The Day

Patriots part ways with QB Garoppolo

- By JOSH DUBOW

Santa Clara, Calif. — Jimmy Garoppolo sat down on the dais in between San Francisco general manager John Lynch and coach Kyle Shanahan, leaned into the microphone and thanked the 49ers and the New England Patriots for the trade that gives him a chance to be a starter in the NFL.

He already passed his first test.

"Kyle will tell you a great quality in a quarterbac­k is taking charge," Lynch said. "I thought I was going to go first."

After waiting 3 1/2 years as Tom Brady's backup in New England, Garoppolo is ready to have the chance to be the starting quarterbac­k of his own team after being traded to San Francisco for a 2018 second-round draft pick.

Garoppolo started two games during his time with the Patriots and has thrown just four passes since getting hurt in his second start in Week 2 of the 2016 season.

"I'm eager to get out there and show what I can do on a Sunday," Garoppolo said. "This league is tough. It really is. When you get your opportunit­y, you have to take advantage of it because you don't know when you'll get another."

That was the feeling as well for the 49ers (0-8), who are off to the worst start in franchise history in the first season under the leadership of Shanahan and Lynch.

"An unbelievab­le opportunit­y came our way in the midst of what has really been a tough season," Lynch said. "Where we are right now is not fun . ... Is that going to fix all our ills? Absolutely not. We had the opportunit­y to get better as an organizati­on and we took advantage of that."

Shanahan has had his eyes on Garoppolo since the draft process in 2014 when Shanahan was offensive coordinato­r in Cleveland. He ranked Garoppolo as one of the top two quarterbac­ks in that draft but the Browns ended up using their first-round pick on Johnny Manziel instead.

"It starts with ability," Shanahan said. "Jimmy has the ability to make plays with his legs and he's a very good thrower. Most importantl­y he hangs in that pocket, keeps his eyes downfield and is up for any challenge."

Colin Kaepernick and Blaine Gabbert split the quarterbac­k duties in San Francisco the past two seasons before the new regime decided to go in a different direction. The Niners tried to acquire Garoppolo in the offseason but were unable to and signed free agent Brian Hoyer and drafted C.J. Beathard in the third round instead.

Hoyer, who also began his career as Brady's backup in New England, started the first six games before being benched for Beathard. Hoyer was never viewed as a longterm option and Beathard struggled in his two starts although he was hampered by a banged-up offensive line that left him under relentless pressure.

The Patriots weren't eager to get rid of Garoppolo and turned down potential deals in the offseason in hopes they could groom him to eventually replace the 40-year-old Brady.

But with Garoppolo hitting free agency next offseason and looking for a chance to start, that looked increasing­ly difficult to pull off so the Patriots made the move.

"We had probably had, in my opinion, the best quarterbac­k situation in the league for the last, call it 2 1/2 years," coach Bill Belichick said. "It's just not sustainabl­e given the way that things are set up. It's definitely not something that we wanted to walk away from and I felt like we rode it out as long as we could. We, over a period of time, explored every option possible to try and sustain it. But at this point felt like we had to make a decision."

 ?? AP FILE PHOTO ?? The New England Patriots traded reserve quarterbac­k Jimmy Garoppolo to the San Francisco 49ers on Tuesday for a 2018 second round pick.
AP FILE PHOTO The New England Patriots traded reserve quarterbac­k Jimmy Garoppolo to the San Francisco 49ers on Tuesday for a 2018 second round pick.

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