Notes and observations from 49ers’ heartbreaking loss to Seahawks

The 49ers couldn’t overcome a rash of injuries and lost their first game of the year Monday night.

That was the incredible, back-and-forth game everyone wanted from this once great rivalry. The rivalry appears to be all the way back, and Seattle left Levi’s Stadium with a 27-24 overtime victory that came down to the final seconds of OT.H

Here are our notes and observations from the contest:

– The Seahawks defense is fast. They’ve stuffed two runs to open the game to put the 49ers in an early third-and-10.

– Jimmy Garoppolo hit Kendrick Bourne for 16 yards and a first down to extend the 49ers’ first drive. His wiggle in the pocket was fantastic. It bought him time to find Bourne open over the middle.

– Garoppolo threw a bad interception on third-and-5, but a defensive holding call bailed him out. That’s the kind of throw he can’t afford to make where a trailing defender can cut underneath a shallow cross. It was almost identical to the pick he threw against the Panthers. He’s just finding the receiver too late.

– Garoppolo is getting whacked on this series. Seattle’s defensive line has gotten multiple free runs at him. The 49ers have to find a way to clean that up.

– The chemistry between Garoppolo and Emmanuel Sanders is remarkable. He’s made a couple passes to Sanders under pressure that took a lot .of faith in his receiver to make a play.

– Garoppolo had Goodwin on a third-and-5, but it was a little high and went off Goodwin’s hands. That’s probably one San Francisco would like him to pull down. Garoppolo made a terrific play to avoid another heavy pass rush and get rid of the ball down the field.

– Rookie Chase McLaughlin, in for the injured Robbie Gould, drilled a 43-yard field goal to open the scoring after a 13-play, 50-yard drive. They’ve got a ton of adjustments to make on offense. That drive was sustained by a couple of bad Seahawks penalties.

– DJ Jones just eviscerated backup center Joey Hunt to swallow up Russell Wilson and end Seattle’s first series. That was an incredible play.

– Deebo Samuel had a 30-yard catch-and-run. San Francisco badly needed one of their receivers to emerge with George Kittle out. A 30-yard reception will do.

– Garoppolo is dropping dimes to Sanders. He threaded the needle over a corner and under a safety for a reception. Sanders held on despite getting his helmet removed by the hit. Incredible play on both ends.

–  Garoppolo hits Bourne for a 10-yard touchdown. The 49ers are torching Seattle on underneath routes. They’ve been there all night.

– Emmanuel Moseley had terrific coverage one-on-one against rookie wide receiver DK Metcalf. The pass breakup forced another Seahawks three-and-out.

– Seattle got its play action working on offense to grab a couple quick first downs on its third series. A third-down blitz and a sack by Fred Warner snuffed out that drive. It’s another Seahawks punt.

– Warner was the catalyst for the 49ers’ next stop. He batted down a Wilson pass on third-and-1. The was a a heck of a play by the linebacker. Nick Bosa wasn’t fooled by the play action and forced an early throw.

– Garoppolo got careless with the ball in the pocket. There wasn’t a flag to bail him out this time. He fumbled on a strip sack by Jarran Reed, and Jadeveon Clowney recovered and strolled in for a touchdown. It’s now 10-7, 49ers.

– Fullback Kyle Juszcyzk got open down the field,  and Garoppolo threw a dime over the linebacker in coverage, but Juszcyzk dropped it. That’s where San Francisco misses George Kittle.

– Another drop. This time Dante Pettis nearly plucked a first down, but got leveled and the ball came loose as he went down.

– WOW. Jaquiski Tartt just ripped the ball away from DK Metcalf as he was going in for a touchdown. Incredible play by the safety to save a score and get the ball back with a minute left in the first half. A score there would’ve given Seattle the lead, and they get the ball to start the second half. It’d be a huge victory for San Francisco if they can get to the half with a lead.

– It feels like the air got sucked out of the 49ers defense. Wilson has time to throw and Chris Carson is finding room to run on the first drive of the second half.

– And just like that Seahawks RB Rashaad Penny put the ball on the ground and the 49ers recovered. That’s a huge play by the defense, and their second takeaway of the night.

– The 49ers couldn’t capitalize on the turnover. Garoppolo misfired to Deebo Samuel on fourth-and-2, and Seattle took over at their own 33-yard line. It’s going to be tough sledding for the quarterback without Kittle and Sanders.

– Dre Greenlaw made a great read on a screen pass to keep Seattle to a five-yard gain when it could’ve gone for a lot more. Nice diagnosis by the rookie on a well-designed screen.

– Fred Warner got Wilson again. It’s his second sack of the night and Seattle will punt on their second series of the half.

– Deebo Samuel made a terrific diving catch on second-and-7 that was ruled just short of the first down marker. Kyle Shanahan challenged the spot successfully and got San Francisco a big first down. With injuries to Emmanuel Sanders and George Kittle, churning clock and shortening the . game is going to be vital. Garoppolo also has to find a pass catcher he can trust.

– And right on cue, Kendrick Bourne has a ball slip through his hands for an easy interception and long return that put Seattle at the 49ers’ 16-yard line. It’s been a truly abhorrent showing by the receiving corps.

– Seattle scored three plays later. 14-10, and this looks dire based on how the 49ers offense has been playing since Sanders’ exit.

– Garoppolo loses another fumble. The route may be on at Levi’s Stadium. The 49ers can’t block anyone or hold onto the football.

– It’s another easy score for the Seahawks. Chris Carson plows in from a yard out to make it 21-10 with 1:42 to go in the third.

– Deebo Samuel dropped a would-be first down and it nearly led to another turnover.

– Huh. Well then. Russell Wilson nearly got sacked, but his offensive lineman took the ball away from him, then Fred Warner punched the ball away from the offensive lineman, and DeForest Buckner scooped and scored. What a wild play that San Francisco desperately needed. They converted the two-point conversion as well and it’s 21-18, Seattle.

– The 49ers defense backed up the score by forcing a punt, then a shaky helmet-to-helmet call on the punt return gave the 49ers excellent starting field position. A big catch-and-run by Deebo Samuel put them in Seahawks territory.

– Another Kendrick Bourne drop on third-and-8 forced San Francisco to settle for a game-tying field goal. That one nearly resulted in an interception as well. This has been a very rough game for San Francisco’s banged up WR corps.

– Levi’s Stadium is LOUD.

– The 49ers can’t get a stop. They keep letting Seattle get into second-and-third and shorts and they keep moving the chains and eating clock.

– Well then. Wilson tried a naked boot, and Ronald Blair read it the whole way. He slung the quarterback down for a sack to bring up third-and-6. Biggest play of the game coming with 3:30 to go in the fourth.

– Another conversion on third-and-6. Seattle is going to get the final possession at this rate. It’s four and five yards at a time. Just a methodical march by a very good offense.

– Huge stop on third-and-short with 1:49 left. Seattle lined up to go for it, then called a timeout. Kicker Jason Myers drilled a 46-yard field goal to take a 24-21 lead. Gut check time for Garoppolo.

– Oof. Brutal series from the 49ers’ QB, who was so good a week ago in Arizona. He nearly threw an interception on first down, then delivered way too high on second-and-10.

– Another interceptable throw on first-and-10 after a third-down conversion. This time Bobby Wagner drops it.

– Shanahan dialed up a screen, but the Seahawks sniffed it out pretty easily. Instead it was a long-developing play that ran a ton of time off.

– Well, San Francisco got it to the Seahawks’ 29. It’s a 47-yard try for McLaughlin and he drilled it to tie. Unbelievable. We’ve got overtime at Levi’s.

– The Seahawks won the toss in overtime. That’s not great news for a 49ers defense that’s struggled to get stops late in this one.

– The 49ers sacked Wilson for a huge loss, but Seattle converted a third-and-16 with a gain of 28. That’s a back breaker after San Francisco appeared to have Wilson sacked, but he escaped, bought time, and hit Malik Turner for a big-time catch-and-run.

– Another huge play by Wilson. He avoided another sack to connect with tight end Jacob Hollister for a first down at the 49ers’ 20. Wilson is the MVP of the league because of his ability to orchestrate drives like this.

– DRE. GREENLAW. He intercepted Russell Wilson in the red zone and returned it to the Seahawks 49-yard line. Unbelievable. He is in because of the injury to Kwon Alexander.

– The 49ers got a huge 7-yard completion on a third-and-6 to extend their series. Then they churned it down to the 29 where they came up on a fourth-and-short and the 49ers will rely on McGlaughlin again from 47 yards. He missed this time and Seattle has great field position. They can win with a field goal.

– Emmanuel Moseley again. He breaks up a third-and-2 throw intedned for Metcalf.  Great game by him.

– Quick three-and-out is not what the 49ers needed. Their series took 14 seconds.

– Wilson with a huge scramble for 18 on third-and-3 to the 49ers’ 39. That puts them on the edge of field goal range. The 49ers sent the house but couldn’t get home.

– A 42-yard Myers field goal with no time left in OT won it. What a game. The 49ers are still in first in the division and the conference.

DeForest Buckner scores weirdest touchdown of season

The 49ers got a defensive touchdown in the strangest way possible.

The 49ers needed a spark from their defense, and they got one when K’Waun Williams flew off the edge to wrap up Russell Wilson. Before Wilson could go down, his offensive lineman Germain Efedi took the ball away from the quarterback, then had it stripped by linebacker Fred Warner. DeForest Buckner scooped it up and scored an enormous touchdown for San Francisco.

The 49ers wound up converting the two-point conversion to make it a 21-18 game.

Seahawks vs. 49ers: Seattle takes lead late in 3rd quarter

After scoring 21 unanswered points Monday night, the Seattle Seahawks have taken the lead over the San Francisco 49ers Week 10.

The Seattle Seahawks were trailing the San Francisco 49ers through nearly three quarters Monday night until quarterback Russell Wilson found tight end Jacob Hollister for the go-ahead score.

After the extra point, the Seahawks lead the 49ers 14-10 with 4:37 left to play in the third quarter.

 

Recently activated from the practice squad, Hollister now has three touchdowns on the year after logging his first two in last week’s win over Tampa Bay.

Running back Chris Carson was the next man up to score for the Seahawks, on a one-yard touchdown run to increase Seattle’s lead to 21-10.

All three of the Seahawks’ un-answered scores have come on the heels of 49ers’ turnovers.

As of this post, Seattle is beating San Francisco 21-10 at the start of the fourth quarter.

If the Seahawks are able to hold onto the lead, they would hand the 49ers their first loss of the 2019 regular season and Seattle would advance to 8-2 on the year.

[lawrence-related id=50721]

49ers vs. Seahawks: 3 things that stood out in the 3rd quarter

The 49ers will have some work to do in the fourth quarter after Jimmy Garoppolo turned the ball over twice in the third quarter.

The 49ers will have some work to do in the fourth quarter after Jimmy Garoppolo turned the ball over twice in the third quarter. Seattle was able to capitalize on both turnovers, and turned both into touchdowns and a 21-10 lead.

Here’s what stood out in the third quarter.

Another forced fumble for the defense

After ending Seattle’s final drive of the first half with a fumble, the 49ers did it once again on Seattle’s opening drive of the second half. The Seahawks were moving the ball well against the San Francisco defense for the first time, but K’waun Williams punched the ball out of Rashaad Penny’s hands and DeForest Buckner picked it up. Seattle has started to move the ball against the 49ers defense, but the turnovers have now slowed Seattle twice.

49ers can’t take advantage of the takeaway

The offense had a huge chance to take control of the game following the fumble recovery, but couldn’t take advantage. They got into a decent spot with a fourth-and-2 in plus territory, but Jimmy Garoppolo overthrew Deebo Samuel for a turnover on downs. The offense hasn’t done much all night, and put a lot of pressure on the defense.

Off of Bourne’s hands, into Diggs’ and Seattle leads

Turnovers have played a huge role in the game, and Jimmy Garoppolo’s second interception of the contest led to Seattle taking the lead. On first-and-10, Garoppolo threw a pass that was high, intended for Kendrick Bourne, that Bourne could have caught, but it tipped off his fingers into the hands of Quandre Diggs who returned the ball to the 49ers 16-yard-line. The play proved costly as Seattle took the turnover and turned it into points with a touchdown to take their first lead.

Fred Warner forces punt with 2nd sack vs. Seahawks

Fred Warner is flying around in the 49ers’ first game without Kwon Alexander.

The 49ers were going to have big shoes to fill at linebacker with Kwon Alexander out. Fred Warner appears to be taking the onus on himself.

He got to Russell Wilson once in the first half for his first career sack. Then he got him again in the second half to force a punt after Seattle started rolling on offense.

This is the kind of showing San Francisco needs from Warner with Alexander sidelined.

49ers vs. Seahawks: 3 things that stood out in the 2nd quarter

One mistake from Jimmy Garoppolo turned the tide of the game and the 49ers hold onto a three point lead at the half. 

The final three minutes of the first half featured several swings, and when the dust settled the 49ers lead 10-7 at intermission. Seattle took momentum with a scoop-and-score from Jadeveon Clowney on a Jimmy Garoppolo fumble that provided the only scoring for the Seahawks. Seattle looked to take the lead, but a huge strip from Jaquiski Tartt ended that hope.

It’s a one-possession game with 30 minutes left. Here’s what stood out in the second quarter:

Warner’s first sack is a big one

Seattle’s offense was threatening to score for the first time with a third-and-4 inside 49ers territory when Fred Warner collected the first sack of his career. Mike Iupati left a hole wide open for Warner to not just bring up a fourth down, but knock Seattle out of field goal range.

Garoppolo’s athletic throw and Bourne’s moves lead to a first down

The 49ers faced a third-and-8 at their own 29-yard-line when Jadeveon Clowney wasted little time getting past Joe Staley to Jimmy Garoppolo. Garoppolo quickly got rid of the ball to Kendrick Bourne four yards short of the marker, but Bourne made a few moves and got the first down to continue the drive. The series would only last three more plays until the 49ers had to punt.

Tartt’s takeaway changes tide

The Seahawks had all the momentum following a defensive touchdown and were driving the ball late in the quarter. Wilson hit DK Metcalfm who turned up field and powered through several would-be tacklers until Jaquiski Tartt stripped the ball prior forcing the turnover at the two-yard-line. The drive ended Seattle’s late push to take the lead before the half, and may have given the 49ers the momentum back.

Jaquiski Tartt steals DK Metcalf’s lunch money, prevents touchdown

Jaquiski Tartt prevented a Seahawks touchdown with perhaps the defensive play of the year for the 49ers.

The end of the first half could’ve been a disaster for the 49ers. Seattle looked like they were going in for a score when receiver DK Metcalf when rumbling through would-be tacklers toward the goal line. Safety Jaquiski Tartt had other ideas.

Tartt flew over and ripped the ball away from the rookie receiver inside the 5-yard line. It was perhaps the defensive play of the year for San Francisco:

If the 49ers hold on to win, remember this play.

3 49ers questionable to return with injuries

The 49ers in the second quarter announced a trio of players were questionable to return to Monday’s game vs. Seattle.

The 49ers announced a trio of injuries in the second quarter Monday night.

Wide receiver Emmanuel Sanders was announced as questionable to return with a rib injury shortly after he was seen walking to the locker room without a helmet. He had two catches for 24 yards.

Center Weston Richburg left the game with a hand injury, and defensive tackle DJ Jones went down with a groin injury.

San Francisco is already without starting tight end George Kittle, so losing another blocker and another pass catching option is a tough draw for the 49ers offense. Ben Garland stepped in for Richburg at center.

We’ll provide updates as soon as they become available.

WATCH: Fred Warner notches 1st-career sack

Fred Warner picked up his first sack of the season to end a Seahawks drive.

The 49ers rarely send extra pass rushers. Defensive coordinator Robert Saleh dialed up a blitz on a Seahawks third-and-4 in 49ers territory. It worked.

Linebacker Fred Warner blew through a hole in the offensive line and dragged down quarterback Russell Wilson before he could get outside the pocket. Seattle punted for the third time in as many possessions.

The 49ers have done a nice job with Wilson in the early going.

49ers vs. Seahawks: 3 things that stood out in the 1st quarter

The 49ers dominated the opening 15 minutes opening up with a 10-0 lead. 

The 49ers dominated the first 15 minutes Monday night, opening up a 10-0 lead. The offense held the ball for 10:55 in the first quarter and held Seattle’s offense to just six plays.

Everything looked good to start. Here’s what stood out in the first quarter:

Too close of a call

The first drive appeared to end abruptly when Jimmy Garoppolo was intercepted by Shaquill Griffin, but Jamar Taylor was called for holding while Garoppolo still had the ball to wipe out the pick. The call was huge for the 49ers offense to allow them to hold on to the ball and continue the drive. Garoppolo was shaky on the opening series, completing three-of-seven passes.

Another bail out from Seattle

Three plays after the near interception, Garoppolo and the offense faced  a third-and-6 at the Seattle 45-yard-line when Garoppolo hit Emmanuel Sanders short of the first down marker. It would have given the 49ers an interesting fourth-and-short situation but Trey Flowers was called for pass interference to prolong the drive. The drive resulted in a 43-yard field goal from Chase McLaughlin to give the 49ers an early 3-0.

First defensive drive couldn’t have gone better

The 49ers defense spared little time making an impact against MVP candidate Russell Wilson, forcing Seattle to go three-and-out on their opening drive. The series was shut down on a third-and-2 when DJ Jones blew through center Joey Hunt to get to Wilson before the quarterback had a chance to even think.

The 49ers offense followed Seattle’s opening drive with a seven-play, 83-yard drive that resulted in a touchdown.