Times Standard (Eureka)

49ers use a classic formula to rebound

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It took two games — and two wins — this past week for the 49ers’ to turn their season around.

The next two games will go a long way to defining it.

Credit to Kyle Shanahan and his team. Lesser squads would have started going through the motions after being punked, at home, by Arizona Cardinals backup Colt McCoy in Week 9.

Instead, the Niners used the embarrassi­ng loss as a rallying cry.

And in the past two games, they have figured out who they are and what they do best.

It’s a good thing, too. It came just in time to make the holiday season interestin­g.

Blowout wins over the Rams on Monday and Sunday’s 3010 beat-down of the Jaguars in Jacksonvil­le have the Niners back to .500, 5-5 — tied with the Vikings for the seventh and final playoff spot in the NFC.

You gotta love the NFL rewarding mediocrity by adding another playoff spot last season.

And wouldn’t fate have it that they’re going to play the Vikings next Sunday at Levi’s Stadium, followed by a divisional showdown with their arch-rivals, the Seahawks in Seattle?

Looking back on it, “interestin­g” might be underselli­ng it. With seven games left, it seems as if every possible outcome for this season remains on the table for the Niners.

Could this be the peak of San Francisco’s success? Absolutely. Both Minnesota and Seattle could prove the Niners were never true contenders these next two weeks. The Niners deserve a shot at respectabi­lity, but now they have to take it.

As well as they have played the last two weeks, that fourgame losing streak the Niners ended this week was no fluke.

But the subsequent little twogame winning streak wasn’t a fluke, either.

And it could also be the start

of a run over the final seven games.

The Niners changed. They adapted. They’re back in control.

So who are these new 49ers — a team with hope and possibilit­y in front of them?

What has this team become the last two weeks?

Drives of 18 and 20 plays to start the last two games tell you everything you need to know.

Yes, they’re the bullies in the neighborho­od.

So, of course, they’re led by a guy named Deebo.

Tactically, the adjustment­s the Niners have made are straightfo­rward — they’re going back to Shanahan basics: The Niners head coach and offensive coordinato­r is asking quarterbac­k Jimmy Garoppolo to get the ball out of his hands as soon as possible after the snap. The goal is to put it in the hands of the Niners’ playmakers, posthaste. Deebo Samuel, Brandon Aiyuk, George Kittle, and their everchangi­ng stable of running backs, which now includes Samuel, give the Niners the best chance to win.

And the quickest way to remove the ball from the quarterbac­k’s hands is to hand it off. The Niners have run the ball 40plus times in back-toback games now. It’s an insane number that almost guarantees a win.

Now, is every play a big gain? Hardly. In fact, the advanced stats say that the Niners’ run game the last two games has been more a hindrance than a benefit to the Niners’ winning effort.

But the on-field results say quite the opposite. The Niners are setting a tone with their run game — they’re establishi­ng that they’re the tougher, meaner team and there’s not much the other team can do about it.

Go ahead, sell out to stop the run against San Francisco. The Niners will still run it and gain three or four yards. That wasn’t something this Niners team — specifical­ly Shanahan — was doing the first two months of the season.

But a modest gain in the box score can be a huge gain in the psychologi­cal battle that is profession­al football.

 ?? PHELAN M. EBENHACK — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? San Francisco 49ers wide receiver Deebo Samuel runs against the Jacksonvil­le Jaguars during the first half Sunday in Jacksonvil­le, Fla.
PHELAN M. EBENHACK — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS San Francisco 49ers wide receiver Deebo Samuel runs against the Jacksonvil­le Jaguars during the first half Sunday in Jacksonvil­le, Fla.
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