The Ukiah Daily Journal

49ers' Shanahan: `I don't see' Garoppolo return scenario with Lance, Purdy set to take over

- By Cam Inman

SANTA CLARA >> Brock Purdy and Trey Lance drew a vocal commitment from the quarterbac­k-challenged 49ers' brass Wednesday.

Jimmy Garoppolo? Time to say goodbye, again.

Coach Kyle Shanahan essentiall­y ruled out Garoppolo from returning for a seventh season, saying: “I don't see any scenario of that.”

Instead, Shanahan pledged his allegiance to the two young, injured quarterbac­ks who, unlike Garoppolo, remain under contract.

“I know we have two starters on our team right now I think we can win with,” Shanahan said in the 49ers' end-of-season press conference. “When you have that situation, you're not that eager to go looking around.”

Thus, there is no such clamoring from him for a high-profile veteran savior, not even Garoppolo, who helped rescue this season after saying goodbye at this same press conference last year.

Now comes more quarterbac­k juggling, after having to deploy four quarterbac­ks — Lance, Garoppolo, Purdy, Josh Johnson — through this season's march to the NFC West title, a 13-4 record, and two playoff wins before Sunday's NFC Championsh­ip Game loss at Philadelph­ia.

“I don't think there is much to handle. One guy can't go, and the other guy should be able to go in OTAS (spring workouts),” Shanahan said.

A year ago, Lance took over as the starting quarterbac­k, and Garoppolo wasn't able to go because of March shoulder surgery that wrecked his trade value. Garoppolo took a pay cut to return in a backup capacity between Lance and Purdy, then Jimmy G quickly reclaimed his job, got the 49ers' on a winning streak, then bowed out with a Dec. 4 foot fracture.

That, of course, launched Purdy's grand entrance to the NFL, as the rookie produced six wins before a significan­t elbow injury promptly forced him out of Sunday's NFC Championsh­ip Game defeat.

Shanahan and general manager John Lynch indicated Wednesday that Purdy. while still considerin­g his options, likely faces a fast-track path to recovery, with a six-month rehabilita­tion from a UCL repair to insert a brace, rather than undergo a complete reconstruc­tion and a yearlong hiatus from Tommy John surgery.

“The positive bit of news is that it seems to be consistent that the right approach is the one that takes the six-month mark (of recovery with an internal brace),” Lynch said. “Everybody also will say you never know until you get in there (with surgery) … We seem encouraged by the prognosis that that's kind of where that's at.”

Added Shanahan: “That was the coolest thing for me to hear about, that once three months is over, they start the rehab to build the arm back slowly. By six months, it's built back. I started to ask questions, `Do you ease him in?' They said, `No, the build-up is between three to six months.' ”

A day after Lance said he expects his right ankle should be cleared for full activity within a month, Shanahan did not dispute that, but added how he'd likely ease the third-year quarterbac­k into the offseason program in April drills before organized team activities in late May.

Lance was mere background fodder Wednesday to Purdy's plight, other than Lynch saying: “Trey's had a rough go the last couple of years. He's obviously going to have to prove that he can stay healthy.”

Lynch insisted that 49ers' ceaseless injuries at quarterbac­k are a “coincidenc­e” and not linked to the offensive scheme, adding that Purdy's had a durable playing career before finding himself in “an inopportun­e situation.” Shanahan was terser with his response.

“If you looked at the injuries, common sense would answer that,” Shanahan began his retort. “How did they get hurt? I'm sorry Josh got a concussion when he hit the ground. I'm sorry our quarterbac­k got his elbow bent backward on a normal drop-back pass. I'm sorry on a drop-back pass someone rolled up on Jimmy's ankle. And then we have a dual-threat quarterbac­k who got hurt running the ball.

“To throw all those four in one category, no quarterbac­ks got hurt when we had to handle it off the whole second half, so look into that.”

DEFENSIVE COORDINATO­R HUNT >> For the second time in three years, Shanahan must hire a new defensive coordinato­r, this time to replace Demeco Ryans, who became the Houston Texans on Tuesday. Ryans was promoted two years ago to succeed Robert Saleh, the New York Jets' coach.

Exterior candidates in play are Vic Fangio (the 49ers defensive coordinato­r from 2011-14), Ejiro Evero (Denver Broncos coordinato­r) and Chris Harris (Tennessee Titans assistant), a league source confirmed. It's not known if Shanahan has interviewe­d any of his current assistants for a promotion, such as defensive backs coaches Daniel Bullocks and Corey Undlin.

Shanahan “loves” the 49ers scheme and how it fits their defenders at every level, so he's “hoping to find somebody who fits with us personalit­y-wise and scheme-wise.”

As for the Texans hiring Ryans, “They made the best hire that was by far available.” Ryans also was a finalist for the Denver Broncos' job that went to Sean Payton. Shanahan confirmed that Bobby Slowick (pass-game coordinato­r) and Anthony Lynn (running backs/assistant head coach) were requested for coordinato­r interviews with the Texans and the Commanders, respective­ly. Both were expected to interview Wednesday.

Lynn joined the 49ers last offseason amid a restructur­ing on the offensive staff after Mike Mcdaniel left to be the Dolphins' head coach. Lynn, a former running back and special teams player for the Giants, 49ers and Broncos, was the Chargers' head coach from 2017 to 2020.

Slowik became the 49ers' offensive passing game coordinato­r last offseason after two years as an offensive assistant and two prior years as a defensive quality control coach. He also has worked as a video assistant and defensive assistant coach for Washington.

LYNCH COMMITS TO RETURN >> Tempted last year by Amazon Prime's lucrative offer to return to broadcasti­ng, Lynch was asked if he'll remain the 49ers' general manager for a seventh year, to which he replied “I think so,” then turned to Shanahan sitting next to him and added: “You good, Kyle? … I plan on being here, committed to doing this and having fun at it and committed to getting better. I'm real proud of what we did this year, which is hard when our standard is to win the whole thing.”

 ?? ARIC CRABB — BAY AREA NEWS GROUP ?? 49ers general manager John Lynch, left, and head coach Kyle Shanahan take part in a press conference on Wednesday in Santa Clara.
ARIC CRABB — BAY AREA NEWS GROUP 49ers general manager John Lynch, left, and head coach Kyle Shanahan take part in a press conference on Wednesday in Santa Clara.

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