Jmare007
pico pal q lee
LMAO if you know, you know.
Na breh….. he had a talk with Fred, Sherm, your hated Jimmie and Trent and they set him straight years ago.
He dropped that Thot and got him another girl
What you don’t know is he be selecting the walk out songs for the boombox
Is this true? Cause I'd love to put him back in my good graces before the bowl
Man hell naw it ain't true. Racists never change. They are either overt or covert. Bosa just choose to be covert since he's around a lot blacks. But he's stillIs this true? Cause I'd love to put him back in my good graces before the bowl
breh, have you ever un-hated a player/coach you decided to hate on from day 1?Man hell naw it ain't true. Racists never change. They are either overt or covert. Bosa just choose to be covert since he's around a lot blacks. But he's still
A fired-up Trent Williams spoke to both the offensive and defensive lines during warmups, then went on to have one of his best games of the season. He allowed no pass pressures and came away with a 90.2 overall grade from Pro Football Focus, his second highest of the season (93.2 vs. Washington in Week 16).
Quarterback pressures allowed:
Banks, meanwhile, had a nice block on McCaffrey’s 1-yard score in the third quarter. Juszczyk took out the linebacker on the edge, the right-side guys — McKivitz and Woerner blocked down — and Banks pulled from his left guard spot to pave the way for McCaffrey.
- Williams 0
- Brendel 1
- Feliciano 2
- Banks 3
- McKivitz 3
Bosa was to the defense what Williams was to the offense. He played all but two snaps and finished with two sacks and eight pressures, the most for either team.
After blitzing the Green Bay Packers just twice in the divisional round, the 49ers blitzed nine times Sunday with linebacker Dre Greenlaw being the most frequent extra rusher.
Quarterback pressures:
The defensive line, of course, struggled to stop the run, especially the outside runs that plagued them against the Packers. Both playoff opponents have successfully used crack tosses — when a receiver blocks down on a defensive end — against the 49ers. Like defensive coordinator Steve Wilks last week, Shanahan on Monday didn’t fault the defensive ends at the edge but rather the players who should have been in pursuit. He wasn’t happy with Jameson Williams’ 42-yard run on the opening drive and Jahmyr Gibbs’ 15-yard score in the second quarter.
- Bosa 8
- Armstead 4
- Hargrave 3
- Kinlaw 2
- Young 1
- Greenlaw 1
“That play was disappointing to me because I thought our pursuit was as bad as it was all year — on both the two long runs,” Shanahan said. “We did get the edge, not with the defensive end because they blocked down on him, but we did it with the next guy to turn (the run) back. And when we turned it back, our pursuit wasn’t there and that was the biggest disappointing thing about both the touchdown runs.”
Warner had a missed tackle in the second quarter that led to a Lions first down. After that, however, he led San Francisco’s defensive charge. He finished with 13 tackles, tying his season high. For the second straight week, the 49ers had nine missed tackles. The Lions had 16.
Here’s how much the Lions respect Ward: He was in coverage on 43 snaps on Sunday and Detroit targeted him once. Thomas, meanwhile, bounced back from his bad game against the Packers. He was targeted four times and gave up two catches for 39 yards.
When Ambru Thomas was injured and had to leave the field in the fourth quarter, his replacement wasn’t a fellow cornerback like Isaiah Oliver. It was a safety, Ryan, who played the rest of the game in the nickel position.
Ryan had one of the team’s nine missed tackles. But he also had an unheralded play at game’s end when he tripped up Lions tailback David Montgomery at the 3-yard line. Montgomery was finished off by Warner and Kinlaw for a 2-yard loss that forced the Lions to burn the first of their three timeouts. When the 49ers retrieved the onside kick, it meant that the Lions could only stop the clock twice, which allowed the 49ers to take the clock to 0.00 without punting.
Moody’s 48-yard field goal attempt in the first quarter drifted wide right. Including the preseason — which, as fate would have it, began in Las Vegas ‚ Moody has missed eight field goal attempts and one extra point. Here’s how he missed them:
- Preseason 1: 40 yards, wide left
- Preseason 1: 58 yards, wide right
- Week 6: 54 yards, wide left
- Week 6: 41 yards, wide right
- Week 7, 40 yards, wide right
- Week 18, 38 yards, wide right
- Week 18, extra point, wide right
- Divisional: 48 yards, blocked
- Conference: 48 yards, wide right
Nah cuz I'm usually rightbreh, have you ever un-hated a player/coach you decided to hate on from day 1?
Idk why people consider him a genius. His play calling in big games says otherwise.Kyle better get In his bag. Let’s see if the genius been holding some shyt up his sleeve