49ers

This comes in a year where the 49ers have already been without their best wide receiver from 2012, Michael Crabtree, who suffered a torn Achilles tendon in the off-season. Rookie linebacker Nick Moody, who played a key role on special teams, is out with a broken hand for at least another five weeks on the IR with return designation.

We'll all remember that another top receiver, Mario Manningham, tore his ACL and PCL late in 2012 and has yet to see the field. Manningham is currently on the PUP list and thus cannot return until after week six.

Nnamdi Asomugha has been held out of the last two games with a knee injury, nose tackle Ian Williams is out for the season with a broken ankle, and former third CB Chris Culliver was placed on IR with a torn ACL in training camp.

Patrick Willis has also missed two games with a groin strain, and Vernon Davis has missed time and generally been slowed by a hamstring injury.
 
The 49ers claimed QB McLeod Bethel-Thompson off waivers and released QB John Skelton.

https://twitter.com/maioccocsn/status/388057429407051776



49ers front office has been looking pretty stupid these past few weeks!
What the hell are you doing Baalke?
We cut BJ Daniels to sign John Skelton.... only to cut Skelton 2 weeks later!



And don't get me started on the rookie DB Marcus Cooper that we cut.
Dude is in Kansas City ballin, I just saw an article about him on the front page of NFL.com

http://www.nfl.com/news/story/0ap20...rising-rookies-tavon-austin-off-to-slow-start


:hithead::hithead::hithead:

Man, I just don't understand some of these moves. I'm not a GM, but damn. :smh:
 
If you don't want your mind blown, please don't read this brief post about the #49ers recent history @ backup QB...

* McLeod Bethel-Thompson was released in 2011 to make room for Scott Tolzien.

* Scott Tolzien was released to make room for B.J. Daniels

* B.J. Daniels was released to make room for John Skelton

* John Skelton was released to make room for ... wait for it, wait for it ... McLeod Bethel Thompson.

Are you still conscious? Did you at least feel queasy? – Matt Barrows 8 minutes ago
 
Man, I just don't understand some of these moves. I'm not a GM, but damn. :smh:

If you don't want your mind blown, please don't read this brief post about the #49ers recent history @ backup QB...

* McLeod Bethel-Thompson was released in 2011 to make room for Scott Tolzien.

* Scott Tolzien was released to make room for B.J. Daniels

* B.J. Daniels was released to make room for John Skelton

* John Skelton was released to make room for ... wait for it, wait for it ... McLeod Bethel Thompson.

Are you still conscious? Did you at least feel queasy? – Matt Barrows 8 minutes ago


he's bored. they need to send him to alaska and take away his communication devices...

boredom moves all the way.
 
Communicating with young players is harder on the field than it is off it, even for the 32-year-old Rogers. During the 49ers Week 4 win in St. Louis, he and Brock disagreed on which receiver – the upfield-bound one and the pass-catcher closer to the line of scrimmage – each corner was supposed to cover.

Brock’s big game in Week 5 was a sign of progress. He was sharing left side of the field with his older, wiser teammate on the third-down play that resulted in his pick-six against Texans quarterback Matt Schaub.

“That’ a process of football, communicating being on the same page,” Rogers said. “As you saw last week, that wasn’t a (trap) we called in practice – that was on the fly.”

With Brock to hold onto the No. 3 cornerback spot in the defense’s nickel packages in Week 6, Rogers and Co. will be tested by a group of athletically-gifted Cardinals wideouts. Larry Fitzgerald’s name comes to mind, but so does the man throwing to him. Arizona quarterback Carson Palmer has thrown nine interceptions in five games to date – the second-highest total for all NFL signal-callers.

“If we see a formation that allows us to jump a route or allows us to make a play, we want to make it," Rogers said. “Our work is going to be cut out for us, but hopefully we can get in a position to keep (Palmer’s) number climbing on picks.”

:yes:
 
Im surprised some people think the Cardinals have a chance against yall tomorrow.....

im not, our offense is aenemic at times :smh: , no consistency

that's been corrected. just need to keep doing what we have been and then throw deep and intermediate routes.

long as we run the ball and use the talent we have we'll be ok.

the cardinals have carson palmer as their qb...

and they don't have a big running back they have speedsters... so..

and on top of that i don't think they're in a position to take any team lightly for the rest of the season.. those 2 weeks were a wake up call for the entire team coaches included.

i expect focus, excellence from here on out trying to earn our spot back..
 
back to calling nothing but cute shit in the red zone i thought we had this problem fixed but apparently fucking not.

run the fucking ball

make a power play.

line up the two te's

frustrating to say the damn least smh it should be 14-0
 
great play calling.

gore breaks one for 30 and then you don't run a similar play for the rest of the drive.

this is the time to run it down their throats. instead you immediately get cute.... this coordinator man smh
 
when someone talks about our secondary you tell them this

In addition, opposing quarterbacks have posted a mind-numbing 67.6 rating against the 49ers through five games. That ranks second in the league behind the Kansas City Chiefs. You take out of account Aaron Rodgers' 333-yard performance against San Francisco in Week 1, its yielding just 153 passing yards per game this season. That's utterly ridiculous by NFL standards today.
Read more at
 
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Outside of basic statistics, which can be misleading, Reid is doing a whole lot more on the field than what is normally expected from a rookie defensive back. Looking at game film, he’s turned out to be a leader and a signal caller for one of the most surprising secondaries in the entire National Football League.

0.jpg


Cornerback Tramaine Brock, who replaced an injured Nnamdi Asomugha in the starting lineup against the Houston Texans last week, took home NFC Defensive Players of the Week honors after intercepting two Matt Schaub passes. The photo (taken from NFL.com’s Rewind feature) shows Brock jumping an Andre Johnson route on a play that he’d eventually return for a touchdowns. On the surface, it appears that Brock did everything on his own here. He read the route and Schaub’s eyes, which eventually led to a early-game changing interception return for a touchdown.
Not to take anything away from Brock here, but Reid deserves an assist.

1.jpg


Here, you can see that Reid is motioning to the right side of the defense. His goal is to point out what’s happening as it relates to Houston’s offensive formation here. What you don’t see in this screenshot is that Reid is motioning directly at Brock, who in turn is looking for help in diagnosing Johnson’s plans on the upcoming play.

The following screenshot gives you a better idea…

2.png


It’s pretty obvious what is happening here. Reid is indicating for Brock to jump the route. The young cornerback did just that and picked Schaub off for an early-game touchdown. What’s even more interesting about this play is that Reid ended up being in position to stop Johnson for a short gain should Brock miss on the interception attempt.

You simply don’t see this type of intelligence and leadership on the field from a defensive back that had four previous regular-season NFL starts under his belt. And it isn’t just an exception to the rule, Reid has acted like a quarterback in San Francisco’s secondary when on the field. In doing so, he has started to remind me a great deal of future Hall of Famer Ed Reed. While not even coming closer to comparing a rookie to someone like Reed, it’s becoming apparent that Reid has that leadership ability in the back end of the defense.

In fact, there can be an argument made that Reid has actually been an upgrade over high-priced free-agent departure Dashon Goldson. This can be evidenced by the fact that Donte Whitner, who struggled terribly in coverage last season, is Pro Football Focus’ third-ranked safety thus far this season. While Goldson and Whitner played well together, they left a lot to be desired as a tandem in coverage. Simply put, this hasn’t been the case with Reid and Whitner through the first five games of the season.

While it remains to be seen which player has had more of an impact on the other, I will go on record indicating that they have meshed extremely well as a tandem in a ridiculously short period of time.

This is evidenced by the way San Francisco’s pass defense has played thus far this season.

All of this leads my to believe that Reid has actually played at a Pro Bowl level thus far this season. Where we could see some rookie struggles moving forward, his play through five games indicates that those will be an exception to the rule throughout the remainder of the season. It’s also important to take into account that San Francisco has taken on four playoffs teams from a season ago in its first five outings this year.
 
The Calvary is coming

Manningham, veteran cornerback Eric Wright and rookie defensive linemen Tank Carradine and Quinton Dial are eligible to begin practicing this week after spending the first six games of the season on the sideline.

“As far as it pertains to Quinton Dial, Tank Carradine, Eric Wright, Mario Manningham, they can start practicing this week, and we anticipate that,” 49ers coach Jim Harbaugh said.
 
Also others are taking notice to what we've been screaming about

that game yesterday should have been a comfortable blow out it should have been 14-0 to start. ad should have been 28-0 basically by the end of the first half

San Francisco was so dominant, defensively, that it is sort of a surprise that it didn’t win this game by a lot more. The 49ers were swarming, forcing turnovers and getting after the passer, while exposing Carson Palmer as the weakness.

These takeaways turned into optimal opportunities for the 49ers, putting them in position to score points early and run away with it, but they could not capitalize. Set up with back-to-back goal situations, the offense only came away with a pair of field goals, making it 6-0 instead of 14-0.

Quarterback Colin Kaepernick also turned it over on the unit’s third attempt, tossing an interception to Cardinals safety Yeremiah Bell on a pass intended for fullback Bruce Miller. It was a questionable series that lacked any real sense of creativity or diversity in ball distribution.

With the game still close, a run on 3rd-and-16 drew the boo birds out in San Francisco.

While the 49ers were able to pull out a win, one has to wonder what this game would’ve looked like had the defense not been a rock. In the end, it adds to the questions swirling around Roman and his total ability as an NFL offensive coordinator, which is namely his play-calling.

needs to get the shit corrected we have multiple red zone weapons.

baldwin jump ball davis and macdonald 2 te set. and boldin as well.

stop the cute shit
 
Also others are taking notice to what we've been screaming about

that game yesterday should have been a comfortable blow out it should have been 14-0 to start. ad should have been 28-0 basically by the end of the first half



needs to get the shit corrected we have multiple red zone weapons.

baldwin jump ball davis and macdonald 2 te set. and boldin as well.

stop the cute shit

www.firegregroman.com

its beeeeen time.. this aint the PAC-12 :angry: :angry: :angry:
 
www.firegregroman.com

its beeeeen time.. this aint the PAC-12 :angry: :angry: :angry:

he's coming around. sort of. he just needs to be serious the entire game instead of just trying shit just to try it.

if you get those possessions in your lap like that. you say we are going to crush their spirits right here

and to be touted as creative he is not when it comes to the red zone or passing. running yes. passing no.

if you put a set where macdonald boldin davis are split out to one side and baldwin is on the left and then throw a quick slant to baldwin side because there would never been any help over there with davis macdonald and boldin on one side that's easy td.

two te sets

just unlimited possibilities
 
he's coming around. sort of. he just needs to be serious the entire game instead of just trying shit just to try it.

if you get those possessions in your lap like that. you say we are going to crush their spirits right here

and to be touted as creative he is not when it comes to the red zone or passing. running yes. passing no.

if you put a set where macdonald boldin davis are split out to one side and baldwin is on the left and then throw a quick slant to baldwin side because there would never been any help over there with davis macdonald and boldin on one side that's easy td.

two te sets

just unlimited possibilities

Nothing in Romans Playbook even closely indicates your vision coming true my nigga :smh:, If Josh McDaniel was our OC :itsawrap:
 
Nothing in Romans Playbook even closely indicates your vision coming true my nigga :smh:, If Josh McDaniel was our OC :itsawrap:

ill settle for running in the red zone because that produces td's lol

if we ran it in the super bowl we'd have a ring. that's all i ask if you can't create no passing stuff

then just please let us run the ball we can get the yards.

something has to happen though. i think jim will get in his ear. the offense is being held back by him. there's a reason nobody has snatched him from us
 
ill settle for running in the red zone because that produces td's lol

if we ran it in the super bowl we'd have a ring. that's all i ask if you can't create no passing stuff

then just please let us run the ball we can get the yards.

something has to happen though. i think jim will get in his ear. the offense is being held back by him. there's a reason nobody has snatched him from us

Crazy thing to me is with all the 'spying' of kaepernick you'd think we'd be seeing way more man coverages and te/rb open in the flats :confused:
 
Crazy thing to me is with all the 'spying' of kaepernick you'd think we'd be seeing way more man coverages and te/rb open in the flats :confused:

we do. the problem is kyle williams kap does not trust it to throw it to him unless he's wide open. and he can't get wide open lined up at the #2. he is a slot wr.

play baldwin and boldin and take advantage of those things.

but we're dealing with the same dude who runs a screen with anthony dixon with kendall hunter and lamichael james on the bench
 
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