New Haven Register (New Haven, CT)

‘Irrelevant’ Purdy on the brink of Super Bowl

- By Josh Dubow

SANTA CLARA, Calif. — Brock Purdy’s NFL career started with the moniker of “Mr. Irrelevant” and the weeklong trip to Newport Beach to celebrate the player picked last in the draft.

With one more win, Purdy’s rookie season in the NFL will end on the brightest stage of all as a starting quarterbac­k in the Super Bowl for the San Francisco 49ers.

It’s been an improbable nine-month journey from the trip to Disneyland, golf tournament, and a roast where he received the Lowsman Trophy as the last draft pick to the NFC title game on Sunday when the 49ers (15-4) visit the Philadelph­ia Eagles (15-3).

“Going to the NFC championsh­ip, it means a lot to us and for myself,” Purdy said. “When I take a step back, it’s pretty cool. Very thankful.”

Purdy is set for perhaps his toughest test yet on Sunday, when he faces an

Eagles defense that led the NFL with 70 sacks and must deal with an imposing road environmen­t.

Purdy handled the crowd noise well in his first road start at Seattle last month, with coach Kyle Shanahan telling him at the time it was important to deal with that before the postseason.

“He did say it was good preparatio­n for what we might have to play in terms of the playoffs, going on the road for road games and obviously Philadelph­ia,”

Purdy said. “In these kind of games, it’s all about communicat­ion. How can you operate smoothly, get in and out of the huddle, get the play off the right way, make sure everyone is on the same page. So that’s definitely a big emphasis this week.”

Purdy has aced every test he’s faced so far and has already become perhaps one of the most productive “Mr. Irrelevant” since the title was first handed out in 1976.

He is the third rookie quarterbac­k ever to win two playoff starts, the fifth to reach the conference title game as a starter and will look to be the first to reach the Super Bowl.

Pretty impressive for the ninth QB taken in the draft. But not a complete surprise to the supremely confident Purdy or the Niners, who saw flashes during Purdy’s limited work in training camp.

San Francisco cut Nate Sudfeld in order to keep Purdy as the third QB and the team didn’t lose any confidence when he was forced to take over early in

Week 13 after Jimmy Garoppolo got hurt.

Purdy helped the Niners win that game against Miami and has won all seven starts since then, posting an NFL-best 111.4 passer rating in that span with 16 TDs and only three intercepti­ons.

A San Francisco offense filled with playmakers such as Christian McCaffrey, Deebo Samuel, George Kittle and Brandon Aiyuk has gotten better instead of regressing with a rookie running the show.

“We stopped looking at him as our rookie quarterbac­k when he took over and he stopped looking at himself like that probably when he got drafted,” right tackle Mike McGlinchey said. “He’s done a great job. I can’t say enough good things about him.”

The history of rookie QBs making it this far in the postseason is not very successful with Shaun King (1999), Ben Roethlisbe­rger (2004), Joe Flacoo (2008) and Mark Sanchez (2009) all losing in that round.

 ?? Thearon W. Henderson/Getty Images ?? The San Francisco 49ers’ Brock Purdy throws a pass against the Dallas Cowboys during the NFC divisional playoffs on Sunday.
Thearon W. Henderson/Getty Images The San Francisco 49ers’ Brock Purdy throws a pass against the Dallas Cowboys during the NFC divisional playoffs on Sunday.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States