Daily Democrat (Woodland)

Kurtenbach

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Shanahan said he's looking for “timing, accuracy, where the balls should go, what play they have. Who makes the consistent right play the most? Who plays the most realistica­lly that gives you the chance to win?” Aren't we all?

As for comparing this quarterbac­k room to past editions: “I don't want to compare it to other years, but we have two guys who are talented enough to be taken in the top five of the draft, and we have another guy who played like it last year. I like the three guys we got.”

And there's a lot to like at this consequenc­e-free juncture of the new season.

Lance's fabled new mechanics are real and spectacula­r; Darnold can spin it with the best of them and is set to take “firstteam” reps as OTAs continue, while Purdy seems to be ahead of schedule in his UCL rehabilita­tion. He's poised to start throwing footballs next week.

No player is perfect — otherwise, we wouldn't be discussing a competitio­n — but their upsides are undeniable.

Lance as a pure thrower isn't something we've seen with the 49ers. That could be a gamechange­r for the team and his career.

Purdy's play last season should give him a head start, but his injury might have negated it. That's life in the NFL.

And the word out of Santa Clara is that Darnold has really impressed the coaching staff. Add in the fact that he's the kind of reclamatio­n project that Shanahan won't quit — the Niners coach likes to do things that make him look like a genius — and you have a threeway competitio­n for the top job.

The good news for the Niners is that thanks to the NFL's new “Purdy” rule, the team can keep all three talented quarterbac­ks on the roster. Every team can now keep a quarterbac­k as an emergency player for games without him counting against the game-day roster.

Apologies to Brandon Allen, who is also a quarterbac­k currently on the 49ers roster.

One time, I swear, things will be straightfo­rward going into the season for the Niners at this position.

Since Shanahan took over, the Niners have boasted certainty at quarterbac­k heading into one campaign — 2020, which just so happened that it was the most uncertain year any of us have ever lived. No one knew if there would be a season, but after eschewing Tom Brady that offseason, at least the Niners knew Jimmy Garoppolo was their starter.

But despite Purdy's play, any chance at certainty went out the window — along with the Niners' chance of going to the Super Bowl — with Haason Reddick's hit in the NFC Championsh­ip.

Now, when Purdy returns to the fold, this conundrum might become simple. Mr. Irrelevant is the man, Lance is his backup, and Darnold is around for emergencie­s.

Or maybe Lance's summer trip to George Kittle's Tight End U camp will inspire the 6-foot-5 quarterbac­k to change positions.

And perhaps all that Darnold hype emanating from Tasman Drive is just the groundwork for a Darnold trade.

This doesn't have to be a mess.

But in May, it is. And all things considered, that seems like a good thing for the Niners.

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