The Ukiah Daily Journal

ANOTHER CROSSROADS

Football coaches have searched and schemed to discover what makes the perfect quarterbac­k since the game was invented. The 49ers find themselves in the middle of the latest evolutiona­ry phase — but have they discovered the key to the future?

- BY CAM INMAN

The NFL, in all honesty, is not a tale of two quarterbac­ks. It sure looked that way during last season’s Super Bowl, with an age-defying star, Tom Brady, outlasting an ever-nimble phenom, Patrick Mahomes.

But this isn’t so much about those two quarterbac­ks. Instead, let’s talk about the NFL’S ever-evolving approach to the position.

Do you ride the veteran pocket passer with a knack for victory? Or go with the young gun — actually the run-and-gun — whose mobility truly makes it an 11-vs.-11 affair each snap?

Just look who’s front and center on this season’s 49ers, with incumbent starter Jimmy Garoppolo grooming/mentoring/staving off hot-shot rookie Trey Lance. So who has the right of way? This isn’t the first time the NFL appears at a crossroads at the most scrutinize­d job on the field. Mobile quarterbac­ks and generation­al athletes have come and gone.

High school and college ranks are breeding grounds for Lancelike quarterbac­ks, those state-ofthe-art phenoms who can dissect defenses with rocket arms and nimble legs — and overlooked quick wit. They can play seemingly any skill position, only to opt for the glory and control of quarterbac­k.

For the 49ers, they last enjoyed a dual-threat option when Colin Kaepernick burst on the scene and led the 2012 team to the Super Bowl. Kap was, at least at his onset, a rushing and passing dynamo.

Steve Young was once, too. Then he developed into a Hall of Famer, maturing with record-setting efficiency as a passer. Jeff Garcia was a three-time Pro Bowler whose mobility helped him fight to survive every down.

Lance came out of a pro-style offense at North Dakota State that employed playaction concepts mirroring much of what the 49ers do under Shanahan.

By mortgaging their draft future and selecting Lance with the No. 3 overall pick, the 49ers got more than insurance for the injury-plagued Garoppolo. They got the prototype for future playoff stardom, or at least another style to deploy.

“There’s lots of different ways you can do it,” 49ers coach Kyle Shanahan said. “I don’t look at it as in trends of the league. I look at it as there’s some special players or special people.”

The NFL bid farewell to two of its top, pocket-oriented gunslinger­s this offseason with the retirement­s of Drew Brees and Philip Rivers.

When it comes to NFL MVPS, it fluctuates between a savvy veteran quarterbac­k not known for his mobility (see Brady, Peyton Manning, Matt Ryan, Aaron Rodgers), to an up-and-comer who baffles defenses with his escapabili­ty and legs (see Mahomes, Lamar Jackson, Cam Newton).

“There’s lots of ways to do it,” Shanahan added. “And people are proving that more and more. Especially the more high schools, the more Pop Warner, my kids’ school, my kids’ flag football team goes no-huddle and just shows pictures. They go fast as could be.

“And man, a lot of people are getting trained in offenses in different ways. A lot of much better athletes are also learning how to play the quarterbac­k position.”

Shanahan thrived on improvisat­ion as a mobile quarterbac­k as a youth, before transition­ing to wide receiver as a Saratoga High freshman.

Those wide-open offenses that are being played today have roots in California.

After watching his son, John, flourish in the spread offense at Granada Hills High under Jack Neumeier, Jack Elway brought that system into the college ranks, first at Cal State Northridge and then San Jose State in the late 1970s. Now, some 50 years later, it’s the norm to see offenses deploy four to five receivers.

But figuring out what type of quarterbac­k is best for success remains in debate.

Mobile quarterbac­ks are nothing new to the 49ers. Young harnessed his scrambling ways to evolve into one of the NFL’S most efficient passers of all time. Some 20 years later, Kaepernick stormed through defenses primarily with his breakaway speed more so than strong-armed throws.

“To see a quarterbac­k run the way he runs, that’s unbelievab­le,” then-49ers linebacker Patrick Willis said of Kaepernick after he ran for two touchdowns and 181 yards (most ever in a game by an NFL quarterbac­k) to beat the Green Bay Packers 45-31 in his playoff debut in January 2013.

Like Kaepernick, Lance checks in at 6-foot-4 and about 225 pounds. But, from initial looks on the 49ers’ practice field, Lance is not a second-coming of Kaepernick, who had more straight-line speed.

Lance came out of a pro-style offense at North Dakota State that employed play-action concepts mirroring much of what the 49ers

 ?? JOSE CARLOS FAJARDO/STAFF ARCHIVES ?? The 49ers are 22-8 in games Jimmy Garoppolo has started since he arrived in a trade from New England before the 2017 season. Injuries limited Garoppolo to six games last season (3 wins) but he was a big reason the 49ers reached the Super Bowl two seasons ago.
JOSE CARLOS FAJARDO/STAFF ARCHIVES The 49ers are 22-8 in games Jimmy Garoppolo has started since he arrived in a trade from New England before the 2017 season. Injuries limited Garoppolo to six games last season (3 wins) but he was a big reason the 49ers reached the Super Bowl two seasons ago.
 ?? BRUCE KLUCKHOHN/ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Rookie quarterbac­k Trey Lance did it all at North Dakota State in 2019, passing for 2,786 yards with 28 touchdowns and no intercepti­ons and rushing for more than 1,000 yards and 14 more touchdowns.
BRUCE KLUCKHOHN/ASSOCIATED PRESS Rookie quarterbac­k Trey Lance did it all at North Dakota State in 2019, passing for 2,786 yards with 28 touchdowns and no intercepti­ons and rushing for more than 1,000 yards and 14 more touchdowns.

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