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  • 49ers change classification of Brandon Aiyuk’s delayed comeback

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    SANTA CLARA — Brandon Aiyuk has officially left the 49ers’ building — and roster, likely forever.

    Aiyuk’s stalled comeback from last season’s knee injury turned into such a vanishing act that the 49ers reclassified his status Saturday as “reserve/left squad.”

    Aiyuk did not previously count against the 53-man roster with his reserve/physically-unable-to-perform list, and now the 49ers are announcing he’s not returning this season — nor essentially in the foreseeable future.

    Although the 49ers voided $27 million in 2026 guarantees back in late July for reportedly violating terms of his knee rehabilitation, Aiyuk maintained a very visible presence during training camp and the first month of the season as he shadowed wide receivers’ warmups.

    He vanished from the media’s sight once October arrived, although 49ers coach Kyle Shanahan and general manager John Lynch stated that Aiyuk continued to show up for early-morning therapy sessions.

    Aiyuk has not officially commented to the media since last season.

    Teammates have expressed concern for Aiyuk and, in recent days, the tone shifted to a past-tense about his 49ers career, which began as a 2020 first-round draft pick and peaked with back-to-back 1,000-yard seasons in 2022 and ’23.

    Aiyuk and the 49ers clashed throughout the 2024 offseason before he agreed to a four-year extension worth $30 million annually. His right knee’s ligaments and meniscus were torn in a devastating hit against the Kansas City Chiefs in October 2024.

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    Cam Inman

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  • 49ers 5 keys to beating Panthers on Monday night for elusive second straight win

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    SANTA CLARA – On display now at the Pro Football Hall of Fame is a memento from the 49ers’ last game, only it’s the Arizona Cardinals’ jersey of Jacoby Brissett, who set an NFL record with 47 completions last Sunday.

    Embarrassing as that may be, the 49ers brought home their seventh victory of the season. Winning by any means possible is all that matters from here on out to the playoffs, and possibly back home to Levi’s Stadium for Super Bowl LX in this bizarro-world season.

    That’s why the 49ers (7-4) can not overlook the surprisingly upstart Carolina Panthers (6-5) in Monday night’s matchup.

    “It gets more important the later you get in the year, especially playing against a team right now who’s in the playoff hunt, fighting for first place in their division,” 49ers coach Kyle Shanahan said. “So, I think we fully understand how important it is to get a back-to-back win.”

    The 49ers have not done that since their 3-0 start, instead alternating wins and losses each weekend amid myriad injuries.

    The Panthers had won just twice in 20 road games dating to 2023 before winning their past three away from Charlotte. They’re seeking their first Monday Night Football road win since 2016, and, almost a decade later, this is their first encore away from home since then.

    They’re not total strangers out here. They were, after all, the 49ers’ NFC West cohort from 1995-2001. They lost Super Bowl 50 here a decade ago. And they clobbered Shanahan 23-3 in his 49ers’ debut in 2017.

    But, again, all that matters now is who wins Monday night and makes a sizeable step toward the playoffs. Here are five keys for the 49ers to make that happen:

    1. STOP THE RUN

    The No. 1 task for any defense is stopping the run, and Monday night that puts the 49ers’ focus on Rico Dowdle. His patience style paid off with a 1,079-yard season last season as the Dallas Cowboys’ starter, and he’s carried that over this season to the Panthers.

    He is averaging 5 yards per carry, and he’s 167 yards shy of a 1,000-yard season. Mind you, he ran for 391 yards combined in back-to-back games against Miami and Dallas last month. Dowdle played a bit role as a Cowboys backup in two previous games against the 49ers, totaling just 26 yards in those 2020 and ’23 games. Spelling him are Chubba Hubbard and rookie Trevor Etienne.

    Curtis Robinson’s first career start comes with weighty responsibility as the play-relaying, movement-signaling middle linebacker role previously occupied by Fred Warner and Tatum Bethune, the latter of whom is out likely these next two games before the Week 14 bye because of last Sunday’s high-ankle sprain.

    2. TIGHTER PASS DEFENSE

    The 49ers not only failed to sack Brissett amid his 47-completion barrage, they yielded the fourth-most yards in their history (452). Carolina’s Bryce Young almost threw for that many on Sunday, too.

    In beating the Atlanta Falcons 30-27 in overtime, Young delivered a career-best game (448 yards, three touchdowns, 123.2 rating). He has a bona fide No. 1 target in Tetairoa McMillan, who leads all rookies with 748 yards (four touchdowns). The 6-foot-5 McMillan had 130 yards and two touchdowns last Sunday, but he’s yet to produce a reception longer than 40 yards.

    The 49ers got interceptions last game from Deommodore Lenoir and Malik Mustapha, perhaps signaling a long-awaited launch point for a takeaway trend. The 49ers’ pass rush, led by Bryce Huff and Keion White, also could wake up and get to Young, who got sacked five times last game.

    Pay particular attention to intermediate passes between 10 and 19 yards, where McMillan has thrived (407 yards) and the 49ers’ defense has waned (111.3 passer rating).

    3. AN ‘UNWANTED’ McCAFFREY

    McCaffrey entered the NFL in 2017 with a chip on his shoulder and carried it with him from the Panthers’ trade to the 49ers three years ago. Motivation is never a concern. But perhaps he should channel his post-trade emotions and lash out for his third 100-yard game in the past six weeks, though the 49ers certainly wouldn’t mind another three-touchdown outing like last game.

    “In hindsight, I firmly believe it’s the best thing that ever happened to me,” McCaffrey said in May 2023 about the trade. “But at the time, it was bittersweet, right? You’re leaving (Carolina). In my head, I was pissed off, and to be frank, I felt, ‘You guys don’t want me anymore.’ I was hungry. That was the first emotion. I was hungry to get back to the football that I knew I could play.”

    Fullback Kyle Juszczyk called it a “weird” feeling the first time he faced his original team, the Baltimore Ravens, and said: “I’m sure Christian is going to have some of that. There’s going to be guys he played with over there and a few coaches, the medical staff. I’m sure he’ll be extra juiced up to go out there and put on a good performance.”

    The Panthers struggled last week to slow one of McCaffrey’s fellow all-purpose backs in Bijan Robinson, who ran for 104 yards and two touchdowns while adding 39 receiving yards.

    4. RED ZONE EFFICIENCY

    Often seizing on defensive coverages they’ve scouted, the 49ers have scored touchdowns on 12 of their past 15 red-zone drives over the past three games, and 16-of-19 dating to the Oct. 19 win over Atlanta.

    That’s pumped them up to the 11th-best red-zone offense in the league, with a 63.4% conversion rate. After a down 2024 season (57.1%), this full-strength 49ers offense could be trending back toward it’s league-leading mark in 2023 (67.2%).

    The Panthers’ defense ranks 29th in red-zone efficiency, yielding touchdowns on 65.8% of such drives.

    If the 49ers don’t score touchdowns, they should get points from newly signed kicker Matt Gay, who’s filling in after Eddy Piñeiro’s hamstring strain Sunday. Gay has made all 43 field-goal attempts in his career inside 30 yards and 84% on overall field-goal tries, though just 32-of-54 when attempting from 50 yards and longer.

    5. WIDE RECEIVER OUTBURST

    With Brandon Aiyuk’s comeback on indefinite hold and a 2026 breakup on the horizon, the time is ripe for Ricky Pearsall, Jauan Jennings and Kendrick Bourne to rise up and link up with Brock Purdy, who’s right big toe is amenable to a second straight start for the first time this season.

    Purdy may have thrown three touchdown passes last Sunday in his triumphant return from a six-game hiatus, but they predictably went to George Kittle (two) and Christian McCaffrey (one). Pearsall had one catch for no gain, Bourne got shutout to remain 18 yards shy of a $500,000 bonus, and Jennings has just 378 yards in a highly publicized contract year. The only 49ers wide receivers under contract for 2026 are Pearsall, Demarcus Robinson, Jordan Watkins, Jacob Cowing, and, for now, Aiyuk, pending a likely March exit.

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    Cam Inman

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  • 49ers’ Fred Warner receives fourth NFC Player of Week honors of career

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    Linebacker Fred Warner is the NFC’s Defensive Player of the Week after his dominance in the 49ers’ 26-21 win Sunday at New Orleans.

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    Cam Inman

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  • 49ers third-stringer, Los Gatos native an unlikely hero in win over Seahawks: ‘A dream come true’

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    San Francisco 49ers third-string tight end Jake Tonges didn’t have a catch and was targeted only once through the first 20 games – and three years — of his NFL career.

    Nevertheless, when starter George Kittle went down with a hamstring injury in the first half of Sunday’s game against the Seattle Seahawks, Tonges was ready.

    Tonges, who grew up a short drive from Levi’s Stadium as a Los Gatos native, caught three passes, including one for a touchdown with 1:34 remaining in the fourth quarter, to help the 49ers rally for a 17-13 season-opening win over the Seahawks at Lumen Field.

    “I’m pretty excited,” Tonges told the 49ers Radio Network after the game. “Really a dream come true right there.”

    With the 49ers facing a third-and-3 from the Seattle 4-yard line, quarterback Brock Purdy dropped back to pass and had enough time to look to his left — twice — before scrambling to his right.

    Purdy then slung the ball toward the corner of the end zone, where the 6-foot-4 Tonges reached over Seahawks cornerback Riq Woolen, who got a hand on the ball, and caught it for the first touchdown of his NFL career.

    What was nearly Purdy’s third interception of the day turned into an unforgettable moment for the former two-sport star at Los Gatos High.

    “I had a corner curl and slipped coming out of my break, and then the scramble drill was on,” Tonges said. “We just always try and stay in bounds and stay alive, and Brock gave me a chance there, and I did the best I could with it.”

    Looking on from the sideline in a red 49ers hoodie, Kittle flashed a massive smile as thousands of the team’s fans inside the often-deafening stadium began to celebrate.

Tonges told reporters later that he asked Purdy, “if he was throwing it out of bounds and he said, ‘No, I was just trying to give you a chance.’ We didn’t want to kick a field goal. Didn’t want to go to overtime. We wanted to score and win it right there.”

Kittle caught a five-yard touchdown pass from Purdy midway through the first quarter to give the 49ers a 7-0 lead, and had four catches for 25 yards before leaving the field with his injury. Niners coach Kyle Shanahan didn’t have an update on Kittle’s health after the game.

As a career backup, Tonges knows he has to stay ready for such moments, and he finished the game with three catches for 15 yards.

“I was thinking just about how many games I prepped for, and didn’t really get the opportunity,” Tonges said. “I kind of know this is my role if George goes down. So, I’m always paying extra attention to third-down stuff, to a lot of the pass stuff. Just staying locked in and being consistent, because you really never know when your opportunity might come.”

Tonges, 26, graduated from Los Gatos High School in 2017 and caught four touchdowns in four years at Cal from 2018 to 2021. He went undrafted but played four games with the Chicago Bears in 2022, playing 34 snaps on offense while not being targeted with a pass.

San Francisco 49ers tight end Jake Tonges speaks during a press conference after an NFL football game against the Seattle Seahawks, Sunday, Sept. 7, 2025, in Seattle. (AP Photo/John Froschauer)
San Francisco 49ers tight end Jake Tonges speaks during a press conference after an NFL football game against the Seattle Seahawks, Sunday, Sept. 7, 2025, in Seattle. (AP Photo/John Froschauer) 

Tonges was waived by the Bears in Aug. 2023 but was signed by the 49ers to their practice squad a few weeks later. Last season, Tonges played in all 16 games for the 49ers but was primarily used on special teams.

The 49ers re-signed him in April — and are glad they did.

“It just comes down to opportunities, and in games, do you get the right look to get the ball and everything,” Purdy said. “So he’s been a consistent guy all throughout last year and camp. George goes down today, and then, boom, (Tonges is) ready for his opportunity. We all love Jake. He’s a smart kid, and we all love him, and he’s a brother to us.”

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Curtis Pashelka

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  • Burford’s broken hand could flip Dominick Puni into 49ers’ rookie starter

    Burford’s broken hand could flip Dominick Puni into 49ers’ rookie starter

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    SANTA CLARA — Rookie Dominick Puni might be fast-tracked into a starting spot on the Super Bowl-contending 49ers’ offensive line.

    His potential aside, Puni played right guard on the first-string unit both Friday and Saturday because injuries sidelined his top competition, Jon Feliciano and Spencer Burford.

    Burford might undergo surgery on a fractured right hand, after taking all first-team snaps through two practices as he tries avenging a Super Bowl blocking gaffe.

    Feliciano, who supplanted Burford as the starting right guard midway through last season, is believed to be dealing with a knee issue ahead of his 10th NFL season.

    That opens the door for Puni. That doesn’t freak out the 49ers, who might need his versatile services either in Week 1 at right guard or later in his rookie season elsewhere on the line.

    “He’s done a real good job,” coach Kyle Shanahan said. “We haven’t had pads on yet, which is always a challenge for guys in protection. He’s stepped in, gotten more reps, and I’m excited about him.”

    The 49ers, after Sunday’s day off, will suit up in pads Monday for the first time of camp, which is honestly when the judging begins for such high-contact spots among linemen. The pass protection thus far hasn’t been ideal, as expected behind a patchwork unit.

    Missing from camp’s opening, four-practice block were left tackle Trent Williams and wide receiver Brandon Aiyuk, both of whom are embroiled in contract disputes. While Williams draws a $50,000 daily fine as a holdout, Aiyuk is attending meetings and participating in all but practices, and he stoically watched Saturday’s warmups from a cart near the weight room.

    Presuming Williams and Aiyuk get their business resolved, the 49ers’ high-producing offense returns intact from last season’s NFC-winning effort, led by Brock Purdy’s franchise-record passing total (4,280 yards) and Christian McCaffrey’s NFL-leading rushing output.

    The offense could improve as it welcomes the NFL Draft additions of Puni, a third-round choice out of Kansas, as well as wide receiver Ricky Pearsall, a first-round pick who could make his camp debut Monday if his hamstring strain allows.

    When Puni reported to rookie camp in May, he spoke like a true lineman: “Physicality, hard-nose football, run the ball — it is what I like to do.” He also knew who he’d be protecting: “I love Brock Purdy. The fact he was the last pick, that’s storybook.”

    Puni has made a positive first impression adapting to the NFL and a complex scheme. Three summers ago, he was at the University of Central Missouri, before transferring to Kansas and finishing his collegiate career as a sack-denying offensive tackle.

    Chris Foerster, the 49ers’ offensive line coach and run-game coordinator, called Puni a “special guy,” commending his strong frame (6-foot-5, 313 pounds) and intelligence as he learns not just a new scheme but a new position. He played left tackle, left guard and right tackle in college.

    “Even if Puni is the best player, is that the guy?” Foerster rhetorically asked Friday. “Do you want him out there opening game, Monday Night Football against the Jets? If he’s the best player, you do, but those are bright lights.”

    Two years ago, Burford started the 49ers’ season-opening loss at Chicago, and he remained the starter into last season before Feliciano took over at the midseason bye. Foerster stopped short of calling it an open competition and instead referred to it as a “fluid situation.”

    “Everyone in the room can play. That’s why they’re here,” center Jake Brendel said. “The coaching staff wants the best players to be out there, and we do, too. We’re definitely seeing a few different bodies at right guard with injuries. One thing is for sure: Foerster’s going to have the best guy out there for us.”

    Burford participated in position warmups then retreated to individual conditioning on a side field during 11-on-11 action.

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    Cam Inman

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  • After career year, 49ers WR Aiyuk set for major extension — or surprise departure

    After career year, 49ers WR Aiyuk set for major extension — or surprise departure

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    SANTA CLARA – Brandon Aiyuk is going from No. 1 wide receiver to No. 1 offseason priority for the 49ers.

    Six months from now, Aiyuk should have a contract extension in hand, the latest edition of the 49ers’ annual payout for a homegrown star.

    Until then, things could get tense, social media posts could get curious, and feelings could get hurt.

    Aiyuk’s career-best season did not end with the result he envisioned: a 25-22 overtime loss in the Super Bowl to the Kansas City Chiefs.

    It did not end with the production he wanted: three catches for 49 yards on six targets, none of which came as he broke free toward the end zone as Brock Purdy’s final pass fell incomplete toward Jauan Jennings in overtime, setting up a field goal that would prove not enough to thwart Patrick Mahomes’ and the Chiefs’ ensuing touchdown drive for their third championship in five years.

    Aiyuk wasn’t one on the 2019 team that lost to the Chiefs in Super Bowl LIV. He looked absolutely crushed Tuesday, two days after their Super Bowl LVIII defeat.

    He struggled to speak in front of his locker. His right hand gripped a football autographed by teammates. His black sunglasses hid his misty eyes. Complementing the look were a black sweatshirt and a trapper ski hat.

    Asked if he hoped to remain with the 49ers, AIyuk replied: “If that’s the right move, yeah.” What would make it right? “A championship.”

    He played a huge role in delivering the NFC Championship, making a 51-yard catch to spark their comeback over the Detroit Lions in the conference finale. He has made several other big plays since being drafted in the 2020 first round (No. 25 overall) out of Arizona State, by way of Sierra College (the franchise’s training camp home in their 1980-90s heydays).

    This season, he earned his first Pro Bowl selection and an AP Second-Team All-Pro nod after producing a career-high 1,342 yards and the NFL’s second-best average with 17.9 yards per catch.

    Last spring, the 49ers exercised the fifth-year option in his rookie contract, setting him up to make $14.1 million in 2024. The typical move in such situations is to not step foot on a field until an extension is in place, and while that is a reasonable business practice, missing the offseason program would hinder Aiyuk’s chance to develop better chemistry with Purdy, who’ll be participating as a healthy starter for the first time.

    Hammering out a new contract is the greatest challenge that awaits the 49ers’ front office this offseason, which has annually accomplished such feats: Arik Armstead (2020), George Kittle (2020), Fred Warner (2021), Kyle Juszczyk (2021), Trent Williams (2021), Samuel (2022), and, Nick Bosa (2023).

    “It’s all one big puzzle,” general manager John Lynch said. “We’ve developed a good cadence over the years, Kyle and I, where he focuses on the season. We do all the planning and then we present things to him and we work through it. That’s what we’ll continue to do.

    “But of course you want a guy like Brandon Aiyuk to be a part of you going forward.”

    San Francisco 49ers’ Brandon Aiyuk (11) reaches to catch a deflected pass in the third quarter of their NFC Championship Game at Levi’s Stadium in Santa Clara, Calif., on Sunday, Jan. 28, 2024. The San Francisco 49ers defeated the Detroit Lions 34-31. (Jose Carlos Fajardo/Bay Area News Group) Jose Carlos Fajardo/Bay Area News Group

    On Wednesday, Aiyuk reshared an Instagram post in which he has his back to the camera, captioned: “I guess we gone see.”

    The going rate for a top-tier wide receiver is between $23 million annually and the $30 million Tyreek Hill commands from the Miami Dolphins at the top of the pay scale.

    The thing is, Aiyuk’s teammate, Deebo Samuel, is making $23.9 million annually as part of the deal (three years, $71.1 million) he wrestled from the 49ers after a contentious 2022 offseason, complete with a trade request and a brief holdout into training camp.

    Samuel is due a $21 million salary next season, with a $28.6 million charge on the salary cap. Tight end George Kittle has a $13.4 million salary ($22 million cap charge). Running back Christian McCaffrey checks in at $11.8 million salary ($14.1 million cap number).

    Those are pricey numbers for elite skill-position players. Don’t forget about left tackle Trent Williams ($20 million salary) and fullback Kyle Juszczyk ($5.8 million).

    Your team is comprised of guys, veterans who’ve been paid very well, of guys who want to be paid very well,” Lynch said. “We’ve got one guy on our team who is pretty prominent who can’t be paid real well right now because the CBA doesn’t allow.”

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    Cam Inman

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  • What the 49ers said after losing to the Chiefs in the Super Bowl

    What the 49ers said after losing to the Chiefs in the Super Bowl

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    The 49ers lost Super Bowl LVIII to the Chiefs 25-22 in an overtime heartbreaker on Sunday at Allegiant Stadium in Las Vegas.

    Patrick Mahomes threw the winning three-yard touchdown to Mecole Hardman with three seconds left in the extra period. The 49ers got the ball first in overtime and drove the ball to the five-yard line, where Jake Moody made his third field goal of the game.

    Receiver Jauan Jennings was involved in both of the 49ers’ touchdowns. He threw a 21-yard touchdown to Christian McCaffrey on a trick play in the second quarter, and then caught a 10-yard pass to give the 49ers the lead midway through the fourth quarter.

    Purdy completed 23 of 38 passes for 255 yards and one touchdown. Christian McCaffrey ran 22 times for 80 yards and caught one touchdown.

    After the defense held Patrick Mahomes and the Chiefs offense in check for the first half, he helped give the Chiefs the lead in the third quarter with a touchdown pass to Marquez Valdez-Scantling.

    Kicker Jake Moody made a 53-yard field goal with 1:53 left in the game to give the 49ers a 19-16 lead, and Mahomes and Travis Kelce led the Chiefs on a drive downfield to tie the game and force overtime.

    Here is what the 49ers said after the game.

    Kyle Shanahan

    At media podium

    General reaction:

    “Those were two real good teams and it went back and forth the whole game. Both teams played their asses off, and in the end, they got it done.”

    What are your emotions after the game?

    “We all hurt, and no one knows how it feels, and I don’t have a lot of words for it, but obviously we’re hurting and our team is hurting. But that’s how it goes when you put yourself out there. I’m real proud of our guys, and I have no regrets with my team. I thought the guys played so hard today. Not everything was perfect by no means, but if I’m going to lose with a group of guys, it’s going to be with those guys any time. It’ll take some time, but we’ll get over this, and we’ll come back next year ready to go.”

    With the way your offensive possession in overtime went, obviously you wanted a touchdown. What went wrong where you guys couldn’t get through there?

    “On the third down? It looked like there was a protection bust up the middle. We were going to Jauan, and it looked like Jauan killed them pretty good. But Chris Jones got loose up the middle. I think there was a mistake, and I’m not sure. But he’s a hard guy to block.”

    Had you thought about it on fourth down in OT, maybe going for it there instead of the field goal, or was there no hesitation?

    “We never thought about it there, fourth and four. Even if we score there, they could still go down and match it. So no there, there was no thought there”

    With the new rules for overtime (both teams get the ball), what goes into the decision to take the ball first there?

    “It’s just something we talked about there with none of us having a ton of experience with it. But we went through all the analytics and talked with those guys, and we decided it would be better and that we wanted the ball third. If both teams matched adn scored, we wanted to be the team with the chance to go and win. We got that field goal, so we knew we had to hold them to at least a field goal and if we did, we felt it was in our hands after that.”

    It looked like your defense was pretty gassed at that point in the game. Did that factor into your decision-making at all, to give them a little bit of a rest?

    “No. We decided that before.”

    How are Kittle and Dre Greenlaw and the guys who had to come out of the game?

    “Greenlaw tore his Achilles, and I’m not sure about George. It was a shoulder thing and he couldn’t go, at the end he was off and on. He was playing through a lot of pain.”

    You went out to try to shake Andy’s hand and didn’t. Is that because you saw it would take some time?

    “No, we talked on Monday and last year, when we played each other last time, it took 25 minutes to shake his hand last time. So we both talked on Monday, and regardless of who won, I love Andy and am tight with Andy, but we talked and we were both going to do that because it was too hard to get to each other after these Super Bowls.”

    How do you think Brock Purdy played? He was moving around, using his legs. Was that an emphasis to get him outside?

    “Um, no. I mean we called a couple bootlegs and stuff, which you do that on that. But that’s what Brock does. He scrambles, he makes some plays, and we knew it would be like that. That’s the toughest defense we’ve been against this year, and we knew it going into the game. That’s a good group. The way they mix up the blitzes, and two-shell coverages against the run, and the man coverage they played was tough. That was why they haven’t given up more than 27 this year. We had our chances, and needed to score a couple of touchdowns and didn’t. But I was happy with Brock.”

    Kyle, this is three times now, with the Falcons and now with the 49ers, three double-digit leads in the Super Bowl. People will talk about that. Why do you think this keeps happening?

    “This is my second game as a head coach, but I think when you go against guys like Tom Brady and Patrick Mahomes, you never feel comfortable with a lead. Those are two of the greatest players to ever play this game. That’s why whether you have a lead or are down points, those guys are always in it. You watch them do stuff like that all the time.”

    Brock Purdy

    General thoughts:

    “Shot ourselves in the foot with just penalties and the operations and stuff. So I’ve got to be better in terms of leading the guys and how I handle things in the huddle and telling them what to expect and stuff like that. At the end of the day, I think we have the team, the offense to score touchdowns and I think I failed to put our team in position to do that.”

    Problems to start to the second half?

    “I’m still trying to figure it out. I’m not going lie. I think first and second down, we’ve just got to be better. You get in these third and longs and it’s tough to convert those kinds of situations. So just got to be better on first and second down. There’s a couple of plays, the defense got the stops like they needed to, and then our first couple plays were just either negative or we’re not moving the ball so it’s as simple as that.”

    On the overtime:

    “At that moment in overtime it was pretty quick, just, we came down here, let’s get points, take a field goal and then trust our defense to do what they can do. So that’s where our mindset was at. “I think earlier in the game, we needed to score in that moment, and so we were aggressive with it and went for it.”

    On the emotions for Kyle:

    “I mean, obviously, it sucks, man. You want to win it for that kind of guy. And he’s a great coach. Everybody wants to go to war with that guy. The way he handles himself and carries himself like we all just want to win for him. And obviously the older guys, the vets, Trent Williams, Aric Armstead, all the guys that have been through it, man, you want to win for him. But it starts with Coach man, that’s who I hurt for, and I hurt for all the other guys, our whole team. What we’ve been through the last year hasn’t been easy and for it to go like that, where it’s close at the end, it’s tough. I’m still trying to wrap my mind around it.”

    On Mahomes:

    “I think he’s one of the best to ever do it, honestly. Makes plays and obviously he’s got a great arm and stuff, but I just feel like the way he moves and his pocket movement and being able to run the ball when his offense needed it. And more than anything, he’s a competitor and like we said going into this game, man like you just don’t want to let him have the ball, because he can obviously do a lot of damage with it. He’s a baller.”

    Takeaways?

    “The first thing that comes to mind is when you have an opportunity like we did to really put some points up on them and take it, you got to take it. It’s the Super Bowl, you’ve got a good team in the Chiefs on the other side. I think we had opportunities to do that and we all fell short of it. I think that’s what eats at me is I feel like we had we had our opportunities to sort of lap them and get up on them and I think we failed to do that. So moving forward with my career, if you get blessed enough to get this in kind of position again, you have to understand that and not learn the hard way.

    On the Chiefs’ defense:

    “I feel like they play a little bit more man than we thought. We just didn’t know exactly how they were going to play us and we thought maybe just play zone, two show, like a lot of teams do. But they did a good job I think of stopping the run when they needed to and then man up … they did their job on third down so I think they did a pretty good job of playing man.”

    On getting back to the Super Bowl?

    “Yes, 100% I mean, that’s the mindset every year I think we have the team to do it. That’s what’s tough about all this, is it’s a long, long season and there’s a lot of stuff that you go through and but at the end of the day, we all have the mindset of being able to do it.”

    Christian McCaffrey

    On his first-quarter fumble:

    “I think that I can’t put the ball on the ground on the first drive. That’s gonna sting, and I put that on me.”

    On losing the Super Bowl: 

    “I’m still a little numb and angry and going through all of the emotions. I just have to wake up tomorrow, and try again.”

    Brock Purdy talked about missed opportunities. Did you feel like you guys had opportunities to score?

    “Definitely. One that keeps coming back in my mind is that first drive. I can’t put the ball on the ground.”

    Is there anything the Chiefs did that surprised you guys?

    “I think it was more about execution.”

    You’ve been playing in this league for a long time. How does this heartbreak compare to anything else you’ve experienced in your football life?

    “Yeah, it hurts the most. Yup.”

    There’s a little bit of confusion surrounding the decision to take offense first in the overtime period … 

    “I was just thinking that we had to down there and score.”

    Can you talk a little bit about Jauan Jennings? A touchdown pass to you, a touchdown reception himself, the second guy to ever do that in a Super Bowl. Just his talent to do so many different things?

    “Yeah, he’s unbelievable, man. He’s extremely gifted, but he plays with so much heart. You see it in the run game, in the way he finishes plays. I’m just lucky I get to play with him.”

    There’s a lot of attention on your young quarterback, a lot of spotlight on him. How do you think he held up on the big stage?

    “I thought he did great. You go look at the self-inflicted wounds we had, and I think we just beat ourselves.”

    Arik Armstead

    On losing the Super Bowl.

    Ah … sadness. 

    How tired do you feel like the defense got? You were on the field a lot.

    We gave it all we had. It’s a hard task to chase around Mahomes, so it puts a lot of pressure on you to keep from getting fatigued. But we gave it our all, and I’m proud of our guys. 

    Are you surprised that Kyle sent the offense out there to start overtime instead of the defense? Did he check with you guys?

     

    I didn’t even know about the new overtime rules, so it was a surprise to me. I didn’t even really know what was going on in terms of that. They put it on the scoreboard, so everyone was like “Oh, even if they score, we still get a chance to do something.”

    Had the staff ever approached you about that this week, to let you know that there is a time when it goes to OT that the rules are different?

    I wasn’t aware of it. 

    On the disappointment of losing in 2020 versus now. 

    The first time around, it being our first Super Bowl I was a part of, it was tough to lose. After, we were all younger. It was a little different feeling. We all had some great years ahead of us and some more opportunities. This time around, I feel like we have some opportunities, but we were just fighting so hard to get it done, and once it’s over, the hardest part is that you have to restart.

    Fred Warner

    On Greenlaw’s injury:

    “He just been dealing with that same Achilles injury for the last few weeks, and so we ran out on the field together and I see him drop down and I knew exactly what happened.”

    On the Chiefs last drive:

    “We had to find a way to get to get a stop. There’s no perfect call there, we’ve got to execute. We got to find a way to get off and we just couldn’t do it.”

    What happened on the final play?

    “I’m not sure. I’ve got to see. I’m not sure who was supposed to be on (Hardman).”

    On Mahomes:

    “He’s a great player man. He’s a gamer. in those situations he knows when to throw it, when to run it. He’s a really great player.”

    George Kittle

    “You train all season, all offseason, every day you put in for work. You go to OTA’s. It’s a long, long season. It’s a long year, and we’re on week 27. We’ve been playing football since late July. To come up short of achieving our goal and dream, it’s not fun.”

    On Greenlaw:

    “That’s depressing. To get injured in the Super Bowl, hopefully he hits up Aaron Rodgers and figures out how to heal that quickly. Besides that, Dre’s a heartbeat of our defense, him and Fred in there. I know they feed off each other. And I think (Oren Burks) and (Demetrius Flannigan-Fowles) stepped in. I think they did a really good job, but we lose a guy like Dre, it’s just, it’s tough and he’s just such a fantastic football player. He’s everything that the Niners stand for. So to lose him, it really, really sucks for him.”

    Jauan Jennings

    On how it felt to throw that pass:

    “That feels awesome. It felt like I was back at the University of Tennessee throwing to Josh Dobbs. To make that play, I just think about my quarterback coach from high school. I know he’s so proud right now and man, I thought we were gonna win.”

    On the pain he’s feeling:

    “How much does it hurt? Man, anybody got a nail he can step on? Probably about that much.”

    Chiefs

    Here is what Chiefs receiver Hardman said to CBS on the championship stage about his winning touchdown catch:

    “I blacked out when I caught the ball.”


    Check back for updates for more reaction. 

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    Joseph Dycus, Curtis Pashelka

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  • Nine numbers that define 49ers-Chiefs Super Bowl LVIII

    Nine numbers that define 49ers-Chiefs Super Bowl LVIII

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    LAS VEGAS — It all comes down to this: America’s biggest annual sporting event that is bound to change lives and legacies forever.

    The 49ers earned a trip to Super Bowl LVIII by cruising through the regular season and completing stunning comebacks against the Green Bay Packers and Detroit Lions. Kansas City, meanwhile, is on the verge of becoming the first team since the New England Patriots 20 years ago to win back-to-back Super Bowls.

    After the Super Bowl, the only numbers that will truly matter will be the score.

    But here are nine statistics, trends, and data points that could tell the story of Super Bowl LVIII between the 49ers and Chiefs.

    19.9 

    The 49ers use the tight formation more than anyone since at least 2017, since Next Gen Stats started tracking. Their offense lines up 19.9 yards wide, on average.

    By aligning their receivers on the numbers instead of outside toward the sideline, they open up passing lanes over the middle and force defenses to respect both the pass and run. At this point, condensed formations could be the most defining trait of Kyle Shanahan’s offense.

    31st 

    In the regular season, Kansas City ranked 31st of 32 teams in yards per carry allowed on zone runs. San Francisco was the best zone running offense in the league. Something’s got to give.

    7.3% 

    The game could come down to whether or not the Chiefs’ receivers can actually catch the ball. Patrick Mahomes is transcendent, but playing quarterback requires teammates who make plays. Kansas City’s 7.3% drop rate ranked 31st in the NFL and their receiving corps had a league-worst 28 catch score grade, per ESPN.

    21

    Christian McCaffrey’s 21 total touchdowns led the league and helped him earn the AP Offensive Player of the Year Award. Then he found the end zone twice in each of San Francisco’s first two playoff games. To beat the Chiefs, the 49ers might need McCaffrey to be the most explosive offensive player on the field.

    87.3 

    Travis Kelce averaged 65.6 receiving yards per game in the regular season, his worst mark since 2015. The nine-time Pro Bowler is in a different stage of his career than when he was running over safeties, but he turned up the past three weeks with Kansas City’s season on the line. In these playoffs, the legendary tight end moved into first-place all-time in playoff touchdowns and is averaging 87.3 yards per game. The 49ers have the most feared linebacker duo out there, but can their shaky secondary contain Kelce?

    113 

    Brock Purdy led the NFL with a 113 passer rating, steering Kyle Shanahan’s offense as well as anyone could have hoped. He takes risks when necessary, extends plays with his legs, excels in the middle of the field and processes quickly. Skeptics remain, but a Super Bowl ring would be the ultimate trump card for the second-year quarterback.

    8.9 

    Deebo Samuel’s 8.9 yards after catch per reception is the highest average in the NFL. Nobody’s better with the ball in his hands than the versatile weapon.

    The Super Bowl actually features the top three YAC/reception players in the league: Samuel, Chiefs rookie Rashee Rice (8.4) and Niners tight end George Kittle (7.7).

    48.79% 

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    Danny Emerman

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