News 49ers Team Notes

Golden Nuggets: Welcome back, D-Rob

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49ers WR Brandon Aiyuk ‘not close’ to return, GM John Lynch says (paywall)
““I keep coming back to (there are) different levels with these ACLs,” Lynch said. “And Brandon had a fairly significant injury involving a lot of different things in his knee.”

“George is doing really well,” Lynch said. “He’s tracking well, putting in a lot of good work like George always does.”

49ers LB Dee Winters getting rave reviews for his Dre Greenlaw impression (paywall)
“Winters said the New York Jets were one of the teams eying him that spring. When they told him they preferred him to be heavier, he obliged.

“They said, ‘We want to see what you look like at 230.’ And I was like 218 at the time,” Winters recalled. “I had, like, two or three weeks to put on 12 pounds. So I was eating everything under the sun.”

As a result, he began his rookie season at 232 pounds and without the zip that had made him jump out at TCU….“I thought that’s what it would take to be a linebacker in the NFL,” he said — and felt slow all season. That wasn’t due solely to the extra pounds (nowadays he’s 223). He admits he sometimes didn’t know where he was going as a rookie.

“I would say I was uncertain of what to do on some plays,” he said. “There would be some formations, and I would be like, ‘All right, I don’t know what to do. Let’s not just run anywhere. Let me kind of find a place to sit, find the ball, then run to it.’”

The defense became more second nature in his second season……The 49ers drafted Winters in 2023 because of his resemblance to Greenlaw, who was coming off arguably his best season. Both were around the same height — at 5-11 1/2, Greenlaw is a half-inch taller than Winters. Winters is lighter and faster, though Greenlaw’s plodding 4.73-second 40 in 2019 was recorded while he was dealing with a hamstring strain. Both appear spring-loaded when attacking the line of scrimmage, and both have the wheels to cut off plays at the sideline.

Winters remembers being struck by their physical resemblance when he was drafted two years ago. In fact, it’s what gave him assurance that he could make it in the NFL.

“I saw him and I thought, ‘On TV, he looks a whole lot bigger,’” Winters said. “He’s a big dude, don’t get me wrong. But when he was standing next to me, it was like, ‘OK, we are about the same size.’ I felt like that gave me some confidence that I could do the same thing.”

As 49ers’ defense relies on rookies, why is third-rounder Nick Martin riding pine in plainclothes? (paywall)
“It’s definitely tough,” Martin said. “I’m just just learning from it and taking every opportunity to get to learn and meet with the coaches, and always just staying prepared like I’m the guy starting.”

The 49ers defense this season fielded eight new starters, including three rookies. Martin hoped to be one of them, lining up next to the highest-paid linebacker in the league. He instead has to settle for sitting next to Warner in position meetings as if it’s an assigned seat.

“Usually it does take a year or two to be comfortable with all the technique and fundamentals” in this system, said linebackers coach Johnny Holland in the middle of training camp.

“Nick’s going to be all right.”

Kyle Shanahan reveals Brock Purdy ‘should’ return vs. Jaguars barring setback
“I think it’s feeling better each day,” Shanahan said of Purdy. “And if that continues, he should be good on Sunday. But hopefully that continues. It’s always delicate with the toe.”

During the period of practice Thursday that is open to the media, Purdy took the first snaps ahead of Jones.“

Brock Purdy, Mac Jones, Robert Saleh, Klay Kubiak preview 49ers-Jaguars Week 4 matchup
“Here’s everything they said.”

Source: https://www.ninersnation.com/golden-nuggets/150751/golden-nuggets-welcome-back-d-rob
 
Brock Purdy is off the injury report

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The San Francisco 49ers are trending positively on the injury report. Wide receiver Jauan Jennings was in uniform for the first time this week after missing Week 3’s matchup against the Arizona Cardinals. That’s good news for a team that is getting its starting quarterback back against the Jacksonville Jaguars. Purdy took place during the portion of practice when the media were allowed to attend.

Shanahan said “Yes” when asked if Purdy would start this Sunday: “He looked good. Got to do a lot more than last week. I’d say he got a lot better.”

The hope was for Purdy to be cleared after a couple of games. Shanahan believes the fact that the Niners considered Purdy an emergency quarterback for Week 3, and after talking to him early in the week, was a good sign. The expectation became clear that Purdy would start as the week went along, as long as he woke up feeling good on Friday.

The following players did not practice on Friday:

CB Renardo Green (neck)
WR Jordan Watkins (calf)
DT CJ West (thumb)
DL Yetur Gross-Matos (knee)

Watkins and West were ruled out. Green, after being limited all week during practice, is questionable. It’s worth noting that he’s been spotted on the side doing work, although he wasn’t in uniform. Darrell Luter has been the next cornerback to sub in when Green is not on the field.

Mac Jones, Jennings, Connor Colby, and Ricky Pearsall are all questionable. The 49ers, having a Thursday game and a critical one at that, will be on the minds of the 49ers as they determine who can and cannot play. But it’s also a game-by-game basis, and no wins are guaranteed. If a player gets cleared by the medical staff, they’ll play on Sunday.

Source: https://www.ninersnation.com/san-francisco-49ers-news/150780/brock-purdy-is-off-the-injury-report
 
3 matchups to watch between the 49ers and the Jaguars: It’s a battle of who can stop the big play

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The San Francisco 49ers have a chance to start the season with a 4-0 record, but the Jacksonville Jaguars stand in their way. Brock Purdy seems to be trending toward a return for the 49ers offense, and it will be in the nick of time, given the Jaguars’ defensive line. Robert Saleh and the 49ers defense will attempt to replace Nick Bosa’s impact on defense against Liam Coen and the Jaguars’ offense.

Here are three matchups to keep an eye on Sunday.

Jaguars’ rushing attack vs 49ers’ run defense

Travis Etienne is in top form through three weeks, averaging nearly six yards per carry with 270 rushing yards. Bhayshul Tuten has been a potent option following Tank Bigsby’s departure via trade to Philadelphia, with 74 yards on 17 attempts and 60 yards after contact. Etienne has forced eight missed tackles and averages 3.63 yards after contact, with 167 of his 270 coming after contact.

The Jaguars run the ball inside 68.9% of the time, which is the fifth-highest rate in the NFL. Meanwhile, 31.1% of their rushes are to the outside (28th in the NFL), but they are first in the NFL in EPA per outside rush at 0.32. The 49ers’ run defense has fared well, allowing an EPA rate of -0.11 on inside runs and -0.12 on outside runs.

Stopping the run and forcing the Jaguars to turn to a drop-back passing offense is a huge benefit for the 49ers.

Jaguars’ defensive line vs 49ers’ offensive line

The Jaguars blitz 32.3% of the time, which is good for 14th in the NFL. Josh Hines-Allen and company are far more efficient rushing four and creating pressure with stunts and one-on-ones. Jacksonville has the fifth-highest EPA on non-blitzes at -0.32. Boasting the ninth-highest pressure rate at 36.2%, the 49ers’ offensive line will have its hands full protecting either Purdy or Mac Jones.

The 49ers offense has the sixth-highest EPA (0.16) on non-blitzes, but is 25th in the NFL when pressured with an EPA of -0.69. It’s fairly simple: keep the quarterback clean, and the 49ers offense will be fine.

Jaguars’ passing defense vs 49ers’ passing attack

While the 49ers’ rushing attack is yet to get on track, the success the 49ers have seen throwing the football has been impressive. Yes, the Jaguars have done well against the pass through three weeks, but the lineup of Carolina, Cincinnati (without Joe Burrow and still lost), and Houston’s passing offense isn’t exactly murderer’s row. The circumstances and schedule have inflated their numbers as their passing defense is second in EPA/DB at -0.18.

Kyle Shanahan’s offense is the best test for the Jaguars. The 49ers are tenth in the NFL with an EPA of 0.22 against single high looks and 11th with an EPA of 0.11 against two high safety looks. Thanks in large part to Ricky Pearsall, the 49ers’ deep pass EPA is tenth in the NFL at 0.68. While it will be great to get the running game on track, this may not be the week unless the run blocking turns it around.

Source: https://www.ninersnation.com/genera...ars-its-a-battle-of-who-can-stop-the-big-play
 
Golden Nuggets: One more sleep until Eddy Piñeiro plays football again

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49ers QB Brock Purdy cleared to play, will start in Week 4 game vs. Jaguars
“While Purdy has been cleared to return to action, backup quarterback Mac Jones is listed as questionable with a knee injury.”

Five 49ers to watch as team looks to remain undefeated in Week 4 vs. Jaguars
“Pearsall enters the week ranked No. 3 in the NFL with 281 yards receiving — behind only Seattle Seahawks wide receiver Jaxon Smith-Njigba (402) and Puka Nakua (333) of the Rams.

The 49ers’ first-round pick of 2024, Pearsall likely will be matched on occasion against Travis Hunter, the Heisman Trophy winner from Colorado. The Jaguars traded up to select Hunter at No. 2 overall. He is a two-way player who has yet to find his niche on either side of the ball.“

49ers vs. Jaguars: The Standard’s 5 fast predictions (paywall)
“That sets table for a matchup pairing the No. 1 pick of the 2021 NFL Draft — Jacksonville QB Trevor Lawrence — with the very last pick of the subsequent 2022 draft. That’s Purdy, of course.”

Kyle Shanahan shares final updates ahead of 49ers-Jaguars Week 4 matchup
“San Francisco 49ers head coach Kyle Shanahan spoke to reporters following Friday’s practice, providing final updates ahead of the team’s Week 4 matchup against the Jacksonville Jaguars. Here’s everything he said.”

The 49ers are counting on Bryce Huff, and that has a nice ring to it (paywall)
““I told him at the beginning of the year, ‘I feel sorry for the tackles,’” left tackle Trent Williams said. “Once he gets that jump, and once he times that snap, his acceleration is so crazy off the edge, it’s like you can’t even play O-line. You basically just have to turn around and be a mall cop or security and get in his way.

“The speed is elite. It’s super elite.”

Back in familiar form, 49ers’ Trent Williams explains season-opening struggle in Seattle (paywall)
“So what happened? Williams referenced that injury and noted that the season opener was his first live game action since Nov. 17. That is, the blindside protector known for his machine-like dominance had collected dust from all that time on the shelf.

“I don’t make any excuses,” Williams said. “I hadn’t played a lot of football to that point. I wasn’t even walking until March. So, a lot of stuff played into it. But at the end of the day, that’s a good defense. Playing on the road. Coming back, first game, and you’ve still got to train your eyes. … I think it was just a few things I had to hone in on. And no matter how good you are, it’s never perfect. There’s always work to be done. At 37, there’s still work to be done.”

Source: https://www.ninersnation.com/golden...sleep-until-eddy-pineiro-plays-football-again
 
49ers elevate CB, don’t elevate WR ahead of Week 4 vs. Jaguars

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The San Francisco 49ers announced they elevated cornerback Eli Apple from the practice squad ahead of their Week 4 contest against the Jacksonville Jaguars at Levi’s Stadium on Sunday.

Apple, 30, is making his first appearance of the season for the 49ers. He had joined the team back in July during training camp amid numbers issues in the cornerback room. He was subsequently released on August 7th, but returned to the team’s practice squad after cutdown day.

San Francisco is dealing with a neck injury to starting cornerback Renardo Green. The second-year defensive back was limited on both Wednesday and Thursday, but did not practice on Friday, and was considered questionable heading into the weekend.

Green had suffered an injury in San Francisco’s 16-15 win over the Arizona Cardinals last weekend, but returned and ended up playing over 86 percent of the defensive snaps in the game.

Apple’s elevation seems to be insurance for Green, as the 49ers have four other healthy corners on their 53-man roster: Deommodore Lenoir, Upton Stout, Darrell Luter Jr., and Chase Lucas.

In addition, the 49ers did not elevate a wide receiver, speaking to their comfort level with Demarcus Robinson and the potential of Jauan Jennings suiting up this week.

Both Jennings and Ricky Pearsall were considered questionable heading into the weekend, with head coach Kyle Shanahan revealing that the latter is more likely to go than the former on Friday. Pearsall was limited in practice on Thursday and Friday after not participating on Wednesday. Jennings, on the other hand, only practiced on Friday, which was logged as limited as well.

Currently, these are the 49ers receivers expected to suit up on Sunday: Pearsall, Jennings, Robinson, Skyy Moore, and Marques Valdez-Scantling.

San Francisco will face the Jaguars on Sunday, with kickoff slated for 1:05 p.m. at Levi’s Stadium.

Source: https://www.ninersnation.com/san-fr...evate-eli-apple-jauan-jennings-ricky-pearsall
 
Fred Warner gets massive fine for unneccessary roughness from Week 3

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It’s gameday for the San Francisco 49ers, but that came with some unfortunate news for one player: linebacker Fred Warner.

Warner, who has been on a tear to start the season, was fined $23,186 by the NFL on Saturday for unnecessary roughness, due to using his helmet on a hit.

There also were several fines issued for use of the helmet against defensive players in Week 3 — including #49ers LB Fred Warner getting docked $23,186 on this play. https://t.co/zaKS7I3mjE pic.twitter.com/M57ZZcVJXu

— Tom Pelissero (@TomPelissero) September 27, 2025

Warner made the hit early in the first quarter on Arizona’s first drive of the game, with the play being a 4th & 1 run from James Conner. Warner was not levied a penalty on the play.

The NFL has handed out several fines for use of the helmet this season, with Saquon Barkley receiving a massive $46,371 fine back in Week 1 for the same infraction.

This is the fourth time that Warner has been fined in his career, and the first for the impermissible use of the helmet. He was fined twice last year, once for an excessive facemask against the Tampa Bay Buccaneers and again for a hip-drop tackle against the Miami Dolphins.

Warner has been playing at an elite level to start the year. He’s recorded back-to-back games with 10+ tackles, and has 30 tackles on the season to go with 12 run stops and a forced fumble. Now, he’ll have some extra motivation to play with on Sunday when the 49ers take on the Jacksonville Jaguars at Levi’s Stadium.

Kickoff is slated for 1:05 p.m.

Source: https://www.ninersnation.com/san-fr...arner-fined-unneccessary-roughness-week-2-nfl
 
3 quick takeaways from the 49ers 26-21 loss to the Jaguars: What did we just watch?

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The San Francisco 49ers had a disappointing 26-21 loss to the Jacksonville Jaguars on Sunday, falling short despite having numerous opportunities in a mistake-filled afternoon.

It was not a pretty game from the start for the 49ers, who had multiple early turnovers and continuously dug themselves into holes.

Quarterback Brock Purdy made his return, but didn’t look the part, while several injuries at wide receiver hurt the 49ers late in the game.

Here are three quick takeaways from the 49ers 26-21 loss to the Jaguars.

Questionable decision-making from Purdy

It was a rough afternoon for Brock Purdy, who had three turnovers, including a fumble that cost the 49ers the game late in the fourth quarter.

The turnovers were back-breakers for the 49ers. Purdy’s first interception came when the 49ers were driving in Jacksonville territory. He had multiple checkdown options open, but forced a pass over the middle of the field to Christian McCaffrey that was a little high and went off the running back’s hands into those of Devin Lloyd.

Purdy’s second interception came after a major defensive stop in the third quarter, as the 49ers had all the momentum on their side after scoring a touchdown to open the second half. It was a killer, coming on the first play of the drive, as his pass was intercepted by Lloyd again after being tipped at the line of scrimmage.

The decision wasn’t a great one anyway, as the intended receiver, Jauan Jennings, seemed well-covered by defenders running a dig, and gave Jacksonville great field position.

The third one was the clincher, though, as the 49ers got to the 50-yard line before Purdy fumbled after getting sacked by Arik Armstead.

The turnovers were brutal, but they weren’t the only issues on Sunday. Purdy consistently missed open receivers high, and was late on a few throws and reads (including a key deep out to Ricky Pearsall).

It doesn’t help that the 49ers struggled in the run game again, due to run-blocking woes, as one of my keys was calming down Purdy’s gunslinger mentality. San Francisco also had a different receiver core.

But, the 49ers paid Purdy big-time money to show up in games like this. He did not on Sunday.

Red zone woes continue

Another one of my keys to the game was executing in the red zone. And the 49ers continued to struggle there.

San Francisco entered the game as the 24th-best red zone offense. They were facing a defense that led the league in limiting red zone trips (two per game), and was 11th in opponent red zone touchdown rate.

The 49ers had an opportunity early on, going on a 13-play, 57-yard drive. But, when it came to the red zone, their struggles came out. San Francisco couldn’t run the ball (Christian McCaffrey had two carries for one yard), and Eddy Piniero had to settle for a 26-yard field goal.

On their next opportunity, the 49ers got within the 10-yard line once again. McCaffrey had a two-yard run on 1st & Goal to set them up at the 5-yard line. On second down, Brock Purdy had Jauan Jennings open for a touchdown, but the pass was low and behind. Jennings had a good chance to catch it, as Purdy placed it away from defenders, but dropped it. On 3rd down, Purdy had Jennings open over the middle of the field, but missed that read and was forced to throw it away after scrambling.

Just like that, another red zone chance led to another field goal.

San Francisco finally did get a touchdown on their third red zone drive, with Kyle Shanahan dialing up a nice shovel play to Christian McCaffrey for the score. But, that was the last time the 49ers got into the red zone, going 1/3 on the day.

The 49ers were close on three other occasions, scoring a touchdown from the 21-yard line. But, they also had two fumbles and an interception in plus territory, derailing other drives and making the red zone chances count even more.

Defense shines, but can’t replicate ending

The defense was a bright spot for the 49ers, for the most part.

San Francisco struggled to contain the run at times, including an early 48-yard touchdown run from Travis Ettienne Jr. in the first quarter, where the 49ers didn’t edge set well, and Jason Pinnock missed a big play.

Jacksonville was able to run for 151 yards, and Trevor Lawrence completed 15 of his first 20 passes while facing minimal pressure in the pocket.

But, the defense showed up in some big spots. With Jacksonville driving on their opening possession into San Francisco territory, the 49ers forced back-to-back negative plays, thanks to a good edge set from Deommodore Lenoir on first down and a tackle for loss from Bryce Huff on second down. A third-down incompletion forced the Jaguars to punt in plus territory.

In the second half, though, is where things turned up. The 49ers forced two straight punts when the offense needed it to open up the third quarter. Then, after being put in a bad position thanks to a Brock Purdy interception, the defense forced a field goal to keep things a one-score game at 20-14.

In the fourth quarter, the 49ers forced another three-and-out and got a crucial third-down stop with under four minutes left that led to a missed field goal from Cam Little to give the offense one final chance.

The defense did have some tough moments, including the 48-yard rushing touchdown for Ettienne after the Jake Tonges fumble. They also gave up a 13-play, 89-yard touchdown drive and allowed a 40-second, six-play, 39-yard field goal drive to end the quarter.

Still, they were put in some tough situations, as the offense and special teams did not play good complementary football. And that was the case at the end of the game, as Jacksonville got a crucial first down to settle things and pull off the victory.

Looking back, one thing is clear, however: the 49ers need a pass rusher. There was just no pressure whatsoever on Trevor Lawrence, who looked as comfortable as he has all season long. There may be need to be reinforcements there.

Join us on the feed if you haven’t, where we’re describing what we saw in 3 words.

Source: https://www.ninersnation.com/san-fr...ick-takeaways-26-21-loss-jacksonville-jaguars
 
Snap Counts & Grades: The 49ers offense lets them down on Sunday

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Well, that was an ugly loss. Dissecting any loss will eventually lead to understanding that the loss is filled with self-inflicted issues and mistakes, but man, did the 49ers beat themselves on Sunday. Four turnovers, multiple dropped passes, and more special teams coverage issues were a perfect storm for a 49ers loss. The 49ers’ defense struggled to pressure Trevor Lawrence, which was predictable following the loss of Nick Bosa, but for the most part, the defense did its part when they weren’t forced into a bad situation off a turnover on offense.

Let’s look at the snap counts and grades from Pro Football Focus.

Offense

Quarterback


Brock Purdy 66 (61.7)

The 49ers franchise QB returned after a two-game absence, but sailed passes high, low, and even right into Jaguars defenders’ hands on Sunday. Purdy’s toe injury isn’t 100%, but if he’s on the field, then the excuse loses merit. The 49ers receivers were credited with four drops (that still seems low), but two interceptions and a fumble can’t happen. The fumble also occurred on the potential game-winning drive.

The bottom line is Purdy must protect the football. Purdy was under pressure on 39% of his dropbacks and finished 6/14, 100 yards, zero touchdowns, and an interception when pressured by the Jaguars. Flush the game on Sunday and get ready for Thursday in LA. A notable caveat is that while Purdy attempted only four passes of 20-plus yards, he completed three of four attempts for 74 yards, earning a 116.7 passer rating.

Running Back

Christian McCaffrey 56 (56.6)

Kyle Jusczcyk 23 (72.2)

Brian Robinson, Jr 10 (67.3)

McCaffrey finished with 49 yards on 17 carries with 48 (!!) coming after contact. With an underwhelming 2.9 per attempt, the 49ers’ rushing attack continues to be stuck in the mud in 2025. Brian Robinson pitched in with 21 yards on five attempts for 4.2 per attempt and 15 yards after contact. The value to the offense is McCaffrey as a pass catcher with another 92 receiving yards and a receiving touchdown, but the issue has been drops for the running back. PFF credited him with one drop.

Wide Receivers

Jauan Jennings 48 (61.2)

Kendrick Bourne 44 (37.6)

Ricky Pearsall 37 (68.7)

Demarcus Robinson 25 (69.5)

Skyy Moore 8 (54.4)

Four drops were credited to the pass catchers. Three of them were from Kendrick Bourne. Unacceptable. Jennings labored through this game, especially following his two-point conversion, where he got absolutely crushed by two Jaguars. Ricky Pearsall left the game after falling on his knee with what Kyle Shanahan described today as a “minor PCL injury.” That diagnosis is initial, and isn’t final until the full tests reveal the extent of the injury. Thursday feels like a long shot, but we’ll hope for good news, right?

Demarcus Robinson returned from his suspension and caught his only target for 20 yards. He’ll be featured on Thursday if Pearsall and possibly Jennings miss the game in LA. Robinson’s revenge game? Sorry, couldn’t help myself.

Tight Ends

Jake Tonges 45 (75.3)

Luke Farrell 32 (52.6)

Brayden Willis 2 (58.7)

Tonges departed briefly with an injury, but was a real bright spot for the 49ers offense with three catches for 58 yards and a touchdown. Luke Farrell caught two passes for 20 yards but fumbled the football. When does George Kittle return?

Offensive Line

Trent Williams 66 (78.4)

Colton McKivitz 66 (77.1)

Dominick Puni 66 (67.8)

Connor Colby 66 (66.8)

Jake Brendel 66 (62.2)

Somehow, the 49ers didn’t allow a sack on Sunday. The offensive line did allow 16 pressures, 14 hurries, and 2 QB hits. Connor Colby led the team with five pressures allowed. Trent Williams was second with four pressures, three hurries, and a QB hit. That just isn’t like Williams at all, and the future Hall of Famer has had an up-and-down season. Dominick Puni and Colton McKivitz allowed two pressures apiece, and Jake Brendel allowed a pressure and a hurry.

The run blocking continues to be an issue. What is even more shocking is the lack of big runs to the left side of the offensive line. With only two attempts to the left end for McCaffrey totaling one yard, it should be as easy as running behind your best offensive lineman. The highest YPA (6.3) was running toward the left guard.

Defense

Defensive Line


Mykel Williams 46 (45.7)

Sam Okuayinonu 45 (46.9)

Jordan Elliott 42 (58.3)

Bryce Huff 38 (71.7)

Kalia Davis 36 (54.5)

Alfred Collins 23 (63.0)

Yetur Gross-Matos 20 (76.9)

Jordan Jefferson 12 (40.7)

Robert Beal Jr 12 (39.2)

The defensive line without Nick Bosa totaled five pressures, five hurries, and zero sacks. Bryce Huff led the defensive line with two pressures and hurries, but the team struggled to create pressure on Trevor Lawrence. Yetur Gross-Matos is working his way through an injury, but he needs to see the field more and be involved as a pass rusher.

There were times when the defensive line made plays to get off the field, but the lack of consistent pass rush is a concern.

Linebackers

Dee Winters 68 (59.5)

Fred Warner 68 (90.9)

Luke Gifford 19 (70.5)

Dee Winters and Fred Warner combined for seven of the 19 total defensive stops for the 49ers’ defense. Winters led the team with nine tackles and finished second on the defense with an 84.0 run defense grade. Warner was the highest graded defender in coverage with a 92.0 grade. Two passes were in Warner’s hands, and the star middle linebacker passed Patrick Willis for forced fumbles as a 49er. However, the fumble landed back in the legs of a Jaguars player and was an indication of the ball not bouncing the 49ers’ way at times on Sunday.

Secondary

Marques Sigle 68 (60.1)

Darrell Luter Jr 68 (64.6)

Jason Pinnock 68 (63.2)

Deommodore Lenoir 68 (61.2)

Upton Stout 43 (54.5)

Ji’Ayir Brown 4 (61.9)

Darrell Luter Jr replaced the injured Renardo Green and was the highest graded run defender with an 85.6 run defense grade. Luter Jr was only targeted twice and allowed one catch in 36 coverage snaps. Marques Sigle continues to be targeted in his rookie season. Sigle allowed a team-high 60 yards on six receptions and seven targets. Upton Stout was dinged for a ticky-tack pass interference call on what was initially the first interception of his career and for the 49ers’ defense.

Source: https://www.ninersnation.com/genera...es-the-49ers-offense-lets-them-down-on-sunday
 
Do the 49ers have a pressure problem?

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The San Francisco 49ers had a disappointing 26-21 loss to the Jacksonville Jaguars over the weekend, falling to 3-1 in a mistake-ridden game at Levi’s Stadium.

San Francisco struggled with every issue they couldn’t afford: turnovers, special teams miscues, red zone woes, and more.

Defensively, as I mentioned in my takeaways after the game, I thought the 49ers did enough against a good team. They held the Jaguars in check through the air for the most part, and mitigated some of the threat from the best rushing offense in the league, aside from a 48-yard Travis Ettienne Jr. touchdown run early.

But, there was one glaring issue in the team’s first game without Nick Bosa: pressure. The 49ers could not generate much pressure on quarterback Trevor Lawrence, who was pressured at the lowest rate of any quarterback in Week 4.

San Francisco has just five sacks through the first four weeks, and their 11.1 percent pressure rate ranks as 31st in the NFL behind only the Carolina Panthers.

Trevor Lawrence didn’t have an amazing day from a statistical standpoint, and he was able to get the ball out relatively quickly (2.63-second average time to throw). But, San Francisco also struggled with pressure without Bosa in the second half of last weekend’s game, and faced a similar issue in Week 4.

What led to the struggles against the Jaguars?

“I know we didn’t get any sacks and stuff, but I thought their main thing was they ran the ball,” head coach Kyle Shanahan said about the lack of pressure after the game. “They got some explosives in the run game, especially, I think they got a 50-yarder, something like that. So I think that is tough to generate pass rush when they’re dependent on the run like that. It looked like they had way too many quick throws that I thought we needed to be more competitive on. The quarterback got the ball out of his hands fast. When you do that, there’s not many opportunities for sacks.”

“We didn’t blitz a ton in the game,” Shanahan continued on Monday. “When we did, there was pressure, and he got rid of it. I would love to have gotten more on him, but I thought they did a good job of getting rid of it quick and when they didn’t, I thought we had four-man rushes where they were chipping and had double teams, so depend a little bit more on coverage that way. Always want to get more pass rush, but wasn’t a huge concern of that game.”

The 49ers simply don’t have the personnel to rush effectively with four currently, so the blitz rate will likely have to increase to get more pressure in the coming weeks. It already made sense for the 49ers to look for pass-rush help via a trade, which general manager John Lynch acknowledged was a possibility. But, that timeline may need to accelerate if the team is serious about contending in 2025.

Coming up, the 49ers face another challenge with the Los Angeles Rams on Thursday, as quarterback Matthew Stafford has historically been one of the best when it comes to getting the ball out quickly. Stafford has the third-best average time to throw this season.

So, defensive coordinator Robert Saleh has a challenge on his hands, while also understanding that his defense is playing above expectations to date.

Source: https://www.ninersnation.com/san-fr...-pressure-problem-robert-saleh-mykel-williams
 
2 Bounceback performances for the 49ers: Darrell Luter Jr shines in expanded role

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Given how ugly Sunday’s loss to the Jaguars was, it was hard to point to many positives. Fred Warner is his high-level, All-Pro self. Christian McCaffrey continues to shoulder so much of the offensive workload and continues to churn out 100-plus scrimmage yard games. But who were two players who bounced back or flew under the radar on Sunday?

Offense: Jake Tonges

Despite leaving Sunday’s game briefly with an injury, Tonges logged a career-high day in receiving yards (58 yards) and yards per catch (19.3). Twenty-nine of those yards were after the catch with a career-long 23-yard reception. Tonges had the same snap count from Week 3 against Arizona (45) and added an 80.9 run blocking grade.

Filling in for George Kittle is never easy, but Tonges has made the most of his opportunities in 2025. While doing most of his damage in the 0-10 yard over the middle window (4/4, 41 yards, and 109.4 NFL QB rating) on the season, Tonges has been a nice surprise for a 49ers offense desperate to find consistent contributors as they wait for offensive reinforcements.

Twelve catches on 15 targets for 125 yards and 10.4 yards per catch with two touchdowns is plenty fine for the former Cal Golden Bear.

Defense: Darrell Luter Jr.

While technically not a “bounce back” performance, one had to wonder how Luter would fare replacing second-year cornerback Renardo Green. Luter Jr responded with the highest graded run defense grade on Sunday at 85.6. Yes, Luter Jr was dinged for a penalty, but in coverage, the former South Alabama Jaguar allowed one catch on two targets for 11 yards.

Known primarily as a special teamer, the Jaguars didn’t test Luter Jr very much on Sunday. Not to say he was lockdown and lights out, but his name wasn’t called on Sunday, given the game plan of off coverage in zone against Brian Thomas Jr and Travis Hunter. Still, it is encouraging to see Green’s replacement execute in Robert Saleh’s defensive game plan.

Depth at any position is a concern, but Luter Jr’s performance on Sunday was a nice surprise and should instill confidence in the coaching staff if Green’s absence is longer than just Sunday’s game.

Source: https://www.ninersnation.com/genera...9ers-darrell-luter-jr-shines-in-expanded-role
 
49ers Q&A: Will an edge rusher save the season? Was Brock Purdy rushed back?

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Earlier this week, I put a post out on the feed to do a sort of mailbag here on Niners Nation. A lot of you sent me some questions. So I’m here to answer them, for no reason other than Q&A’s can be fun. As I mentioned in the feed post, I don’t care about what I think or say, but if you want me to provide some [unnecessary] context, here’s some [unnecessary] context.

So, with that said, welcome to the first edition of…Gee, I don’t know. “Ask Pato?” “Mailbag?” ”Golden Tickets?” We’ll come up with an official name for this as time goes on, if we continue doing it. Throw your name ideas in the comments or something.

Keep an eye on the Niners Nation Feed for our next edition of this Q&A. It’s that handy little ticker to the right of the posts. And even if you don’t want to ask questions, come engage with us. If you don’t want to talk to me, you’ve got KP, James Brady, even Fooch chiming in over there.

Ok, onto your questions:

“Why is it so difficult for some fans to say Purdy had a bad game?”

– Bigtime22

The same reason it’s difficult for some analysts to admit Brock Purdy is a good quarterback: no one wants to admit they are wrong, have been educated, etc., etc. or in the case of one game, offer even a shred of evidence to the contrary on something that is probably subjective (oh he played objectively bad…but you get the idea). I’m a Brock Purdy fan. I think he’s perfect for Kyle Shanahan. I also think he played poorly on Sunday. The whole team was playing poorly on Sunday, however, so you can’t blame it all on Purdy; there’s a lot more to it than that.

Purdy did have a bad game. A single bad game doesn’t mean the 49ers overpaid him, or that the last few years are just suddenly erased. Especially in Week 4, with injuries piling up and receivers dropping passes. But saying that gives ammo to the other side, and we can’t have that.

“Unless we trade for a (more than) competent edge, this season is toast?”

-CanWeCloneJoe?

“Will we trade for an edge rusher?”

-billthebiker

I’m not sure if a lack of edge for the rest of the season indicates doom when there’s so much more that hurt the 49ers on Sunday. The 49ers defense still doesn’t have an interception for 11 games, and Sunday against the Jacksonville Jaguars, they had like, zero hits and zero sacks—yet they still somehow held the Jaguars to 26 points despite four turnovers, one of which resulted in that inexcusible TD run the moment they (the 49ers defense) took the field. And don’t forget the points scored on the special teams housecall.

While the defense had a hand in Sunday’s disaster, it was a team effort, and one for which the defense shoulders less blame. And given what we’ve seen, despite the edge issues, defense may be further back on the list of needs—if you can believe it. It’s been almost a running gag that they can’t get two edge rushers to play at the same time consistently.

When the 49ers do make a trade before the deadline, they usually do it for a piece that would complete everything, and have been quite good with timing it. They got Emmanuel Sanders in 2019 to bolster the wide receiver room, and they got Christian McCaffrey in 2022 when a running back was needed. This year, there’s a lot more than just one position that brings it all together.

Will they trade? If they had beaten the Jaguars and then were to beat the Los Angeles Rams this week, I’d be more optimistic. Thursday against the Rams will say a lot. If they don’t beat the Rams, the odds of a trade would decrease significantly—and no, it doesn’t mean the season is a loss; the 49ers are still in a good position with those three wins, just a bit more uncertain about what they have and if it’s worth burning a draft pick.

If they do and go 3-0 in the division, I’d say interest is renewed, but the 49ers don’t want to pull that trigger unless they think they can go all the way. Currently, we see a team that can make the playoffs, but as far as a deep postseason run, an edge isn’t going to be enough to nurse the offense back to health and grant them the ability to run the ball effectively. Or catch the ball. Or just, you know, hold onto the ball.

If they can’t do that, the season is toast, regardless of them doing 20 transactions to get all the best edge rushers under one roof before the deadline.

Did the staff bring Purdy back too early? Or was half a brock better than half a mac which is better than 100% A Martinez?

-FartinGold

I swear some of your avatars are either awesome or awful. In this case, that’s the former because I was laughing while reading it.

Now to answer your question, Gold Fartin, it’s a bit of column “A” and a bit of column “B”. If you look at what’s actually reported, Purdy was good to go Sunday, and from what was said after the game, his foot wasn’t bothering him—during the game, that is. After the game, there was soreness, but from what we know, everything reported seemed to indicate that it wasn’t a significant issue during the game.

That doesn’t mean there might have been more to it; this is the NFL, but for all intents and purposes, he wasn’t rushed back on one leg and wasn’t protected from himself.

And as for half a Mac [Jones], at this point? When everyone is healthy, Purdy is the 49ers’ best quarterback. If he’s a little hobbled and the backup tweaks his knee, you still take your chances with the starter. We don’t know the significance beyond what’s reported, so we can only go by what’s printed, or posted, or…whatever.

As for Martinez, he hasn’t played a single NFL game. The Jaguars’ defense is decent. Unless necessary, there’s no reason to put him in a game like that.

What percentage of people would you say think they are a good driver and it’s everyone else that are lousy drivers?

-Inigo Montoya’s Dad

It all depends on what you think is a good driver. Me? I actually know that when there’s a red arrow pointing right at a traffic light, a right turn is not allowed (in Seattle, anyways). The cars behind me start beeping while I wait for the green light. I wouldn’t call myself a good driver, just a safe one. As for the ratio, I’d say 85 percent. Same as traffic: if you’re always complaining about all the traffic while you are gridlocked, chances are, you’re the traffic.

Source: https://www.ninersnation.com/commen...r-save-the-season-was-brock-purdy-rushed-back
 
Why the 49ers should explore a trade sooner than later

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The San Francisco 49ers are sitting at 3-1 after a 26-21 loss to the Jacksonville Jaguars this weekend, where they were killed by turnovers and missed opportunities offensively in another injury-ridden game.

To make matters tougher, the 49ers have a quick turnaround this week as they face the Los Angeles Rams on the road on Thursday Night Football, with kickoff slated for 5:15 p.m. at SoFi Stadium.

San Francisco could very well be without Brock Purdy, Ricky Pearsall, and Jauan Jennings, while other rotational pieces also did not practice on Tuesday. Those would be big blows to the team, as the 49ers’ wide receiver core would completely consist of players who joined the team this year.

Now, after winning two divisional games against the Seattle Seahawks and Arizona Cardinals over the first two weeks of the season, the 49ers are still in a good spot at 3-1 and 2-0 in the division, where they can afford to lose a tough game like Thursday’s.

But, when you put into perspective how the 49ers’ schedule looks over the next few weeks, things start to get dicier.

Following the Rams game, the 49ers have their fifth road game of the season against the Tampa Bay Buccaneers in Week 6 before returning home to face the Atlanta Falcons in Week 7. Then, it’s back-to-back road trips to face the Houston Texans and New York Giants in Weeks 8 and 9 before the NFL trade deadline.

Looking at that group of opponents, there isn’t any game where the 49ers are the clear-cut favorites to win, aside from perhaps the final one. Tampa Bay has started the year 3-1, playing competitively in every game, with its lone loss being to the undefeated Eagles. Atlanta has started 2-2 and has shown improvement on both sides of the ball. The Texans are 1-3, but possess a strong defense and an offense that finally improved in Week 4. And the Giants just beat the 3-0 Los Angeles Chargers in rookie quarterback Jaxson Dart’s first start.

It is very plausible that the 49ers go 2-2 or even 1-3 over that four-game stretch. Assuming they lose to the Rams, that would make them 5-4 or 4-5 at the trade deadline, putting them in a tough spot for the second half of the season as they fight for a playoff spot.

Now, with the amount of young talent on the team, the 49ers may be okay with that outcome, pushing more of their chips into 2026. But, with players getting older and the possibility of a playoff run still there, San Francisco could still look to contend with the top teams in 2025.

If they’re serious about contending, it may be smarter to make a move ahead of the trade deadline to address key needs like a pass-rusher, rather than waiting until the middle of the season. San Francisco hasn’t been able to get pressure on the quarterback without star Nick Bosa, and they don’t have anyone on the roster that seems like an immediate fix. Trading for a pass-rusher on an expiring deal wouldn’t cost much draft capital and keeps the books clean going forward in 2026.

Yes, San Francisco could wait to see how its team performs before making a decision on whether to contend this season. But, they have a tough stretch in front of them and injuries continue to loom large, so that decision may have to come sooner than later.

Source: https://www.ninersnation.com/san-fr...trade-sooner-than-later-nick-bosa-replacement
 
5 players to watch for the short-handed 49ers vs. the Rams on TNF

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The San Francisco 49ers are going to be shorthanded on Thursday when they face the Los Angeles Rams, as quarterback Brock Purdy, wide receiver Jauan Jennings, and wide receiver Ricky Pearsall were among those ruled out for Week 5.

With Purdy out, Mac Jones will make his third start in four weeks, and he’ll be throwing to a brand-new receiver corps that likely consists of Marquez Valdes-Scantling, Russell Gage, Skyy Moore, Kendrick Bourne, and Demarcus Robinson.

San Francisco has traditionally had Los Angeles’s number under head coach Kyle Shanahan, but they lost both games to the Rams last year and are underdogs heading into Thursday’s contest.

With the number of key pieces out, let’s look at five players to watch for the short-handed 49ers on Thursday.

Renardo Green

The Rams have been targeting the cornerback guarding Puka Nacua quite often this season. That could be Renardo Green on Thursday, as the second-year pro may have the toughest challenge of his young career.

Nacua lines up everywhere and has been dominant this year, leading the NFL in catches, targets, and receiving yards through four games.

Green missed Week 4 with a neck injury that he sustained at the end of Week 3, but seems trending to play against the Rams and will step into the fire immediately.

It wouldn’t be a surprise to see Upton Stout get a ton of volume his way against Nacua and Davante Adams, but Green’s success on the outside could be a big factor for the 49ers on Thursday.

Mac Jones

Jones has been crucial to the 49ers in both wins this season. And he’ll have his biggest challenge yet against the Rams with his group of pass-catchers.

Above all else, he’ll need to minimize turnovers, but he may need to spearhead the 49ers offense if the run game continues to be inefficient.

Head coach Kyle Shanahan has shown he’s not afraid to unleash Jones, with the quarterback throwing 39 and 41 passes in his two starts. He’ll have a lot of pressure on Thursday with a below-average group of weapons and against a tough defensive line.

Bryce Huff

The 49ers need some pass-rush help. They’ve struggled without Nick Bosa over the last six quarters in getting to the quarterback. That can’t happen against Matthew Stafford, who is already very efficient with getting the ball out in time.

Huff is the 49ers most-accomplished pass-rusher currently. He’ll need to get to the quarterback on Thursday, forcing the Rams to change their gampelan and getting them off their rhythm.

Huff has two sacks and a forced fumble this year. He’ll face more difficult 1-on-1s now, but he needs to perform well on Thursday.

Mykel Williams

Similar to above, the 49ers need some pass-rush help. But, they also are hoping to contain Los Angeles’s rushing attack after Kyren Williams rushed for 77 yards on 5.9 yards per carry against the Colts.

Williams is a quality run defender at his size and length, and he’ll have to set the edge well against a creative rushing attack. He is also looking for his first sack and is hoping to improve his pressure numbers, showing steady improvements week by week.

But, the 49ers will need to rely on their defense this week, which means they’ve got to win at the line of scrimmage first and foremost. That starts with players like Williams.

Connor Colby

The rookie seventh-round guard from Iowa has been tested quite often over his first two games, with teams throwing stunts at him and making life difficult.

Well, things don’t get much easier against the Rams, who have a top-tier pass rusher in Jared Verse, a quality nose tackle in Poona Ford, and two good defensive linemen with Kobie Turner and Braden Fiske.

The Rams defense has quietly been one of the best in the NFL in 2025. That comes from their success up front, and Colby will probably see more stunts and pressures thrown at him on Thursday.

Source: https://www.ninersnation.com/san-fr...s-news-5-players-to-watch-vs-los-angeles-rams
 
3 quick takeaways from the 49ers 26-23 win over the Rams: Special teams was a win?

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The San Francisco 49ers beat the Los Angeles Rams in a 26-23 overtime thriller on Thursday Night Football, putting together a clutch fourth-down stop in the red zone to seal the deal.

It was a game of highs and lows as the 49ers came out cruising, faced some adversity, ultimately went to overtime, and figured out a way to win despite giving up 456 yards defensively.

San Francisco improved to 4-1 on the season with their third divisional win, sitting atop the NFC West, and also became 3-0 with backup quarterback Mac Jones at the helm.

Here are three quick takeaways from the 49ers’ 26-23 win over the Rams on Thursday.

Setting the tone early

In my preview, I highlighted the importance for the 49ers to sustain long drives, slowing the pace of the game, and wearing down the Rams’ defense.

That’s exactly what they did to start the game. San Francisco opened with an eight-play, 72-yard touchdown drive that spanned 4:51 of clock. Then, after a quick punt from the Rams following one first down, the 49ers went on a 17-play, 91-yard touchdown that took 8:15 off the clock and gave them an early 14-0 lead into the second quarter.

Those two drives were early tone-setters for the 49ers, who needed every advantage they could get.

To end the second half, the 49ers needed a response after Los Angeles got on the board with a touchdown. And they took the clock to halftime, getting a field goal on a 12-play, 48-yard drive that lasted 2:09 and gave the team a 17-7 lead at the break.

San Francisco had another 12-play, 55-yard field goal drive that spanned 6:13 of clock to open the third quarter and extend its lead to 20-7, and its final scoring drive in regulation was another 12-play drive for a field goal.

Things weren’t going to come easy for the 49ers and their depleted roster. But they set the tone early with long-sustaining drives and found ways to chew the clock and score.

Special teams comes in handy

It feels like it’s been a while since the 49ers definitively won a game on special teams. Well, that was the case on Thursday, as San Francisco got big contributions from kicker Eddy Piñeiro, while benefitting from multiple mistakes from Rams kicker Joshua Karty.

Piniero was a perfect 4/4 on field goals on Thursday, hitting 37, 20, 59, and 41-yarders, with the latter being the go-ahead score in overtime. The 59-yard field goal was massive, giving the 49ers a 23-20 lead with under three minutes in regulation.

Had he missed, Los Angeles would’ve gotten great field position with the game dwindling down and a chance to win by running the clock out for a field goal.

Joshua Karty, on the other hand, missed a field goal from 53 yards to open the third quarter, and also had a missed extra point with Los Angeles primed to take a 21-20 lead after a touchdown. Those four points proved to be the difference in the game.

Karty also had a missed knuckleball kick to open up overtime that gave the 49ers field position at their own 40-yard line on the drive that got them the go-ahead field goal.

San Francisco nearly had a big mistake as Isaac Guerendo lost the football on a fumble, but it was ruled down because his forward progress was stopped. Outside of that, they won the special teams battle in a big way on Thursday.

Niners win the turnover battle

Entering the game, the 49ers were 30th in the NFL in turnover margin, while the Rams were sixth-best in the NFL.

Well, the tables turned, and in big moments on Thursday, with two huge fumble recoveries from the 49ers.

In the second quarter, with the Rams driving down 14-0, running back Blake Corum couldn’t handle a pitch from Matthew Stafford, bobbling the ball and putting it on the ground. Recently called-up defensive lineman Trevis Gipson was there and got the recovery.

Then, late in the fourth quarter, with the game on the line and Los Angeles at the 49ers’ three-yard line on 1st & Goal with 1:03 remaining, Kyren Williams got the ball punched out on a great move by rookie defensive lineman Alfred Collins. Collins recovered the ball, possibly saving a touchdown and the game for the 49ers.

Yes, Los Angeles scored a field goal a minute later to send it to overtime, but the touchdown would’ve forced San Francisco to go get one of its own with a minute left with one timeout and a hobbled Mac Jones.

San Francisco hasn’t done great with the turnover battle this season, but they came up big when it mattered on Thursday.

As always, join us in The Feed to describe what you just saw in three words.

Source: https://www.ninersnation.com/san-fr...ick-takeaways-from-26-23-win-los-angeles-rams
 
49ers offseason gamble is paying off

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The San Francisco 49ers went with a different offseason approach this spring, electing to stay away from the free agent market and instead put their effort into development with 11 draft picks.

San Francisco was bound to have a ‘reset’ year at some point, given the number of top-tier contracts they had shelled out. But, they were also going to continue forward with several All-Pros on the roster, which automatically puts efforts to contention on a year-to-year basis.

So, if the 49ers were to shed money in the offseason and not sign marquee free agents, that meant they needed to hit on draft picks early.

In 2022 and 2023, that was a major struggle for the 49ers, as both draft classes have been largely unsuccessful, apart from the Brock Purdy selection. But, in 2024, San Francisco found starters in wide receiver Ricky Pearsall, cornerback Renardo Green, right guard Dominick Puni, and safety Malik Mustapha, who each saw development through the end of the season.

San Francisco had the opportunity to select high in 2025, and its offseason gamble to rely on rookies is starting to pay off. First-round defensive lineman Mykel Williams has been a Day 1 starter, and his impact has primarily been seen as a run-defender early on. Seen as a developmental player with a high floor and a high ceiling coming out of the draft, the former has been there, while glimpses of the latter are starting to show.

Then, there’s second-round pick Alfred Collins, who was written off early after a slow start in the offseason. But, he was the savior in Week 5, forcing a fumble on Los Angeles Rams running back Kyren Williams at the two-yard line with 1:07 to go. That proved to be a game-changer, as Los Angeles could’ve easily had a touchdown there, but the game ultimately went to overtime, with the 49ers winning 26-23.

San Francisco’s third-round pick Upton Stout had a key pass breakup in the team’s 16-15 Week 3 win over the Arizona Cardinals, forcing an incompletion on third down to give the 49ers the ball back for a game-winning field goal.

And fifth-round pick Marques Sigle has been thrown into the fire immediately, going through his ups and downs at safety, especially in coverage. But, he was among those who rallied to the ball for a major stop on 4th & 1 in overtime to seal the game for San Francisco.

In the past, the 49ers haven’t seen as many early contributions from that many players in their rookie class. But, in need of production from younger players, San Francisco has seen its offseason gamble pay off en route to a 4-1 start.

“We knew since [the] end of free agency that we would have to depend on a lot of draft picks to come in and play,” head coach Kyle Shanahan said on Friday after the win. “So, we knew we had to hit on the right guys with that and we really felt good about these guys. As soon as we got them in the draft, we felt good. And they’ve been this way since OTAs when they came in right away.

“For them to get out there, and we knew we were going to be in this position, but the fact that they’re out there and they’ve worked to stay in this position, they’ve worked to be healthy. Even though you know you have to play the rookies, if they’re not ready, you’re still going to play someone behind them. You’re still going to put someone ahead of them. They do need to earn that spot. And they did.

“That’s kind of allowed them just to be out there and get this experience and go through all this stuff because when you’re made of the right stuff as a football player, the more you play, the better you get. So, for those guys to be in this situation, to be able to stay healthy, to be able to work through all these ups and downs is very beneficial to them and it’ll be beneficial to our team as [the] year goes and into the future.”

Now, the expectations aren’t significantly high for the 49ers in 2025, as they’ve been in past seasons. But, they’ve shown a knack for winning tight, one-score games, which wasn’t there in 2024. And that has led them atop the NFC West after five weeks, despite facing a plethora of injuries to key starters.

San Francisco will get talent back as the season progresses, but the development of its younger players will be paramount to the team’s success in 2025. So far, so good.

Source: https://www.ninersnation.com/san-fr...n-gamble-development-paying-off-kyle-shanahan
 
Golden Nuggets: What a beautiful weekend to trade for a pass rusher

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49ers Week 5 rookie report: Injury forced a change and the big man joined the band (paywall)
“You won’t find defensive end Mykel Williams in the box score. You will see safety Marques Sigle toward the top with his team-high 13 tackles, albeit due in large part to how much he struggled in coverage. Mykel Williams did not record a single stat, reminiscent of his quiet NFL debut. Sigle was targeted seven times and allowed six catches for 138 yards, accounting for more than a third of Matthew Stafford’s 389 yards through the air.

But both hunkered down as key cogs on the play that secured their team’s win in walk-off fashion as the Rams failed to convert on a 4th-and-1 carry from the San Francisco 11-yard line in overtime.

Mykel Williams cut inside Rams backup right tackle Warren McClendon Jr. in a way that carried McClendon out of the B-gap, opening a clear path for Warner to burst through. Kyren Williams was therefore forced to bounce his run to the C-gap. Reserve nickel back Chase Lucas occupied a blocker in that hole. Sigle, along with cornerback Deommodore Lenoir, did what earned him the “Sultan of Swarm” nickname from the 49ers scouting department.“

49ers vs. Rams PFF grades: Best and worst from the game, plus snap counts
“Center Jake Brendel earned the team’s best run-blocking grade (73.6), while running back Christian McCaffrey posted the best pass-blocking grade (81.7). Among offensive linemen, Williams had the top pass-blocking grade at 56.3.”

Kyle Shanahan provides 49ers updates after Week 5 win vs. Rams
“San Francisco 49ers head coach Kyle Shanahan spoke with reporters during a conference call on Friday, the day after the team’s 26-23 overtime win over the Los Angeles Rams. Here’s everything he said.”

Kyle Shanahan states George Kittle is a ‘long shot’ to play vs. Buccaneers
“The 49ers expect to get second-year safety Malik Mustapha back at practice next week, but George Kittle is likely to miss at least another game.”

Why Brock Purdy vs. Mac Jones quarterback controversy is good thing for 49ers
“Purdy is still the quarterback. That is not even a question less than five months after he signed a five-year, $265 million extension.

But Purdy is not healthy. And it is anybody’s guess when he will be ready to get back on the field and play up to his standard.

In the meantime, Jones has made a major contribution toward putting the 49ers in a great position for the final 12 games of the regular season. Jones was called upon to start against the New Orleans Saints and the Arizona Cardinals before facing the Rams on a short week.

The 49ers are 4-1, including 3-0 within the NFC West. Jones might not be done, yet. The team has confidence that they can win a lot of games with him at quarterback — even if “backup” is his official, unquestioned title.

Let’s face it, if there were no talk of a quarterback controversy right now, the 49ers’ season would not look nearly as promising.“

49ers minutia minute: Mac Jones went bananas as offense ran up huge snap count (paywall)
“Jones was cramping and even dry heaving late in the game, and at one point, head coach Kyle Shanahan was told that the quarterback’s forearm cramps were so intense that backup Adrian Martinez had to go in.

“We were calling the play for Adrian, and then I looked up and Mac was in the huddle,” Shanahan said Friday. “He just sprinted out there and kept it going. And I said, ‘All right, let’s see how long this lasts.’ He lasted the whole game and obviously was a big part of why we won.”

Shanahan said trainers wanted to bring Jones into the locker room for an IV but there were only seven minutes left in the game — not enough time for the procedure. So Jones instead ate three bananas.

“I guess (bananas) was the next-best plan — and to have some pickle juice also,” Shanahan said.“

Kawakami: The no-quit 49ers, Kuminga in pre-trade limbo, and more bold thoughts (paywall)
“I’ll say it: This defense and this team is earning the biggest opportunity out there for the 49ers. Yes, they’re good enough to get the 49ers’ front office thinking about making a trade for Trey Hendrickson to fill the Bosa void.

You don’t do that if you have a mediocre team. Or a team that has suffered the kinds of injuries that might make it let go of the season. But this 49ers team isn’t letting go of anything.

They’re on a playoff path. They’re not dominant, they still can’t really run the ball, and there are other vulnerabilities. But they’re resilient and they’re winning games.

If it costs a second-round pick to get Hendrickson, that’s not a terrible price to pay for a real shot at winning a few playoff games. Or possibly winning all of the playoff games.“https://sfstandard.com/2025/10/03/49ers-rams-trey-hendrickson-mac-jones/

Source: https://www.ninersnation.com/golden...-beautiful-weekend-to-trade-for-a-pass-rusher
 
8 winners and 3 losers from the 49ers Week 5 win: A little bit of luck, and a lot of Shanahan

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During his postgame interview, San Francisco 49ers quarterback Mac Jones said Kyle Shanahan told him he was pissed off that the Niners were underdogs against the Los Angeles Rams. The 49ers were missing most of their receiving production and starting quarterback. Oddsmakers thought the road team would be lucky to score 17 points with how shorthanded they’d be in SoFi Stadium.

Shanahan told Jones to let it fly, and Jones obliged en route to a thrilling victory. Let’s talk about the winners and losers from Thursday night.

Winners​

Kyle Shanahan​


Shanahan cultivated an immaculate game plan to play keep-away from an offense that was inevitable.

The 49ers ran 19 more plays than the Rams and possessed the ball for 13 more minutes. San Francisco ran the ball 33 times. Mac Jones had 32 attempts under ten yards. All in an effort to bleed the clock.

Shanahan defended his decision to run the ball at the end of regulation. He can be forgiven for a decision to kick a field goal on 4th & 2 from the two-yard line. Adrian Martinez would have been tasked with getting the offense in the end zone for his first career pass attempt on the road against the reigning division champs.

Shanahan deserves some grace for those calls after deciding to go for it on fourth down earlier in the game in his own territory with the lead. Even better, there was no hesitation.

The 49ers were aggressive on their first two offensive drives, which led to points. Shanahan is no stranger to winning at SoFi Stadium, but you could argue this was his least talented team offensively to go into Los Angeles and come away victorious. It was undoubtedly the most impressive win, considering the roster.

Against a defensive line that had the fourth-highest pressure rate and a defense that was seventh in schedule-adjusted passing efficiency coming into Week 5, Shanahan called touchdown drives of 72 and 91 yards to open the game that combined for over 12 minutes and had three other 12-play drives with Christian McCaffrey and a bunch of other players nobody else wanted at the skill positions.

Shanahan is now 3-0 with a backup quarterback and 2-0 in the division. Last night was a peak Shanahan game that should make him the frontrunner for Coach of the Year. Shanahan showed why this team will always have a chance as long as he’s in control.

Fred Warner​


Dee Winters is playing about as well as any linebacker can, and he’s not close to the level Warner is playing at.

Warner had 12 tackles, four of them stops, was targeted four times and only allowed one reception, and was seemingly in the right place when the Niners needed him to be every time. On a third down, Kirk Herbstreit blamed Warner for a coverage bust. But you could tell by the All-Pro’s reaction after the play that it wasn’t on him.

The 49ers have been blessed with stud linebacker play for the past 15 years, but Warner might be the best one yet.

Kendrick Bourne​


Much like interceptions, you should be good enough to overcome a drop. Now, Bourne’s drop, for the second week in a row, could not have happened at a worse time. Instead of going in for another score, the 49ers punted it back to the Rams, and they scored a touchdown.

Bourne lined up illegally during the two-minute drill before the half and was flagged for a penalty. That would be the last time anybody had anything negative to say about Bourne.

Bourne had more yards on in-breaking routes against the Rams than he did all last season with the New England Patriots.

In what effectively became a dink-and-dunk offense, Bourne had eight first downs, forced three missed tackles, and added 57 yards after the catch. The rapport between him and Jones was palpable. There’s a trust between the two, almost as if they’ve played together before. Bourne caught both of his contested situations and proved he was not only worthy of staying on the field but also good enough to be the go-to guy on third downs. It was the best we’ve seen Bourne look. He was superb.

Mac Jones​


On the first drive, Jones left the pocket when he didn’t have to, and Colton McKivitz was flagged for holding. After Bourne’s drop, Jones did not come back to KB, who was wide open, on the next passing play, and instead forced an incomplete pass. In overtime, on second down, Jones took a sack that effectively ended the drive. Those were the only visible mistakes Jones made on 50 dropbacks.

That’s right, 50. Jones has 39, 41, and 49 attempts in three starts as a 49er. Brock Purdy has attempted 40 or more passes just once. Yes, these are different circumstances, but Shanahan trusts Mac with the keys in this offense.

Jones made a concerted effort to get rid of the ball before Jared Verse and the Rams’ pass rush could decapitate him. They tried. And came close on numerous occasions. Jones was under pressure on only 24 percent of his dropbacks, largely because he got rid of the ball so quickly, but he was hit seven times. These weren’t love taps, either.

There were a couple of instances where you wondered if Jones would stay on the field. But he never missed a snap, gutted out an improbable win, and put the offense in the right spots routinely. The 49ers won a divisional road game after targeting Kendrick Bourne and Jake Tonges 11 times while their quarterback was gimpy.

Jones is now 3-0 and likely has earned himself a contract with another team once his time is up in San Francisco after Thursday night. Anybody with eyes could see that Jones was in pain. But he never waved in the pocket, and threw for 19 first downs and a pair of touchdowns in a difficult situation. That’s what a leader looks like.

Losers​

Connor Colby​


This section will feature the rookie class. The secondary and offensive line are feeling the ripple effects of first-year players. Let’s start with the seventh-rounder.

In fairness, he should not be playing, nor should the 49ers count on a player like Colby so early in the season. But injuries have forced their hand, and these are the results.

Colby put up a valiant effort in his first start, but it’s been downhill since.

Colby allowed a pair of quarterback hits, a sack, and four total pressures. When you count the number of missed blocks, busts, and non-competitive plays, Colby was even worse than those numbers would suggest. We’re not going to sit here and poo-poo a seventh-rounder saying, “He sucks!” Colby was taken in the round he was for a reason. He was thrown to the wolves, and he’s getting chewed up, as expected.

Upton Stout & Marques Sigle​


Defensive backs are inevitably going to get beaten in the NFL. That’s the job that they signed up for. Sigle has been picked on all year. It doesn’t seem like he’s been in a bad position. It does seem like Sigle has no idea how to play the ball in the air.

On one play late in the game, Sigle could have had an interception if he had played the ball instead of the man. The replay showed Sigle running by the receiver and completely whiffing on his hit. If Sigle’s eyes found the ball, it was an easy interception. On an end zone target, the ball went right through Sigle’s hands.

Stout’s mistakes are becoming more common. He’s prone to looking into the backfield when he should be looking at his man. It’s cost Stout in previous games, but “bad eyes” were an issue against a quarterback who spots mistakes from a mile away.

Stafford took advantage of Sigle and Stout’s worst traits to the point where if they had the ball, the rookies would be exploited — hence, Shanahan’s keep-away strategy.

Kudos to Robert Saleh for rolling with his rookies and letting them fail. This is how development works. Stout and Sigle need these reps. They have to learn on the fly in September and October so they can be reliable down the stretch and for a potential playoff run.

It would be easy to pull the plug and put a veteran like Chase Lucas in. That looked to be the case in the fourth quarter, when Lucas was on the field. However, Kyle Shanahan said Stout left due to an ankle injury.

Lucas looked like a starter during the preseason when Stout was out with an injury. The second Stout was healthy; he returned as the starter. That was a sign that the coaching staff had the utmost confidence in their third-round pick.

It wouldn’t feel real if the rookie defensive backs were flawless against Sean McVay and one of the best quarterbacks in the NFL, with two All-Pro-caliber wide receivers.

Now, you could argue they were on the other end of the spectrum in their first true test against an upper-echelon offense as pros. Stafford targeted the rookie duo 15 times. He completed 13 of those throws for 224 yards and 10 first downs.

If you look at the Super Bowl champions from previous seasons, the adversity they went through early in the season paid off in the playoffs. The 49ers are hoping for a similar outcome with their rookie class taking lumps during the early portion of their schedule.

It wasn’t just the rookies. Renardo Green was the only player who held his own in coverage, and some of his incompletions were due to off-target throws. Stafford added +14.9 in EPA in this game, per Next Gen Stats. For reference, the 49ers quarterbacks through five games have a total EPA of +20.1.

Thankfully, for the 49ers, Saleh brought his four-leaf clover on the trip to Los Angeles.

Winners​

The 49ers luck​


There is no shame in being lucky.

The Rams fumbled on 1st & 10 from San Francisco’s 24-yard line. Joshua Karty was wide right from 53 yards. With 1:07 remaining in regulation, the Rams fumbled one yard away from the end zone.

There were multiple drops that would have been first downs, and timely penalties when the Rams were in the Niners’ territory. The luck pendulum swung in the 49ers’ way on Thursday night.

Christian McCaffrey​


Christian McCaffrey forced more missed tackles (12) in Week 5 than in any other game as a Niner. McCaffrey averaged 2.6 yards per carry. Two-thirds of his rushing yards came after contact. McCaffrey picked up a pair of first downs on the ground, but most of his production came through the air.

McCaffrey caught eight of his nine targets for 82 yards and caught a touchdown in the red zone. Five of those receptions went for first downs. McCaffrey had 78 yards after the catch. Shanahan is finding ways to get his best player in 1-on-1 situations, and his best player comes through time and time again.

Alfred Collins​


Collins is another rookie forced into the fire. Kalia Davis is expected to miss the next two games. Collins saw a season-high in snaps on Thursday night. Of his 40 snaps played, 30 of those came as a pass rusher. Collins had a quarterback hit and was on the field for the final play in overtime.

Collins is why the game went to overtime, and Mac Jones didn’t need to make a game-winning touchdown drive in regulation for the 49ers to win. How many times during the week do you think the Rams’ running backs practiced protecting the football from a 335-pound peanut punch?

Kyren Williams' face got in the way of Alfred Collins' fist 😂😭#49ers pic.twitter.com/yLGkTUbP0i

— Alex Tran (@nineralex) October 3, 2025

That was the play of the game.

Eddy Pineiro​


Eddy Pineiro made all six of his kicks against the Rams, including a 59-yarder:

#49ers Eddy Piñeiro was HYPED after nailing a 59-yard field goal 🔥 pic.twitter.com/8C1u4KFE5v

— Alex Tran (@nineralex) October 3, 2025

Any other year, the 49ers would punt the ball. Pineiro has given Shanahan every indication that he can nail any kick from any distance. Pineiro’s perfection can’t be ignored as we recall all the ways the 49ers won.

Source: https://www.ninersnation.com/san-fr...in-a-little-bit-of-luck-and-a-lot-of-shanahan
 
49ers-Rams: Should officiating crew have called roughing the passer on one of those hits on Mac Jones?

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If the NFL makes any recent statements about how much it cares about player safety, responding with a cutup of NFL referee Bill Vinovich’s calls during the 49ers’ 26-23 win over the Los Angeles Rams is a good rebuttal.

Initially, this was going to be a disclaimer stating that the 49ers did not lose to the Rams due to the officiating. The 49ers had a different plan and yanked out a 26-20 win over the Rams.

Had the 49ers lost, Vinvovich’s crew would not have been the reason. Much like the two Super Bowl losses (or botches from an officiating standpoint), I would be able to give you a list of reasons why they lost, such as Kendrick Bourne dropping a key pass or some questionable playcalling in certain spots. Instead, the 49ers do what good teams do, regardless of laundry; they won.

But the officiating, led by Bill Vinovich, was still terrible. This is a talking point because Vinovich has dethroned Jerome Boger as a source of frustration for 49ers fans. There are the two recent Super Bowl losses he was a part of, and even if the 49ers are not on the receiving end, he’s had some shameful moments, most notably the missed pass interference call in an NFC Championship game played between the New Orleans Saints and none other than the Los Angeles Rams.

Tonight, there was a play that seemed characteristic:

If this was Pat Maghomes he’d have been ejected and suspended 5 games, but since it’s Mac Jones, it’s a play on…no roughing the passer pic.twitter.com/IRIIPJB1Nr

— CFBBlueprint (@CFBBluePrint) October 3, 2025

This was on third-and-goal play from the Rams’ two-yard line. Rams linebacker Byron Young came and flattened after Mac Jones. Getting taken down wasn’t so bad, but the follow-through was what made it suspect. If you listen to the video above, former NFL Referee Terry McAulay also says the call should have been a roughing penalty.

It’s definitely a polarizing call. Some say it wasn’t roughing, others say the opposite. Regardless of where you land, the hit left Jones limping and fans holding their breath. Luckily, Jones returned to the game on the next series.

So was this roughing? If the league is trying to protect quarterbacks, it most definitely is. The bigger issue is that we should never have gotten to this point.

Several plays before the third-and-goal gave us visuals of Jones getting hit from all sides after throwing the ball. One hit had him already limping before the above happened. Should there be flags for those?

Better question: Is the NFL also trying to protect its quarterbacks? That’s what they want to tell us. And for that reason, a flag after the first hit during that series might have erased the hit you see above, as that would probably indicate that kind of play wouldn’t be tolerated. They already gave the Rams a clear warning earlier in the second quarter when Rams defender Josaiah Stewart got nailed with roughing the passer. May as well follow up on it.

Instead, you got Mac Jones playing, showing us just how physically tough he is. His knee is held by a single muscle fiber, and he’s still grinding through it.

This wasn’t the only call by Vinovich. There was a punt return with a clear block in the back that seemingly didn’t get called; some are saying there was a missed offensive pass interference. There was also a strange phantom defensive holding call on the 49ers. The list goes on.

But none more notable than the coin toss. No, not the initial coin toss, but the overtime toss. After winning the toss, the Rams choose to play defense. Vinovich asked Fred Warner which side the 49ers wanted, and then what we got was five minutes of the officiating crew moving the teams from one side of the field to the other.

So is this crying about the refs? No, it’s simply pointing out that it’s not fun when this happens, whether you’re a 49ers fan or not.

But back to the roughing call. Are you okay with Vinovich not throwing a flag on that play, or do you think that was clearly roughing the passer?

Regardless, had the 49ers lost, this officiating would not have been the reason.

Source: https://www.ninersnation.com/san-fr...-the-passer-on-one-of-those-hits-on-mac-jones
 
Golden Nuggets: What a gorgeous Sunday to hate-watch the NFC West

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What I’m Hearing on A.J. Brown’s future, J.J. McCarthy’s status and MetLife turf (paywall)
“That morning at the team hotel in Marina del Rey, Jones told teammates he was on his balcony when he looked out at the water and saw a floating dead body. Someone called the police. As the 49ers loaded buses for the stadium, players watched investigators and even a coroner’s van pull into the marina. On Friday afternoon, the Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Department said the incident was still under investigation.

That’s how the quarterback for the San Francisco 49ers started his day.

And yet, hours later, Jones was extraordinarily steady. Against a talented Rams defense, he threw for 342 yards, two touchdowns and no interceptions, exactly why the 49ers traded up in the 2021 NFL Draft with the intention of selecting him before eventually pivoting to Trey Lance.“

49ers’ gritty win serves as revenge for Kyren Williams’ ‘big brother’ comments
“After San Francisco was swept by Los Angeles last season, Williams claimed the Rams were the “big brothers now” after years of the 49ers’ one-sided dominance in the interstate rivalry.“

49ers injury updates: George Kittle’s timeline shifts; Malik Mustapha close to return
“Malik is the one who we’re hoping to open up here on Monday,” Shanahan said.

Source: https://www.ninersnation.com/golden...-a-gorgeous-sunday-to-hate-watch-the-nfc-west
 
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