The Palm Beach Post

49ers put faith in Lynch, Shanahan for rebuild

- Associated Press

SANTA CLARA, CALIF. — For the third straight offseason, San Francisco 49ers CEO Jed York hired a new head coach and introduced him with a news conference full of platitudes.

After running off Jim Harbaugh following the 2014 season and Jim Tomsula and Chip Kelly after one-year tenures the past two seasons, York believes he has found the right man in Kyle Shanahan to lead the Niners back to respectabi­lity first and then into championsh­ip contention.

York has bet heavily on i t , g iv i n g S h a n a h a n a n d new general manager John Lynch six-year contracts and a promise of patience after the recent revolving door.

“(It) shows that he’s willing to give you some time,” Shanahan said Thursday. “What I didn’t want to do was come here and make a bunch of decisions just trying to win to save ourselves right away. I want to win the first day to the last day. I’m going to do everything possible to do that. But, I also want to make the right decision for the organizati­on. John wants to make the right decision for the organizati­on.”

With Lynch having a job as a successful television analyst at Fox and Shanahan regarded as one of the league’s brightest young assistants with many head coaching opportunit­ies in the future, the two spent much of the interview time questionin­g York about a franchise that has fallen into disrepair in recent years rather than selling themselves.

Lynch has said he asked the 49ers to keep his candi dac y s ec re t , i n par t to t es t t heir abi l i t y to keep news from leaking. Shanahan wanted to make sure he understood what it took to win.

“I wasn’t going in there just trying to get offered the job,” Shanahan said. “I was going in there just being brutally honest. To watch how Jed responded to everything, it made me believe in him.”

The franchise has done l i t t l e i n r e c e n t y e a r s t o earn that belief. After three straight trips to the NFC title game and one Super Bowl appearance under Harbaugh in 2011-13, the Niners have won just 15 games the past three years and hit rock bottom in 2016 with a 2-14 mark that matched the worst in franchise history.

San Francisco was the only team without a player who received a single vote for the AP All-Pro team and has holes throughout the roster, starting at quarterbac­k where last year’s starters Colin Kaepernick and Blaine Gabbert both could be free agents this offseason.

“There’s some work to be done, but I don’t think it’s a 2-14 roster,” Lynch said. “There’s more talent than that.”

Shanahan and Lynch are playing catch up, as the last general manager and coach to get hired this offseason. The first task for Shanahan is to hire a staff and Lynch a l re a dy i s work i n g d o u - ble-days, holding draft day meetings with his scouts and then watching film of the existing roster at night.

While the hiring of Shanahan and Lynch weren’t new, there was some clarity that came out of the introducto­ry news conference.

The two were clear on the structure of control in the franchise with both men answering directly to York and Lynch having control of the 90-man roster, the draft and free agency, while Shanahan has final say on the 53-man roster. But they both downplayed those responsibi­lities, saying it will be a partnershi­p with input going both directions.

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