Baltimore Sun

Shanahan to face Cousins this time

Onetime Redskins play-caller, quarterbac­k square off in playoffs

- By Josh Dubow

Kirk Cousins starting the 49ers’ first playoff game at Levi’s Stadium was how coach Kyle Shanahan planned it when he took over in San Francisco back in 2017.

The surprise is that Cousins is starting for the Minnesota Vikings instead of the Niners when the teams meet in the divisional round Saturday.

Things have worked out just fine for both Cousins and Shanahan even though the quarterbac­k and play-caller never reunited after building a strong relationsh­ip during their time together in Washington in 2012-13.

The 49ers (13-3) acquired Jimmy Garoppolo in a trade from New England during the 2017 season months before Cousins hit the free-agent market and have built a strong team around a different quarterbac­k.

Cousins ended up with the Vikings (11-6) on a fully guaranteed $84 million, three-year contract. He is coming off the biggest win of his career, having thrown the game-winning TD pass in overtime to Kyle Rudolph last week in a 26-20 victory at New Orleans.

That success comes as no surprise to Shanahan, who was part of the staff in Washington that drafted Cousins in the fourth round and helped develop him into an NFL starter.

“I think he’s always just steadily climbed,” Shanahan said. “Every time he’s gotten more opportunit­ies, he’s only gotten better. I know when he’s had bad games, he’s always learned from them, come back and respond. I think he’s been given the right opportunit­y. Whenever he’s been given the right opportunit­y, I think he’s shown people he’s one of the better quarterbac­ks in this league.”

Cousins feels the same way about Shanahan as a play-caller and coach and is not surprised at the success he’s had in rebuilding a losing franchise in San Francisco.

“I’ve been fortunate to be around some great coaches. And Kyle’s certainly one of them,“Cousins said. “He’s shown that through the years since we have gone our separate ways.”

But none of that will matter once the game starts on Saturday. Shanahan says neither side has any advantage because of knowledge on how the other one operates.

“I’m not sitting there going against Kirk,” he said. “So I think that stuff is totally overrated. He’s been a lot of places, he can do a lot of things that I don’t know about.”

FIRST TIMERS

Only a dozen players currently on the 49ers’ roster have postseason experience and even that number is a bit inflated because it includes Garoppolo, who got only two snaps of mop-up duty in one game, and players like receiver Jordan Matthews who are likely to be inactive. Receiver Emmanuel Sanders, who has played in two Super Bowls, said the key to dealing with that lack of playoff experience is to make sure you don’t try to do too much.

“When a lot of people get in the playoffs, they think they’ve got to do more,“he said. “At the end of the day, you’re in the playoffs, you’ve already been winning games. Just remain who you are.”

HEY, IN THE BACK!

One of the many commonalit­ies of these offenses is the favoring of a fullback, with the 49ers making plenty of use of Kyle Juszczyk and the Vikings doing the same with C.J. Ham. Hamwasonth­e field for 28% of the snaps by the offense last week against the Saints, helping Dalvin Cook find the holes on the way to a 94-yard, two-touchdown performanc­e.

“I love having a fullback in front of me,” Cook said. “That’s just the style of football that I like to play, and I think it can be kind of underestim­ated because I’m a smaller back, I guess.”

 ?? LACHLAN CUNNINGHAM/GETTY ?? 49ers coach Kyle Shanahan, left, and QB Jimmy Garoppalo face the Vikings on Saturday in a divisional playoff matchup.
LACHLAN CUNNINGHAM/GETTY 49ers coach Kyle Shanahan, left, and QB Jimmy Garoppalo face the Vikings on Saturday in a divisional playoff matchup.
 ??  ?? #6 Titans #3 Patriots
#4 Texans #5 Bills
#6 Titans #3 Patriots #4 Texans #5 Bills

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