Oroville Mercury-Register

Kurtenbach

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much money to throw around this offseason, but whatever they do have, the vast majority of it needs to go to Williams, who is likely to command a contract in the range of $20 million per season. So congrats to him.

But re-signing Williams — while necessary — can’t be the full extent of the 49ers’ moves on the offensive line this season.

Again, whether it’s Justin Fields, Jimmy Garoppolo, or Deshaun Watson under center for San Francisco in 2021 (all signs point to it being Garoppolo) the Niners need to improve their pass protection.

We just saw how valuable a strong, cohesive offensive line can be in Tampa Bay’s Super Bowl win. The Buccaneers’ protection of Tom Brady was elite and that, paired with his excellent decisions and accuracy and a hair-on-fire defense combined to blow out Kansas City in the big game.

The Niners, of course, found a different formula in the fourth quarter of their Super Bowl loss to Kansas City in 2020. And then the team slid a bit more this past season. Per PFF, the Niners were 24th in the NFL in pass protection last year — this, despite the fact that Williams was the highestgra­ded tackle, overall, in the league last season. Laken Tomlinson, Daniel Brunskill, and Mike McGlinchey allowed 16, 20, and 21 hurries last season, respective­ly.

Some of that is the quarterbac­k’s fault, no doubt, but no one can allege that those three players had playoff-worthy seasons.

The Niners simply have to be stronger up the middle to compete in their division, much less in the conference or league. That was, of course, the case when the team only had to worry about Aaron Donald — the NFL’s best defender — in Los Angeles. The addition of Watt to the division and to a team that already has Chandler Jones at defensive end only increases the urgency for San Francisco. Thank goodness Seattle is imploding. It’s San Francisco’s only good news this offseason.

Given the Niners’ financial constraint­s, there are only two ways to significan­tly improve the team’s interior offensive line: the draft — specifical­ly pick No. 12 — and bargain-bin free agency.

Former Cal Bear Alex Mack was once arguably the best center in the NFL under Shanahan, having played with him with the Browns and the Falcons.

At age 35, his game has slipped, but there were moments last season where he looked like his old self. Could he unite with Shanahan for a third time this offseason? The price would have to be right for San Francisco, but the need is certainly there for the Niners.

And while it might not be a sexy decision, the addition of Watt to the division has to increase the chance that the Niners use the No. 12 pick in the upcoming draft on an offensive lineman. Ideally, a tackle who can start at guard for at least the 2021 season.

Keep an eye on Northweste­rn’s Rashawn Slater, Virginia Tech’s Christian Darrisaw, or Oklahoma State’s Teven Jenkins. All three have the strength to play immediatel­y in the middle.

Slater, because of his outstandin­g movement skills, has a great shot of later sliding to tackle as a replacemen­t for McGlinchey in 2022, further validating the early pick.

The Niners have put a lot of stock in football being a simple game of “kill the quarterbac­k”.

The team’s defensive identity will once again be the defensive line in 2021. They’ll get to the quarterbac­k there.

But the Niners’ quickpassi­ng game and heavy run attack are unlikely to be enough to protect Garoppolo (or, perhaps, someone else) on offense. The inclusion of Watt means this team needs more help up front, and while offensive lines don’t sell tickets, they do win divisions, playoff games, and Super Bowls.

 ?? MATT PATTERSON — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE ?? Former Houston Texans defensive end J.J. Watt has agreed to a two-year contract with the Arizona Cardinals.
MATT PATTERSON — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE Former Houston Texans defensive end J.J. Watt has agreed to a two-year contract with the Arizona Cardinals.

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