49ers LB Patrick Willis elected to Pro Football Hall of Fame

Patrick Willis is officially a Pro Football Hall of Famer!

It’s about time.

Former 49ers linebacker Patrick Willis is finally a Pro Football Hall of Famer. He’ll be inducted with the class of 2024.

This is Willis’ fifth year on the ballot and fifth time landing as a finalist. He appeared bound to get in eventually and now the wait is over.

“Congratulations to Patrick Willis on his well-deserved honor of being elected to the Pro Football Hall of Fame,” the 49ers said in a statement. “Willis has cemented his legacy as one of the greatest linebackers in NFL history. He set a standard of excellence and provided exemplary leadership for his teammates. His grit and passion for the game anchored our defense and elevated everyone around him. We join the 49ers Faithful in celebrating Willis as a member of the Pro Football Hall of Fame Class of 2024.”

A lack of longevity is likely part of the reason Willis had to wait so long to get his gold jacket. He played just eight years, but he packed a Hall of Fame résumé into those years.

He was a Defensive Rookie of the Year in 2007, a seven-time Pro Bowler, a five-time First-Team All-Pro and a one-time Second-Team All-Pro. Willis also landed on the Pro Football Hall of Fame 2010s All-Decade team.

There weren’t any off-ball LBs better than Willis when he played, and there aren’t many better in NFL history. Now he’ll join his peers in Canton.

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49ers RB Christian McCaffrey wins NFL Offensive Player of the Year

Christian McCaffrey is the Offensive Player of the Year!

49ers running back Christian McCaffrey has been named the NFL’s Offensive Player of the Year. The award was announced Thursday night as part of the NFL Honors Ceremony.

It’s not a huge surprise McCaffrey won the award, which has become a de facto non-quarterback MVP award in an era where the MVP is almost exclusively a QB award. McCaffrey was also a top-five MVP finisher.

This season the 49ers star RB led the NFL with 1,459 rushing yards. He was also the league leader in scrimmage yards (2,023) and touches (339), and tied for the league lead with 21 total touchdowns. McCaffrey was rewarded with a Pro Bowl trip, a First-Team All-Pro nod, an NFC Offensive Player of the Week award and two Offensive Player of the Month awards.

As good as quarterback Brock Purdy was this year, it was clear McCaffrey was San Francisco’s best offensive player, and his OPOY award is just a cherry on top of what was a sensational season.

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Matt Rhule claims he wanted Panthers to draft Brock Purdy

Former Panthers coach Matt Rhule claims he wanted the Panthers to draft Brock Purdy but was vetoed.

Sure, Matt.

This probably won’t be the first time a coach talks about how he wanted his team to select Brock Purdy in the 2022 draft, and it will only happen more as Purdy has more success in the NFL.

Unfortunately for Rhule it’s unlikely that even Purdy could’ve saved his iteration of the Carolina Panthers. Rhule, now the head coach at the University of Nebraska, went 11-27 in two-plus years as the head coach in Carolina. The club signed Teddy Bridgewater for the 2020 season, and then traded for Sam Darnold to navigate the 2021 campaign before adding Baker Mayfield ahead of the 2022 season.

None of those QBs played particularly well under Rhule, and Mayfield just got done taking the Buccaneers to the playoffs. The likelihood that Purdy would’ve bailed out a disastrous Panthers team seems low given what we saw those other QBs do during the Rhule era.

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If Rhule was telling the truth, though, it says a lot about what the Panthers thought of him as an offensive coach that they wouldn’t let him snag a QB he liked with a late-round pick.

Coincidentally it was a 37-15 Week 5 loss to the 49ers that ended the coach’s tenure with the Panthers. That was the same game Purdy made his NFL debut, taking a knee to end the game and perhaps Rhule’s NFL career.

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Sacramento Kings troll Detroit Pistons with video of Brandon Aiyuk catch

The Sacramento Kings used the 49ers’ NFC championship win over the Lions to troll the Detroit Pistons.

The Sacramento Kings on Wednesday night got in on the Northern California sports love action when they faced the Detroit Pistons at Golden 1 Center.

During the introduction of the Pistons’ starting lineup, the Kings in-game ops team played a highlight on repeat of Brandon Aiyuk’s diving 51-yard catch against the Detroit Lions that turned the tide of the NFC championship game at Levi’s Stadium a couple of weeks ago.

The Pistons fan in attendance was probably furious.

The Kings, who ended a 16-year playoff drought last season and are now the No. 5 seed in the Western Conference vying for another playoff trip this year, are trying to find the same type of sustained success the 49ers have had the last few years.

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Meanwhile the Pistons are in the earliest stages of a full rebuild and entered Wednesday night with an NBA-worst 6-43 record.

Perhaps Detroit fans get the last laugh in this one though since the Pistons’ 2004 championship is the most recent among any of the four teams involved in this bit of light trolling.

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Report: 49ers considering changing Super Bowl practice facility due to field conditions

The #49ers may be changing their practice facility for the Super Bowl less than a week before the game. Reporting via CBS Sports’ Jonathan Jones:

The 49ers may have an early hurdle to clear in their Super Bowl preparations. According to CBS Sports’ Jonathan Jones, San Francisco may be looking for a different practice setup than the one they’re slated to have at UNLV.

San Francisco on Sunday arrived in Las Vegas for the week-long lead up to Super Bowl LVIII, but a handful of team personnel got ahead of the rest of the club to go ensure the practice facilities are to their liking.

Jones on Monday reported the 49ers weren’t happy with the softness of the sod the NFL laid atop the turf at UNLV’s practice facility, indicating it’s softer than they prefer it to be.

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Since it’s not a safety issue and instead just a matter of preference, there may not be many avenues for the 49ers to justify a switch. Jones wrote that the 49ers could negotiate with the NFL to practice at the Raiders’ facility where the Chiefs are holding their sessions. They could also bring in their own, firmer sod if they don’t want to roll forward with what’s available at UNLV.

Unless the team really believes there’s a safety issue, it’s hard to imagine they’d go through the process of trying to change practice facilities at this juncture. Head coach Kyle Shanahan has already detailed how difficult it is to prepare for the Super Bowl on a normal schedule amid all the festivities and responsibilities leading up to the game. Adding in a variable of where they’ll practice doesn’t seem like something they’d be keen on doing.

San Francisco on Monday will have a walk-through practice at UNLV, at which point they’ll likely make a decision on how they’ll proceed the rest of the week.

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49ers must gear up for very different version of Patrick Mahomes

It’s still Patrick Mahomes, but this version of him is dramatically different than the one the #49ers faced in Super Bowl LIV. Here’s how:

There may not be a bigger challenge in the NFL than stopping Chiefs quarterback Patrick Mahomes in the playoffs. The 49ers experienced this firsthand in Super Bowl LIV when Mahomes led a furious comeback that turned a 20-10 Chiefs deficit in the fourth quarter into a 31-20 Chiefs win. Unfortunately for San Francisco, their tape from Mahomes’ performance the last time they faced him in the Super Bowl isn’t likely to be very informative on slowing him down. Not only is Mahomes still dominant, he’s doing it in a dramatically different way than he did five seasons ago.

In 2019 the Chiefs were an electric, explosive deep passing game. Mahomes’ average depth of target was 8.5 yards per Pro Football Focus. He threw deep on 12.2 percent of his throws and had 15 touchdowns with just three interceptions on tosses 20-plus yards downfield. He was also prolific in the intermediate area with 20.5 percent of his throws coming between 10 and 19 yards beyond the line of scrimmage. There was still plenty of short game though with a combined 59.4 percent of his tosses coming either behind the line of scrimmage or within 9 yards of it.

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Mahomes had prime Tyreek Hill and prime Travis Kelce running around wreaking havoc, and the Chiefs offense stretched defenses in ways that were nigh impossible to stop for 60 minutes. Eventually the dam was going to break.

Now Hill is gone and Kelce is in the twilight of his prime, albeit still outstanding. Kansas City has relied on a patchwork receiving corps that features rookie Rashee Rice, Justin Watson, retread Mecole Hardman and veteran Marquez Valdez-Scantling. There’s also the erratic Kadarius Toney whose absence from the lineup may or may not be a net positive for Kansas City.

Instead of pigeonholing an unproven group of pass catchers into roles to fit a dynamic downfield passing game, Mahomes and head coach Andy Reid have reeled the passing game in. They now rely on Mahomes’ ability to process and extend plays to maximize a passing attack that requires more of its quarterback.

Explosive plays are still there, but Mahomes is much more likely to take a checkdown or short throw than he used to be.

In 2023 his ADOT plummeted to 6.9 yards. That’s tied for 38th out of 44 qualified quarterbacks. His deep throw rate dropped to 10.3 percent, and he tossed just two touchdowns with six interceptions on those throws. Mahomes this season has targeted the intermediate area just 17.7 percent of the time, and he’s in the short area on 40 percent of his tosses.

Those numbers are all down compared to 2019 to varying degrees, with a huge uptick coming on throws behind the line of scrimmage. In 2019 just 17.8 percent of his throws were behind the line. That number skyrocketed to 23.1 percent this season. He threw 112 (!) screen passes this year according to PFF, compared to just 66 five years ago.

So, what does this mean for the 49ers?

After having to defend a heavily vertical attack in Super Bowl LIV, San Francisco will now see a more compact Chiefs passing game. That doesn’t mean it’s less effective, and it doesn’t mean Mahomes isn’t capable of making throws down the field. It’s just a bigger question mark now as to whether the receiver is going to catch it.

In order to “stop” Mahomes now, the 49ers won’t need to contain vertical routes, they’ll need to tackle. Letting Mahomes scramble or letting pass catchers run after short throws is how Kansas City will generate chunk plays. Tackling has been a huge issue at times for San Francisco this season (they missed 150 this season). If they can do it effectively in the Super Bowl though, they’ll have a real chance of slowing down this new version of the Chiefs’ passing game and avenging their loss to Mahomes four years ago.

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NFL Pro Bowl Games offer perfect highlight on 49ers success in 2023

The NFL Pro Bowl Games feature zero #49ers — the best possible outcome.

The NFL Pro Bowl Games have begun with dodgeball and various skills competitions replacing the traditional poor facsimile of a professional tackle football game. Now the NFL’s All-Star festivities end Sunday with a flag football game between the league’s two conferences.

While the Pro Bowl has become more of a sham than a showcase of the NFL’s top talent, the football version of an All-Star game offers a lens that underscores just how good the 49ers were in the 2023 season.

San Francisco had a ludicrous number of players either in the games or as alternates. Nine players made the roster, with an additional 12 listed as alternates. Part of the reason they had 21 participants/alternates is due to their long-term success and the pull the 49ers fan base has across the country. Fan voting heavily favored San Francisco and helped some players get into the mix who might not have been there with a different club.

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Aside from that though, the best part of the Pro Bowl Games for the 49ers will be that none of their players will be there. Super Bowl participants don’t take part in the games because of preparations for the big game.

San Francisco perfectly threaded the needle. They had a ton of good individual performances this season and put nine players on the NFC’s roster, and then they had the team success in the playoffs to skip the All-Star festivities.

For 49ers fans watching this year, there’s no better sight than George Kittle, Brock Purdy and the rest of their Pro Bowlers not partaking in the end-of-weekend flag football game. They’ll have to wait a week for the next Sunday when they’ll partake in the end-of-season football game instead.

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3-round mock draft: 49ers win Super Bowl, restock roster at key spots

The #49ers hit most top needs after winning Super Bowl in 3-round mock draft:

The priority of the 49ers’ needs in the 2024 NFL draft could quickly change depending on how things go in Super Bowl LVIII against the Chiefs.

However, a three-round mock draft from Sports Illustrated’s Luke Easterling offers a look at how San Francisco might attack the draft out of the No. 32 spot after winning the Super Bowl.

The result of the 49ers’ four selections in the top three rounds is a crop of players that hit a slew of needs that San Francisco will surely need to address regardless of the Super Bowl outcome.

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Here’s a look at those picks:

Most of 49ers Super Bowl preparations will happen during bye week

Kyle Shanahan explains how preparation, experience can help the #49ers in the Super Bowl:

By the time the 49ers are in Las Vegas for the Super Bowl they’ll be almost fully prepared to play in the NFL’s championship game despite there being a week until the game kicks off.

With the added responsibility that comes with the big game, head coach Kyle Shanahan he learned that the week off between the NFC championship and the Super Bowl is essential for pre-game preparation. That means when they leave Santa Clara for Southern Nevada, the 49ers will have a full game plan installed.

“You try to get as much in this first week as possible,” Shanahan said in his Thursday press conference. “When you get out there, we go through it again. But it is different. Our Monday’s totally different with the media deal. Our routine’s off because you’ve got to do these press conferences every day. So you get about an hour off from all your normal times. So when you usually do red zone and stuff, you’re two hours behind. A little more tired. All that stuff adds up. If you put stuff off to that week and think it’s going to be a normal week you’re going to get to that Thursday or Friday and not quite feel as comfortable.”

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Shanahan indicated he was happy with the team’s preparation ahead of Super Bowl LIV, which the 49ers lost to the Chiefs to cap the 2019 season. However, that group had far less Super Bowl experience than this year’s team. 11 players on the roster were with the club the last time they went, and that’s something Shanahan thinks could be helpful.

“I think all those guys for the most part were young guys and it was their first one,” Shanahan said. “I think always when you go your first time you experience a lot of stuff, but I think when you go your second time, all that stuff you experienced, it’s about one thing. It’s about what happens in those three hours. I think it’s real cool for those guys who have gone to be able to talk to players who it’s their first time kind of help them not get caught up in stuff. Especially guys who are rookies and guys like [WR] Deebo [Samuel] and things like that. So, having experience always helps.”

While the 49ers’ experience may help them, they’re going against perhaps the most experienced group in the league with the Kansas City Chiefs where head coach Andy Reid and quarterback Patrick Mahomes have been to three of the last five Super Bowls.

Ultimately, as Shanahan noted, all that matters is what happens between kickoff and the clock hitting 0:00. Preparation and experience help, but the 49ers will need to be at their very best if they’re going to knock off a Chiefs club that’s dominated the decade so far.

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George Kittle used meme to speak 49ers NFC championship comeback into existence

George Kittle called the #49ers big comeback, and couldn’t wait to get a joke off about it:

Sunday night during the NFC championship trophy presentation, 49ers tight end George Kittle stepped to the microphone and harkened back to an old viral internet video to illustrate his reaction to the team’s 17-point second-half comeback vs. the Detroit Lions.

“They had us in the first half, not gonna lie,” Kittle said through the Levi’s Stadium speakers in reference to a popular high school football interview that has more than 11 million views on YouTube.

The quote from high school football player Apollos Hester saying “they had us in the first half, I’m not gonna lie” has become a popular meme, and Kittle couldn’t wait to unleash it after a 49ers victory.

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NFL Films posted footage on Twitter of Kittle telling his teammates during the second quarter that he’d be using the quote when San Francisco came back to win. There’s also a great shot of Kittle encouraging quarterback Brock Purdy while the team was getting blown out early in the game.

Ideally the 49ers won’t fall behind in the Super Bowl the way they have in their first two playoff games, but rest assured if they do and come back to win, Kittle will be there with a joke to show for it.

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