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VanD

Sicc OG
Feb 8, 2004
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crabtree is wrecking shop in practice apparently and working hard as fuck. are yall at practice seeing what goes on? or do yall just make crazy assumptions and doubt singletary being a capable coach or having a brain?


There is a "strong possibility" rookie receiver Michael Crabtree will be in the starting lineup Sunday against the Houston Texans, 49ers coach Mike Singletary confirmed this afternoon.



Josh Morgan started the first five games for the 49ers at split end. But Morgan told The Press Democrat today he has been informed Crabtree and Isaac Bruce will be the 49ers' starting receivers on Sunday.



Furthermore, Morgan remained at the 49ers' practice facility over the bye week to personally help Crabtree learn the position - and, in essence, take his job. Crabtree was the No. 10 overall pick but finally signed a six-year contract with the 49ers on Oct. 7.



"I'm helping him learn my position and take my position," said Morgan, who ranks second on the 49ers behind Vernon Davis in receiving. Morgan has 13 catches for 202 yards and one touchdown. "It is what it is. If he can help us win, I'm all right with that.



"They gave him my spot. So if he's going to be in there, I might as well help him out so I can make sure he gets it right."



Morgan has also started getting some work on kickoff returns. Morgan said he would welcome that opportunity to return kickoffs and punts, in addition to his expected new role as the 49ers' No. 3 receiver.



Singletary made no mention of the possibility Crabtree would be in the starting lineup when he spoke to the media earlier in the day. But after Morgan made his comments, Singletary was seen in the locker room. When asked about Crabtree, he stopped just short of guaranteeing Crabtree has been promoted to a starting role.



Singletary said he and 49ers offensive coordinator Jimmy Raye have talked about Crabtree's immediate promotion to the starting lineup. Crabtree caught passes from backup quarterback Alex Smith on Thursday. He also spent time during the bye week learning as much of the offense as he could with teammates Morgan and running back Frank Gore.



Singletary said it is a strong possibility Crabtree will start, but he is a little hesitant about the message it would send to have Crabtree immediately surpass five receivers on the roster after missing 71 days in a contract stalemate. Singletary said he is also sensitive to how the move would affect Morgan's development.
singletary is the man, if u doubt this, u will be popped in the mouth.
 

VanD

Sicc OG
Feb 8, 2004
5,934
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crabtree and morgan should be the starters tho. bruce is slowing down and has dropped a few.

brandon jones should probably be number 3. seems like he'd be nice in the slot.


not sure about morgan on kicks and punts, i know he can make the plays but he never had a return in college for a td. but if he can hold on to the damn ball, its a good start.

i'm curious what coffee could do on returns too.
 

PoLLo LoC831

NINER EMPIRE
Mar 20, 2005
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Clements fails to meet lockdown hype
http://www.mercurynews.com/49ersheadlines/49ers/ci_13606226?nclick_check=1

The 49ers and their fans are sweating the offense, wondering if Michael Crabtree can give it some juice, hoping coordinator Jimmy Raye will summon creativity from a mind more comfortable with basics.

Nate Clements, for one, ought to be thankful.

The curiosity about Crabtree, the obsession with fixing a stagnant running game and a deficient offensive line foster a climate that at least partially obscures the shortcomings of the cornerback who arrived in 2007 on a vessel of hype crafted from his sterling reputation and the staggering contract negotiated by his agent.

Clements' $80 million ($22 million guaranteed), eight-year deal — since adjusted to $64 million over seven years — made him at the time the highest-paid defensive player in NFL history. His play through 36 games as a 49er has not measured up to his salary.

The latest example is Nate's previous game, Oct. 11 against Atlanta, when wide receiver Roddy White enjoyed a career day: eight catches, 210 yards, two touchdowns. As astounding as the overall numbers are, the most disturbing sequence for the 49ers, their fans and Clements was the way White finished his 90-yard touchdown. After catching a short pass in front of Clements, White spun out of a tackle and dashed away like a cheetah outrunning a bloodhound.

Any fine, instinctive 29-year-old cornerback who loses ground in a chase is counting the minutes until he becomes a safety.

White's performance was reminiscent of Terrell Owens' masterpiece last November. Then with the Cowboys, T.O. roasted the Niners, mostly Clements, for seven catches, 213 yards and a touchdown.

There are the other instances in which Clements is shown in an unflattering light, such as San Francisco's Sept. 27 loss at Minnesota. The Vikings scored first when a 49ers blitz left Clements in coverage against wide receiver Sidney Rice. Brett Favre spotted the matchup and burned the blitz on a 30-yard hookup with Rice.

This is unbecoming of a cornerback whose Web site is "Lockdown22.com."

Yet it made sense for the 49ers to pursue and sign Clements. They had enough salary-cap space to hide a fleet of yachts, they needed a quality cornerback, and Clements was by all accounts the best available free agent.

The presumption was Clements would be the best cover corner in a San Francisco uniform since Deion Sanders' one-year mercenary mission in 1994.

But legitimate shutdown corners intimidate even the best quarterbacks, persuading them to do the smart thing and throw to the other side of the field.

There is nothing to indicate passers fear throwing toward Clements.

Which means the 49ers defense, while improving, still has a hole — especially when the pass rush is slowed. There is no shutdown corner, meaning the entire field is in play for the quarterback. The Falcons, with two weeks to prepare, saw that and exploited it.

It's reasonable to think Houston, which plays host to the 49ers on Sunday, will do the same. Texans coach Gary Kubiak is offensive-minded, Matt Schaub is a quality quarterback, and Andre Johnson is one of the five best wide receivers in the NFL.

If Clements were a true shutdown corner, defensive coordinator Greg Manusky could rely on him to contain Johnson, forcing Schaub to look elsewhere. It worked for the Jets, who in a 24-7 victory last month held Houston to 183 yards. Covered mostly by New York corner Darrelle Revis, Johnson was limited to four catches for 35 yards.

Revis the following week was primarily responsible for holding New England's Randy Moss to four catches for 24 yards in a 16-9 victory over the Patriots.

Thus is illustrated the value of a shutdown corner. Revis is a member of an elite fraternity, along with the Raiders' Nnamdi Asomugha, Denver's Champ Bailey and a few others.

Clements is beaten too often and too badly to be among them.

This is not about whether Nate is a good guy. He certainly seems to be, on and off the field. It's not about whether he's a good player, either. He is instinctive, dedicated and among the league's most physical corners, whether jamming a receiver or cutting down a runner. Any general manager in the NFL would be happy to have him.

The 49ers surely are happy Clements is on their roster. He's the best they have.

And it's a lot easier to cast him as such when fires are raging elsewhere, diverting attention toward the punchless running game and the leaky offensive line and the shiny new toy to be unveiled Sunday.
 
Jun 1, 2002
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ARTICLE ON NATE CLEMENTS

I THINK THIS GUY'S DAYS ARE NUMBERED IN SF. THE PERFORMANCE AGAINST ATL WAS UNACCEPTABLE.

Poole: Clements' deficiencies covered up
By Monte Poole
Oakland Tribune columnist

Related
Blog: 49ers Hot Read

More 49ers
THE 49ERS AND their fans are sweating the offense, wondering if Michael Crabtree can give it some juice, hoping coordinator Jimmy Raye will summon creativity from a mind more comfortable with basics.

Nate Clements, for one, ought to be thankful.

The curiosity about Crabtree and the obsession with fixing a stagnant running game and a deficient offensive line foster a climate that at least partially obscures the shortcomings of the cornerback who arrived in 2007 on a vessel of hype crafted from his sterling reputation and the staggering contract negotiated by his agent.

Clements' $80 million ($22 million guaranteed), eight-year deal — since adjusted to $64 mil over seven years — made him at the time the highest-paid defensive player in NFL history. His play through 36 games as a 49er has not measured up to his salary.

The latest example is Nate's last game, Oct. 11 against Atlanta, when wide receiver Roddy White enjoyed a career day: eight catches, 210 yards, two touchdowns. As astounding as the overall numbers are, the most disturbing sequence for the 49ers, their fans and Clements was the way White finished his 90-yard touchdown. After catching a short pass in front of Clements, White spun out of a tackle and dashed away like a cheetah outrunning a bloodhound.

Any fine, instinctive 29-year-old cornerback who loses ground in a chase is counting the minutes until he becomes a safety.

White's performance was reminiscent of Terrell Owens' masterpiece last November. Then with Dallas, T.O. roasted the 49ers, mostly Clements, for seven catches and 213 yards and a touchdown.

There are the other instances in which Clements is shown in unflattering light, such as the 49ers' Sept. 27 loss at Minnesota. The Vikings scored first when a 49ers blitz left Clements in coverage against wideout Sidney Rice. Brett Favre spotted the matchup and burned the blitz on a 30-yard hookup with Rice.

This is unbecoming of a cornerback whose Web site is "Lockdown22.com."

Yet it made sense for the 49ers to pursue and sign Clements. They had enough salary cap space to hide a fleet of yachts, they needed a quality corner, and Clements was by all accounts the best available free agent.

The presumption was Clements would be the best cover corner in a San Francisco uniform since Deion Sanders' one-year mercenary mission in 1994.

Legitimate shutdown corners intimidate even the best quarterbacks, persuading them to do the smart thing and throw to the other side of the field.

But there is nothing to indicate passers fear throwing at Clements.

Which means the 49ers defense, while improving, still has a hole — especially when the pass rush is slowed. There is no shutdown corner, meaning the entire field is in play for the quarterback. The Falcons, with two weeks to prepare, saw that and exploited it.

It's reasonable to think Houston, which plays host to the 49ers on Sunday, will do the same. Texans coach Gary Kubiak is offensive-minded, Matt Schaub is a quality quarterback, and Andre Johnson is one of the five best wideouts in the NFL.

If Clements were a true shutdown corner, defensive coordinator Greg Manusky could rely on him to contain Johnson, forcing Schaub to look elsewhere. It worked for the Jets, who in a 24-7 win last month held Houston to 183 yards. Covered mostly by New York corner Darrelle Revis, Johnson was limited to four catches for 35 yards.

Revis the following week was primarily responsible for holding New England's Randy Moss to four catches for 24 yards in a 16-9 win over the Patriots.

Thus is illustrated the value of a shutdown corner. Revis is a member of an elite fraternity, along with the Raiders' Nnamdi Asomugha, Denver's Champ Bailey and several others.

Clements is beaten too often and too badly to be among them.

This is not about whether Nate is a good guy. He certainly seems to be, on and off the field. It's not about whether he's a good player, either. He is instinctive, dedicated and among the league's most physical corners, whether jamming a receiver or cutting down a runner. Any general manager in the NFL would be happy to have him.

The 49ers surely are happy Clements is on their roster. He's the best they have.

And it's a lot easier to cast him as such when fires are raging elsewhere, diverting attention toward the punchless running game and the leaky offensive line and the shiny new toy to be unveiled Sunday.
 

Tony

Sicc OG
May 15, 2002
13,165
970
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What are you talking about? He was on Owens and he had 2 catches and a 100 yards before the half was over.... and then they took Clements off of him.