The Standard Journal

San Francisco 49ers tuning out criticism after collapse in Miami

- By Josh Dubow

SANTA CLARA, Calif. — Coach Kyle Shanahan knows the criticism is floating around because of all the messages asking if he’s OK after the San Francisco 49ers collapsed in the fourth quarter of a Super Bowl loss to Kansas City.

There are questions about time management and play calls, the performanc­e of quarterbac­k Jimmy Garoppolo and why the defense couldn’t come up with a big stop when needed.

But Shanahan insulates himself from all of that and believes in his decisions and players even if the team ended up losing 31-20 after leading by 10 points in the fourth quarter.

“I don’t feel it’s intense blow-back, I’m not on Twitter and whatever all that stuff is,” Shanahan said Thursday. “I would never do that to myself anyway. I’ve lost the Super Bowl before, I’ve been a part of a bigger lead that was lost, so I’m very well aware of what goes with that. I also am not a good liar. How you guys hear me talk is exactly how I feel.

I’m really upset about the loss because it’s hard to get there. I personally thought we had the best team in the NFL this year. We weren’t. We’ve got to deal with that.”

Now the Niners must begin the long process of getting back this far so Shanahan can be part of the one team that ends a season happy after winning a championsh­ip.

Only three teams have bounced back from the disappoint­ment of a loss in the title game to win it all the following year, with Dallas and Miami doing it in backto-back seasons in 1971-72 and then the New England Patriots again in 2018.

Eight other Super Bowl losers returned to the game the next season only to lose again, including Buffalo three times. But 15 of the past 33 teams that lost in the Super Bowl failed to even make it back to the playoffs the following year, including the Los Angeles Rams this past season.

“We do believe we’re different,” general manager John Lynch said. “There’s not many teams that go from four wins to 13 and dominate an NFC in the playoffs and get there. We believe this team is different. We believe we’re capable of doing that.”

The offseason will feature big decisions about whether the Niners can bring back key free agents like defensive lineman Arik Armstead, receiver Emmanuel Sanders and safety Jimmie Ward.

All expressed interest in returning but keeping everybody will be difficult under the salary cap, especially with players like All-Pro tight end George Kittle and defensive tackle DeForest Buckner up for extensions soon.

San Francisco won’t have nearly as much leeway to add big pieces like they have the past few offseasons when they’ve brought in highpriced players like cornerback Richard Sherman, defensive end Dee Ford, linebacker Kwon Alexander and fullback Kyle Juszczyk.

“Those days aren’t happening anymore,” Lynch said. “We can’t go to the grocery store and say I’ll have that, I’ll have that, I’ll have that. It is more like, I’ll have that, but I might have to put that back. There are trade offs. It’s tightening up, but we knew that all along.”

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