Daily Democrat (Woodland)

Host Rams on Sunday with bevy of issues that NFC West rivals faced from last year

- By Cam Inman Bay Area News Group

The warning signs of a Super Bowl hangover are growing by the week, along with the number in the San Francisco 49ers’ loss column:

• The star quarterbac­k may not be such a star.

• Moves by the young, hotshot coach are more circumspec­t.

• Offensive line breakdowns are plentiful.

• Running back knee injuries are, well, not good.

• Defensive heroes are missing, amid cornerback upheaval.

Why, that also sounds like the 49ers’ immediate predecesso­rs, the 2019 Los Angeles Rams, who missed the playoffs after losing in the prior season’s Super

Bowl.

Rams coach Sean McVay isn’t ready to throw dirt on the 49ers’ presumed fate, at least not before Sunday night’s matchup at Levi’s Stadium.

“Five games is a really small inventory to write the narrative,” McVay said on a conference call with Bay Area media.

“I know these guys will be ready to go. I know what great coaches, what great players they have, so I think there’s a lot of football left to be played for both teams.”

Who’s around to play out that string — or that comeback streak — for the 49ers? Injuries have derailed them from the start, and no team — the Rams, included — has ever had to rebound from a Super Bowl loss while navigating crisis after crisis amid a pandemic.

Here are a few issues the 49ers are workshoppi­ng and how the 2019 Rams relate:

QUARTERBAC­K PLAY » For Jimmy Garoppolo to restore his reputation as a savvy winner, he will have to play (and win) through a highankle sprain, something he was unable to do at first try last Sunday. He got benched by halftime of a 43-17 loss to the Miami Dolphins.

It wasn’t that Garoppolo looked like a sitting duck in the pocket as much as he lacked zip and accuracy, amid an insecure pocket. Those are his trademarks: quick passes on the money, preferably over the middle to George Kittle or an elusive wide receiver for yards

after the catch.

Jumping off the Garoppolo bandwagon so soon is a dicey call. A year ago, the Rams opened 3-2 while Jared Goff had seven touchdown passes and seven intercepti­ons; this year, he has eight TDs, three intercepti­ons and four straight games with a passer rating over 100.

Coach Kyle Shanahan acknowledg­ed that high-ankle sprains can linger all season. If Garoppolo can balance the pain while moving the offense down field, that is the 49ers’ best and perhaps only shot at quarterbac­k success.

COACH ‘EM UP » Offensive players have expressed surprise at some defensive schemes they’ve faced. Right tackle Mike McGlinchey called them “wild looks.” Has Shanahan lost the element of surprise and yielded it to his opponents?

Although Dolphins coach Brian Flores remarked how Shanahan’s misdirecti­onand motion-oriented strategies also come with a touch of gimmicks, creative calls have been few and far between this season, aside from the occasional gem such as Kyle Jusczczyk’s

touchdown on a fullback dive last Sunday.

Shanahan has thrived when matching wits against McVay, who was groomed in the Shanahan scheme when they were Washington in 2010-13.

“So much of what I’ve learned about this game stems from being able to work under Kyle in Washington,” McVay said.

A year ago, 49ers defensive coordinato­r Robert Saleh countered McVay’s play calls and constantly celebrated on the Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum’s sideline in a 20-7 49ers win Oct. 13.

A week ago, Saleh’s defense got embarrasse­d, specifical­ly his secondary, especially fill-in cornerback Brian Allen, who everyone agrees should have had more help (and better technique) before his merciful benching. Emmanuel Moseley’s return from a concussion is much needed to offset the Rams’ attack. O-LINE CONFIDENCE » Left tackle Trent Williams and right tackle Mike McGlinchey recently took turns defending their play, saying any breakdowns were not developing into

a habit. That is what they claimed publicly. Privately, they surely know things must improve.

Guards Laken Tomlinson and Daniel Brunskill have had perhaps even more issues on the interior, all while center Ben Garland plays pretty well through his own high ankle sprain from mid-August.

“O-linemen playing together is similar like five basketball players trying to play zone defense together,” Shanahan said. “It doesn’t matter what you do on your own or how you work out or anything. It’s the continuity of guys moving together and getting those reps all the time.”

The 49ers have continuity, which makes their breakdowns so baffling. A year ago, the Rams’ line lacked continuity, and injuries forced them to shuffle their unit which has blossomed into a better unit this year.

McGlinchey called criticism of him and the 49ers’ linemen “over the top,” that it is a “lazy narrative of one play or two, and (critics) see something on Twitter and think they have it figured out.”

 ??  ?? KARL MONDON — BAY AREA NEWS GROUP San Francisco 49ers quarterbac­k Jimmy Garoppolo (10) was sacked by the Los Angeles Rams five times including this one in the fourth quarter, Dec. 21, 2019, at Levi’s Stadium in Santa Clara.
KARL MONDON — BAY AREA NEWS GROUP San Francisco 49ers quarterbac­k Jimmy Garoppolo (10) was sacked by the Los Angeles Rams five times including this one in the fourth quarter, Dec. 21, 2019, at Levi’s Stadium in Santa Clara.
 ?? NHAT V. MEYER — BAY AREA NEWS GROUP ?? San Francisco 49ers head coach Kyle Shanahan leaves the field following their 43-17 loss to the Miami Dolphins at Levi’s Stadium in Santa Clara on Oct. 10.
NHAT V. MEYER — BAY AREA NEWS GROUP San Francisco 49ers head coach Kyle Shanahan leaves the field following their 43-17 loss to the Miami Dolphins at Levi’s Stadium in Santa Clara on Oct. 10.

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