East Bay Times

Beathard called upon to head up San Francisco’s effort as spoiler

- Ky aam Inman cinman@bayareanew­sgroup.com

The 49ers’ “Super Bowl Revenge Tour” has taken a long-suspected detour. They officially aren’t going back to the playoffs, and they won’t atone for last season’s Lombardi Trophy giveaway.

Their mission has changed with two games to play.

“Our motto the last week is: just go out

there and have some fun,” said C. J. Beathard, who, because of injuries to Jimmy Garoppolo and Nick Mullens, will be the 49ers’ third starting quarterbac­k this season when they play today against the host Arizona Cardinals.

Beathard’s former Iowa teammate

George Kittle will be back in uniform to help Beathard and the 49ers, and to gain momentum for next season’s anticipate­d rebound with healthier players.

“Yeah, we didn’t have the year we wanted to have. We’ve got a lot of pieces coming back,” Kittle said Thursday. “One of my favorite things to say is, ‘I get Nick Bosa next year.’

“It’s really fun for me to say because

he’s just one of my favorite football players to ever even watch. I know he’s excited to get back. I’m going to put my chips in that when Nick Bosa is healthy, we’re going to be just fine.”

Even with Bosa and Kittle and other stars, the 49ers lost to Arizona in the season opener, and State Farm Stadium in Glendale, Ariz., hasn’t been as kind as the 49ers’ adopted home this past month because of Santa Clara County’s COVID-19 restrictio­ns. The 49ers (5- 9) lost to Buffalo and Washington there earlier this month. After Sunday’s getaway loss in Dallas, no players blamed their refugee status for their freefall.

If the 49ers are to upset the Cardinals (8- 6) behind a third-string quarterbac­k and a drasticall­y redacted roster, here are five players who will influence that:

1. Cardinals quarterbac­k Kyler Murray

Murray led the Cardinals to a 24-20 comeback win over the host 49ers in the season opener, and one key way he did so was by running, then ducking. Murray (13 carries, 91 yards) slid late and drew unsports

manlike conduct penalties on Dre Greenlaw and Kerry Hyder in the Cardinals’ second-half surge.

“The dude is as fast as can be and it’s definitely a task trying to get him down,” Greenlaw said. “First game, we had so many penalties because everyone tried to get in a lick, but as soon as they get there, he goes down.

“Playing him a second time, we know what to expect. We have to make sure we’re locked in, on it, ready to hit but as soon as he slides, don’t do too much.”

Murray does a lot more than run. He has 25 touchdown passes and 10 rushing TDs. He won his third NFC player of the week honor of 2020 last week, passing for 406 yards and three touchdowns plus a rushing touchdown in a 33-26 win over Philadelph­ia.

“He’s one of the best in the world with regards to getting out of the pocket and extending plays and getting first downs with his feet,” defensive coordinato­r Robert Saleh said. “So, I guess Sunday will tell us everything we need to know about how far we’ve come.”

2. 49ers quarterbac­k C. J. Beathard

Time to see if Beathard brings more than just toughness to praise. He won’t be afforded time to

shake off rust in his first start since 2018, which was a last-minute defeat at Arizona against Josh Rosen (Beathard’s backup today).

Beathard acknowledg­es he previously lingered too long in the pocket before escaping. He’s been to susceptibl­e to hard hits (40 sacks, 17 games).

“We’re a lot better team than we were back then,” Beathard said of his former starts in 2017 and ’ 18. “We’ve got a lot of guys that have been in the offense, you know, some of us for two, three years now that they know the scheme. Me being able to get rid of the ball quicker, being on the same page with guys, that helps a lot, too.”

If Beathard excels in this two-game tryout, that could coerce coach Kyle Shanahan to bring him back a fourth season, even if it’s as a No. 3 quarterbac­k. Mullens’ elbow surgery could keep him out all of 2021, so the door is open for Beathard to regain solid footing.

A r izona coach K lif f Kingsbury’s scouting report on Beathard: “He knows the offense inside and out. Smart player, accurate thrower.”

Beathard has completed just 57.8% of his passes. Two of his 45 passes this season produced late-game touchdowns, raising his ca

reer total to 14 touchdowns against 13 intercepti­ons.

Now, if Beathard stinks it up, Shanahan has no intention of pulling him for Rosen, who surely would love taking a crack at his former team ( he was drafted No. 10 overaall by Arizona in 2018). Rosen joined the 49ers on Wednesday and this is not seen as a tryout.

3. Cardinals wide receiver DeAndre Hopkins

There’s no question he could be as dominant as he was in Week 1 (14 catches, 151 yards). The biggest mystery is who will try defending him this time.

Richard Sherman’s season- long calf woes will keep him out, and possibly from ever again suiting up for the 49ers, since he’s said it would take a miracle to re-sign him because of the team’s financial crunch.

Jason Verrett should be game for opposing Hopkins. Verrett missed the opening matchup because of a hamstring injury, then made a stirring comeback this season to revive his career. He missed last game because of illness but looks on track to play.

But safety Jimmie Ward (concussion) is also out, and safety Tarvarius Moore (knee) and cornerback Emmanuel Moseley ( hamstring) are questionab­le.

Ahkello Witherspoo­n could be a hot target if he starts again, having resurfaced last week with nice plays. Saleh called it one of Witherspoo­n’s best games since his 2017 rookie year.

4. 49ers wide receiver Brandon Aiyuk

All due respect to the 49ers’ two offensive Pro Bowlers — left tackle Trent Williams and fullback Kyle Juszczyk — but Aiyuk has been the 49ers’ brightest star on offense. He has 59 receptions for 733 yards and five touchdowns. He is 195 yards shy of breaking Jerry Rice’s single-season record for yards by a 49ers rookie.

“Going into a game, my mindset is that I’m going to have 200 yards, and then go from there,” Aiyuk said. “The mindset is not to worry about that record, but to go have the perfect game, which I’ve yet to do.”

Also watch if Aiyuk gets more opportunit­ies as a punt returner. Return specialist Richie James Jr. fumbled a punt return last week and Trent Taylor is on the COVID-19 reserve list. Aiyuk has rotated in as a punt returner the past three games. He has two returns (26 yards) and two fair catches.

5. Tight end Kittle Shanahan hasn’t flinched when asked, with no playoffs at stake, why in the

heck he’d play Kittle for the first time since a Nov. 1 foot fracture. Simply, Shanahan insists that a medically cleared Kittle should not be withheld from action when other players are pushing through injuries to finish the season.

Kittle’s got a nice little rivalry going with the Cardinals, too. He’s been injured the past two times the 49ers faced them.

“This team’s going to look pretty different next year,” Kittle said. “I’m excited for that, but I’m also exited to play these two games and give some teams some fits. It’s going to be pretty fun.”

On Halloween night 2019 in Arizona, he sustained knee and ankle injuries in a tight victory. He missed the next two games, including a rematch 17 days later. In this season’s opener, Kittle’s four catches (44 yards) sparked the 49ers to an early lead, but Budda Baker’s hit sprained Kittle’s knee and sidelined him the next two games.

Kittle has missed the past six games, eight overall, after signing a record contract for a tight end before this season.

Perhaps this game will have to suffice as the vengeance Kittle vociferous­ly sought after the 49ers’ Super Bowl defeat.

 ?? ANDA CHU — STAFF PHOTOGRAPH­ER ?? C.J. Beathard will be the 49ers’ quarterbac­k today when they take on the Arizona Cardinals in Glendale, Ariz.
ANDA CHU — STAFF PHOTOGRAPH­ER C.J. Beathard will be the 49ers’ quarterbac­k today when they take on the Arizona Cardinals in Glendale, Ariz.

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