Enterprise-Record (Chico)

Garoppolo must now rescue SF

- Dieter Kurtenbach

As of the time of publishing, Jimmy Garoppolo hasn’t officially returned to the 49ers’ lineup.

But let me be the first to welcome back the San Francisco quarterbac­k.

The 49ers simply must have

No. 10 under center for Sunday’s game against the Dolphins, which carries outsize importance for Week 5 because of San Francisco’s inauspicio­us start to the season and hellacious schedule between Weeks 6 and 13.

Week 4’s loss to the Eagles made it clear that the Niners need Garoppolo. They cannot be expected to win with either NickMullen­s or C. J. Beathard at the helm of the offense. The fact that Beathard is now back in this conversati­on should tell you everything.

But the Niners also need Garoppolo to play the best football of his career.

No pressure or anything.

Over the last few weeks, I’ve spent a great deal of time thinking about how NFL teams can create sustained, year- over-year success. The salary- cap structure of the league creates so many difficulti­es in retaining talent and the sport itself is so brutal. The NFL wants parity and those two forces work to create it.

The only way to fight those forces — to be good forever — is to have a transcende­nt quarterbac­k.

The teams that you can count on to be in the playoffs every year have quarterbac­ks you can count on to be MVP candidates, too. They’re failsafes. When a roster isn’t as good as expected because of injury and bad

(or unlucky) front- office decisions, the quarterbac­k holds up the team.

I know 49ers fans hate Russell Wilson, but you have to respect the fact that hehas takenhis teamto the playoffs in all but one year of his career, with Seattle winning nine games that season. In the last few seasons, the Seattle roster has been a hot mess. Doesn’t matter, Wilson picked up the slack, did some bonkers stuff, and the Seahawks made the playoffs. This year, Seattle’s roster seems coherent, and sure enough, they’re 4- 0. We’ll see if that sticks, but Seattle is going to be in the tournament.

Garoppolo is no Wil

son, but he does seem to win a bunch. San Francisco has won 75 percent of its games with him as their starting quarterbac­k. As much as “Bad Jimmy” can do things to seemingly lose the 49ers games, there’s more than enough “Good Jimmy” to win games.

But as I wrote before the season, the Niners were going to experience attrition with the other 52 roster spots on game day. There was simply no way that San Francisco would have the best defense in the NFC and an efficient offensive power around

Garoppolo again in 2020.

I underestim­ated how significan­t that attrition would be.

If I thought the Niners’ roster, on the whole, would take a step back in 2020 because of natural regression and roster constructi­on, the first four games of this year have been more like a sprint away from the line of scrimmage. Injuries have decimated the Niners’ roster andwhile the teamhas held its head above water in the first few weeks, the full brunt of these injuries is likely to be felt in the weeks to come.

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