Daily Democrat (Woodland)

Star rookie safety is thriving on defense

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Safeties are the most crucial defensive chess pieces on the board that is an NFL field.

So it's good that 49ers rookie safety Ji'Ayir Brown likes playing chess.

“I've messed around with video games a bit, but I'll play chess all day,” he said Wednesday.

The 49ers are going to need Brown's strategic mind to be working overtime in the final four weeks of the regular season and all the weeks that are to follow. Thrown into the fire after All-Pro safety Talanoa Hufanga blew out his knee in Week 11, the rookie from Penn State is the marked man in the Niners' defense.

But much like Brock Purdy last season, Brown has been able to take it in stride because of preternatu­ral maturity and serious extra-curricular preparatio­n. Also like Purdy during his rookie season, Brown's success or failure will prove critical to the 49ers' chances of achieving their Super Bowl dreams.

“Every week is going to be a challenge,” 49ers general manager and Hall of Fame safety John Lynch told me. “He's gotta be up to it.”

I have many opinions others have deemed controvers­ial, but one that seems to rile people up the most is when I say that “safeties are destiny” in important games. I'm not suggesting they're as important as the quarterbac­k, but it should be noted that when a quarterbac­k heads to the line of scrimmage, he's looking for the safeties.

Not only do safeties define a defense (the reason quarterbac­ks are so interested in them pre-snap), but they're vital in both the run and pass game, and are, most importantl­y, the last line of the defense.

A great safety can flummox the quarterbac­k and make everyone in front of him on defense look good.

A bad one can undercut the efforts of even the most talented unit.

You can scheme pressure. You can't cover up for a safety in over his head. And in big late-season or postseason games, where margins are razorthin, safeties — the guys who aren't even on the TV screen when the ball is snapped — are often the difference between winning and losing.

The 49ers know about this all too well. In the 2021 NFC Championsh­ip Game, the Rams' Eric Weddle — signed off the couch weeks before — was everywhere, breaking up pass plays and stuffing the Niners' vaunted run game.

“Without Weddle those guys don't beat us,” Lynch told me (through gritted teeth). “He was phenomenal.”

(In that game, the Niners' strong safety, Jaquiski Tartt, dropped an intercepti­on that would have clinched the victory.)

Now, the 49ers will play some massive games in the coming weeks, and there's nowhere for Brown to hide. That's a lot of pressure on the rookie's

shoulders.

That's why plenty of smart people around the league shuddered when Hufanga was ruled out for the remainder of the season.

But those who knew Brown weren't worried.

“I always put that pressure on myself,” Brown, 23, told me Wednesday. “I don't feel like I made it. I never get settled. I don't go out — I don't find interest in that stuff. I'm just wired that way.”

His teammates have noticed.

“As soon as he came into the team, I felt like he was very mature for his age, even being a rookie. Everybody called him the `young vet,'” Fred Warner said. “He's had that presence about him since the day he got there… He's kept his head in that playbook, that iPad, constantly watching film, constantly watching tape. He's out there making checks, making calls.”

“[It's] Just being a student of the game,” Brown said. “When other guys were out there, I was putting myself in the same position they were in, letting my mind and instincts take over through the film — wondering how I would do in the same situations.”

 ?? STEPHEN BRASHEAR — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE ?? Seattle Seahwks wide receiver D.K. Metcalf dives for extra yards as he is tackled by San Francisco 49ers defensive back Ji'Ayir Brown and defensive back Charvarius Ward, right, on Nov. 23 in Seattle.
STEPHEN BRASHEAR — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE Seattle Seahwks wide receiver D.K. Metcalf dives for extra yards as he is tackled by San Francisco 49ers defensive back Ji'Ayir Brown and defensive back Charvarius Ward, right, on Nov. 23 in Seattle.
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