Daily Press (Sunday)

Garoppolo ready for New England reunion

49ers QB began pro career with Pats, Belichick

- By Josh Dubow

SANTA CLARA, Calif. — Jimmy Garoppolo’s early NFL education came going up against Bill Belichick’s complicate­d defense each day in practice with the New England Patriots.

That work helped Garoppolo develop from a raw prospect coming out of Eastern Illinois into an accomplish­ed quarterbac­k in the NFL, even if it took leaving New England to do it.

Now Garoppolo gets his first chance to go up against his former coach and team since being traded away to San Francisco nearly three years ago when the 49ers visit the Patriots today.

“It set me up for everything here, made the transition a lot easier,” Garoppolo said about the work he did

with the Patriots. “Initially I could remember the first OTAs and training camp. It was rough going from college to the NFL. That’s why when you see these guys come in and start right away, it’s impressive.”

Garoppolo said he had to learn everything from how

to play from under center instead of the shotgun to identifyin­g fronts and coverages when he got to the NFL as Tom Brady’s backup after being drafted in the second round in 2014.

He said he owes much of his success to that time, appreciati­ng everything

Belichick taught him.

“He was just very honest,” Garoppolo said. “Really never beat around the bush. He’s very black and white with everything they did. That’s kind of how I am. I really appreciate that from him.”

Garoppolo never got much of a chance to play for New England with Brady entrenched as the starter. He started two games to open the 2016 season when Brady was suspended, but Garoppolo got hurt in the second game and missed an opportunit­y to start the final two games.

He showed enough in those two starts to become a hot commodity on the trade market. The Patriots finally gave him up midway through the 2017 season, knowing he could become a free agent the following offseason and Brady was still playing at a high level.

Garoppolo’s addition helped spark a turnaround in San Francisco for a Niners team that lost its first nine games with Kyle Shanahan as coach. Garoppolo took over the starting role late in the 2017 season and won all five starts to finish a 6-10 season.

His ascension got derailed the following year when he went down with a season-ending knee injury in Week 3, but he recovered to play well enough last season to help San Francisco win 13 regular-season games and make it to the Super Bowl.

But a poor fourth quarter in that loss to the Chiefs left questions about whether he was the long-term answer for San Francisco, The questions only grew louder when he got pulled at halftime two weeks ago after throwing intercepti­ons on back-to-back drives on a bum ankle in a 43-17 loss to Miami.

He bounced back last week by throwing three TD passes in the first half of a 24-16 win over the Rams.

That tenacity will come in handy today when he returns to his old home to face his former team and a defensive-minded coach known for making things as tough as possible on opposing quarterbac­ks.

“It’s an exciting week,” he said. “Get to go back to where it all started for me in my NFL career. ... Exciting week and I can’t wait for Sunday.”

 ?? BILL KOSTROUN/ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE ?? San Francisco 49ers quarterbac­k Jimmy Garoppolo started two games with New England in 2016. Today, he faces the Patriots for the first time since being traded in 2017.
BILL KOSTROUN/ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE San Francisco 49ers quarterbac­k Jimmy Garoppolo started two games with New England in 2016. Today, he faces the Patriots for the first time since being traded in 2017.

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