The Day

Giants facing Mullens and the 49ers

- By JOSH DUBOW AP Pro Football Writer

Santa Clara, Calif. — Nick Mullens remembers getting the phone call from Archie Manning inviting him to the prestigiou­s Manning Passing Academy two summers ago.

Mullens savored the chance to take part in the four-day clinic run by Archie and his two NFL quarterbac­k sons, Eli and Peyton. Mullens especially relished the opportunit­y to watch Eli Manning take part in some of the drills.

"To see how he moves in the pocket, he has very quick feet and is just very smooth," Mullens said. "I definitely remember just sitting there and watching him throw. I took that all in."

Mullens now will get another chance to see Manning up close when he makes his second career start for the San Francisco 49ers (27) tonight against Manning and the New York Giants (1-7).

Mullens is coming off a scintillat­ing debut, completing 16 of 22 passes for 262 yards, three touchdowns and no intercepti­ons for a 151.9 passer rating in a 34-3 victory over the Oakland Raiders. That's the highest rating since the merger for a player in his debut with at least 20 attempts.

Things might not be as easy now GIANTS AT 49ERS 8:15 p.m., Levi’s Stadium (ESPN)

that the Giants have an idea of what Mullens can do.

"I think they're going to be like, 'Oh crap. This guy is good,'" running back Matt Breida said. "I think they'll put more people back there to cover because of the throws he made and can do."

While Mullens is just getting started, Manning is nearing the end of his career as he plays his 15th season for a team that is struggling mightily. New York has lost five straight games and the questions are mounting about how much longer the two-time Super Bowl MVP Manning has as quarterbac­k.

"I think there's urgency to get things going, for sure," Manning said. "We got to get some wins. We got to get going, and everybody wants it. The team needs it, for the morale and for just the hard work and everything we put in. Just need to reap the benefits of the work, and feel good about what we're doing."

Here are some other things to watch:

Splendid Saquon

Rookie Saquon Barkley has been a rare bright spot for the struggling Giants, topping 100 yards from scrimmage in seven of his first eight games. Barkley has been a bit hit and miss with 16 runs for negative yards, tied for fifth worst in the league, and 11 plays that gained at least 20, which is tied for second most among running backs. Barkley is just the ninth player to gain at least 1,000 yards from scrimmage in the first eight games of his rookie season.

"I'm not one of those guys that says, let me see my stats, let me see how much I ran for this or that. I just play," he said. "I'm not going to stand here and lie, I am very active on social media, so there's fan pages of me and I can go on Instagram or even on my explore page and they just happen to pop up. I've seen prediction­s of what I'm capable of doing, but it means nothing to me."

Pressure point

The struggling pass rush for the 49ers broke through in a big way last week with eight sacks against Oakland. Cassius Marsh led the way with a career-best 2 ½, and Dekoda Watson had 1 1/2 in his first game after coming off IR.

San Francisco had eight sacks in a game only once in the previous two decades, doing it against the Rams in 2009.

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