Lodi News-Sentinel

49ERS FIND NEW QB IN NFL DRAFT

- Cam Inman

Trey Lance’s 49ers career began at 5:41 p.m. Thursday. He is officially on the clock to end their Lombardi Trophy drought.

But perhaps not so fast. Lance, who turns 21 on May 9, is a young and relatively unproven product from North Dakota State who could use his rookie season learning behind incumbent starter Jimmy Garoppolo.

Or, Lance’s 6-foot-4, 224-pound frame is too irresistib­le to hold back and he’s immediatel­y installed into coach Kyle Shanahan’s playoff-caliber team.

Lance beat out Alabama’s Mac Jones and Ohio State’s Justin Fields, the two quarterbac­ks who faced off in January’s College Football Playoffs national championsh­ip game that Alabama won.

Another quarterbac­k option the 49ers considered: Aaron Rodgers, the Green Bay Packers’ reigning NFL MVP who thought a trade home to Northern California was in the works Wednesday, Fox Sports’ Trey Wingo reported.

Ending the 49ers’ 26-year Super Bowl drought is a task neither Jimmy Garoppolo nor 19 other starting quarterbac­ks have accomplish­ed since Steve Young produced the 49ers’ fifth Super Bowl win.

In that 1994 training camp with the 49ers was Lance’s father, Carlton, who auditioned for two weeks as a safety.

Trey Lance has a championsh­ip to his credit, albeit at the FCS level from the 2019 season in his only full action with the Bison. Lance played only one game last fall as the program opted out amid the COVID-19 pandemic.

Winning a Super Bowl won’t be the only pressure Lance faces whenever he unseats Garoppolo, the embattled incumbent whose future has grown more tenuous each month and each injury since the 2019 team’s Super Bowl loss.

More pressure comes from having to live up to the price he cost the 49ers from a March 26 blockbuste­r trade, when they jumped up from Nos. 12 to 3 at a franchise-mortgaging cost (first-round picks each of the next three years plus a 2022 third-rounder to the Miami Dolphins).

“I’m happy we’re going to get one that we like, that we’ve done it right and I hope the fans are happy with it,” coach Kyle Shanahan said Monday about his quarterbac­k pursuit. “But the key is, ultimately, they’re going to be happy based off how we do in the future, not how they feel that night, whether they won the arguments with their friends or things like that.”

As for Garoppolo’s future, it rests either as a trade candidate or as a jaded captain intent on overcoming injuries for one last hurrah with the 49ers.

Speaking of trade candidates, the 49ers hit up the Green Bay Packers on Wednesday to see if they could pry loose Aaron Rodgers, NFL Network reported. Rodgers, the reigning NFL MVP and a Chico native, has been rumored for weeks about a potential leap away from Lambeau.

This draft saw Lance as the third quarterbac­k taken, after Trevor Lawrence and Zach Wilson, as scripted, went 1-2 to the Jacksonvil­le Jaguars and the New York Jets.

In trading up to No. 3, Shanahan and general manager John Lynch received the endorsemen­t to do so by 49ers CEO Jed York, and the bigger ask may have been to retain Garoppolo, who has a notrade clause and is slated to make $25 million this year.

Lance is the eighth quarterbac­k drafted in 49ers’ history with a firstround pick, and previous choices at No. 3 overall were Y.A. Tittle (1951) and John Brodie (1957). The 49ers have drafted 27 quarterbac­ks since 1970, with Joe Montana being the only one to make the Hall of Fame and Pro Bowl as a 49er.

Lance is their highestdra­fted quarterbac­k since Alex Smith was picked No. 1 overall in 2005, ahead of Rodgers.

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 ?? JOHN KUNTZ/CLEVELAND.COM ?? NFL Commission­er Roger Goodell presents the jersey to quarterbac­k Trey Lance, who went to the San Francisco 49ers for the third pick in the 2021 NFL Draft in Cleveland.
JOHN KUNTZ/CLEVELAND.COM NFL Commission­er Roger Goodell presents the jersey to quarterbac­k Trey Lance, who went to the San Francisco 49ers for the third pick in the 2021 NFL Draft in Cleveland.

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