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PoLLo LoC831

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Mar 20, 2005
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Gore Joins Off-Season Program

http://sf49ers.com/pressbox/news_detail.php?PRKey=4119&section=PR News

Chrissy Mauck
April 02, 2008

Much like last season, this off-season started off a little rocky for 49ers running back Frank Gore. Going home to Miami when the season ended has always brought an ear to ear grin for Gore, but returning back to Florida this year is when it finally hit home that his beloved mother Liz, who had succumbed to a long and hard fought kidney disease prior to the 49ers week two game last year against St. Louis was truly gone.

“The season kept my mind busy last year, but it was really tough once I was staying back at the house and I’d sit there remembering so much stuff,” said Gore. “When she was sick, I’d lay in the bed with her and we’d just talk about everything. I just miss being with her and talking to her and seeing her be so happy just because I was home. So, that was really tough, but I just have to stay strong and try to get better at dealing with it.”

Gore has also been dealing with recovery from last year’s high ankle sprain, one that likely would have shelved most players, but the 2006 NFC leading rusher had already missed training camp and the preseason with a broken hand. He allowed himself to rest the ankle only one game in 2007, and then gutted it out and became only the fifth player in team history to rush for more than 1,000 yards in consecutive seasons with 1,102 rushing yards.

“It was tough every week with people grabbing it,” said Gore. “After the games, the painkillers went away and I could barely walk, but it was a tough year for everybody. I love the game and my team, and I just wanted to keep fighting with them.”

Even after a month of rest, the ankle was still sore when he began his off-season training at Perfect Competition. Eventually the soreness wore off and Gore was able to benefit from working with other top NFL athletes including Anquan Boldin, Plaxico Burress and Fred Taylor.

“We all go at it,” said Gore. “I especially like to compete against Taylor because we really push each other. We have our strengths in different things. In my strengths, he tries to get me in that, and whatever he has his strengths in, I try to get him at that.”

When Gore arrived this week and joined the 49ers off-season strength and conditioning program, he quickly sought that same type of competition and chose cornerback Marcus Hudson to race against.

“Hudson is a defensive back and is a guy with great speed who can run all day long, so I feel like if I go against him, I’ll get better,” said Gore. “The ankle slowed me up this off-season, so I still feel like I’m playing catch up in terms of my conditioning, and so I want to be pushed.”

Gore also expects newly signed backup running back DeShaun Foster to serve as added motivation.

“I feel that if a team wants to get better, there has to be competition,” said Gore. “So we’ll compete, try to get each other better and help the team win.”

Last year Gore publicly expressed his own personal goals. This go around, the only goals he’s willing to share are those of his team.

“I have some pretty high goals, but I’ll keep them to myself,” said Gore. “From a team standpoint, I want us to go to the post-season, and I think to get there, we have to work hard and make sure we all have a high team standard.”

On Tuesday, Gore met the man he hopes can help transform the 49ers last ranked offense into a consistently competitive offense to be reckoned with. Given all that’s been written about Mike Martz’ supposed tendency to overlook the run game, one might assume Gore would be down in the mouth about his new offensive coordinator.


“By me looking at his playbook, it’s similar to Norv Turner’s offense, and that was the best year of my career,” said Gore. “I think if the players buy into the system, we can do great things.”

It also helped the 49ers Pro Bowl back to hear from former Rams running back Marshall Faulk, who had outstanding production in Martz’ system. Gore and Faulk had a long discussion when the two got together at an autograph session in the Bay Area last month.

“Marshall told me not to worry about people talking about how he throws the ball – that I’ll be featured and that I’ll love this offense,” said Gore. “He offered to come out and help me if I needed anything, but that the main thing for me is to show Coach how much I love the game, and to really learn the offense and every position on the field. He said I should study the fullback’s role especially because Coach will use that position in the slot and get the ball to him. So, I just have a lot of studying to do.”

Gore won’t ever forget his mother, but he does hope that in being back in the 49ers fold, he can at least do something about erasing the rest of last year’s on the field disappointments.

“It feels good to be back around the guys and to be back out on the field with them,” said Gore. “Every day this off-season that I’ve gone to work out, I thought about what last year was like and how we underachieved. We were better than that, and we can’t let that happen again. I just can’t wait till we really start playing football again so we can show what this team can do.”
 

PoLLo LoC831

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Perfect attendance should earn Willis a green sticker

http://49ers.pressdemocrat.com/default.asp?item=2181422

It's not too difficult to figure out which 49ers defensive player should be entrusted with the responsibility of wearing the radio device to listen to incoming signals from the sideline.

It has to be somebody who rarely comes off the field. It should be somebody who lines up close to the umpire. (The defensive player with the green dot on the helmet is required to report to the umpire upon taking the field.)

Sounds like this is a job for inside linebacker Patrick Willis.

Willis and cornerback Nate Clements were the only players to be on the field for every defensive snap for the 49ers last season. Because the defense was on the field for more plays than any other team in the league -- 1,079 snaps - those two saw more action than any players in the NFL.

(Coach Mike Nolan has not committed to Willis as the player to wear the device, but he is clearly the only logical choice.)

* * *

According to a Foxsports.com report, there were only 35 of 1,898 players in the league to play every snap. Only three rookies did not come off the field, and two of them - Willis and tackle Joe Staley - played for the 49ers. Browns tackle Joe Thomas was the other.

The 49ers had a league-high five player take part in every snap during the season. The others were guard Larry Allen and center Eric Heitmann.

The rule allowing one defensive player to wear a speaker in his helmet to get play calls from the sideline passed by a 25-7 vote. The 49ers were proponents of the rule. The seven votes opposing the rule came from teams with coaches having offensive backgrounds: Seahawks (Mike Holmgren), Rams (Scot Linehan), Raiders (Lane Kiffin), Buccaneers (Jon Gruden), Eagles (Andy Reid), Redskins (Jim Zorn) and Packers (Mike McCarthy).

* * *

Looking at this report, probably the most impressive note was seeing that Justin Smith played a remarkable 97.9 percent of the Bengals plays. Defensive linemen are generally rotated regularly, and for Smith to play nearly every snap is absolutely amazing.

It's doubtful Smith will approach that percentage again. I'm sure the 49ers want to avoid burning him out. With more rest during the course of a game, expect Smith to be a major factor in 2008.

* * *

The 49ers have not officially arranged visits with all the draft-eligible players. Just a reminder that these visits don't necessarily mean that the club has targeted those players. That would be way too easy. The team says that a lot of these visits are because the club did not get a chance to finish the entire process with an individual at the combine or one of the bowl games.

Ray McDonald, Tarell Brown and Jason Hill (local combine) were among the players who visited the 49ers prior to last year's draft. Remember, McDonald had a medical condition with his knee that the 49ers probably wanted to check out further. And Brown had some sketchy circumstances with his recent past that the 49ers wanted to evaluate.

Among the others who visited the 49ers last year were S LaRon Landry, DE Jamaal Anderson, WR Robert Meachem, DT Alan Branch, DT Ikaika Alama-Francis, OT Jermon Bushrod, DE Justin Harrell, OT Tony Ugoh and CB Eric Wright (local combine).

* * *
 

PoLLo LoC831

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First-round receiver? Nah, we'll pass

http://www.sacbee.com/static/weblogs/49ers/archives/011547.html

Will it be Devin Thomas, Mario Manningham or Limas Sweed? Early Doucet or Malcolm Kelly? DeShaun Jackson or James Hardy? Which of these receivers will the 49ers take at pick No. 29? My guess – none of them. Despite a big need for a future No. 1 receiver, I don’t think the 49ers will try to find one in the first round, and here’s why:

Top-tier receivers are historically hard to find, especially if you don’t have a Top 10 pick. There have been 43 receivers taken in the first round in the last 10 drafts. Of those, nine have been to a Pro Bowl. Of those nine, only two – Javon Walker in 2002 and Reggie Wayne in 2001 – weren’t selected in the first 10 picks. Walker was selected No. 20 overall; Wayne went No. 30 overall.

Well, what about Mike Martz? Doesn’t he want better receivers at his disposal? Well, sure. But my sense is that he’d rather have another bookend offensive tackle and will say as much if the personnel staff asks him. Two of Martz’s best receivers over the years have been Torry Holt (no. 6 overall in 1999) and Roy Williams (no. 7 in 2004). But he’s also had great success with Isaac Bruce (2nd round 1994), Mike Furrey (undrafted 2000), Kevin Curtis (3rd round 2003) and Shaun McDonald (4th round 2003).

The point is that Martz can find a productive receiver just about anywhere in the draft. And this draft is teeming with solid mid-round prospects. Heading into the Senior Bowl, for example, Adarius Bowman, Doucet and Sweed were the three big names. The players who came up biggest during practice and in the game, however, were Lavelle Hawkins, Andre Caldwell and Harry Douglas. There’s also Eddie Royal, Earl Bennett, Josh Morgan, Dexter Jackson, Donnie Avery, Jordy Nelson … the list goes on.

Here’s another reason: Koren Robinson. He was a Scot McCloughan guy with the Seattle Seahawks in 2001. Robinson should have been great – he had size, speed, good hands, excellent college production. But he had some troubling off-the-field issues involving alcohol, and that’s what sunk Robinson’s career. Robinson came out of NC State as a junior and McCloughan and the Seahawks simply didn’t know enough about him. That experience has made McCloughan wary of juniors in general (one of the reasons the 49ers are heavy on Senior Bowl alums) and wary of junior receivers in particular. Thomas, Kelly, Jackson, Manningham and Hardy all are juniors. Sweed and Doucet are seniors who struggled through injuries in their final season.

****

Great news! Gerry Austin is one of two NFL referees who will be retiring. The other is Larry Nemmers. Niner fans, of course, will remember Austin for the head-scratching explanation in Pittsburgh last season involving Vernon Davis and Troy Polamalu that all but halted the 49ers’ second-half momentum. ESPN’s Mike Sando, who is to stats what Michaelangelo was to paint (and who used to be a newspaper guy before being tempted by the Dark Side), writes that Austin suffered a league-high 13 replay reversals in 2007. And that’s not a good stat. So in addition to being wrong (a lot), Austin committed what I consider the cardinal sin -- slowing down the game.

-- Matt Barrows
 

PoLLo LoC831

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49ers Announce Preseason Layout

http://www.49ers.com/pressbox/news_detail.php?PRKey=4121&section=PR News

The NFL announced on Thursday information regarding the preseason schedule for all 32 teams.

The 49ers 2008 Preseason Schedule is as follows:
Week 1 - at Oakland (CBS5, KNBR 1050 and The Bone)
Week 2 - home vs Green Bay (CBS5, KNBR 1050 and The Bone)
Week 3 - at Chicago (Thurs 8/21, FOX)
Week 4 - home vs SD (Fri 8/29, CBS5, KNBR 1050 and The Bone)

All exact dates and times will be firmed up in Mid-April.

Factoid: Three of these four opponents are the same as the 49ers preseason opponents in 2007. The only new preseason opponent for the 49ers this year is the Green Bay Packers.
 

Tony

Sicc OG
May 15, 2002
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Aw man that first game is going to be weak... our starters probably won't play as much.... so we're going to see the battle of the backups.
 

PoLLo LoC831

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Mar 20, 2005
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Niners announce exhibition schedule

http://49ers.pressdemocrat.com/default.asp?item=2182332

Niners fans will get a chance to see new Green Bay starting quarterback Aaron Rodgers during the second week of the exhibition season when the Packers play the 49ers at Candlestick. The 49ers today announced their exhibition schedule.

Of course, the 49ers said they were considering Rodgers, the Chico native and former Cal QB, with the No. 1 overall pick in the 2005 draft. The 49ers had their sights set on Alex Smith all along, and Rodgers ended up plummeting in the draft to No. 24, where the Packers selected him. Rodgers enters this season as the Packers' No. 1 quarterback after Brett Favre's retirement.

Smith expects to be near 100 percent for the team's minicamp the weekend after the draft. He said he'll be full-go for the start of training camp. In Week 2 of the exhibition season, the Smith-Shaun Hill competition should be worth watching.

* * *

My first reaction when looking at the schedule is to see what road trips are on the horizon. Nothing like making that long trek to Oakland. Oh, well.

But -- wait -- there's another trip to Chicago.

Wow. The 49ers and Bears will be playing each other. It's only a preseason game, so what really can come of it? But the bad blood between the teams' front offices should be intense. Will the Bears be keeping an eye on Lance Briggs to make sure nobody from the 49ers talks to him.

If the Bears send Briggs out to midfield as a captain for the coin toss . . . and if a 49ers player has the audacity to shake his hand . . . will the Bears file tampering charges with the league office?

* * *
 

PoLLo LoC831

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Mar 20, 2005
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Looking for Moore at outside linebacker

http://www.sacbee.com/static/weblogs/49ers/archives/011606.html

Heading into the 2008 season, Jay Moore is an unknown quantity at a critical position. The 49ers didn’t get much production – especially pass-rushing production – from their outside linebackers last season and many believe they must take an outside linebacker (QG?) with one of their first picks in the draft. I caught up with Moore today after he finished his morning workouts and found out three big things happened to him this offseason: He got married, he fully recovered from a vicious high-ankle sprain and he lost a little weight. If you’ll remember, Moore showed up last season at 272 pounds after playing defensive end at Nebraska. Right now he’s a 259-pound outside linebacker.

Moore said his primary focus this offseason has been getting leaner and quicker. He says he feels comfortable with his weight, which he remembers was painfully hard to pile on while in college. “Back then you would have protein shakes, an extra burger – anything to add weight,” he said. “I made myself eat as much as I could. It’s a lot easier now. It’s not as stressful. Now I can eat like a normal person.”

Moore’s rookie season ended when he suffered a high-ankle sprain in the preseason and was placed on injured reserve. The term “high-ankle sprain” sounds innocuous, but Moore says he suffered ligament, cartilage and even bone damage, and that doctors told him he would have been better off breaking his ankle. He didn’t start running until Week 12 and didn’t really test it out – making cuts, change of direction – until the offseason. It’s back to normal now, and Moore has been participating fully in the team’s offseason program.

So what will be Moore’s role in 2008? It’s hard to say at this point. He started out last season playing the Sam linebacker position behind Manny Lawson and figures he’ll begin the May minicamp in the same spot. But the 49ers want all of their outside linebackers to be able to play both the Sam and Will (rush) positions. Not only would that make their chameleon defense less prone to injuries, it would keep opposing offenses on their toes. So if the new, slimmed down Moore shows the pass-rush burst the 49ers have been missing – who knows – maybe he’ll appear opposite Lawson instead of behind Lawson.

******
By the way, I talked with Moore about another Nebraska guy, OT Carl Nicks. Here’s what Moore had to say: “He’s a good player. Out of all the tackles there, he’s the one that gave me the biggest fits…. He’s pretty athletic for a big guy.” Moore said that after he was drafted by the 49ers, he went to Nicks to ask him about Northern California. Moore is a lifelong Nebraska native. Nicks is from Salinas.

Moore also agreed that Nicks’ run-in with Lincoln police in early March probably wasn’t a big deal. Nicks was ticketed and cited for “failure to disperse” after police broke up a party he was attending. Incoming coach Bo Pelini later banned Nicks from Nebraska’s Pro Day.
 

PoLLo LoC831

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Mar 20, 2005
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X's and O's with Mike Nolan

http://www.49ers.com/pressbox/news_detail.php?PRKey=4122&section=PR News

Attention all 49ers Faithful! X’s and O’s with Nolan is your chance to ask 49ers head coach Mike Nolan your questions! Once a week during the off-season and then twice a week during the regular season, Coach will answer a few questions from our fans. Answers will be posted on 49ers.com!

Please submit your questions via email to [email protected] and then check back next Friday to see if your question was selected!
 

PoLLo LoC831

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Mar 20, 2005
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Purdy: Not much talk in 49ers stadium talks

http://www.mercurynews.com/49ersheadlines/ci_8807476?nclick_check=1

You might be wondering how the 49ers stadium negotiations in Santa Clara are going. Or maybe not.

But know what? If you are wondering at all, then you apparently are putting more energy into the talks than Cedar Fair, the theme park company that has dithered and dawdled and frustrated just about everyone else connected to the project.

In fact, at this moment, if things fall apart on the Santa Clara stadium deal, Cedar Fair is where you can point the finger.

A quick recap for those just coming to the South Bay tailgate party: The 49ers and Santa Clara are in talks to craft a stadium agreement. It then would be placed before the city's voters this autumn for approval or rejection. But no agreement can be completed smoothly without cooperation from Cedar Fair, the Ohio-based owner of Great America theme park, which adjoins the proposed 49ers stadium site.

Cedar Fair doesn't own the theme park property. The city of Santa Clara does. However, Cedar Fair has a long-term lease on the land - and has certain rights over the parking lots where the stadium would be built. That's where the hang-ups lie. Cedar Fair won't get off its Psycho Mouse seat and cut a deal.

The 49ers have to be annoyed by this, although team spokeswoman Lisa Lang tried her best Thursday to put an optimistic spin on the situation. She noted that the three parties - the football team, the city of Santa Clara and Cedar Fair - held a rare sit-down session a few weeks ago. Before

that, Cedar Fair had sometimes gone months without participating.
"The fact that we are now meeting and talking about the project is a definite improvement over where we were before," Lang said. "But despite the talks, nothing has been resolved. So in that regard, we have not made progress."

Guess not. Because when Lang was asked to provide the date of the next negotiating session involving Cedar Fair, she could not. Neither could Stacy Frole, a spokeswoman for Cedar Fair. But she disagreed with the premise that the company is holding up progress. "We're being made out to be the bad guys here," Frole said, "but we've made our position clear all along."

With all due respect, not really.

In 2006 when the 49ers first announced that Santa Clara was their preferred stadium site, Great America and Cedar Fair endorsed the idea. The theme park even flashed a "Future Home of the 49ers" message on its Highway 101 electronic billboard. That explains why the 49ers and Santa Clara didn't think Cedar Fair would be a roadblock to the project.

Except, oops. Not long thereafter, the company flipped, saying that a 49ers stadium was an awful idea and not compatible with theme park operations. Then, a few weeks later, Cedar Fair switched again and declared itself officially neutral on the project. Finally, late last year, the company declared its firm opposition to the original stadium site, forcing the 49ers to create a Plan B site on the "overflow" parking lot located farther from Great America's main gate.

So. What precisely is Cedar Fair's newest "clear" position? At least for the next five minutes?

"We are agreeable to the overflow lot if certain concerns are met from our end," Frole said. "And we have to work through some of those items."

Terrific. Then work through them. Hold meetings. Whatever. Get it done and give the people a chance to vote on it. The 49ers and Santa Clara have set July 22 as a "soft deadline" for conclusions of their negotiations. That would allow time for the deal to be placed on the November ballot. But if the Cedar Fair issues don't get resolved, that might be difficult.

Of course, this could be what Cedar Fair wants. It might hope the stadium project just melts away, although Frole says otherwise. She said the company has not always received information it has requested from the city and the 49ers in a prompt fashion. Maybe if Cedar Fair representatives agreed to attend more meetings, that wouldn't happen.

Now comes this interesting piece of news: Cedar Fair, as part of a $14 million improvement plan at Great America, wants to build a giant wooden roller coaster on the west side of the theme park. But the new coaster would be 111 feet high on land that is zoned for structures only 35 feet high.

Cedar Fair, therefore, has applied for a zoning variance with Santa Clara to complete the roller coaster in time for the 2009 theme park season. However, the owners of nearby office buildings are not wild about the idea, believing the sound of roller coaster screamers might disrupt workers.

And what is Cedar Fair's stance? It wants to meet with the office building owners and resolve the issue but complains those owners aren't cooperating. After one meeting fell apart, a Great America representative wrote to Santa Clara officials and said the property owners were "hindering the schedule" of the roller coaster timeline.

So let's review, shall we?

• When Cedar Fair proposes to build something on the Great America property, Cedar Fair wants the talks to move faster than fast and gripes when they don't.

• But when the 49ers and the city of Santa Clara propose to build a stadium on the Great America property, Cedar Fair wants to hem and haw and not care whether it takes months or years to get things settled, if they are settled at all.

Look, if Cedar Fair wants to end the frustration and simply kill the stadium project, it should just come right out and say so. Of course, the company won't do that. Such a move would incur the wrath of many 49ers fans - especially the ones who understand that Santa Clara is probably the team's last best hope for a new stadium in the Bay Area.

Consider: If the Santa Clara plan falls through, the 49ers' only other option is the massively flawed and toxic stadium "proposal" in San Francisco, guaranteed to go nowhere. At that point, the team would face two bleak options: Continue to play at disintegrating Candlestick Park, or threaten to leave Northern California for another part of the country.

If that should happen and people angrily trace the situation back to Cedar Fair's roadblocks in Santa Clara . . . well, how full would the Great America roller coasters be? At least the office workers wouldn't have to worry about the screaming.
 

PoLLo LoC831

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Mar 20, 2005
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Groves to visit with 49ers

http://www.sacbee.com/static/weblogs/49ers/archives/011630.html

Quentin Groves, the defensive end-turned-linebacker from Auburn, will pay the 49ers a pre-draft visit one week from today, according to his agent. The 49ers are believed to be eying Groves for the Will linebacker spot that primarily provides the pass rush in the 49ers’ 3-4 defense. Several 49ers evaluators, including GM Scot McCloughan, attended Groves’ pro-day workout at Auburn last month. Of course, with more and more teams playing a 3-4 these days, the 49ers aren’t the only team interested. Groves will visit nine teams in the coming weeks: Pittsburgh, Cleveland, Cincinnati, Miami, San Francisco, New Orleans, New York Giants, New York Jets and New England Patriots.

Groves tied the career sack record at Auburn last season despite battling injuries (dislocated toes) and finishing with only three sacks in 2007. He’s intriguing to 3-4 teams like the 49ers because of his size-speed combination. At 255 or so pounds, he ran the 40 in an impressive 4.57 seconds at February’s combine. And perhaps even more eye-catching than that, he hoisted 225 pounds 30 times. That was one of the top showings for defensive ends, and the very best mark for linebackers.

In the mock drafts I have seen, Groves goes anywhere from the mid first round to the very end of the second. That makes me think that there are varying opinions of him from the teams around the league, which likely stems from his injury-marked senior season. Here is some additional information supplied by Groves’ agent (which explains why it’s so gushing):

* Quentin Groves graduated from Auburn University as one of the top defensive players to ever play for the program. Quentin is an exceptional athlete and versatile player, which he displayed by playing both defensive end and linebacker during senior season at Auburn. Quentin was voted to the 1st team All SEC two years in a row and he holds the title for the most sacks in Auburn history.

* Quentin was forced to grow up fast in rural Greenville, Mississippi. His father was not involved in his life growing up as he was raised by his mother who was often dealing with her own personal issues. At a young age he learned to be self sufficient which motivated him to work hard at athletics. Quentin found football not only as an outlet for all of his energy, but also a sanctuary where he could forget about all of the other issues in his life and focus on the game he loved.

* During his college career at Auburn, Quentin matured faster than most of his teammates. Unlike almost every player in this year’s NFL Draft, Quentin has been married for almost two years to a former Auburn track star. His wife, Treska, supports him fully in his endeavor in the NFL. She is his biggest fan, but also his toughest critic. Treska has continued to motivate Quentin throughout the process of training for the NFL Combine and Auburn Pro Day.

* After the Peach Bowl, they moved to Atlanta where Quentin trained with fellow Auburn Defensive Lineman Pat Sims. He also trained with Tony Villani of XPE Sports in Roswell, Georgia for all his athletic drills in preparation for the Combine. Chuck Smith, the former Defensive End of the Atlanta Falcons, trained Quentin for the position drills and prepared him to be a better pass rusher at the next level. Smith worked with him on improving his moves and technique to complement his natural speed.
 
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Now comes this interesting piece of news: Cedar Fair, as part of a $14 million improvement plan at Great America, wants to build a giant wooden roller coaster on the west side of the theme park. But the new coaster would be 111 feet high on land that is zoned for structures only 35 feet high.

Cedar Fair, therefore, has applied for a zoning variance with Santa Clara to complete the roller coaster in time for the 2009 theme park season. However, the owners of nearby office buildings are not wild about the idea, believing the sound of roller coaster screamers might disrupt workers.
Rollercoaster > 49ers new stadium
 

Chree

Medicated
Dec 7, 2005
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A Little of This, a Little of That

Spitblood has laid down an intriguing challenge - Pick the 49ers first-day draft picks for fun and prizes, the top prize being a smokeless ash tray. No, we will think of something else for the top prize. Who's interested?

The latest Pro Football Weekly had three anonymous takes from NFL football people on the tampering charge leveled against the 49ers.

"... league wide observers agree that the tampering penalty doesn’t reflect well on new Niners GM Scot McCloughan, who is under major pressure to oversee the Niners’ transition back to being a respectable organization."

"How many teams get caught for tampering? ... The worst part was being embarrassed by the league."

"What the Bears did to the 49ers was disrespectful and low class. They did not have to treat it the way they did."

Bryant Young hasn't completely closed the door on retirement. He hasn't filed his papers with the league yet. He's also engaging in plenty of team activities including the annual ski event last weekend. Young has also spent some time at the team facility lately.

But can he stomach another year of disappointment? Young said at the end of the season that it was too tough for him mentally to go through another losing campaign.

Tully Banta-Cain can ride GoKarts and recover fumbles for TD's.

NFL.com

Tully Banta-Cain can ride GoKarts and recover fumbles for TD's.

Tully Banta-Cain won a charity GoKart race in the HP parking lot Sunday in a benefit for the Loneliest Road Campaign, which raises awareness and funds for pediatric cancer research. Nearly all the celebrities were 49ers or former 49ers.

Jeff Ulbrich, Young, J.J. Stokes, Keena Turner and former 49ers fullback and current Raiders running backs coach Tom Rathman all took part. Banta-Cain had an unfair advantage, he said he raced GoKarts twice a week at a little track in New England when he was with the Patriots.

Ulbrich made the biggest splash with his daring driving. He sent himself and others careening into the barrier.

"Well, I'm the best athlete out here," Ulbrich announced in a bit of trash talk.

"Hey, whatever," Banta-Cain shot back.

Later, Young said that Ulbrich was driving "dirty."

All the players and former players had a blast.

"It was a lot of fun," Banta-Cain said. "It's a great cause and it needs some publicity."