49ers officially place Damontre Moore on IR, add DL to roster

The 49ers shuffled their defensive line after Damontre Moore’s season ended due to a broken forearm.

The 49ers on Wednesday officially announced a trio of expected roster moves. Defensive lineman Damontre Moore was placed on Injured Reserve with a broken forearm, and defensive lineman Jeremiah Valoaga was elevated from the practice squad. Valoaga was replaced on the practice squad by Alex Barrett.

Moore was hurt in Sunday night’s win over the Packers and played through most of the game with a broken arm. He was a preseason star for San Francisco who was re-signed two weeks ago after Ronald Blair III went on IR with a torn ACL. He had five tackles, a quarterback hit and a forced fumble in two games.

Valoaga was also very good for the 49ers in the preseason. He finished with 4.5 sacks – the second highest total in the NFL for the exhibition season. He made his way to the 49ers via the Lions after Detroit signed him as an undrafted free agent in 2017. All nine of his games came in his rookie season. He had 1.0 sacks, five tackles, two tackles for loss and five quarterback hits in those nine games.

The 49ers will likely turn to Valoaga right away when they face the Ravens in Baltimore. A deep defensive line rotation is necessary against their run-heavy offense.

Valoaga’s vacated practice squad spot was filled by defensive lineman Alex Barrett. Barrett was also a Lions undrafted free agent in 2017. He played two games for Detroit in that season. Valoaga and Barrett both spent time under 49ers defensive line coach Kris Kocurek when he held that position for the Lions.

49ers face Ravens as big underdogs

The 49ers are underdogs for the first time since facing the Rams in Week 6.

The 49ers enter Sunday’s game in Baltimore in a relatively unfamiliar position. They’ll be underdogs against the red-hot Ravens. BetMGM has San Francisco as 6.5-point underdogs at M&T Bank Stadium.

It’s the first time the 49ers haven’t been favored in a game since Week 6 in Los Angeles. The line for Sunday opened at 4 points, but rapidly moved to 6.5 as money came in on the Ravens.

People may still not be sold on the 49ers. Despite a 10-1 start that includes a recent steamrolling of the Green Bay Packers, a soft early-season schedule has some holding out on buying into San Francisco. With that mindset, it makes sense that the Ravens, who’ve outscored opponents 172-46 the last four weeks, would be heavy betting favorites.

There’s also a big question mark around quarterback Jimmy Garoppolo and the 49ers offense. The NFL is such a quarterback-driven league that a team with MVP-candidate Lamar Jackson, facing an up-and-down quarterback like Garoppolo, would receive plenty of love from bettors.

Baltimore’s defense has gone under the radar because of Jackson’s meteoric rise. They’ve given up just 11.5 points per game in four contests since the bye week.

The Ravens and 49ers have followed the same formula this season for the most part. They get ahead, then run the ball like crazy and suffocate teams with swarming defenses that feast on one-dimensional attacks.

Sometimes a game comes down to who scores last, but Sunday could come down to who scores first.

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49ers can clinch playoff spot in Week 13

The 49ers can clinch a playoff spot in Week 13.

The 49ers could finish Week 13 at the No. 5 seed in the NFC. They could also clinch a playoff spot.

The Rams are the last-remaining five-loss team in the NFC and they’re sitting at the No. 7 seed, one spot out of the playoffs, so they’re the only team that matters most to the 49ers in this clinching scenario. They’re in Arizona to face the 3-7-1 Cardinals. A loss would push them to 6-6, making 10-6 their best possible finish. The 49ers clinched a 10-6 record last week by moving to 10-1 with a victory over the Packers. They could get their clinching 11th win this week in Baltimore.

Here are the 49ers’ clinching scenarios:

49ers win + Rams loss or tie
49ers tie + Rams loss

This essentially sets up a scenario where a 49ers win and a Rams loss clinches a playoff spot for San Francisco the rest of the way.

The Rams visit Levi’s Stadium in Week 16, but if things go right for San Francisco, they’ll have wrapped up a playoff spot long before then.

49ers could get 4 key players back for showdown with Ravens

The 49ers may get healthy just in time for their toughest test of the season.

The 49ers might be as healthy as they’ve been all year when they roll into Baltimore on Sunday for a showdown with MVP frontrunner Lamar Jackson and the Ravens.

Head coach Kyle Shanahan on Monday indicated in his press conference that left tackle Joe Staley, defensive end Dee Ford, running back Matt Breida and kicker Robbie Gould were all progressing well and game-time decisions.

That’s a much better prognosis than last week when it became clear early in the week that San Francisco would face the Packers without their four starters.

The 49ers have survived a slew of injuries thanks to some quality depth on their roster, but they’re not going to reach their peak until they’re at full strength. Getting Staley, Ford, Breida and Gould back would put San Francisco as close to peak health as they’ve been all season.

Staley had surgery a finger he dislocated and fractured against the Seahawks in Week 10. Breida aggravated an ankle injury that same game and hasn’t played since. Ford hurt his hamstring the following week against the Cardinals, and Gould injured his quad in practice leading up to the Seattle game.

Gould told Jennifer Lee Chan of NBC Sports Bay Area that he plans to play Sunday.

Ford’s return would come at a good time after Damontre Moore, who replaced Ronald Blair, broke his forearm Sunday night. San Francisco is suddenly thin at defensive end, and putting Ford back in the lineup would be a nice boost for the pass rush.

The offensive tackles also struggled Sunday night. Justin Skule, Staley’s backup, was pulled in the second quarter in favor of Daniel Brunskill. Staley’s return to the lineup to shore up Jimmy Garoppolo’s blind side would help the offense immensely.

Breida’s insertion back into the lineup would give the running game an element of explosiveness its been missing with him banged up. He’s a home run threat every time he touches the ball. While the 49ers’ other backs are talented, Breida is simply a different type of electric that helps power San Francisco’s rushing attack.

The 49ers won’t practice until Wednesday, at which point we’ll get a better idea of how close each of those players are. Shanahan’s update Monday is optimistic though, and that’s as good as they can hope for given how bad the injury situation has been to this point.

 

Damontre Moore to go on IR with broken forearm

The 49ers lost another defensive end Sunday.

The 49ers can’t seem to keep their defensive ends healthy. Damontre Moore, who replaced the injured Ronald Blair III after he tore his ACL, broke his forearm in Sunday night’s win over the Packers according to head coach Kyle Shanahan.

He told reporters Monday that Moore suffered the broken forearm during the Packers game and played through it. Shanahan didn’t learn it was broken until after his postgame press conference.

Moore was a preseason star for San Francisco, but couldn’t land a roster spot with so much depth at defensive end. He went unsigned until the 49ers re-added him after Blair went down in the team’s Week 10 loss to the Seahawks.

He played two games for the 49ers and posted five tackles, one quarterback hit and a forced fumble that helped ice a Week 11 win over the Cardinals.

Shanahan said Moore will likely be replaced by Jeremiah Valoaga from the practice squad. Valoaga also had a stellar preseason where he finished second in the league with 4.5 sacks. His performance was enough to earn him a practice squad spot. The 25-year-old former Lion played nine games for Detroit as an undrafted rookie in 2017. He had 1.0 sacks, five tackles, two tackles for loss and five quarterback hits in those nine games.

With Dee Ford nursing a hamstring injury, Valoaga could get thrust into action quickly once he’s added to the roster.

49ers assert dominance in NFC, stay atop playoff picture

The 49ers are the best team in the NFC, and Sunday proved it.

The 49ers’ spot as the NFC’s top team is no longer in question after they toppled the Packers 37-8 in Week 12. The win allowed them to create separation from Green Bay, and stay a game ahead of the Seahawks and Saints after their wins Sunday.

Here’s what the NFC playoff picture looks like after Sunday’s action:

1. 49ers (10-1)
2. Saints (9-2)
3. Packers (8-3)
4. Cowboys (6-5)
5. Seahawks (9-2)
6. Vikings (8-3)

The Rams are the No. 7 seed at 6-4, but given the level of play in the top six seeds, it’s hard to see them climbing back in. They face the Ravens on Monday Night Football, and a loss could effectively end their season.

San Francisco’s win Sunday over Green Bay was enormous because a loss would’ve knocked the 49ers to the No. 5 seed. Instead, they pounded the Packers and showed why they own the best record in the NFC. While the 49ers’ schedule has been relatively light, they’re dominating teams that’re going to finish below them in the standings. Not to mention their lone loss came in the final seconds of overtime to the Seahawks.

The 49ers are as dominant as their record and plus-169 point differential indicate, and that was on full display Sunday night at Levi’s Stadium.

The race in the conference for a first-round bye and home-field advantage is going to be fascinating. The Packers and Vikings play again in Week 16. The 49ers and Saints play in Week 14, and then San Francisco faces Seattle in the final week of the season.

We may already have the six playoff teams in the NFC, but we’re far from having the order settled with five weeks to go.

Richard Sherman put clamps on Davante Adams

Richard Sherman was dominant against Packers WR Davante Adams on Sunday.

Packers wide receiver Davante Adams didn’t have his best night against the stingy 49ers pass defense. He had seven catches for 43 yards and a touchdown in one of his least productive games of the year.

Part of the reason for his lack of production was veteran cornerback Richard Sherman. The All-Pro corner allowed one catch for seven yards on two targets in 16 coverage snaps vs. Adams according to ESPN’s Next Gen Stats.

There was a lot of concern that the 31-year-old might start seeing a dip in productivity as he entered his 30s coming off a torn Achilles. His second year back from that Achilles injury has been even better than the first, and the four-time Pro Bowler is again playing at an elite level.

Sherman was flagged for a pair of fairly soft penalties on the Packers’ scoring drive, but was flawless other than that Sunday night.

Aaron Rodgers is the type of quarterback who’ll take advantage of mistakes, and Adams is the kind of receiver who will turn a mistake into a big play. Sherman didn’t allow either player to get loose Sunday night while the 49ers defense as a whole gave up just 104 yards through the air.

San Francisco’s secondary benefits plenty from their pass rush, but showings like Sherman put together against Adams are evidence that the coverage on the back end has been just as good as the rush up front.

George Kittle playing through bone chip in ankle

George Kittle’s ankle is stable, but he’s playing through a bone chip he suffered Oct. 31 at Arizona.

It turns out 49ers tight end George Kittle is playing through a bone chip in his ankle. Head coach Kyle Shanahan informed the media of the extent of Kittle’s injury during his press conference after the 49ers’ 37-8 win over the Packers on Sunday night.

Kittle injured his ankle in the team’s Oct. 31 win in Arizona. He finished that game with six catches for 79 yards and a touchdown. That ankle, combined with a knee injury that Shanahan classified as a “popped capsule,” kept Kittle out of two consecutive games.

Shanahan told reporters the ankle is stable, and that Kittle will have to play through the pain.

The bone chip didn’t hamper him in his return Sunday night against the Packers. He posted six catches on six targets for 129 yards and a touchdown. He was effective in all three levels of the passing game and looked like his pre-injury self running through and past would-be tacklers.

Kittle’s unlikely to be fully healthy the rest of the year, but if he keeps playing like he did Sunday night, he and the 49ers should be just fine.

6 takeaways from dominant 49ers’ win over Packers

The 49ers cruised to a 37-8 win over the Green Bay Packers, who entered the game as the No. 2 seed in the NFC. It was a thorough domination at Levi’s Stadium by the NFC’s top team as San Francisco moved to 10-1 for the season. Here’s what we took …

The 49ers cruised to a 37-8 win over the Green Bay Packers, who entered the game as the No. 2 seed in the NFC. It was a thorough domination at Levi’s Stadium by the NFC’s top team as San Francisco moved to 10-1 for the season.

Here’s what we took away from Sunday night:

49ers silence doubters

Kyle Terada-USA TODAY Sports

The 49ers silenced a lot of talk about their weak strength of schedule going into Sunday night. They dominated from start to finish against the Packers and looked like the class of the NFC. In a week where the No. 3-seed Saints struggled to beat the Panthers, the 49ers’ domination of a No. 2-seed Green Bay club really stands out. San Francisco, if anyone still doubted it, is for real.

Notes and observations from 49ers 37-8 win vs. Packers

The 49ers dominated for 60 minutes against the Packers on Sunday Night Football.

It was total domination by the 49ers from start to finish Sunday night in a 37-8 romp over the No. 2 seeded Green Bay Packers at Levi’s Stadium.

Here’s our notes and observations from the win:

– Emmanuel Moseley is starting at cornerback even though Ahkello Witherspoon is fully healthy. Moseley’s played well since Witherspoon went down with a foot strain in Week 3.

– Fred Warner sacked Aaron Rodgers on the first third down of the game and forced a fumble that Nick Bosa recovered on the Packers’ 2-yard line. Tevin Coleman scored on the first play of the ensuing drive. That’s about as perfect of a start the 49ers could’ve hoped for.

– Another Packers third down attempt fails. Rodgers was under duress again and fired high over the middle. The pass bounced off his receiver’s hands and fell just outside the reach of a diving Jaquiski Tartt. San Francisco’s pass rush is flying around early in this one.

– A Deebo Samuel slant goes for 8 yards to open the 49ers’ second series. He’s dominant on that route thanks to his aggressiveness going toward the football.

– Another slant for a gain of 15 to Emmanuel Sanders. When their entire group of pass catchers is healthy, this passing attack gets whatever it wants in the middle of the field.

– Near disaster when Garoppolo mishandled a snap. Laken Tomlinson kicked the ball backwards, which allowed Tevin Coleman to dive on it for a loss of 8. Getting behind the sticks isn’t ideal, but it’s better than a turnover in that spot near the 50.

– DJ Jones’ presence is immediately felt in the run game. He has two tackles, both tackles for loss with 8:10 to go in the first quarter.

– Rodgers made a nice play to get the ball out under pressure on a blitz from Jaquiski Tartt. Arik Armstead strung the play out though and held Packers RB Jamaal Williams to a gain of 4.

– A delayed safety blitz on third-and-5 got to Garoppolo for a sack on San Francisco’s third possession, but an illegal hands to the face penalty extended the drive for San Francisco.

– Jeff Wilson Jr. went for 25 yards on his first carry. He’s gone for 50 yards his last two touches.

– Garoppolo had to throw one away on third-and-5 from the Packers’ 11 thanks to heavy pressure from Justin Skule’s side. Chase McLaughlin drilled a field goal to go ahead to 10-0.

– Nick Bosa had a free shot at Rodgers on a play action look, but Rodgers smartly spun away from the pressure and ran for a gain of four. He’s among the best in the league at sensing pressure on his blind side.

– The 49ers held on a third-and-13 thanks to a nice diving deflection by Jimmie Ward and another big stick by Emmanuel Moseley, who laid a big hit on second down. San Francisco’s defense is flying around. Green Bay hasn’t crossed their own 35

– Another sack for the Packers ends the first quarter. They hit Garoppolo a lot in the first 15 minutes.

– Two plays, 8 yards for the Packers to open the second quarter. They’ve made an adjustment. They’re still running and Rodgers is lookiinig to get the ball out quicker.

– Four plays, 43 yards. Green Bay’s offense  is cooking on now that they’re moving laterally. San Francisco struggles badly going sideline to sideline.

– Ahkello Witherspoon had great coverage one-on-one vs. Davante Adams to force an incompletion and bring up a third-and-8. They picked up seven on third down thanks to a nice tackle from Ward. Green Bay will go on fourth-and-1.

– They didn’t get it on an inside handoff. Another huge stop from the 49ers’ defense.

– Skule flagged for holding. He’s having a rough night.

– Now another sack given up by the rookie left tackle. Yikes.

– Fred Warner has really taken over as an emotional leader on the defense. He’s been on a different level since Kwon Alexander went down with a season-ending injury.

– Arik Armstead blasted Rodgers for his ninth sack of the year. He flew off the edge on a stunt with Bosa. That’s an unblockable play.

– Another great pass breakup from Jimmie Ward on a deep shot intended for Jimmy Graham. Graham had it, but Ward punched it out at the last second.

– Daniel Brunskill is in at left tackle after Skule got off to a terrible start.

– Just like that the 49ers get Kittle involved and he catches two balls for 40 yard as the clock winds inside five minutes to go in the first half. San Francisco needed three plays to get in the red zone after starting at their own 32.

– A quick jaunt to the red zone stalled out and McLaughlin kicked his second field goal of the night. It’s 13-0, 49ers.

– Two more throws Ahkello Witherspoon’s way. Two more incompletions.

– Dee. Bo. It’s a 42-yard touchdown pass with 58 second left in the half to go up 20-0. He took a throw over the middle and outran two defenders to the end zone. He’s developed into a real weapon over the last three weeks.

– Another sack. This time it’s Nick Bosa. The defensive line has been sensational through the first 30 minutes. They forced another punt with 33 seconds left in the half.

– Another field goal before the end of the half thanks to a 22-yard completion to Kittle after good starting field position. It’s 23-0 and San Francisco gets the ball to start the half.

– Green Bay is sticking with the run and quick pass plays to open the second half. They’ve had success with both, but get in trouble when they try to stretch the field vertically.

– Armstead gets another sack to bring up a third-and-8 near midfeidl on Green Bay’s first drive of the second half. Rodgers scrambled for four on third down to bring up a fourth-and-4. They’ll go for it.

– A huge gain on fourth down. Jamaal Williams leaked out of the backfield and Rodgers found him amid heavy pressure for a 15-yard catch-and-run. That’s a huge missed opportunity for San Francisco.  Rodgers manipulates the pocket so well with his feet though.

– A facemask by Dre Greenlaw puts the Packers into the red zone at the 49ers’ 11. It’s their first red zone trip of the game.

– Jimmie Ward recognized a quick throw to Davante Adams outside and blew the play up for no gain. Adams probably scores if Ward gets hung up on his block.

– Rodgers got pressured by Bosa on third-and-8, and scrambled for a gain of five.  An unnecessary roughness penalty on Richard Sherman gave Green Bay a first down at the 2. Multiple replays didn’t reveal anything penalty-worthy though.

– A touchdown on a shovel pass to Adams two plays later made it 23-6. They got the two-point conversion on another throw to Adams to make it 23-8. That call on Sherman is still baffling.

– That’s one way to answer.  14 yards to Kendrick Bourne. 61 yards to George Kittle. Six points. 49ers lead 30-8.

– It’s 30-8 at the end of the third quarter.

– The 49ers looked to have a stop on fourth-and-10 with 14:04 left in the fourth quarter, but K’Waun Williams was flagged for pass interference to extend the drive.

– Another sack for Armstead. This time he splits it with Jaquiski Tartt. It came on fourth-and-8 with 11:29 left, and gave the 49ers the football back with a chance to ice this one.

– Raheem Mostert provides the nail in the coffin. A 15-yard touchdown makes it 37-8. What a sensational showing from the 49ers.