Lodi News-Sentinel

49ers’ QB draft pick will either make Shanahan a hero or unemployed

- Chris Biderman

SANTA CLARA — We don’t know plenty of things for sure about the decision 49ers coach Kyle Shanahan is going to make with the No. 3 overall pick in the upcoming NFL draft April 29.

Which quarterbac­k is he going to take? Will that player be good enough to start right away, leading to the team’s sooner-than-expected departure from Jimmy Garoppolo? Will that young quarterbac­k be the right player to keep San Francisco in Super Bowl contention for the foreseeabl­e future?

There are also plenty of conclusion­s we can already make.

Namely, Shanahan isn’t satisfied with three losing seasons in four years while having multiple campaigns derailed by Garoppolo’s injuries. He’s grown weary of blowing double-digit second-half leads in the Super Bowl (which has happened twice for him as a play-caller since 2016). And he’s ready to assert himself as one of the best coaches in the NFL, not just by reputation but by resume.

Oh, and one more thing. His commitment to his next young signal-caller is going to the biggest decision he ever makes as a coach.

No pressure, Kyle.

The pick and the next five to 10 years will define Shanahan’s coaching career. He has an opportunit­y to nail it by finding the next 49ers super star to join Joe Montana and Steve Young as franchise pillars that led teams to Lombardi trophies.

Or Shanahan’s quarterbac­k will fall flat, making April 29 the unofficial start to the countdown toward his eventual firing. He’ll have missed on Garoppolo, who was given a five-year, $137.5 million contract on the strength of his five-game performanc­e in 2017, which led to trading three first-round draft picks for the chance to find his replacemen­t. Few coaches are given the opportunit­y to come back from two of those mistakes.

‘Compete for and win Super Bowls’ — This is the NFL, after all, and rarely do coaches exit on their own terms. Anything less than winning Super Bowls fails to live up to the organizati­on’s expectatio­ns, which have been stated by Shanahan and CEO Jed York. It’s true even for Shanahan, who in 2020 was given a contract extension through the 2025 season, which coincident­ally would run through the entirety of rookie’s first contract.

“It’s up to us to make sure we compete for and win Super Bowls,” York said after “mutually” parting with Jim Harbaugh in 2014. “That’s our only goal. We don’t raise division championsh­ip banners, we don’t raise NFC Championsh­ip banners. We raise Super Bowl banners. And whenever we don’t deliver that, I hope that you will hold me direct

ly responsibl­e and accountabl­e for it. And we look forward to getting this thing back on track.”

That must be the lens in which this decision is judged by.

Shanahan can’t feel comfortabl­e with being competitiv­e and making the playoffs until the season ends in a parade down Market Street in San Francisco. Getting to the playoffs and getting ousted regularly won’t be acceptable for a roster featuring George Kittle, Trent Williams, Nick Bosa, Fred Warner and Brandon Aiyuk all in their primes — paired with a rushing attack that should be among the league’s most effective as long as Shanahan’s in charge.

Shanahan guided the 49ers from 2-14 in 2016 to the Super Bowl after just three years at the helm, and had a 20-10 lead on the Chiefs until the midway mark of the fourth quarter. That was with arguably the NFL’s best defense whose coordinato­r, Robert Saleh, is now the head coach of the New York Jets.

Making up for the defense taking a predictabl­e step back with Saleh gone will be the 49ers offense going to another level, which falls directly on Shanahan’s decision and his grooming of Justin Fields, Mac Jones, Trey Lance or perhaps Zach Wilson, should the Jets do something unexpected and not take the BYU alum with the No. 2 overall pick.

“You hope to be competing to get into the playoffs every single year, which is the ultimate deal to get you a chance at the Super Bowl. So that’s your goal every year,” Shanahan said. “The more you look into this league, it’s, especially our four years here, it’s very hard to succeed when your starting quarterbac­k doesn’t say healthy or if you don’t have one of those true starting quarterbac­ks. We’ve gotten that with Jimmy. He’s played at a very high level when he’s played. It’s been tough, the two years he’s missed. It’s been hard to compete the same way, so we knew we had to look into that this year.”

Is Shanahan set on Jones? — Shanahan has a chance to change the narrative surroundin­g what he looks for in quarterbac­ks.

Many in the NFL are expecting him to draft Alabama’s Jones, who fits in the statuesque archetype of other quarterbac­ks he’s worked with, like Matt Ryan, Garoppolo, Kirk Cousins and Matt Schaub. Those beliefs throughout the league appear to be fueling the speculatio­n that Jones will be the pick, even while many involved in the decision-making process (scouts and coaches) aren’t privy to Shanahan’s decision just yet. It’s more than likely Shanahan already had a quarterbac­k in mind when he made the trade with the Dolphins on March 26.

Jones would hardly be surprising. Shanahan has been stubborn in the past. He passed on a chance to draft Patrick Mahomes or Deshaun Watson in 2017 because he was set on signing Cousins in free agency during the 2018 offseason, before Garoppolo fell into his lap at the trade deadline. Jones is a polarizing prospect who wasn’t discussed as a top-five pick until the 49ers made the move to No. 3.

But the league is changing and the athletic, dynamic quarterbac­ks are becoming all the rage. The only stationary signal-caller that’s enjoyed playoff success recently is Tom Brady, and any coach looking to draft the next Brady is either an unmitigate­d genius or completely off his rocker.

Beating Mahomes, Watson, Aaron Rodgers, Russell Wilson, Kyler Murray, Josh Allen and Lamar Jackson might take more than Shanahan’s genius. A case can be made it will require the quarterbac­k to offer his own genius when things break down in ways Ryan and Garoppolo couldn’t when they needed to keep the chains moving during their Super Bowl meltdowns.

Last year’s championsh­ip round tells the story. The final four quarterbac­ks were Mahomes, Allen, Rodgers and Brady. Mahomes, Allen and Rodgers all have elite arms and can throw on the run, and all can make plays when things break down.

Wilson, whom Shanahan has played eight times the last four years, offers the best example of a player that transcends surroundin­gs. The Seahawks have made the playoffs the last three years with a defense that ranked Nos. 22, 26 and 16 in yardage, respective­ly. The offensive line allowed the fifth-, ninth- and eighthmost sacks in the NFL. All the while Wilson’s passer rating hasn’t dropped below 105.1.

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