Albuquerque Journal

Elway-Lynch connection goes beyond alma mater

Hall of Fame QB has served as mentor for HOF safety

- BY ARNIE STAPLETON

ENGLEWOOD, Colo. — San Francisco 49ers general manager John Lynch always wanted to be like John Elway, his idol growing up and his mentor in the NFL both on the football field and in the front office.

“John was a tremendous resource,” Lynch said Saturday as his team wrapped up two days of joint practices with Elway’s Denver Broncos in advance of their Monday night preseason game. “He’s a good friend. We’ve got a lot of parallels in where we went to school and being two-sport athletes.”

Both were tutored by celebrated California high school football coach Jack Neumeier and both were Stanford quarterbac­ks who also excelled on the baseball field before starring for the Broncos, albeit a decade apart and at different positions.

When Lynch was a rookie safety in 1993 with the Buccaneers, Elway gave him some pointers after a game that stuck with him his whole career.

That tutoring continued two decades later when Lynch served a sort of apprentice­ship under Elway, the Hall of Fame quarterbac­k-turned-general manager. He attended the 2013 NFL combine with Elway and sat with the Broncos’ GM during the draft.

When the 49ers approached him about their GM job, Lynch sought Elway’s advice again, and Elway told him he could be great in the front office just as he was on the football field for 15 NFL seasons and in the broadcast booth for eight more.

Elway said he knew Lynch had the right temperamen­t, people skills and football knowledge.

“He was a guy that was a great

competitor, and so I thought that being a GM for him would be a really good fit,” Elway said, before quickly adding: “And I apologized to him a couple of times. I told him, ‘I hope you still like it.’ Because I don’t like it after two losing years.”

Unable to find a suitable replacemen­t at QB since Peyton Manning retired in 2016, the Broncos have posted back-to-back losing seasons for the first time since 1971-72 after going to two Super Bowls and winning one in Elway’s first five seasons.

An 11-21 two-year skid led Elway to make yet another offseason change at both head coach (Vic Fangio for Vance Joseph) and quarterbac­k (Joe Flacco for Case Keenum) and use a second-round draft pick on Missouri QB project Drew Lock.

The 49ers already have their franchise quarterbac­k in Jimmy Garoppolo, but he blew out his left knee last September, and San Francisco stumbled to 4-12 after going 6-10 in coach Kyle Shanahan’s first season. Garoppolo won all five of his starts in 2017 following his stunning trade from New England.

At 59, Elway is 12 years older than Lynch, who freely admits it was Elway’s poster he had on his wall growing up.

“I used to try to walk pigeon-toed so I’d be more like him and all those things,” Lynch said, chuckling. “But now to call him a friend and I think the little bit of time in an offseason when he had me come in here was very integral in my motivation to do this and saying, hey this might be something that someday I might want to do.

“So, he’s been a tremendous resource and I have a great amount of respect and admiration for him in everything he’s done.”

The Broncos and 49ers got together for workouts this week largely because of the close relationsh­ip between Elway and Lynch, and the Broncos ejected two players from practice for throwing punches during a dust-up Saturday: roster longshots Brendan Langley and Bug Howard.

“Particular­ly when you have a great partner to work with, there’s so much you get out of this work,” Lynch said, rattling off advantages such as facing different schemes and unfamiliar opponents to evaluating how players handle the uptick in intensity.

“Vic even said to his guys, ‘Hey, these are our teammates for the next couple of days,’ and Kyle reiterated it,” Lynch said before Saturday’s scuffle. “That doesn’t mean that you’re not competing your tail off, but it means let’s respect each other.”

RAIDERS: Oakland Raiders general manager Mike Mayock told disgruntle­d receiver Antonio Brown it’s time to decide whether he’s “all in or all out” about playing this season after losing a fight with the NFL and NFLPA over his helmet.

Mayock issued a statement to reporters that the Raiders released in a video on Twitter expressing his frustratio­n that Brown didn’t participat­e in practice Sunday despite being healed from the frost-bitten feet that have sidelined him for most of training camp.

“You all know that A.B. is not here today. So here’s the bottom line. He’s upset about the helmet issue. We have supported that. We appreciate that,” Mayock said. “But at this point, we’ve pretty much exhausted all avenues of relief. So from our perspectiv­e, it’s time for him to be all in or all out. So we’re hoping he’s back soon. We’ve got 89 guys busting their tails. We are really excited about where this franchise is going and we hope A.B. is going to be a big part of it starting Week 1 against Denver. End of story. No questions.”

Brown has been upset that the NFL and NFLPA won’t allow him to use the same Schutt Air Advantage that he has used throughout his career. Brown filed a grievance over the issue that he lost on Aug. 12 and then set out to find a newer version of the helmet that was less than 10 years old to get approved.

 ?? DAVID ZALUBOWSKI/ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Denver Broncos general manager John Elway, a Hall of Fame quarterbac­k, looks on during a joint practice with the Broncos and San Francisco 49ers on Friday.
DAVID ZALUBOWSKI/ASSOCIATED PRESS Denver Broncos general manager John Elway, a Hall of Fame quarterbac­k, looks on during a joint practice with the Broncos and San Francisco 49ers on Friday.

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