Revenge is a Dish Best Served GOLD: The Official 2012 SF 49ers Season Thread

Heretic

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Why does Carr not count? He had an AWFUL O-line. He broke the record for sacks. All he had was a young Johnson and Kubiak came in like Harbaugh did and said "bye bye". People forget that Harbs went after Hasselbeck AND drafted a QB the year he came in. So I don't think he was that high on Alex. Given the shortened season he had to stick with him. Again, they re-signed him to a contract that they can walk away from next year.

How are Jordy Nelson and James Jones game changers? Blare White? I can go all over the league and point to 3rd, 4th, 5th round receivers who are balling. Not saying that Swain and co would beast elsewhere but to blame Alex's failures on a the receiving core is stupid. He even admitted that he was tentative and should take more shots.

As far as receivers making plays....you're right..they should. But they have to be given the opportunity to. Throw the ball. We got folk here wanting 1200 yard seasons from receivers who barely get targeted past 5 yards. Some of that is Alex and some is the playcalling.

I didnt mean thise receivers were game changers I should have typed that out, I meant the receivers I mentioned earlier. Like I said though, smith is not great and management should have either brought people in or let him go. Still last year he was just a game manager but when they allowed him to, he balled out. Im not blind to the fact that most teams would have cut him by now but also most teams would have gone after players ti help out as well so its possible he would or could have been much farther along if thats the case. Problem is we dont know and I think this season will tell a much better story
 

feelosofer

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I think one of the things Alex had going for him in terms of how Harbaugh approached the situation is his relative youth. The problem with David Carr is that Houston beat the piss out of him and it just killed the dude mentally. Alex has to have a considerable level of mental toughness, in combination with his general love for the organization (he could've easily left in year 4 or 5 when his initial contract was up and took a shot at another team). True, I wouldn't blame people for having been skeptical of Harbaugh starting Alex. But Harbaugh was very smart, he tried to cover all his bases in trying to get Hasselbeck and drafting Kaep. He even tried to get Peyton in this past offseason. But moving forward, I think keeping Alex was the best thing for us short and long-term. He's obviously the best QB on the team and it's not even close, he's still young and can develop mentally, Harbaugh and Greg Roman have improved his mechanics, at least going by the latter half of last season and this preseason. But I can't blame people for being skeptical, he sucked for so long.

But I agree this year we need to take more shots in the passing game, if we try and fail fine, but I'd rather that than see what happened later in the season when teams only covered part of the field and kept our passing in check.
 

yseJ

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I think Ive said it on the :hamster: thread but Ill reiterate about alex now

I liked what Ive seen from Alex last year. now there were certainly times when I nearly banged my head on the wall, especially with accuracy on deep routes that missed open receivers

but I think alex finally did some baby steps in the right direction: hes trying to read defenses and isnt afraid to call adjustments, he stopped blatantly staring down receivers, and limited stupid mistakes while bailing out oline a few times by using his legs to gain yards.

I think its mostly playcalling and harbaugh giving him confidence and a plan. I think harbs instead of telling him to go out there specifically stresses out that he shouldnt try to do too much. alex is not a leader of this team or this offense. hes a student, and once he learns he can operate an NFL offense. but he has to have someone guiding him who believes in him. urban meyer, harbs.

he will never be a slinger or a prolific passer due to his accuracy, or lack thereof. its pretty clear. he wont be a big-arm QB who zips the ball down the field. and that's ok to me, but not ok for others, understandably enough

also, they played him so safe because we didnt need for him to throw the ball. as a result it was great for us because once we needed alex to engineer some passing, most teams didnt know our offense well enough (since we dont throw the ball much). thus, some clutch comebacks vs lions, eagles, saints and one of the best balls Ive seen him throw against seattle to crabs. and still we caught a few breaks on those, but thats football.
 

yseJ

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also, every team that played us twice last year stifled our pass offense in the second game much worse than in the first game. element of surprise kinda wore off in all 4 instances and teams adjusted to roman's playcalling more.
 

JLova

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also, every team that played us twice last year stifled our pass offense in the second game much worse than in the first game. element of surprise kinda wore off in all 4 instances and teams adjusted to roman's playcalling more.

Good point.
 

Heretic

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also, every team that played us twice last year stifled our pass offense in the second game much worse than in the first game. element of surprise kinda wore off in all 4 instances and teams adjusted to roman's playcalling more.

I agree completely. I think.. Well I hope that'll change this year, because as much as I liked roman, we need to spread teams out more to take pressure off of frank. Plus that would play into smiths strengths more. I look at alex's best games last year and that's exactly what we did, namely late against detroit which opened up frank, we did it late against dallas, and against the saints. There were other games also. However I cant complain because the only game we got beat with no chance of winning was against baltimore. That game was bad and hard to watch.
 

FaTaL

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Alex Smith throwing with better accuracy


SANTA CLARA -- Quarterback Alex Smith has looked good during the offseason months in previous years. But he has never looked quite like this.

His strong training camp continued Tuesday with an outstanding start to the 49ers' three-hour practice. The only incomplete pass among his first 25 attempts came when his toss to Randy Moss, running the back line of the end zone, zipped through Moss' hands.



:jawalrus:
 

B90X

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Smith and Manningham are developing a rapport. Been reading that the last few practices these 2 have been locked in.

San Francisco 49ers – Niner Insider Blog – SFGate.com » Smith-to-Manningham beauty signals start of offensive fireworks

Early in Tuesday’s practice, Alex Smith lofted a perfectly placed 30-yard pass to Mario Manningham, who beat a half-step-too-slow Deante Purvis for a touchdown in the right corner of the end zone.

As Manningham cradled the ball in, Purvis gave him a slight shove and Manningham, calmly, looked at the undrafted rookie cornerback and flicked the ball at his facemask.

As Smith ran down the field to high-five Manningham, Purvis looked to the sky and yelled in frustration.

Not to pick on Purvis – a deep-end-of the-roster rookie I thought might be worth watching in the preseason opener – but the Smith-to-Manningham connection was just the start of a forgettable afternoon for him and other reserves in the secondary.

During Tuesday’s practice, offensive first-stringers were routinely matched against backups and the results were predictable.

Some of the other highlights:

** Matched against Purvis, Michael Crabtree ran a fly pattern down the right sideline. As Colin Kaepernick launched a 40-something-yard throw, Crabtree tapped the brakes. Purvis kept sprinting. Crabtree ended up with a go-and-stop reception.

** Once wasn’t enough for Smith and Manningham, who connected for another deep ball down the right sideline. This time, at least, Purvis had company as safety Colin Jones couldn’t get over in time.

** It wasn’t just Purvis. In another Very Unfair Fight, Randy Moss breezed by Cory Nelms for a 40-yard reception from Kaepernick.

** Smith threw a 15-yard touchdown pass to Vernon Davis, who jumped high to snag it in the back of the end zone. I didn’t write down the closest defender in my notebook, but I don’t believe it was Everson Walls. Still, it will go down in Tuesday training-camp lore as The (Practice) Catch.

** Manningham picked on another undrafted rookie, this time it was former Stanford safety Michael Thomas, to haul in a deep pass from Kaepernick down the left sideline.

** Kaepernick had a pair of impressive high-velocity, back-shoulder completions during a press-coverage drill, both coming down the right sideline. First, he stuck a 12-yarder into Manningham, who caught the ball as cornerback Chris Culliver was turning around. Later, he did the same with Moss, who beat a slow-to-turn-his-head Carlos Rogers.

** Kaepernick’s throws were nice, but Smith had the best toss during press-coverage work, floating a 40-yard completion to Davis down the left sideline. Perrish Cox, who had decent-to-kind-of-good coverage, was the victim.

** Don’t worry, Scott Tolzien fans, he had his moments. At one point, he rolled right and threw a BB to A.J. Jenkins, who bobbled it and hung on.
 

B90X

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Here's another recap from Barrows about yesterdays practice:

49ers Blog and Q&A: Day 15 recap: Big hits, nice catches on ladies' night
[Day 15 of 49ers training camp saw some hard hitting by the second- and third-team units as well as a couple of nicely thrown passes. The best may have been from Josh Johnson, who saw that Chris Owusu had a step on first-string cornerback Tarell Brown, then feathered the ball in over Owusu's shoulder before safety Dashon Goldson could arrive for help. Owusu made several nice catches during the team portion of practice, including two from Scott Tolzien.
Alex Smith seems to hook up with Vernon Davis on a daily basis, and Wednesday was no exception. Davis beat safeties Trenton Robinson and Darcel McBath on another deep sideline route. Smith had another solid throw to Mario Manningham in seven-on-seven drills in which Manningham made a nice double move near the goal line. Manninghham, who is perhaps fully healthy now after being slowed at the start of camp, has looked very good this week and has been a popular target.

Some other nice plays: Ben Hannula juked cornerback Deante Purvis after catching a pass from Tolzien, then broke several tackles for a big gain during live-tackling drills. Hannula was a jack of all trades for Jim Harbaugh at the University of San Diego - he was even the backup quarterback - and he has that ability for the 49ers. He's very much a Harbaugh-type guy in that regard, and while dark horse, he is a possibility for a practice-squad spot because of his versatility. ... It was another rough day for Purvis. He crashed into Ginn on a deep pass, drawing a pass-interference penalty.

Tight end Demarcus Dobbs made a nice catch at his hip on a pass from Tolzien. ... Fellow tight end Konrad Reuland caught an ugly pass in traffic while draped by two defenders and while falling onto his back. That's sooo Garbage Man. ... LaMichael James showed his speed and play-making ability on an outside run in which OLB Kourtnei Brown was pinched inside.


************************************
The defense made some plays, too. Colin Kaepernick hit A.J. Jenkins on a crossing route. Jenkins, however, bobbled the pass and in the process of trying to retain the ball was thumped by safety C.J. Spillman, who jarred it loose. ... Tarell Brown knocked a ball from Brian Tyms during seven-on-seven drills. ... A deep pass from Johnson to Jenkins was intercepted by cornerback Anthony Mosely ... Johnson was trying to hit Tyms near the goal line in 11-on-11 drills and his pass was dropped by safety Colin Jones. "That was the girl you never asked out," said one coach about the blown opportunity.

************************************
Patrick Willis had a trainer work on his left shoe/foot for about 10 minutes before rejoining practice. ... Fellow inside linebacker Michael Wilhoite was nicked during the live tackling session. ... Jenkins had a slight hobble after leaping for a high pass from Kaepernick. He continued to practice.

Isaac Sopoaga was back on the field after missing the last two practices. A quartet of outside linebackers, however, were still missing: Aldon Smith, Ahmad Brooks, Cam Johnson and, of course, Darius Fleming who's return this season from an ACL tear is unlikely. Newcomer Ikaika Alama-Francis is not permitted to practice until next week. ... Perrish Cox didn't practice for the first time this summer and is "working through something," according to a team spokesman. Rookie Michael Thomas filled in for Cox at nickel cornerback with the second-string defense. Thomas seems like someone the 49ers could keep on their practice squad.
 

B90X

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Crabtree is showing more speed this camp. This bodes well for the passing game in general. I'm telling you guys, he's going to lead the team in receiving...again!

49ers say Crabtree is faster than ever | ProFootballTalk

49ers wide receiver Michael Crabtree is coming off the healthiest offseason of his four-year career. Plagued by recurring foot problems his first three seasons, Crabtree is catching the eye of coaches and teammates in training camp practices with allegedly improved speed.

“He was playing last year on a bad wheel and battled his way through it,” offensive coordinator Greg Roman explained to CSN Bay Area’s Matt Maiocco. “I think he’s a lot healthier this year, and he certainly appears to be much quicker and faster.”

49ers cornerback Carlos Rogers also observed that Crabtree’s “foot speed” is improved.

Crabtree has not shown the ability to consistently run by coverage so far in his career. He’s been primarily a possession receiver whose best route is the slant. Crabtree is averaging under 13 yards per reception through three seasons, looking much more like a No. 2-caliber NFL wideout than the No. 1 he was drafted to be.

If Crabtree’s speed has truly improved, perhaps he’ll start living up to that top-ten draft status.
 
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B90X

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Niners just cut Bynham...
49ers Blog and Q&A: Byham waived; who's the 49ers' third tight end?

Byham waived; who's the 49ers' third tight end?

The 49ers today waived injured tight end Nate Byham, a former sixth-round pick who tore his ACL last August and has been slowed in his comeback from the injury. Byham missed Friday's preseason opener and all of this week's practices.

At the close of the 2011 season, which he missed, Byham said that he was ahead of schedule in his rehabilitation and was eager to return to the practice field. A league source, however, said that Byham's injured knee has not responded well in recent weeks and that he was hoping that time away from practice could help it regain its strength. Byham had an MRI earlier this week.

If Byham clears waivers, the 49ers can place him on injured reserve for the second straight season. The two sides also could reach an injury settlement, which would allow Byham to become a free agent.

An excellent blocker, Byham was competing to be the team's No. 3 tight end. Now it appears that Konrad Reuland, a member of the practice squad last year, is in the lead for that spot. Or it's possible that the 49ers go into the season with only two true tight ends: Vernon Davis and Delanie Walker.

Several defensive players, such as Demarcus Dobbs and Will Tukuafu, have been playing offense this offseason, and it's possible that one can be brought into the game when it calls for a third tight end. Dobbs has shown promise at tight end, and he's even changed his jersey to No. 40 to accommodate the move. Tukuafu has lined up as a fullback/H-back. The other tight ends on the team are undrafted rookie Garrett Celek, longsnapper Kyle Nelson and newly signed Joe Sawyer.

Another tight end, Gijon Robinson, was cut yesterday after he didn't show up for practice, according to a league source.
 
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ESPN's Camp Confidential: San Francisco 49ers
Camp Confidential: 49ers - NFC West Blog - ESPN

SANTA CLARA, Calif. -- One school of thought says the San Francisco 49ers got the most they'll ever get from quarterback Alex Smith last season.

What if last season was only the beginning?

That question ran through my mind while watching Smith fire passes on time and on target during a recent three-day stay at 49ers training camp. The answer became clearer every time Smith connected with newcomers Randy Moss and Mario Manningham, which was frequently. He appeared more accurate, more confident and more in command than I can ever recall seeing Smith during a training camp -- or any other time, for that matter.

"He's letting the ball go, he's making the right decisions and he's not afraid," tight end Vernon Davis said. "He's playing ball, he's having fun."

Of course, it figures a quarterback would look better throwing to proven targets than when operating without them. Michael Crabtree, Kyle Williams, Brett Swain and Joe Hastings were the only wideouts available to Smith in the NFC Championship Game last season. Williams, now fighting for a roster spot, ranked second among the 49ers' wide receivers with 20 catches during the regular season.

Life for Smith is better now.

"If you watch our team last year, we were kind of one-dimensional as far as offense," left tackle Joe Staley said. "The passing game went through Vernon and Crabtree. The running game was Frank [Gore] and Kendall [Hunter]. We've added a lot of talent. The more weapons you have, the more versatile you can be. Our coaches are very creative."

Smith proved last season he could be a trusted extension of the 49ers' coaching staff. He threw five interceptions in 445 pass attempts, playing to the team's strengths on defense and special teams.

Smith has what offensive coordinator Greg Roman calls a "unique" ability to grasp a game's dynamics in real time for the purposes of managing risks. On the surface, that sounds like a creative way to avoid slapping the dreaded "game manager" label on a quarterback with limited skills. The 49ers don't see it that way at all. They think Smith has demonstrated all the intangibles great quarterbacks should possess: mental and physical toughness; an off-the-charts football IQ; a level head no matter the circumstances; a passion for preparation; and the ability to perform in the clutch. They see him leading an offense that wasn't as bad as advertised, one that should only get better.

"Without an offseason here, we finished 10th in the NFL in scoring [actually 11th] and fourth in time of possession," Roman said. "That is in spite of being poor on third down, which is pretty remarkable.

"We're going to be opportunistic, strike when we feel it's time to strike," he said. "The other part of it is, when we make decisions on offense, it's big picture. The offense, defense and special teams are all intertwined. But we have an offseason under our belt now and are working through our second camp together. We certainly expect a lot of ourselves this year."

THREE HOT ISSUES

1. Crowded offensive backfield. Frank Gore is going to get his carries. Kendall Hunter, Brandon Jacobs and LaMichael James will be competing for what's left over. Their roles haven't solidified, but Hunter has enjoyed a tremendous camp. He caught my attention this week by hauling in a deep pass up the sideline, the type of play running backs rarely make. Hunter is going to play. James, as a rookie, figures to need time.

Jacobs, signed from the New York Giants, has been getting work in short-yardage situations, an area in which Anthony Dixon struggled in the postseason.

After collecting two Super Bowl rings in five seasons with Kevin Gilbride as his coordinator, Jacobs has been blown away by Roman's ability to showcase each player's individual strengths. That is a recurring theme among 49ers players.

"That is what this staff does the best," Jacobs said. "'G-Ro' is a genius, man. I've seen it, mainly these last couple days, we started doing some different things on offense, things out of different formations and basically putting the defense in sets he wants them to be in, versus what they want to be in."

Based on what he's seen, Jacobs said he thinks Gore would have six or seven Pro Bowl appearances by now, instead of three, had this 49ers staff been in place the whole time.

2. Role for Randy Moss. The passing game went through Crabtree and Davis last season. Both are in the primes of their careers. Neither figures to see his role diminish appreciably. With Manningham joining the mix and rookie first-round choice A.J. Jenkins lurking, a rotational role for Moss appears likely.

The sentiments Jacobs expressed regarding Roman and the 49ers' coaching staff could be important to keeping Moss from growing frustrated. Moss never has been one to suffer fools, even perceived ones, especially if the ball stopped coming his way. He did buy into "the New England way" when the Patriots' offensive staff was at its best and the team was winning. Moss also was catching balls left and right from an all-time great quarterback back then, circumstances the 49ers will not replicate.

The question then becomes whether Moss, 35 years old and coming off an idle season, will put team goals ahead of personal ones no matter what.

Davis, probably the most emotionally authentic player on the team, said he "loves" Moss for having "a great heart" and being a selfless teammate.

"Not only has he extended some knowledge to me, he has shown me that being great requires you to work even when you've had tons of success, with people saying you're a potential Hall of Famer, first ballot," Davis said of Moss.

3. Potential sophomore slump. Aldon Smith has incurred a DUI arrest, suffered stab wounds at a party and been carted off the Candlestick Park field with a preseason hip injury since setting a franchise rookie record with 14 sacks last season. That sounds like a sure-fire recipe for a sophomore slump.

Smith has been getting around slowly with the help of a forearm crutch. Hip injuries can be terribly painful. Athletes as lean as Smith have so little padding in that area. On the positive side, Smith has bounced back quickly from injuries in the past. He missed three games after suffering a cracked fibula during the 2010-11 season at Missouri.

The 49ers are asking Smith to transition from situational pass-rusher to full-time outside linebacker. Missed practice reps could slow that transition in the short term.

REASONS FOR OPTIMISM

The 49ers brought back all the important players from a team that finished 13-3 and reached the NFC Championship Game last season. They added weapons at receiver and running back after falling short offensively.

Both sides of the ball figure to benefit from a full offseason after scrambling to learn new schemes on the fly following the lockout.

The progress Davis showed late last season comes to mind as an extreme example. Adapting to yet another offense was tough in the beginning, but once he grasped the concepts more fully, there was no stopping him (10 receptions, 292 yards and four touchdowns over two playoff games).

Finishing 13-3 again would break from precedent, but all signs point to the 49ers as NFC West favorites.

Much will hinge on whether the offense improves, and to what degree.

The line appears in position to take a step forward. Four of the five starters played at least 92 percent of the offensive snaps last season. The new starter, right guard Alex Boone, is entering his third season with the team. The best offensive lines play together for years. This one increasingly has continuity. There's talent, too, with first-round choices in three of the five spots.

REASONS FOR PESSIMISM

Niners fans should be familiar with the warning labels by now.


Injuries: The 49ers were unusually healthy last season. Alex Smith took a league-high 44 sacks and somehow started every game. He started 16 games in a regular season for the first time since 2006 and the second time in his career. The defense suffered very few meaningful injuries in 2011-12, but the hip bruise Aldon Smith suffered last week highlighted the implausibility of a repeat on that front.

Turnovers: History says San Francisco's plus-28 turnover differential will be unsustainable.

Targets on backs: The 49ers are going from hunters to hunted. Opponents will be gunning for them. Opponents will also have fuller, more accurate reads on the schemes Jim Harbaugh and staff brought to the NFL from Stanford. The unconventional shifting and personnel combinations San Francisco unleashed on opponents might not have the same effect a second time around. That might have begun to happen last season, when the 49ers proved far less dominant when facing opponents a second time.

OBSERVATION DECK

Tarell Brown has been the best cornerback in camp. Teammates say he puts in the prep time. It shows when the 49ers do situational work. The more specific the situation, the better Brown seems to fare. Brown is also probably the 49ers' best corner in press coverage, an asset in short-yardage situations, whereas the other starting corner, Pro Bowl choice Carlos Rogers, tends to prefer off coverage.
Jacobs has run effectively in short-yardage situations. I did notice rookie linebacker Kourtnei Brown rocking Jacobs twice in one-on-one pass-rush drills during the team's recent Fan Fest practice.
When the 49ers enter their locker room from the practice field, a sign meets them with a list of five points: work hard, stay loose, stay focused, be accountable and take care of one another. The sign greeting them as they leave the locker room reads, "You are getting better or getting worse. You never stay the same."
Versatile corner Perrish Cox is making a strong push to unseat Chris Culliver in the nickel role. No matter what happens, Cox figures to play this season. He's made an impact on special teams as well. Seeking continued improvements in the secondary was additionally important with Aaron Rodgers, Matthew Stafford, Eli Manning, Jay Cutler, Drew Brees and Tom Brady on the schedule this season.
While Harbaugh has defended Jenkins from premature and unfair criticism, all indications point to a gradual assimilation for the receiver San Francisco selected in the first round. Veteran safety Donte Whitner: "When he gets there, I would compare him to a guy like Robert Meachem. He's not really big in stature, but he has a lot of speed. He has some quickness."
Safety Michael Thomas could be an undrafted free agent to watch for the 49ers this season. He knows the defense after playing for coordinator Vic Fangio at Stanford. Whitner: "If I was a betting man, at the end of the season, he'll be somewhere around this football team, whether it be on practice squad or on the 53[-man roster] because he wasn’t drafted, he’s not the biggest guy, not the fastest guy, but he has football instincts and he has football smarts. He’s around the football in practice."
The 49ers do a good job maximizing roster spots. They used nose tackle Isaac Sopoaga at fullback in power packages last season. Staley and Sopoaga caught passes. Bruce Miller successfully converted from college defensive end to starting fullback. Defensive lineman Demarcus Dobbs is the latest project. He's working as a blocking tight end and could conceivably push Nate Byham for the third roster spot at that position. Harbaugh: "He's definitely far enough along. We still don't know what that ceiling is yet."
The defense has a firmer grasp of Fangio's playbook entering a second season together. The team had 42 defensive calls installed when this week opened. That's not an unusual number, but Fangio should be able to call more of them with confidence.
Every player I spoke with -- Alex Smith, Davis, Williams, Jacobs, Staley and others -- mentioned putting team goals before individual ones. Harbaugh and staff have ingrained that mindset in players. It's a storyline to watch now that the 49ers have additional offensive weapons, a strong personality in Moss and higher expectations overall.
 
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