:::[Official] San Francisco 49ers 2024 Season Thread [2-2 vs Cardinals 10/07 1:05PST]:::

Should UnicornHunter’s faithful card be revoked for his blasphemous Patrick Willis comments?

  • Yes permanently

    Votes: 31 79.5%
  • Yes temporarily

    Votes: 5 12.8%
  • No

    Votes: 3 7.7%

  • Total voters
    39
  • Poll closed .
the Oline really needs to get their **** together.

they made the eagles Dline looking like god mode out there :x
 
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Lol 
roll.gif
 
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Real talk I just browse this thread and never really post. But I've been watchin all the snaps that Lynch is in particularly because of red80 red80 knowledge of the game. Repped. He will become a household name and steal of the draft.
 
Yeah...when the seats are full perhaps :{

Was at the game, almost all the seats emptied at halftime some didn't get back til halfway through the 1st possession after halftime that's why it looked so bad on tv. Crowd was hyped tho only when it was full.
 
Stevie's TD brought the crowd to life. Seems like everyone was on pins and needles up to that point. Can't say I blame em though, Sackorpick didn't have a great first half sans that amazing throw to Gore.
 
Niners' Frank Gore ensures his message is heard

SANTA CLARA, Calif. -- He runs with the blunt force of The Equalizer, pushing through holes that look almost invisible, finding yards where they don't otherwise exist.

As one of the least likely star running backs in NFL history, Frank Gore  is about as subtle as a Prince guitar solo.

On Saturday afternoon, as the San Francisco 49ers  gathered at the end of the walk-through preceding Sunday's pivotal clash with the Philadelphia Eagles, Gore delivered a message to his teammates tinged with tough love: Stop stressing out about your individual issues, and start committing yourself to pulling this team out of its hole.As a motivational speaker, the dude knows how to rock it, too.

"It was exactly what we needed to hear," Niners guard Alex Boonerecalled after Sunday's 26-21 victory over the Eagles  at Levi's Stadium, gesturing toward the locker of the 10th-year halfback who'd fueled the tenacious, determined and collectively impressive triumph. "He said, 'Let's stop worrying about who gets the credit; let's just go out and win.' And he's right -- stats are for losers. It's a lot nicer to have a ring than to be the leading receiver on your team."

Then, on Sunday, Gore, as is his custom, gave the Niners (2-2) even more of what they needed, energizing 70,799 fans by converting a short, wobbly Colin Kaepernick  pass into a 55-yard touchdown and rushing another 119 yards against the previously undefeated Eagles  (3-1).

Coming off one of the most underwhelming performances of his brilliant career, a six-carry, 10-yard effort in San Francisco's 23-14 defeat to NFC West rival Arizona, the Niners' alltime rushing leader made a resounding statement. And afterward, he let it be known that despite the presence of yet another  younger, fresher model brought in to take his job (rookie Carlos Hyde, a second-round pick out of Ohio State), he has no intention of going quietly.

"Mike, tell the world I can still play," he said shortly after I entered the Niners' locker room, diverting his path toward the shower in the process. "That's what I'm out to show everyone. I've been through so much -- two ACLs, two shoulders, a hip injury that could have ended my career ... Every year, it seems like, they've drafted a back. And yet, I'm still here, and there's a reason the man upstairs got me to this place."

On Sunday, the 31-year-old wonder played like a man with zero patience for anything less than a relentless pursuit of excellence -- which, in fairness, he has every right to be.

As one 49ers  veteran told me: "Let's face it: For us, it has to be now. Because after this year, a whole lot of us could be gone, including the head coach."

Under that backdrop, it's tough not to look at 2014 as the last, best chance to deliver on the massive promise San Francisco has displayed during the Jim Harbaugh  era. Following three consecutive near-misses, the Niners' quest for a sixth Super Bowl  championship has taken on an urgency that permeates throughout the franchise, all of which amped up the tension in the wake of the team's 1-2 start.

Last February, when reports surfaced that tension over Harbaugh's contract status had precipitated an inquiry  from the Cleveland Browns  during their coaching search, the outside world got a sense of just how tenuous the power dynamic is inside the Marie P. DeBartolo Sports Centre. It's not just a financial staredown that has created tension between Harbaugh and his bosses, Niners owner Jed York and general manager Trent Baalke; there are legitimate questions as to whether they'll be able to coexist past this season.

And, sources say, the strain has also filtered into the Niners' locker room, with some veterans beginning to wonder if the coach is more focused on his own interests than he is on those of the team.

One thing that's in everyone's  interest, of course, is short-term success, and these Niners are too talented and battle-hardened to be discounted as a championship contender, even with all the ominous overtones. That made San Francisco's losing-streak-lite -- disheartening defeats to the Bears  and Cardinals, complete with second-half collapses -- especially frustrating, and compelled coaches and players alike to refer to Sunday’s test against theEagles  in unusually weighty terms..

"We talked about this one starting on Monday -- if we want to get to where we want to go, it's a 'must-win' game," Niners fullbackBruce Miller  said. "You fall to 1-3, it's gonna be tough. We'd been suffering from a lot of self-inflicted wounds, which made it even more frustrating. We should  win a lot of games; we've got a good football team. And winning this game makes it a lot less stressful around here, I know that."

What everyone in Ninerland should know by now is that when it comes to stress relief, Gore is the perfect prescription.

A year ago, coming off a gut-wrenchingly close Super Bowl  XLVII defeat to the Baltimore Ravens, the Niners dropped consecutive games to fall to 1-2, creating the first mini-crisis  of Harbaugh's coaching tenure. They confronted it, beginning with a Thursday Night Football drubbing of the Rams  in St. Louis, by scaling back on their offensive ambitions and making Gore the focal point.

He gained 153 yards on 20 carries in that victory over the Rams, sparking a five-game winning streak. San Francisco would literally come within a couple of inches of another Super Bowl  appearance, thwarted only by Seahawks  cornerback Richard Sherman's exceptional effort in the corner of the CenturyLink end zone.

On Sunday at Levi's Stadium, after an opening drive that netted minus-15 yards -- setting up the blocked punt that created the first of three  touchdowns by the Eagles' special teams and defense -- the Niners hopped aboard the Gore Express once more. He blasted through a small hole for 15 yards the first time he touched the ball, bulled forward for a six-yard gain the second time and charged ahead for seven more on his third carry.

To say this had a calming effect on his teammates is like declaring that Wi-fi  has been a bit of a boon to the Silicon Valley.

Said receiver Stevie Johnson, whose brilliant, 12-yard catch on the left edge of the end zone brought the Niners to within 21-20 midway through the third quarter: "It's like, 'Oh -- we're rollin' now.""It gives us confidence," said Joe Staley, the 49ersPro Bowl  left tackle. "It's like, everything is right in our world."

"It's very uplifting," Miller said. "He works so hard, and runs so hard, that when we get him going, it's so rewarding. You know he's gonna give it everything he has, and most of the time he'll make you look better than you should."

You don't have to tell that to Kaepernick, who got the ultimate pick-me-up from his running back at a most stressful time: Facing second-and-17 from his own 45 on the first play of the second quarter, Kaepernick took a shotgun snap and was chased to his left by an Eagles  pass rush (in this case, backup defensive linemen Brandon Bair  and Beau Allen) that looked poised to record a sack for the second consecutive play. As he neared the sideline he stopped suddenly and threw back awkwardly across his body toward the middle of the field -- a ball that at first looked like it had pick six  written all over it

"I was looking back and saw Kap throw it across his body," Staley said, "and I'm thinking, 'Oh (expletive).' I turned around real quick and saw it heading to Frank with no one around him. And then he was gone."

Gore caught the ball at the Philly 42, rambled to his right and charged ahead with a purpose that few others in his profession can summon. Just inside the 25-yard-line, Eagles  safety Earl Wolff  angled in to make the tackle -- and was negated by a forceful stiff-arm that Gore delivered without breaking stride.

"When Frank gets it going like that," Boone said, "it's over."

It wasn't that simple -- at least not on this day. It took a heroic defensive effort from the Niners' defense, which held Chip Kelly's vaunted offense to 213 yards and zero  points, preserving the San Francisco lead with a terrific goal-line stand that left Philly a yard short of the end zone with 1:55 remaining.

It's also quite possible that the tension swirling in Santa Clara will resurface and persist, and that this skilled team will buckle under the weight of expectations, infighting and individual agendas.

"Frank is who he is for a reason," receiver Anquan Boldin  said. "He's a guy who has  to touch the ball. It's just a mindset, and we feed off of it. You can't be timid. You can't be soft. That's what he did today -- that’s what he gave us. The guy is a football player. Some people just are. He's that guy."Whatever the challenges, it's clear that the majority of men who wear the red-and-gold uniforms would prefer that Gore be a big part of the solution. He declined to comment on his Saturday speech to the team -- "I don't want to get into any of that," he said -- but judging from what we saw on Sunday, it certainly seemed like his teammates took his words to heart.

In what may well be his final season as a 49ers  player, Gore is a guy hell-bent on making sure that everyone around him puts the team first. He does, however, indulge himself one bit of individual competition: A third-round pick out of Miami in 2005, Gore can rattle off all five backs picked ahead of him, and he proudly notes that he's one of two runners from that crop still employed by an NFL team. The other survivor, former Chargers  fourth-rounder Darren Sproles, reasserted his relevance on Sunday, taking a punt 82 yards to the house to give the Eagles  a 21-10 lead with 8:48 left in the second quarter.

"Me and Sproles are the last ones left standing, and I'm trying to beat him out, man," Gore said, smiling, after emerging from the shower. "It's gonna be tough, though."

It's a challenge from which Gore won't back down, and one which, in his mind, pales in comparison to the Niners' collective quest for a championship. However it ends -- their story, his story, the Harbaugh era, all of it -- there's one point that was driven home on Sunday, and it wasn't subtle: Frank Gore  can still play.
 
 
EXTEND FRANK ASAP

2-3 years.
I agree and i feel like at this point in his career he would even take less than what his market value would be to stay with the 9ERS for a chance to get that Super Bowl championship!!! ...even though he is getting older and been in the league a long time for a running back he still got something left in that tank!!!!......i gotta say though i like what i see early in Hyde, so hopefully when Frank is ready to say goodbye we'll be in good hands!!!
 
I agree and i feel like at this point in his career he would even take less than what his market value would be to stay with the 9ERS for a chance to get that Super Bowl championship!!! ...even though he is getting older and been in the league a long time for a running back he still got something left in that tank!!!!......i gotta say though i like what i see early in Hyde, so hopefully when Frank is ready to say goodbye we'll be in good hands!!!

Agreed. I hope he gets extended and ends his career as a life time 49er.
 
^agreed but like any NFL player you never know money talks and a lot of teams would love to have someone like frank.

Great read red. Ain't no better way to change the tide then a performance like that.
 
Just checked in after the game awesome
Nail biter. Some of y'all are quick to assume its over its comical. We finally played 60 minutes of football.

Lynch looked special at times yesterday. Him and Aldon are gonna be a problem on the stunt with cowboy.
 
Things I noticed also Anthony Davis was dominating whoever rushed off his side. And Culliver never wants to tackle.
Kap was asked to do a lot yesterday with a damn free rusher coming through the A gap every other 3rd Down.
 
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The 49ers’ coaching staff wanted to make Friday’s practice so taxing on the defense that Sunday would seem like a breeze by comparison.

The defensive backs chased the scout-team receivers deep downfield on one play, then turned around to find a fresh set of receivers already lined up for the next snap. Coordinator Vic Fangio didn’t send in the plays to his panting defenders until the last second. All the while, Guns N’ Roses blasted at them from colossal speakers on the side of the practice field.

Fangio :hat
 
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