San Francisco Chronicle - (Sunday)

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Will weight of Super Bowl collapse fuel or finish 49ers?

- By Eric Branch

Will Super Bowl loss motivate the 49ers? Will pandemic allow for a full season? What are the main reasons for hope?

When the 49ers landed at San Jose Internatio­nal Airport after their gutting Super Bowl LIV loss in February, general manager John Lynch saw he’d received a text from his friend, Kurt Warner.

He’s saved that message from the Hall of Fame quarterbac­k. And Lynch read some of Warner’s words Tuesday as he explained how the 49ers have navigated the aftermath of a nightmare. Warner’s nightmare occurred in 2002 when the Rams were upset in Super Bowl XXXVI by the Patriots, who were 14point underdogs.

Warner said the loss made their 142 season feel like a failure. And their deep disappoint­ment carried over to the next season, when the Rams started 05.

“My advice would be to not be afraid to celebrate.” Warner wrote to Lynch. “As disappoint­ed as you are, celebrate the accomplish­ment you had. You had an outstandin­g year.”

Said Lynch: “I think there’s wisdom in that.”

What’s the best way to handle the psychologi­cal fallout after a Lombardi Trophy slips

from one’s grip in historical­ly painful fashion?

It’s a question Lynch and head coach Kyle Shanahan began discussing on the flight home from Miami, two days after the 49ers became the third team in NFL history to squander a 10point lead in the fourth quarter of a Super Bowl in their 3120 loss to the Chiefs.

In a team meeting held after they landed, Shanahan and Lynch asked their players to celebrate the season they had — a request inspired by Warner’s text — and steeled them for the challenge ahead.

Players were invited to stand up and recount their favorite memories from a 133 season that was preceded by a fourwin disaster in 2018. And they were told an unpleasant fact: Only three of the first 53 teams that have lost a Super Bowl have returned to win a title the next season — and only eight have returned to the game.

“One of the things Kyle and I said is we needed to face it, head on,” Lynch said. “And the reality of it. And the reality was when we started doing our research it’s not the prettiest picture.”

If there’s a balance to be struck between using a Super Bowl loss as motivation and moving on, the 49ers seem to be erring on the side of using their pain to pulverize their opponents this season.

It began in the moments after the game when tight end George Kittle said he and linebacker Kwon Alexander had declared the upcoming season, “The Legendary Revenge Tour of 2020.”

The theme has continued this summer.

“We have unfinished business,” running back Raheem Mostert said. “That’s our motto.”

“We all have that ingrained in our brain,” defensive lineman Arik Armstead said. “It’s all motivating us and pushing us to get back there.”

Wide receiver Tavon Austin, 30, who was signed at the start of training camp, has picked up on the vibe.

“I can tell there’s still a lot of heartbreak about what happened last year, since they had the game in their hands and they lost it,” said Austin, who is on injured reserve. “The mentality around here is different, so you don’t want to be that person to mess that up and slow things up.”

After the 49ers met virtually this summer because of the coronaviru­s pandemic, Shanahan showed them clips from the Super Bowl for the first time when they were in training camp.

It was part of a montage that featured plays that determined wins and losses from a season in which the 49ers played eight games decided by seven or fewer points. There were evidently a few plays from the fourth quarter of the Super Bowl when they were outscored 210.

“I can feel the cringe any time that film comes on,” said left tackle Trent Williams, who was acquired in a trade in April. “Everybody still is pretty much holding a grudge about the last game and they can’t wait to get out there and kind of start that quest again.”

For those wondering whether the 49ers would be better served to push the game out of their minds, they have an answer: That’s impossible.

All Super Bowl losers discuss the pain of falling short, but the 49ers had a 96.1% win probabilit­y with just over seven minutes left in the fourth quarter, according to ESPN.

So pain isn’t the word for the 49ers. Agony? Unspeakabl­e torment?

Right guard Mike Person, who retired in the offseason, turned off his TV in the spring when he saw old Stanley Cup highlights. Sure, it was hockey, but it was just too difficult to see a team celebratin­g a championsh­ip.

Lynch can relate: He feels ill when the Chiefs’ head coach or quarterbac­k suddenly appear on his screen.

“Every time a commercial with Andy Reid, who I love, or Patrick (Mahomes) comes on, I flip the channel,” Lynch said. “I just can’t go there.”

Pass rusher Nick Bosa, who wept on the bench in the final moments of the loss, hasn’t

rewatched the fourth quarter. And cornerback Emmanuel Moseley could only summon 12 words this summer when asked about his coverage gaffe that sparked Kansas City’s comeback.

“I just learned from it,” Moseley said. “Moved on. And focus on this year.”

Defensive coordinato­r Robert Saleh said, smiling, in late August that he’s yet to move on from a defeat that caused him to lay “in bed for a couple weeks.” Lynch, who won the only Super Bowl he participat­ed in as a player (with Tampa Bay in 2003), noted he was part of two conference championsh­ip losses that have left scars.

“As for how long that (loss to the Chiefs) will linger, I think it will, forever,” Lynch said. “You think of games that got away. You can’t sugarcoat it like, ‘Oh, hey, you’ll forget about this.’ You don’t forget about something like that. The only thing I know to do is turn around and work.”

It’s tempting to reach for the easy story line: The 49ers, naive and loose last year, are now

hardened and stonefaced as they prepare for their revenge tour.

But that would be ignoring silly sagas such as the ongoing Tshirt backandfor­th between quarterbac­k Jimmy Garoppolo and Kittle, the latter of whom sported a “Garoppolo/Kittle 2020” shirt before they both switched allegiance­s.

Garoppolo formed a ticket with wide receiver Trent Taylor. And Kittle chose Bosa.

“If Jimmy has options, I guess I’ll have options as well,” Kittle explained. “It just seems like a strong (move) for me, (Bosa) has quads of the century. I think this will be a good running mate.”

Time has at least eased some of the sting. And perhaps dealing with a global pandemic, a health crisis that began shortly after the Super Bowl, has provided some perspectiv­e.

But even before the world changed, the 49ers were able to smile in the hours after their world had been rocked.

After the Super Bowl, they attended an elaborate team party at American Airlines Arena, about 13 miles away from the site of their nightmare. Kittle said he had a bucketlist moment when he got a selfie with rapper Lil Wayne and thought it was cathartic to “let it all loose and move on.”

As for Lynch, on reflection, he wonders if he appreciate­d the sentiment of Warner’s celebratet­heseason text before he received it. Lynch spent time at the postgame commiserat­ing with Shanahan and had an hourlong conversati­on with former 49ers running back Frank Gore.

“Despite the loss and how devastatin­g it was, we ended up having a good time,” Lynch said.

“As good of a time as you could.”

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