The Mercury News

Lance ‘super excited’ for profession­al debut on Saturday against Kansas City

- By Cam Inman cinman@ bayareanew­sgroup.com

SANTA CLARA » Trey Lance is “super excited” for his 49ers debut in Saturday’s exhibition opener.

That is not just because Kansas City Chiefs counterpar­t and dual-threat role model Patrick Mahomes will be coming to Levi’s Stadium.

Is Lance eager to meet him, though?

“I guess we’ll see what happens. I’m trying to win the game,” Lance said Wednesday.

Neither coach Kyle Shanahan nor offensive coordinato­r Mike McDaniel have announced Lance’s upcoming role, such as whether he’ll relieve incumbent starter Jimmy Garoppolo,

who may or may not play.

“Excited to go compete with this locker room of guys, and, at the same time, everything is new,” Lance said. “From the hotel the night before the game to pregame warmup, everything is going to be new. But football is football.”

Also new will be playing in a game and hearing play calls come into his helmet via Shanahan’s radio.

He’s practiced that in a camp he described as “going very well.”

As Mahomes did, Lance comes into the NFL with an impressive arm and mobility,

which are quite useful to escape the trouble that comes from operating behind second-string offensive linemen. He took off running downfield five times Wednesday. He also kept his eyes wide open, looking for potential targets and firing accurate passes, eventually completing 15 of 20 passes. Enter: Humility. “Obviously I want to keep my eyes downfield and get the ball into the hands of the playmakers,” Lance said. “Those guys are much faster and more dynamic than I am.”

What does McDaniel want to see in Lance’s debut?

“Shoot, he hasn’t heard play calls in a (NFL) stadium with fans ever,” McDaniel said of Lance. “Whether he’s outstandin­g or has rough patches, it’s a process.”

Lance acknowledg­ed that one such rough patch came earlier this week in a goal-line drill, in which he threw short of the goal line on fourth down. Simply put, Lance is excited to get another crack at that.

Though Shanahan vowed to reporters last week that Lance will play this season in some capacity — perhaps in specialize­d run packages — Lance said he has yet to hear that directly from him, adding that all his current focus is on training camp.

One aspect that opened Lance’s eyes is how fast tight end George Kittle is, to which Kittle replied: “Oh Trey. He’s 21 years old. He’ll learn at some point and throw the ball out there.”

As loyal as Kittle is to Garoppolo, he didn’t downplay Lance’s upbeat presence, something Kittle and other teammates experience­d in a Las Vegas jaunt this offseason.

“Trey’s great. Great personalit­y. Plenty of energy. Good vibe,” Kittle said. “He’s definitely a 21-yearold. I connect with him now and I bet we would have been best friends if I was 21 . ... He’s very profession­al every day and he enjoys it.”

Lance played just one game last season at North Dakota State, after leading the Bison on an undefeated run to the Football Championsh­ip Subdivisio­n crown in 2019. He hasn’t looked too rusty or compiled too many rookie mistakes.

“We don’t harp too much on what happens. It’s all about getting better,” McDaniel added. “Continuous mistakes are worrisome. There’s nothing we’re worried about.”

Lance, for the second time this camp, made a onesnap cameo behind the firststrin­g offensive line, and instead of running with the ball, he handed off to rookie rusher Trey Sermon. TAKEAWAYTI­ME

Garoppolo was 13 of 22 and had his first practice in which two passes got intercepte­d — by Dre Greenlaw and Jason Verrett. K’Waun Williams nearly intercepte­d Garoppolo until a collision with Greenlaw knocked the ball to the ground.

Rookie safety Talanoa Hufanga intercepte­d a deep pass by Josh Rosen, a grab in which defensive coordinato­r DeMeco Ryans said: “I jumped up with him when he made that play.”

Ryans said takeaways are highlighte­d during film review, adding: “Everything we do is about taking the ball away. That’s the main focus. When we get takeaways, our chances of winning goes up tremendous­ly.”

The pass defense looked solid all day, mostly with the reserve unit. Arik Armstead (groin) and Dee Ford (back) took part in a few snaps. D.J. Jones deflected a Garoppolo pass that Greenlaw intercepte­d. Rookie cornerback Deommodore Lenoir, who’s lining up on the second team, made a timely pass breakup. Eric Yarborough, Jordan Willis, Kevin Givens and Zach Kerr had solid pass rushes. JALEN HURD RETURNS

Wide receiver Jalen Hurd returned after a two-practice absence, doing so with support tape on his right knee. He did not have a pass come his way in about seven snaps during fullteam drills, including one with the first-team unit.

 ?? KARL MONDON — STAFF PHOTOGRAPH­ER ?? Rookie QB Trey Lance is expected to play in Saturday’s exhibition opener against the Chiefs, but in what role?
KARL MONDON — STAFF PHOTOGRAPH­ER Rookie QB Trey Lance is expected to play in Saturday’s exhibition opener against the Chiefs, but in what role?

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