Marin Independent Journal

Kurtenbach

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He had no choice. While Purdy was the team's fourth option at quarterbac­k heading into training camp that season, when injuries forced him into the starter role, the 49ers were not in a position to simplify their offense for the sake of a young quarterbac­k. They were a team with serious Super Bowl aspiration­s, after all.

The full weight of Shanahan's hefty playbook was put on Purdy's shoulders.

Trust would first be given, then earned.

And 17 regular-season starts into his NFL career, Purdy has earned it in spades.

Shanahan's trust in Purdy was on full display the last two weeks.

Sunday, against an excellent run defense, the Niners attacked Tampa

Bay through the air from the game's opening snap. The run-first Niners became a fun-and-gun team in Week 11.

Purdy to Brandon Aiyuk. (Five catches, 156 yards, and a touchdown.)

Purdy to George Kittle. (Eight catches for 89 yards and a touchdown.)

Purdy to Deebo Samuel. (Twenty-one yards a catch.)

The Niners' pass game revved into high gear on

Sunday.

“I thought he had a hell of a game,” Shanahan said of Purdy.

Aiyuk had the highlight of the day, a 76-yard touchdown catch-and-run on a fly route out of the slot. (Shanahan placed him in the slot often this week, a clever move.)

And while credit needs to go to Aiyuk — he beat his man off the line of scrimmage and outran a safety in the open field — the parabola of Purdy's pass, which traveled 45 yards in the air, ensured that Aiyuk didn't have to

change his alter his stride to catch the ball.

It was as if the ball magically appeared in his hands en route to the end zone.

Not bad for a quarterbac­k who is not known for his arm strength or deep balls.

“Brock's arm looks great,” Kittle said.

“You don't get that many plays like that in a game,” Purdy said. “I saw all of it. It was pretty sweet.”

And while not every pass was as pretty and effortless on Sunday, the rest

didn't seem far off.

Purdy and his elite receivers cut through the Buccaneers' defense like a hot knife through butter. There wasn't a throw Purdy proved incapable of completing, on time, and he was asked to make some tough passes against a tough Tampa Bay defense.

“Brock's a solid, really good quarterbac­k. I don't know if he can run a 4.3 [40-yard dash], but everything we've asked him to do, he's done at a really high level,” Shanahan said. “We run plays,

he goes through progressio­ns, attacks coverages. He goes through the whole defense.”

Indeed, he did. And what a welcome change that is for San Francisco as this season heads into the home stretch.

It seems like a different era, but a little over a week ago, there were fair questions about whether Purdy could be that kind of quarterbac­k moving forward. The 49ers had lost three straight games to close October, and Purdy, while still statistica­lly solid, was making more mistakes than usual. He turned the ball over six times in those three losses. For the Niners, it was the difference between winning and losing.

But in the two games since — against two good defenses — he's been dynamite: 40-of-51, 629 yards, with six touchdowns and no turnovers.

Shanahan said there was nothing Purdy needed to change from that stretch, save for the turnovers. He expected his quarterbac­k to bounce back.

“You never know [if they can] until people go through it,” Shanahan said. “But the film was so good — the guy was playing unbelievab­le in those three losses. It wasn't really something to worry about... You just have to make sure he doesn't make up stuff.”

Purdy disagreed with

Shanahan's assessment Sunday.

He credits a mindset shift for his — and the 49ers' — resurgent play. It's a level of play they'll need to keep as the team heads into its most daunting three-game stretch of the season: at Seattle on Thursday, at Philadelph­ia, home against Seattle.

“Not even that we were complacent or anything, but [we had the mindset] that we were just going to walk into the game and it was going to be given to us,” Purdy said. “I had to get back to `Man, we gotta go take it.'

“Getting back to that, and proving myself every drive, every play, that I can be the guy for this team. I have to earn it every single week.”

We're now over an entire NFL regular season into Purdy's career as an NFL starter. He's been tossed into every situation — good and bad — and found ways to thrive.

And Sunday's game, No. 18, might have been his best yet.

The fact that his performanc­es continue to ask that question, one year in, says something. This guy doesn't have much left to prove. What more could you need to see from No. 13 to make you a believer?

But so long as Purdy doesn't believe he's the real deal, the Niners will continue to be in good hands at the most important position in the game.

 ?? NHAT V. MEYER — BAY AREA NEWS GROUP ?? San Francisco 49ers starting quarterbac­k Brock Purdy (13) throws under pressure against the Tampa Bay Buccaneers' Anthony Nelson (98) in the first quarter at Levi's Stadium in Santa Clara on Sunday.
NHAT V. MEYER — BAY AREA NEWS GROUP San Francisco 49ers starting quarterbac­k Brock Purdy (13) throws under pressure against the Tampa Bay Buccaneers' Anthony Nelson (98) in the first quarter at Levi's Stadium in Santa Clara on Sunday.

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