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PoLLo LoC831

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QB Smith on the Mend

http://www.49ers.com/pressbox/news_detail.php?PRKey=4111&section=PR News

Getting to know a new offensive coordinator is familiar territory for quarterback Alex Smith. After all, that’s something he’s dealt with every year of his NFL career. The quarterback is currently adjusting to his fourth with noted play caller Mike Martz taking over the 49ers offense this off-season.

Instead, the real unknown being thrown Smith’s way this go-around is what his role will be in this new offense as head coach Mike Nolan has said the starting quarterback spot is up for grabs.

“It will be an open competition," said Nolan on set of the NFL Network last week. “It's no one's job to lose. It's both guys' job to take."

Even in his rookie year when he began the year as the backup to veteran Tim Rattay, Smith had the luxury of knowing that as the number one overall in the pick, the reigns to the offense would eventually be his. In week five of his rookie year, Smith earned that nod and when healthy, has been the starter ever since.

Now, he’ll go head to head with veteran Shaun Hill who showed the most consistent play at quarterback for the 49ers last season, albeit in only two and a half games. Even though he might not be the front runner anymore, Smith said his approach to the competition will be the same.

“You know, it’s different but at the same time it isn’t,” said Smith. “For me, I can control what I can control and that’s doing the best I can everyday at everything I do, pushing myself to the limit and really working as hard as I can. That’s the same thing I’ve really done since I’ve been here. My focus is that I can do what I can do and everything else is going to take care of itself. Competition is a part of sports. It’s a part of football. It’s something that I’ve dealt with and every football player has dealt with since they’ve been playing this game. It’s kinds of inherent within the game. I don’t think it’s something to be scared of other than it’s going to make us better.”

Smith’s ability to re-gain a stronghold on the position could be delayed somewhat as he continues his recovery from season-ending shoulder surgery. After six weeks in a sling, Smith said he’s practically full-go in the weight room, but is still following a regimented schedule when it comes to throwing.

“At this point, I’m still in a toss and playing catch phase. I’m not throwing to wide receivers,” said Smith who said he usually tops off the distance on his throws at 40 yards. “This is something where I’m really trying to work my arm back into throwing shape. The projected goal is to still have another month or so to get it to where it needs to be. I’m trying to take my time with it.”

Smith hopes to be full go by the team’s early May mini camp, but he could still be limited in live throwing as a precautionary method. By training camp, he said he’ll be “absolutely” 100%.

His shoulder is not the only thing that required some mending this off-season. Smith said he’s spent significant time talking with Coach Nolan and putting last year’s communication problems to rest.

“He and I are both looking forward to putting last year behind us,” said Smith. “I’ve talked with him several times and I think we’re both excited about it. I know I definitely am. We’re both better than that and I think we’re looking forward to obviously erasing that and proving not only to the people in this building, but everywhere, that we’re going to move on and we’re going to do better than that and we expect better. I think we’re both excited for this opportunity ahead of us.”

And as for that fourth offensive coordinator, Smith welcomes the change and the opportunity to study under one of the league’s best when it comes to developing quarterbacks.

“Just look at the track record Martz had with all those quarterbacks and the way they’ve played and the numbers they’ve put up and where they’ve taken their game,” said Smith “I’m just excited for the chance to really continue trying to reach my potential. I feel like I haven’t even been there yet since I’ve been in the NFL, playing at the level I know I can play (at).With Coach Martz’s help and all the guys around here, I hope to get there.”

Topping the list of new players that Smith referenced were future Hall of Fame wide receiver Isaac Bruce and former Arizona receiver Bryant Johnson.

“I’m excited for everyone, for the guys who are returning and the guys just coming in,” said Smith of his supporting cast. “I think the new additions are going to make us better. It’s more competition, like I said, and I think it’s something that’s going to help this team. You talk about a guy like Isaac Bruce coming in with that much experience, not only in the NFL, but also with Coach’s Martz’s system. I’m excited to have a guy like that in here, to pick his brain and get another outside perspective from a veteran guy that’s really kind of been around.”
 

PoLLo LoC831

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49ers' Willis, Staley showed beginners pluck

http://msn.foxsports.com/nfl/story/...ed-beginners-pluck?CMP=OTC-K9B140813162&ATT=5

The rookie wall? San Francisco's Patrick Willis and Joe Staley went rolling through it.

According to documents obtained by FOXSports.com, only 35 of 1,898 NFL players participated in every regular-season snap last season. The list includes just three rookies: Willis, Staley and Cleveland left tackle Joe Thomas.

"What Patrick and Joe did was very unusual," said 49ers general manager Scot McCloughan, whose team drafted both players in the first round last year. "To have two rookies starting from Week One isn't heard of too often.

"Rookies have good and bad times. Sometimes during the bad times, they can't get out of a funk because they're not mentally or physically mature enough. Our two guys never hit that wall."

In Willis' case, he hit everyone else. Willis earned a Pro Bowl berth while finishing with an NFL-high 174 tackles. Willis and 49ers cornerback Nate Clements also appeared on more regular-season downs (1,079) than any other players.

Such heavy participation is especially unusual in today's NFL because of injuries, frequent substitutions and coaching decisions to rest players either in blowouts or at season's end if a playoff berth is clinched. Twenty-nine of the 35 players who didn't miss a snap in 2007 were offensive linemen, which is a unit that rarely rotates starting personnel.

Besides Willis and Clements, the only other non-linemen to reach the 100-percent mark were Oakland linebacker Kirk Morrison, Seattle safety Deon Grant, Cleveland safety Sean Jones and Cincinnati quarterback Carson Palmer.

"I can't say what the rookie wall is," Willis told FOXSports.com on Thursday. "On some Sundays, you feel more tired than others. But for the most part, it was wonderful because of the guys I had around me. They took me under their wing and talked to me each day. That really meant a lot and helped me stay focused."

That isn't to say Willis coasted through his first NFL campaign.

"I was exhausted at the end," said Willis, who was forced to play with a cast at mid-season after breaking his hand. "My thing is each time I step on the field, whether it's at practice or in a game, I want to give 100 percent. The coaches had to teach me how to practice (with less intensity)."

Staley also admits to being drained after taking every snap at right tackle.

"You're so used to being run down and tired all the time that you get used to it," Staley said. "Once you get away from football, you realize how exhausted you are and how much your body needs recovery time."

Staley said his transition to a 16-game NFL schedule was made easier from having played in 14 contests as a Central Michigan senior.

"I knew the rookie wall was coming, but football is something I absolutely love," said Staley, the first 49ers rookie offensive lineman to start every game in 39 seasons. "You like your body feeling sore. It builds mental toughness. I like being challenged like that."

Snap totals don't necessarily reflect the value of a specific position. For example, only one defensive tackle (Tennessee's Tony Brown) and one running back (Philadelphia's Brian Westbrook) appeared on at least 80 percent of their team's plays in 2007.

McCloughan, though, said participation totals factored into San Francisco's decision to sign Clements and Justin Smith to massive free-agent contracts. Smith had the NFL's highest snap percentage for a defensive end (97.8) the past two seasons while playing for Cincinnati.

"When you invest top dollars in guys, durability and past injury history are huge factors," said McCloughan, whose team gave Smith a six-year, $45 million contract with $20 million guaranteed earlier this month.

"Justin and Nate clearly take care of themselves in the off-season. It also shows toughness to play through little nicks. After Week One if you're a starter, the chances are you're not going to be 100 percent (healthy) the rest of the year."

San Francisco left guard Larry Allen (who is expected to retire) and center Eric Heitmann also didn't miss a snap in 2007. But even with an NFL-best five players having perfect participation, the 49ers finished 5-11 largely because of an offense that McCloughan disdainfully says "couldn't get a first down."

Besides changing offensive coordinators this off-season by hiring Mike Martz, McCloughan hopes the extensive playing time Willis and Staley received as rookies will help accelerate a turnaround.

"It's definitely beneficial being in there," Staley said. "Getting all those reps in game-time situations gives you that much more of an opportunity to get better
 

PoLLo LoC831

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Several proposals on the table at the owners' meetings

http://www.49ers.com/pressbox/news_detail.php?PRKey=4112&section=PR News

PALM BEACH, Fla. -- Mike Nolan thinks there are reasons beyond safety for the proposal that could lead to an NFL ban on hair hanging from the back of helmets.

"The nameplate is on his back; the number is on his back," the San Francisco 49ers coach said Sunday, the day before the NFL's meetings officially begin. "That's what we want the fans to see. Not his hair."

This might be a year when fans actually take interest in what owners do at these gatherings. Many meetings are filled with arcane proposals, like changing the positioning of offensive linemen's arms during blocks. This season, at least, there is some meat among the suggestions.

Or at least some hair.

The idea of banning long hair -- players would be allowed to tuck it under their helmets -- was proposed by the Chiefs. Kansas City's Larry Johnson tackled Pittsburgh's Troy Polamalu by the hair after an interception in a 2006 game.

Whether the measure will pass is problematic: The Chiefs bring a proposal for a rules change most years, and almost all of them fail to get the 24 votes needed from the 32 teams.

The other rules proposals come from the competition committee, which has more clout. Among them:

» Changing the playoff seeding so that a wild-card team could get home-field advantage in a first round game if it has a better regular-season record than a division winner.

"I like it because it makes teams play out the season," said Detroit Lions president Matt Millen, a member of the competition committee.

Last year, two wild-card teams with better records went on the road and both won: the eventual Super Bowl champion New York Giants in Tampa and Jacksonville in Pittsburgh. The Bucs benched regulars for the final game and finished 9-7 to 10-6 for New York, which didn't need its home field, where it finished 3-5. The Giants won their last 10 road games, including three playoff games.

Labor strife looming?

Shuttle forward. It is the 2011 NFL season. Three champions have been crowned since the Giants' astonishing Super Bowl XLII victory that ruined New England’s crack at ultimate perfection. Full story ...

» Ending the forceout rule on receptions and interceptions. Currently, the play stands if a player is forced out of bounds making a catch. If changed, a player must get both feet down in bounds under all circumstances.

» Eliminating the 5-yard "incidental facemask" penalty. Grabbing the facemask and turning it would lead to an automatic 15-yard penalty.

» Instant replay on field-goal attempts. This was proposed in part because of a game last season in which Cleveland's game-tying field goal against Baltimore appeared to hit the crossbar and bounced back on the field. It was eventually ruled to have hit the support stanchion behind the crossbar and was good. The Browns went on to win in overtime.

On the business side, there will be discussions on a variety of issues, including the impending labor talks. Some owners have predicted the league will opt out of the labor contract in November, the date for reopening the deal. But despite rhetoric from the union and some owners, league officials note all that will do is set the stage for new negotiations -- with no other potential ramifications until 2010, a season without a salary cap if no new deal can be worked out.
 

PoLLo LoC831

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For 49ers, getting better means getting better players

http://www.sacbee.com/sf49ers/story/823451.html


SANTA CLARA – General manager Scot McCloughan will say the 49ers build and replenish through the draft.

The team's roster tells a different story.

They've drafted seven projected offensive starters, sure, but the number on defense is only four.

The 49ers have plenty of players who began their careers in other cities, and they have been among the league's most avid free-agent hunters in recent years. The 49ers made another big splash in free agency this year, signing nine new faces in the offseason since the market opened Feb. 28.

It's not exactly a break in philosophy. The 49ers have plenty of homegrown talent – Frank Gore, Patrick Willis, Vernon Davis, for example – at key positions.

It shows, instead, that more than three years after McCloughan and coach Mike Nolan took over, the 49ers continue to rebuild.

"Our talent is OK," McCloughan said in January. "It's not great."

McCloughan and Nolan say they believe the best teams have healthy competition at nearly every position. That wasn't happening when the duo took over the talent-starved 49ers in 2005, and they have been trying to bolster that talent base through free agency since.

This year's free-agent haul follows a recent pattern for the 49ers: one marquee name followed by a handful of other players to augment the team's depth.

The big prize was defensive lineman Justin Smith, who was signed to a six-year, $45 million contract. Smith is expected to anchor the right side of the defensive line and add a better pass rush to a defense that had a hard time harassing quarterbacks in 2007.

The 49ers hope they added another defensive starter in Dontarrious Thomas, who will compete for the so-called "Ted" linebacker spot Derek Smith played last season.

Thomas is far more athletic than Smith, who was cut by the team in February and subsequently signed with San Diego, but was an underachiever with Minnesota. It is uncertain whether he has the hard-nosed disposition to play the position.

Thomas' main competitors are Brandon Moore and Jeff Ulbrich. If Thomas does not win a starting nod, he is versatile enough to be a top backup at all four linebacker spots.

On offense, the 49ers' free-agent pickups were heavily influenced by new offensive coordinator Mike Martz.

The most obvious is wide receiver Isaac Bruce, considered a future Hall of Fame candidate whose best seasons came when Martz was running St. Louis' offense. Bruce turns 36 in November, and his production has dipped in recent seasons.

Martz, however, must resurrect the 49ers' moribund offense quickly, and Bruce is considered ideal for teaching the new offense to his younger position mates.

Bruce is a near lock to be one of the team's Week 1 starting wide receivers. A top contender for the other spot is Bryant Johnson, a former first-round pick of the Arizona Cardinals who had been playing behind two of the league's best receivers in Anquan Boldin and Larry Fitzgerald.

The 6-foot-3, 213-pound Johnson is perhaps the 49ers' most physically talented wide receiver, and after signing a one-year contract, he will be eager to display those skills in 2008. He will compete for the No. 2 spot against Arnaz Battle, Ashley Lelie and Jason Hill.

J.T. O'Sullivan certainly doesn't have Bruce's impressive résumé, but he also is well-versed in Martz's system, having been Martz's No. 2 quarterback last year with Detroit.

Martz has said O'Sullivan has many of the same qualities of the coach's former protégés Kurt Warner and Marc Bulger, and he insists that O'Sullivan has a chance to start. O'Sullivan's presence, at least, accelerates the learning curve for Alex Smith and Shaun Hill.

J.T. O'Sullivan certainly doesn't have Bruce's impressive résumé, but he also is well-versed in Martz's system, having been Martz's No. 2 quarterback last year with Detroit.

Martz has said O'Sullivan has many of the same qualities of the coach's former protégés Kurt Warner and Marc Bulger, and he insists that O'Sullivan has a chance to start. O'Sullivan's presence, at least, accelerates the learning curve for Alex Smith and Shaun Hill.

The 49ers have been praised for another offensive acquisition, longtime Panthers running back DeShaun Foster.

Martz plans to lean on Gore the same way he did Marshall Faulk with St. Louis, where the offense was virtually unstoppable with the great back as its centerpiece but sputtered when he missed playing time.

Martz learned the value of a capable backup, and in Foster he has a running back who has rushed for nearly 900 yards in each of the past three seasons.
 

PoLLo LoC831

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Q&A with Coach Foerster

http://www.49ers.com/pressbox/news_detail.php?PRKey=4113&section=PR News

Chris Foerster joined the San Francisco 49ers this off-season after coaching the offensive line in Baltimore. Foerster enters his 16th NFL season with the 49ers and will be coaching the offensive line with George Warhop. Learn more about Foerster and his coaching approach in this Q&A!

Q: What has the transition been like coming from Baltimore out to California to coach with the 49ers? Mike Martz runs a different offense than what you did in Baltimore, so has it been a bit of a crash course or were you familiar with this offense from another one of your stops?
A: The transition has been good. Since I actually lived out here 20 years ago, it’s nice coming back to the Bay Area. The 49ers and Baltimore are actually very similar organizations. I think with Coach Nolan coming from Baltimore and given what he’s tried to establish here in San Francisco, it makes it any easy transition because both organizations do things similarly and they do them well. As far as the offense goes, when I was in Miami, Norv Turner had just left the Dolphins and they kept his terminology, and so with Martz taking over here, the systems are very similar so it’s been nice that it’s not a huge transition in what I need to learn.

Q: You played center in college at Colorado State, but what made you decide to then get into the world of coaching?
A: My high school football coach, Ollie Mayfield, was the most influential person in my life. I was just a normal kid playing all sports and he came in my junior year of high school at Sabino High School in Tucson, Arizona and he was just very positive, very demanding, very tough, but very, very positive and he always talked about doing everything right. He very much believed that football is a small picture of what life is like in general. If you do things right in football, it should carry out into the rest of you life. If you learn the disciplines of football, you can learn the disciplines in the classroom and your personal life. For some reason it clicked with me and when I went off to Colorado and did my thing playing and it came to the end, I decided I wanted to do what he did and be a high school teacher and coach. I graduated and was ready to go to my student teaching and the guys I played for at Colorado told me if I could get into grad school that I could be a grad school coach there. So I got into grad school and I was a grad assistant for one year and they had a position open after that and they hired me. From there it was just a matter of networking. I ended up at Stanford, worked for Dennis Green, followed him to Minnesota where I met Tony Dungy and it went on from there.

Q: You also have been an offensive coordinator and a tight ends coach at the NFL level. How does it help to have that versatility in your coaching background?
A: It’s made me more flexible as a line coach. I’ve lived thru the problems of the passing game and what the tight ends, quarterbacks and receivers go through after coordinating and so it’s helped me see show how the whole thing fits together. As an offensive line coach, you get locked into your five guys and your world and how tough a job it is because it’s a rough place to play. Guys won’t like this comment but arguably you have the worst athletes on the field. They are the biggest and the strongest probably, but they have the least amount of athletic ability and they have to do things against people who are much faster and more athletic. So, there are disadvantages for offensive linemen and as coaches you are so locked into taking care of your guys and making sure you help offset any disadvantages they have physically that you can sometimes not see the big picture. There has to be give and take and so I think in coordinating and working with the tight end, it’s really opened my eyes to that.

Q: You and George Warhop will share offensive line coaching duties. Have you guys worked out a system for that?
A: I think the first thing is learning the terminology that George uses so that I say things the way that he says them. It’s a bit of a learning curve in that regard but these guys know his lingo and that’s something I am going to have to get on board with. The way Coach Martz has set it out for us as far as installation goes is there is a lead coach in the running game and a lead coach in the passing game. George will be the lead guy in the run game and I’ll be in charge of leading the protection. That has to be my area of expertise every Tuesday when we are putting in the game plan, so I’ll need to know what the problems are in protections, which are good and what adjustments we might need to make. George will be a huge part of that as well, as I will in the running game. We’ll really do it all together but the preliminary work leading up to it, Martz will turn to me on protections and turn to George on the run game. As far as coaching, we’ve all had two guys out there working before so we’ll just be communicative in terms of where we’ve got our eyes. Finally on game day, I think I’ll be in the press box and George will be down on the field

Q: What is your coaching style? Are you a yeller, or more cerebral in your approach in dealing with the players?
Well, I’d like to think I’m evolving and maturing. I really think I have high expectations for players and when you have a high level of expectations, the importance of one play starts to build on a coach as the year goes on. So, I’d say I express my feelings freely when that frustration level reaches a certain point. Over time, that frustration level has gone down because I’ve learned through experience that certain things are going to happen. When you have a younger player in the game, you realize before the game you might have a mismatch so I’m not going to get mad at this guy because we know he’s not going to win every battle. It’s really our job as coaches to try to help him out to minimize that mismatch. Before I had the attitude and expectation that we were going to block everybody every play or I was going to lose it. I can’t do that anymore. I wouldn’t make it another 20 years coaching if I lost it that often, but when I do hit my boiling point, I’m not afraid to express myself. So I think ten years ago I was much more volatile in all areas. I think now I pick my battles.

Q: What is the one thing you hope to impart to your players?
A: I really want to be the best teacher I can be. At the end of the day I want to help my guys be the best players they can be. It’s not about me, it’s about them becoming the best player they can be so they can help the 49ers win. Everything I tell them is to help them become a great player because that works for everybody.

Q: As of now the 49ers have to plan without Larry Allen who is no longer under contract and not expected to make a firm decision regarding retirement until this summer, so what is the plan for that guard position? Will Adam Snyder work there primarily or will you also be working him at tackle?
A: Snyder goes in there at left guard now for us. Jonas Jennings will be on the right side, Joe Staley at left, David Baas at right guard and center Eric Heitmann. We’ve got Tony Wragge who has played guard and center and then we just signed Jeb Terry, so we are still a little thin at guard, but we expect Snyder and Baas to get the job done. It’s a good group. They are a young group, and they are still developing, but they love to play football. They have a great attitude and they are good guys. George has done a nice job getting them to this point and we’ll continue to work with them until they develop as really solid starters in the league. They’ve got some experience and we’ll look for them to develop further.

Q: What kinds of things do you plan to work on with your group during the upcoming OTA period? What can they gain this off-season?
A: The key thing before mini camp is to get the installation done for the offense. We’ll go through that installation twice before mini camp and then we’ll install it again during mini camp. We’ve got to get them familiar with this terminology and this offense. While it’s the same system, there are some subtle changes that weren’t here the last two years so they have to be confident in it. When you know what you are doing, you have a chance to perform physically. If you don’t know what you are supposed to be doing, it’s hard to ask them to know physically what we expect out of them.

In addition, we’ll also address every single player’s individual needs. Instead of getting ready for an opponent, we’ll just work overall on the general fundamentals. Each player was given an index card of what they need to get better at, so when we go out on the field to work, each guy knows what they need to work on. That’s something you don’t really have time for in the season, but right now we can really individualize and work on what each guys needs help with fundamentally.

Q: Scot McCloughan has said that the depth at offensive line in this year’s draft is loaded. Do you agree with that assessment? How much time have you spent lately on watching some of these college players?
Since I’ve been here, we spend every morning working on our offense and every afternoon watching college guys. They gave us an extensive list and George Warhop and I have split that up, and it’s a very good draft. It’s a deep draft, and probably deeper at tackle than any year before. There are a lot of guys who can play, so you are going to get some quality players beyond the first round. It’s a good year for them.
 

PoLLo LoC831

NINER EMPIRE
Mar 20, 2005
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Talkin' 49ers draft with Mel Kiper Jr.

http://49ers.pressdemocrat.com/default.asp?item=2179602


ESPN draft guru Mel Kiper Jr. was on a national conference call this morning. We're at the stage in the process where the individual workouts are wrapping up. Kiper said not a lot is going to change between now and April 26, the first day of the draft.

"The ratings are going to be pretty firm right now," Kiper said.

Kiper has been ESPN's top draft analyst since 1984. He is the president of Kiper Enterprises, which he founded in 1981 as a college student.

* * *

But, first, the 49ers will have their local combine at the team's Santa Clara practice facility on April 18. This is when they can bring in some of draft-eligible players from the local colleges, as well as players who grew up in the area and went away to college.

* * *

In last year's draft, the 49ers traded up to No. 28 to select offensive tackle Joe Staley. They gave the Patriots a first-round pick in 2008 (No. 7 overall) and a fourth-round pick (No. 110), which turned out to be defensive back John Bowie, whom the Raiders acquired through New England.

Then, the 49ers traded their second-round pick (No. 42) to the Colts, who used it to select left tackle Tony Ugoh. The 49ers received the Colts' first-round pick in 2008 (No. 29), along with the Colts' fourth-round pick (No. 126), which the 49ers used to select safety Dashon Goldson.

One year in, it looks as if those trades have worked out well for both the 49ers and Colts. We don't know anything about how it's going to work out for the Patriots because right now all they have is a draft slot.

Here's what Kiper had to say about it:

"Everybody criticizing San Francisco for Joe Staley and losing the seventh pick overall to New England, I would argue that Joe Staley is going to be a pretty doggone good left tackle as well. And in this draft, what left tackle would be equal to Joe Staley at that point? Ryan Clady? Chris Williams? I mean Joe Staley is pretty good. So would you rather have Joe Staley last year when he's already transitioned into the league and already had a season under his belt? Or would you rather draft a left tackle fresh that you'd have to pay that kind of money to as a seventh pick. Joe Staley was a late pick in the first round. I don't have any issues with that. They identified a guy they wanted.

As far as the Colts losing the No. 29 pick this year . . . "At that point you'd be hard-pressed to find a left tackle equal to Ugoh. Carl Nicks at Nebraska? I'd rather have Ugoh. You look at some of the other guys at that particular juncture, Oniel Cousins at UTEP? No way. Ugoh is much better. He's definitely significantly better than any left tackle who would be on the board at that point."

* * *

Here are a couple questions the staff here at Instant 49ers asked Mr. Kiper . . .

Instant 49ers: Toward the end of the first round which offensive linemen will be in the discussion? Where do you see the 49ers going with that No. 29 pick?

Kiper: "If you're asking. 'Who's the best offensive tackle on the board at that point?' It's probably Gosder Cherilus from Boston College. And I say that because he was a left tackle at B.C., and he's not going to be a left tackle in the NFL. He's going to be a right tackle. (The 49ers) have Joe Staley to be your left tackle. Now you have Cherilus at right tackle.

"He did struggle some at left tackle, but I thought he got better late in the year. But he did struggle. He's a right tackle. He had a great year as a right tackle as a junior. He looked to be one of the top-15 seniors coming into this season based on how he played at right tackle. If he would've translated that to left tackle, he would've been a top-10 pick. That didn't happen. That's why people say he's a right tackle. Obviously as a right tackle, he drops down a bit. That's why he maybe gets into the late first round. I'd say a Cherilus at that point would be a guy you'd have to consider."

Instant 49ers: Who are the guys who could start off at guard and eventually move to tackle?

Kiper: "Cherilus is a guy you'd want to be your right tackle. Nobody else I see at that point . . . I wouldn't see Carl Nicks of Nebraska that high. Nobody has the versatility at that particular juncture.

"I'm going to give you a guy. I'm only saying this personally because I don't think a lot of people feel the way I do, and we'll see how this turns out three or four years from now. But I think Chilo Rachal from USC is a guy . . . and I'm not saying he'd go there (No. 29), if you traded early-to-mid-second - I think that's where most people think he'll come off the board. I say that because he was a guard at USC who played a little right tackle early in his career, at least worked at that position. At 6-5, 315, with very good feet, strong, tough kid, he could be a right tackle. Here's a guard who could be a right tackle.

"If you're asking who I think the better player is, he or Cherilus? I think he's a better player than Cherilus, but he's a guard. He can play right tackle. If you want to roll the dice there, you could take him. That would be another option, and a kid I'm very high on. Outside of the league, I don't think many observers have Rachal as highly rated as I do."

Instant 49ers: Of those outside linebacker/defensive ends who only have value to 3-4 teams, how many of those guys can step in and make an immediate impact?

Kiper: "The guy who'll have the biggest impact is (Vernon) Gholston, but he'll be long gone (when the 49ers pick). After Gholston, you'd be looking at probably Cliff Avril from Purdue, you'd be looking at Bruce Davis from UCLA, Quentin Groves from Auburn. If you want another guy. Marcus Howard from Georgia could be a fourth- or fifth-round guy. I mention him for the Colts because he's the kind of guy they want.

"But I'd say for the 49ers, I'd look at Davis, Avril or Groves to kind of fit what they're looking for. . . . I wanted to give you one other guy, Curtis Johnson, a defensive end/outside linebacker from Clark in Atlanta. He is another kid who fits the mold and would be ideally suited to be that 3-4 outside linebacker."
 

PoLLo LoC831

NINER EMPIRE
Mar 20, 2005
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Trophy goes to special teams

http://www.sacbee.com/static/weblogs/49ers/archives/011475.html

Special Teams coach Al Everest was walking around with a shiny new piece of hardware Monday – a trophy he and assistant Jeff Rodgers received for winning Special Teams Coach of the Year from the Aguilar Kicking Academy. The academy sends ballots to every special teams coach in the NFL and Everest and his staff were the top vote getters.

And why not? Punter Andy Lee had a great 2007 season, finishing with a 41-yard net average, setting the record for punts inside the 20 yard line (42) and going to the Pro Bowl for the first time. Kicker Joe Nedney, meanwhile, was 17 of 19 on field goals and 22 of 22 on extra points.

In fact, the special teams as a whole had an excellent season. The only glaring red marks that come to mind are Allen Rossum’s kickoff return in Week 3 and Nedney’s slip-of-the-finger incident in Week 8. Oh, and they probably could have used a few more big returns, which is why they signed Rossum.

Rodgers, of course, is no longer with the 49ers having taken a job as Kansas State’s special teams coordinator. The 49ers have interviewed some candidates but have not yet settled on Rodgers’ replacement.

****
The NFL doled out 32 compensatory draft picks to 15 different teams. The 49ers, as expected, were not one of them. They'll go into the draft with six picks, the lowest total in the McCloughan-Nolan era. Compensatories are given based on a formula that essentially weighs free agents lost the year prior against free agents acquired. The 49ers brought in a lot of new faces in 2007 (Nate Clements, Michael Lewis, Aubrayo Franklin, Tully Banta-Cain, Ashley Lelie) and lost very few (Anthony Adams, Eric Johnson). Next year's draft, however, should net several compensatories for San Francisco, which has lost Justin Smiley, Kwame Harris, Maurice Hicks and Marques Douglas to free agency.

It's interesting to note that both Atlanta and Baltimore gained an extra third-round pick and that Baltimore has four compensatories total. Both of those teams are looking for a quarterback and might be interested in leap-frogging the Miami Dolphins at pick 32. The extra picks give those two teams more ability to wheel and deal with teams picking at the end of the first round such as the 49ers. (And, yes, I know teams can't trade their compensatory picks).
 
Dec 22, 2004
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Remember today is April 1st so all trades are a fucking joke...I forgot for a second when I went to 49erswebzone and seen we traded for Jason Taylor...
 
Nov 5, 2004
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Oh shit, good lookin on the April fools, I woulda forgot.

I remember reading something last year about a receiver, forgot who it was though. I think it was that we traded for Andre Johnson. My heart raced for a second.
 

PoLLo LoC831

NINER EMPIRE
Mar 20, 2005
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Offense Gets Together

http://49ers.com/pressbox/news_detail.php?PRKey=4117

Tuesday marked the first day of “teaching school” for the offense. I’d normally say passing school, but the unit actually didn’t come together today as a group and instead worked separately with their position coaches.

Early in the morning, the offensive line worked with position coaches George Warhop and Chris Foerster, with the rest of the skill positions getting together at 11 for a 45-minute session.
“It was good to get together as a unit and see everyone out there even though we didn’t work as a group,” said quarterback Shaun Hill. “Instead, we did more individual stuff and personally, you see just how much you need to improve on before we get to mini camp.”

Hill has been in a few meetings already with Martz, and said the 49ers new coordinator applied the same detailed approach during today’s field work with the quarterbacks.

“He’s very detailed on the field and in the classroom and we are going to know exactly what we are supposed to do, and if we don’t do it, we’ll be held accountable and that’s the way it should be,” said Hill. “I think everyone is excited about this opportunity to work and learn from Coach Martz.”

Tight end Vernon Davis made his first appearance in the off-season program by joining the 11AM group for the work with the coaches, and then the noon group for head strength coach Duane Carlisle’s workout.

In other news, the NFL released the top 25 earners in their “Performance Based Pay” system that awards lower-salaried players for playing time.

LB Parys Haralson made it on the list at 25, earning an additional $226,221 for the 2007 season. It was a perfect time to receive a bonus for the 49ers third-year linebacker, who is currently browsing for a home back in Mississippi

“They actually told us right when we got back from the OTAs and I was very, very excited,” said Haralson. “It really wasn’t even on my mind, so it was a nice surprise. I’ll take a bonus any day they want to give me one.”

Performance-Based Pay was created as part of the NFL’s 2002 Collective Bargaining Agreement extension with the NFL Players Association. The system creates a fund used as a supplemental form of player compensation based on a comparison of playing time to salary. This program will stay in place through the remaining years of the CBA in which a Salary Cap exists. The fund increases by a fixed amount of five percent each year.

This just in from the ongoing owner's meetings...

League owners have approved a communication device for defenses on Tuesday at the NFL Annual Meeting.

One defensive player will wear a helmet similar to what the quarterback is allowed on offense. Should that player leave the game, another player can be designated to also have the device, but only one defender with the device can be on the field at a time.

This is something I know head coach Mike Nolan, a former defensive coordinator, was strongly in favor of having passed

A few other random observations…

was out last week, but I know that RB Frank Gore just arrived for the off-season program, and I believe the same is true for RB DeShaun Foster. Both players took part in the 7AM workout session and then worked with new running back coach Tony Nathan during the coaching school.

I remember last year CB Nate Clements telling me at one point he wanted to drop some weight and get down closer to what he was in college. He felt it would make him a little faster. I noticed today in the workouts that Clements definitely looks leaner. He still looks to have his same upper body strength, but definitely appears to have shed a few pounds. Strength coach Duane Carlisle concurred with my assessment, and Clements grinned when I made the comment to him.

LB Roderick Green arrived this week for the workouts and he too seems lighter and leaner in his upper body. LB Jay Moore may have trimmed down some as well this off-season to fit the 49ers 3-4 defense after coming in last year as a rookie making the transition from DE to LB. I had no idea Moore was so fast, but he showed it in the morning drills.

CB/RS Allen Rossum is meanwhile living up to his reputation for being fast. Carlisle said on Monday he hasn’t seen speed like that since he joined the 49ers three years ago. Rossum once won the NFL’s Fastest Man Competition, held at the Pro Bowl.

Outside linebackers coach Jason Tarver was coming off the field after working with the linebackers and stopped to watch one of Carlisle’s workouts with me. Tarver told me I had just missed his guys and then said, “Wow, Manny Lawson looks really good.” He said they wouldn’t let Lawson do all of his drills, but that the linebacker was “very explosive.”

Defensive line coach Jim Tomsula is a new man these days after having hip surgery this off-season. It used to be painful even to watch Tomsula limp around the field, and it’s wonderful now to see him moving around with such an improved gait.
 

Chree

Medicated
Dec 7, 2005
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more offseason training photos


^ lol he looks like Radio there...



VD and Delanie Walker



Mike Martz looks fat



Sullivan Coaching up WR Bryant Johnson
 

PoLLo LoC831

NINER EMPIRE
Mar 20, 2005
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Douglas Vs. Smith Continued

http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/blogs/ninerinsider/detail?blogid=45&entry_id=25380

A debate began on March 6 about the relative merits of defensive end Justin Smith, who signed an six-year, $45 million deal with $20 million guaranteed, and Marques Douglas, who signed a four-year deal with the Buccaneers at a fraction of that amount.

Both had similar 2007 numbers with Smith making 78 tackles, two stuffs (tackles on running backs for a loss) and two sacks. Douglas had 72 tackles, 12 stuffs and three sacks. So why pay so much more for Smith?

After looking at the tape of the Dec. 15 Bengals-49ers game, it became obvious. Smith affected the game with his constant and timely pressures on quarterback Shaun Hill, while Douglas didn't pressure Carson Palmer at all. But the analysis was unfair to Douglas, who faced Bengals Pro Bowl left tackle Willie Anderson, while Smith dueled Adam Snyder - an injury replacement for Jonas Jennings.

So how about comparing Douglas and Smith against the same player in the same stadium, All-Pro Seahawks tackle Walter Jones at Seattle's Qwest Field?

Again, this analysis slants somewhat towards Smith. The Bengals lost a tight 24-21 game to Seattle, while the 49ers offense did Douglas no favors in a 24-0 loss in which the 49ers recorded a franchise-low six first downs.

Nevertheless, even with the skewed games, it's clear that Smith is the better player, no matter what the stats say.

Douglas simply couldn't get through Jones to pressure Seattle quarterback Matt Hasselbeck, not even once. He seemed more intent on covering the flat and peeling away from Jones to make a downfield tackle.

Smith had his problems with Jones, but he was able to bull rush him, and wheel him back into Hasselbeck. It's clear after watching two games that Smith is stronger and more athletic than Douglas. Smith proved it in the Seattle game by covering tight end Will Heller on one play. Heller couldn't run away from Smith on a flat route and Smith tackled him after he caught a 2-yard pass.

Seattle also paid Smith a compliment. On a critical 4th-and-1 on the Bengals' 36 with 1:41 left, Seattle ran away from Smith's right-end spot for a 14-yard gain and a first down.

In the two games, Smith never came out of the game and played right end for all but two or three plays. The 49ers plan to highlight him, playing him everywhere on the defensive line, which they did with Douglas.

I'd be surprised if Smith turned out to be a bust. Certainly, the 49ers overpaid him, every team that signs a big name early in free agency does. Nevertheless, he should make a significant impact.

NOTES: Linebacker Parys Haralson might have been somewhat surprised to receive an extra $243,000 this year (don't you love it when that happens). Haralson benefitted from the Performance-Based Payment distribution from the 2002 Collective Bargaining Agreement.

Based on a formula of playing time, salary, bonuses and incentives, players are awarded money from the Performance-Based Payment pool if they play a fair amount but are in a lower salary bracket. Haralson, a fifth-round draft choice in 2006, made $360,000 in base pay last year and is due to make $445,000 this year.

Thanks to NoFear for the heads up on the "L" in the Aquiar site. It's been corrected.

COMMUNITY CALENDAR: The 49ers eighth annual ski event takes place April 3-6 and will include coaches Mike Nolan, Greg Manusky and Mike Martz. Alex Smith, Joe Nedney, Vernon Davis, Manny Lawson, David Baas and even Bryant Young are expected to be at Squaw Valley for the event.