The Mercury News

Lance’s ‘different style’ talk of camp

Rival QB Garoppolo among the impressed

- By Cam Inman cinman@ bayareanew­sgroup.com

>> Jimmy Garoppolo’s post-practice analysis of rookie Trey Lance was spot on Tuesday, and it didn’t reek of jealousy or intimidati­on.

“Trey, he’s been making some plays,” Garoppolo said.

Uh, yes, yes he has. “You know, we all have a long way to go,” Garoppolo said. “We’re just getting started here in camp and we’ll keep this thing rolling.”

Lance, if you’re just tuning in, is on a roll.

On Tuesday, he threw the best pass of his debut training camp — and one of the longest completion­s on the 49ers practice field in ages — when his spiral soared 50 yards in the air and into Trent Sherfield’s arms down the left sideline for a touchdown. It highlighte­d Lance’s best passing day as a 49er, when he completed his first 14 attempts in team drills before overthrowi­ng a deep

shot to Richie James Jr. to end practice. (One pass came after a play appeared to be whistled dead for a penalty but Lance was encouraged to throw, which he did and completed.)

Lance is bringing more than that to his budding competitio­n with Garoppolo.

Lance’s legs are on the move. For the third straight day, the 49ers’ offensive installati­on called for Lance to run on zone reads and designed keepers. He did so nine times Tuesday, including his first-team rep in which he ran up the middle behind an offensive tackle.

“It’s not a play you’re doing with all the quarterbac­ks,” said coach Kyle Shanahan, who a day earlier said Lance wouldn’t be cutting into Garoppolo’s first-team role.

None of this is alarming. It’s why the 49ers drafted Lance No. 3 overall, after studying his dual-threat dominance for North Dakota State.

“The athleticis­m he brings — me, Josh (Rosen) and Nate (Sudfeld) — we were kind of joking about it. It pushes us to be better athletes, in a way,” Garoppolo said.

“It’s a different style. It’s ‘pick your flavor that you want.’ ”

Shanahan is not about to choose one quarterbac­k over the other a week into camp, or, better said, he’s not about to bench a proven starter in Garoppolo for a young phenom who just made his debut in full pads and has yet to play any of the upcoming three exhibition­s.

Shanahan said he will make that change only “when I think he gives us the best chance to win.”

How much does a day like Tuesday — after impressive outings in Lance’s previous two practices, marred only by a few false starts and cadence issues — go toward expediting his starting candidacy?

“I don’t really look at it like that. I thought he had a decent day,” Shanahan said. “I thought he did good with his reps, not perfect. But we’re just evaluating everybody right now. I’m not putting it like that.”

Garoppolo completed 8 of 12 passes Tuesday, including a miss intended for Brandon Aiyuk on a deep shot that Jason Verrett covered 40 yards downfield.

Through six practices, the unofficial stats show Garoppolo 47 for 74 (56.8%) and Lance 50 for 71 (70.4%) in full-team drills.

Garoppolo says he isn’t worried about any competitio­n with Lance so much as how the offense is matching up with the 49ers defense. On that point he’s noticed a change from recent years, with more back-and-forth taking place on a play-to-play basis than a day-to-day volley.

“Here, it’s been one play them, one play us. I’ve been on some good teams and that’s an early mark of a good team,” Garoppolo said.

Notes

Defensive end Dee Ford joined the 49ers pass rush in another encouragin­g sign in his comeback from last year’s back issue.

“It’s exciting to get him back out there. The energy he brings, the speed he brings, you have to be aware of where’s he’s at,” Garoppolo said. “It’s always a pleasure to have him out there.”

Added Shanahan: “He looked like the Dee Ford I remember. Hopefully he can keep it up and we’ll be smart with him.”

Ford also showed speed in coverage, pursuing Lance around the edge and out of bounds. Most often Arden Key, Samson Ebukam and Arik Armstead have been lining up at defensive end with the starters this camp.

“We’re waiting for Bosa to be back,” Garoppolo added. “I can’t wait for those two to be together again.”

Bosa remains limited to defensive line drills and Shanahan hopes to have him in full action at some point before the Sept. 12 opener.

• Wide receiver Jalen Hurd took part in team drills for the first time since his 2019 rookie season, which was eventually wiped out by a back injury and followed up with a 2020 knee injury. Hurd jumped offside on his first snap and saw no passes come his way, but he looked fast off the line.

• Linebacker Azeez AlShaair will miss a couple weeks with a knee sprain after an injury Monday.

• Wide receiver Deebo Samuel did not practice because of groin tightness.

• Cornerback Tim Harris Jr., who saw first-team snaps the initial practices of camp, is out for a couple weeks with a groin injury. Fellow cornerback Dontae Johnson (foot) and tight end MyCole Pruitt (calf) did not practice.

• Regardless of how right tackle Mike McGlinchey is benefittin­g from the addition of 25 pounds, Shanahan noted: “I like how his technique is right now.”

 ?? ANDA CHU — STAFF PHOTOGRAPH­ER ?? 49ers rookie quarterbac­k Trey Lance, left, chats with veteran Jimmy Garoppolo during drills at training camp,
ANDA CHU — STAFF PHOTOGRAPH­ER 49ers rookie quarterbac­k Trey Lance, left, chats with veteran Jimmy Garoppolo during drills at training camp,

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