Times Standard (Eureka)

Garoppolo returns to practice

Lance remains sidelined as SF returns from bye, prepare to host Colts on Sunday night

- By Cam Inman

SANTA CLARA » While Jimmy Garoppolo practiced Monday for the first time since his Oct. 3 calf injury, fellow quarterbac­k Trey Lance did not take the field alongside him. Lance was diagnosed with a left knee sprain from his Oct. 10 starting debut.

Garoppolo’s right calf looks unhindered and that puts him on target to reprise his starting role Sunday night when the 49ers (2-3) host the Indianapol­is Colts (2-4).

“Seemed like Jimmy,” left tackle Trent Williams said. “He was fighting to get back last week. Seeing him this week, he seems like he’s been ready. If there was a game last week, he’d probably have been OK to play.

“So, yeah, Jimmy looks like Jimmy.”

Garoppolo warmed up alongside Nate Sudfeld, who will likely be elevated again from the practice squad to serve as the backup for a second straight game if Lance is inactive Sunday.

Lance was projected to miss one to two weeks because of the knee sprain that was diagnosed a day after the 49ers’ 17-10 loss at Arizona, in which the rookie had 16 carries.

BUCKNER’S RETURN » DeForest Buckner’s upcoming return to Levi’s Stadium is already stirring mixed emotions, and safety Jimmie Ward put into poignant perspectiv­e how Buckner’s March 2020 trade to Indianapol­is impacted the 49ers overall.

“You know what DeFo brought to this team. He was the heart and soul when he was here,” safety Jimmie Ward said. “I wasn’t happy about it, but I understand the business side. I’m pretty sure you all knew something was going to happen, just like I did. Just didn’t know what was going to happen.”

What happened was the 49ers opted not to pay Buckner, their top pick in 2016, and instead retained Arik Armstead, their No. 1 draft choice in 2015. The 49ers pocketed the Colts’ first-round draft pick (No. 13 overall) and Buckner landed a four-year, $84 million contract with $40 million guaranteed. Armstead’s extension was announced the same day, a five-year-, $85 million pact with $45 million guaranteed.

“It was bitterswee­t. We ended up getting (Javon) Kinlaw and we ended up getting Brandon Aiyuk,” Ward said of last year’s first-round draft picks.

“But we lost a leader — especially a leader in defense and on this team. He’s still my brother and I still love him.”

Ward commended coach Kyle Shanahan and general manager John Lynch for the strides they took to replace Buckner, from drafting Kinlaw to finding other defensive tackles such as D.J. Jones and Kevin Givens. Kinlaw has a knee issue that’s limited him all year, and he did not practice Monday.

“Those guys have to work on their craft and they’re doing great. Watch these last three games and teams couldn’t run the ball at all,” Ward added. “Buck was unique in some of the stuff he did, how aggressive he was and his mindset. The players now are the same type, but they’re them. Can’t be Buck. He’s a totally different person. Thinks different. Built different.”

CORNERBACK RESURFACES » Nickel back K’Waun Williams rejoined practice after being out with a calf injury since early in the Sept. 26 loss to the Green Bay Packers. Dontae Johnson and Deommodore Lenoir have filled in covering slot wide receivers since then.

Williams was not placed on injured reserve so he is eligible to return after missing two games.

 ?? DARRYL WEBB — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Jimmy Garoppolo’s right calf looks unhindered and that puts him on target to reprise his starting role Sunday night when the 49ers (2-3) host the Indianapol­is Colts (2-4).
DARRYL WEBB — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Jimmy Garoppolo’s right calf looks unhindered and that puts him on target to reprise his starting role Sunday night when the 49ers (2-3) host the Indianapol­is Colts (2-4).

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