Greenwich Time

Full circle for Jets’ Gore with facing familiar 49ers

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NEW YORK — Frank Gore took his first snap as a pro in what seems like a lifetime ago. And in the physical, not-for-long nature of the NFL, it might as well have been.

Mike Nolan was the coach of the San Francisco 49ers in 2005, with Mike McCarthy the offensive coordinato­r. Tim Rattay was the starting quarterbac­k, with No. 1 overall pick Alex Smith waiting in the wings. Gore was a wideeyed third-round pick running up the depth chart.

Meanwhile, somewhere in South Florida, current 49ers defensive end Nick Bosa wasn’t even 8 and couldn’t have had any idea he’d someday need to tackle Gore — who’s still going strong at 37.

“He seems like an unbelievab­le dude, but he’s the enemy this week,” Bosa said. “So (we) have to get after him.”

It all comes full circle for the ageless running back on Sunday when his New York Jets host the team with which he began his NFL career.

“I want to win, especially coming off a loss last week,” Gore said, referring to the Jets’ 27-17 defeat at Buffalo. “I want us to look a lot better as an offensive team and that’s doing whatever it takes to win.

“It could be the 49ers, it could be Seattle, whoever. I just want to get a win.”

So, no, it’s not a reunion tour for Gore, who isn’t exactly reminiscin­g about the old times. With Le’Veon Bell on injured reserve with a hamstring injury, Gore is being asked to lead a banged-up backfield against a 49ers squad that’s also 0-1 and looking to bounce back from a seasonopen­ing loss to Arizona.

Rookie La’Mical Perine could make his debut this week for the Jets after missing the past few weeks with an ankle injury. Newly signed Kalen Ballage might also be in the mix. But, it will likely be Gore who sets the tone for an offense that struggled mightily a week ago.

“I know that’s a big load with Le’Veon not playing this week and being out for a couple weeks,” said Gore, who signed with the Jets in the offseason. “But even when Le’Veon was here, I was always preparing like I was the guy just because you never know what happens. That’s why every day I go out on the practice field and prepare like I do.

“If my number gets called, I want to be ready.”

That has been Gore in a nutshell throughout his now 16 NFL seasons.

Teammates, coaches, fans and media have marveled at how the thirdleadi­ng rusher in league history keeps himself in shape — physically and mentally — approachin­g the game with the enthusiasm and hunger of that 22-year-old kid in San Francisco all those years ago.

“I love Frank Gore,” said 49ers coach Kyle Shanahan, who remembers watching him at the University of Miami while serving as the offensive quality control coach at Tampa Bay from 2004-05.

CROWDER OUT WITH HAMSTRING INJURY

NEW YORK — Wide receiver Jamison Crowder has been ruled out for the New York Jets’ game Sunday against the San Francisco 49ers because of a hamstring injury.

Crowder’s absence is a big blow to Sam Darnold and the offense, which struggled despite the receiver having seven catches for 115 yards and a touchdown in the season-opening loss at Buffalo last Sunday.

“We’ll have to make some adjustment­s,” coach Adam Gase said Friday.

Crowder, who led the Jets last season with a careerhigh 78 catches, was listed on the team’s injury report last week with a hamstring issue but practiced fully and played.

Gase said Crowder was running earlier this week and “kind of pulled up.” He was limited at practice Wednesday, but sat out Thursday and Friday.

Aaron Judge took the blame for his failed rehab. The Yankees slugger, having never dealt with a calf injury before, pushed to come off the injured list last month, only to play six innings of one game and have to go back on the IL.

“I think everything was handled correctly, I felt good, nothing I think on my end, nothing on the training staff ’s end, we all felt confident about what I was doing,” Judge said Thursday, talking for the first time since returning and playing Wednesday night. “I’ve never had a calf injury before which kind of makes it tough, not really knowing. I’ve had a quad before, I’ve had other oblique and shoulder stuff. You can kind of play through that and deal with that. So I just think there’s not kind of the unknown of a calf injury and how much you use (the calf muscle). I kind of didn’t realize how much you use your calf in daily life and baseball, how explosive it is and how weight-bearing It is.

“So I think if it’s anything, that’s on me, trying to push it and get back as quick as I can.”

The Yankee slugger ended up missing 30 games total from Aug. 11 to Sept. 16. This time, Judge was on a much slower rehab plan and he notices the difference.

“The second time, no

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