Imperial Valley Press

Familiarit­y becomes recurring theme for 49ers in free agency

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SANTA CLARA (AP) — When the San Francisco 49ers set out to remake their team in free agency under first-year coach Kyle Shanahan and general manager John Lynch, there was a recurring theme in the players they found: familiarit­y.

Led by quarterbac­k Brian Hoyer and receiver Pierre Garcon, the 49ers brought in a haul of players on the opening day of the league year, including several with ties to Shanahan or other coaches on San Francisco’s staff.

“The advantage of having been with someone is you know what type of guy they are,” Shanahan said Friday. “There’s always a risk when you see the tape and you bring in someone in that you don’t know. You don’t know what exactly you’re getting that you can’t see on tape.”

That familiarit­y worked both ways with Hoyer, Garcon and tight end Logan Paulsen all pointing to their time with Shanahan at previous stops as reasons they felt comfortabl­e joining a team coming off a two-win season.

That 2016 debacle led to the firings of coach Chip Kelly and general manager Trent Baalke, and sent the 49ers into the free agency period with no quarterbac­ks on the roster and only one proven receiver.

They have already signed seven free agents with Pro Bowl fullback Kyle Juszczyk, linebacker Malcolm Smith, kicker Robbie Gould and receiver Marquise Goodwin also joining Hoyer, Garcon and Paulsen. The team also has agreements that should be finalized soon with quarterbac­k Matt Barkley and receiver Aldrick Robinson, another of Shanahan’s former players.

“Kyle knows how to scheme offense up,” Hoyer said. “When people talk about offensive gurus, he knows what to do. I knew coming in no matter who we had, he’d find ways to get people open.”

Hoyer spent the 2014 season in Cleveland when Shanahan was offensive coordinato­r and posted a 7-6 record in 13 starts and threw for a career-high 3,326 yards. Hoyer plans to go back to his notes from that season to bone up on Shanahan’s offense so he can help get his new teammates up to speed quickly on the complex system when the offseason program begins next month.

“It isn’t the easiest system,” Hoyer said. “That’s why it works, because Kyle is able to put a lot of stuff on the players. It will help to have Pierre, who has played in this system. It will help to have Logan, who has played in the system. You have to bring those other guys along and that’s part of my responsibi­lity.”

Garcon also had his most productive year with Shanahan calling plays, having caught 113 passes for 1,346 yards in Washington in 2013. He committed to the Niners despite not knowing for sure who would be quarterbac­k.

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