Lodi News-Sentinel

WARNER AN ANCHOR FOR 49ERS DEFENSE

- Chris Biderman

SANTA CLARA — The 49ers defense is ranked fifth in scoring, fifth in yardage, eighth in yards per play, seventh in thirddown conversion­s, third in opponents’ redzone scoring and second in touchdowns allowed per game.

So last year’s NFC champions behind Richard Sherman and Nick Bosa must have picked up right where they left off, right?

Of course not. San Francisco’s defense has been decimated by injuries, starting with Sherman’s absence after the first game of the season and Bosa’s season-ending ACL tear a week later.

The 49ers defense started five different combinatio­ns of cornerback­s through the first seven games. They recently held the Patriots to six points, while recording four intercepti­ons, without both starting safeties. Linebacker­s Kwon Alexander and Dre Greenlaw both missed time with injuries. And, of course, the defensive line doesn’t look at all the same as last season without DeForest Buckner in the middle or Bosa and Dee Ford rushing from the edges.

The 49ers defense has remained productive despite all that shuffling. The only constant? Middle linebacker Fred Warner. Warner holds together 49ers defense Warner, the emerging third-year pro, is the glue that holds everything together, the quarterbac­k of the defense that makes sure all 11 players are in the right position, the emotional ringleader and smack talker reminding opponents of their inferiorit­y to gain a mental edge.

“He’s just kind of taking over from the start and he’s been such an active player, run and pass, and so available to make plays because he’s such a hard worker and great reader and an instinctiv­e, you can’t watch the defense and not see him,” Seahawks coach Pete Carroll said on a confer

ence call this week.

“He just jumps out at you.”

Indeed, Warner is having the best season of his career while he carries a depleted defense to a topfive unit, statistica­lly, despite the team’s best players dropping like flies throughout the season. Which is why CBS analyst and former Cowboys quarterbac­k Tony Romo wouldn’t stop gushing over Warner during the broadcast of San Francisco’s suffocatin­g performanc­e in New England, calling him, “the best linebacker in ball.”

“All-Pro Fred” is the nickname teammates have bestowed, despite the first-time captain waiting for his first Pro Bowl or All-Pro recognitio­n.

Perhaps Warner didn’t quite make his mark as a rookie on a defense that struggled against the pass in 2018, or he was overshadow­ed by all the star power that flanked him in 2019. This year, he’s clearly the most valuable member of a defense that would be lost without him given the injuries.

“I’ve always held myself to highest standard,” Warner said on a Zoom news conference Wednesday. “I’m the one in the middle, the one everybody’s looking at every single day, every play, so as long as I’m on point I know that we can continue to get better and better.”

Warner stellar against passing game as Seahawks loom

Warner, according to Pro Football Focus, is the highest-graded linebacker against the pass in the NFL while his 55.9 passer rating when targeted ranks second. He has two intercepti­ons, including one last week of Cam Newton, after having just one pick throughout all of last season. His tackling statistics aren’t quite off the screen as he ranks 14th in the league, while Romo argued Warner does so well positionin­g himself that offenses avoid him.

“Just from a mental standpoint, he’s the quarterbac­k out there,” head coach Kyle Shanahan said. “The calls he makes, all the confusing things that people do offensivel­y with the motions and change of strengths and how he gets us lined up. When you play zone defense a lot, you better have some good guys inside who look at the quarterbac­k and I think Fred is as good as anyone.”

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 ?? WALLY SKALIJ/LOS ANGELES TIMES ?? L.A. Rams running back Darrell Henderson Jr. (27) has a pass knocked away by 49ers linebacker Fred Warner at Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum on Oct. 13, 2019.
WALLY SKALIJ/LOS ANGELES TIMES L.A. Rams running back Darrell Henderson Jr. (27) has a pass knocked away by 49ers linebacker Fred Warner at Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum on Oct. 13, 2019.

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