Santa Cruz Sentinel

Young praises BYU’s Wilson

Former 49ers QB would love to see incoming rookie in scarlet and gold

- By Cam Inman

The 49ers have moved up to the No. 3 spot in next month’s draft, but after the show Zach Wilson put on Friday at BYU’s pro day, he might be off the board by the time they pick.

Among those in Wilson’s audience was 49ers general manager John Lynch.

“The game of football is changing, especially at the quarterbac­k position,” Wilson told reporters afterward in his video call. “You want someone that’s athletic and mobile in the pocket and can make all the throws, but also extend and make things from different angles.”

That indeed is what the 49ers are likely seeking for coach Kyle Shanahan’s fifth season and beyond.

That play-making flair is what every team should want.

“I watch him and I want to watch more of him,” former 49ers (and BYU) quarterbac­k Steve Young said of Wilson in a recent interview with the Bay Area News Group. “There are few guys I want to watch more of. He’s a good young player. He’s a hard-working, good kid.”

If Wilson is gone within the first two picks by the Jacksonvil­le Jaguars and the New York Jets, the 49ers are apparently banking on a franchise-leading quarterbac­k to still be on the board, such as mobile playmakers Justin Fields (Ohio State) and Trey Lance (North Dakota State).

Shanahan’s prototype his first four seasons was to have a tough, pocketmind­ed quarterbac­k who could get the ball out quick on short-to-intermedia­te throws while directing a motion-oriented, run-dominant system. Alabama’s Mac Jones could be that guy.

Jimmy Garoppolo did that wonderfull­y in 2019, the only season of his career in which he played more than six games. His injuries (knee, 2018; ankle, 2020) doomed the 49ers.

So they vowed not to go bankrupt again in the quarterbac­k department, and Shanahan acknowledg­ed last December that he’s receptive to a more mobile quarterbac­k.

“You start to see you can win football games with any type of quarterbac­k as long as they are good enough and you can be good enough in hundreds of different ways,” Shanahan said Dec. 9. “So, I evaluate quarterbac­ks in terms of trying to find people who can have a chance to be one of those elite-type guys and there’s lots of different ways to do it.

“... You’re just trying to find a guy who is better than about 98 percent of the people on this planet or in this country and when you find that, you get him and you adjust to him.”

What makes Wilson better among his 2021 peers, including probable top pick Trevor Lawrence?

“There’s a lot of good ones. For sure, this draft is full of good players, a lot of good quarterbac­ks I’ve worked with in California, as well,” Wilson said.

“Something I feel that separates me is just my passion for the game. I really put a lot of time into what I do. Throughout all the years, I’ve really dedicated my life to football.”

 ?? RICK BOWMER — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? BYU quarterbac­k Zach Wilson warms up before participat­ing in the school’s pro day workout for NFL scouts on Friday in Provo, Utah.
RICK BOWMER — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS BYU quarterbac­k Zach Wilson warms up before participat­ing in the school’s pro day workout for NFL scouts on Friday in Provo, Utah.

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