Warner would make any quarterback envious. To have a quick-twitch ability and the courage to stand in and make the throw and cover up are tremendous qualities and one reason Garoppolo has thrown for more yards than any other 49ers’ quarterback in his first two starts.
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