The Ukiah Daily Journal

Bosa wins Defensive Player of Year honor

- By Cam Inman and Jerry Mcdonald

Nick Bosa sacked quarterbac­ks an Nfl-high 18 1/2 times this season, earning the 49ers' star the NFL Defensive Player of the Year award at Thursday night's NFL Honors show in Phoenix.

Bosa, 25, is only the third 49ers player to win that honor, joining Deion Sanders (1994) and Dana Stubblefie­ld (1997). Chiefs defensive lineman Chris Jones and Cowboys linebacker Micah Parsons were this season's other finalists.

In other results involving the 49ers, head coach Kyle Shanahan was runner-up in Coach of the Year voting, running back Christian Mccaffrey finsihed second for Comeback Player of the Year and quarterbac­k Brock Purdy finished third for the Offensive Rookie of the Year.

Demeco Ryans, the 49ers defensive coordinato­r and now head coach of the Houston Texans, was named as the NFL'S Assistant Coach of the Year.

Bosa won in a landslide, getting 46 of 50 first-place votes and being named on 49 of 50 ballots. Parsons finished second, followed by Jones and Philadelph­ia edge rusher Haason Reddick. The only players to get first-place votes other than Bosa were Jones (1), Reddick (2) and Jets defensive tackle Quinnen Williams.

The 49ers' defensive end thanked his family and the 49ers organizati­on in a brief acceptance speech.

“If I've learned one thing in life up to this point, whatever end goal you have in mind, it's not going to be a smooth path,” Bosa said. “There's going to be times where you're questionin­g yourself. But if you stay the course and believe in yourself and take it one day at a time, there's going to be a light at the end of the tunnel.”

The highlight of the night was a surprise appearance by Damar Hamlin, the Buffalo Bills safety. Hamlin came onto the stage after a standing ovation for the medical staffs that saved his life after his cardiac arrest on the field during the Bills' game in Cincinnati on Jan. 2.

“First off, I'd like to thank God, just for being here,” Hamlin said.

Later to the throng of medical personnel around him, he said: “I want to give a special thank you to everyone on this stage for everything they did for me, and thank you to everyone around the country and around the world who prayed for me and hoped for me.”

Niners tight end George Kittle provided a moment of levity during the show with a song parody devoted to his teammates. With a nod to show host Kelly Clarkson, he modified her hit “My Life Would Suck Without You,” in an ode to Bosa, Purdy and Mccaffrey,

Shanahan finished second behind New York Giants head coach Brian Daboll, with Daboll receiving 123 poits (16 first-place votes) to Shanahan's 100 (12 first-place votes). Mccaffrey had 12 first-place votes and 110 points, but Smith won comfortabl­y with 28 firstplace votes and 171 points.

Purdy finished third in the balloting for Offensive Rookie of the year with six first-place votes and 78 points. Jets wide receiver Garrett Wilson (18/156) won with fewer first-place votes than Seahawks running back Kenneth Walker III (19/129).

When Bosa won NFL Defensive Rookie of the Year honors three years ago, he was too busy to personally accept the award, seeing how the 49ers were preparing for the Super Bowl. This time, Bosa and the 49ers had their season end in the NFC Championsh­ip Game to the Philadelph­ia Eagles, who will take on the Kansas City Chiefs in Sunday's Super Bowl LVII.

“It was an unbelievab­le season and we have a lot to be proud of and a lot to build on,” Bosa said as the 49ers cleaned out their lockers Jan. 31. “There's going to be a lot of the same guys back, so that's exciting. It's obviously never the same group, which makes the NFL tough.

“You just have to appreciate life and keep living.”

Bosa is collecting multiple awards for his careerbest season: All-pro, Pro Bowl, the 49ers' Len Eshmont and Matt Hazeltine awards, and multiple defensive player of the year nods.

Rather than play for $18.9 million on the fifthyear option of his rookie deal, Bosa is expected to land a record-setting contract extension, likely before training camp starts in late July.

“He's a fantastic football player, he's a game changer of a football player,” general manager John Lynch said Feb. 1.

The 49ers have a history of rewarding their own, doing so annually since 2018 with marketsett­ing deals for Jimmy Garoppolo, George Kittle, Fred Warner, Kyle Juszczyk, Trent Williams and Deebo Samuel.

Bosa said last week that he was not necessaril­y looking to become the NFL'S highest-paid defender.

“It takes time, it takes patience, it takes persistenc­e, and we'll have that on our side,” Lynch added. “He's represente­d by very good and capable people. And you heard Nick (last week), he never seems to get too excited.

“He's pretty chill about the whole thing and I think with that in mind and each of us wanting the same thing, we'll be able to come to an agreement.”

Bosa's 18 1/2 sacks were one shy of the 49ers' franchise record (Aldon Smith, 2012). His 48 quarterbac­k hits were also the NFL'S most this season, and he had 19 tackles for loss that tied for second-most.

That level of individual dominance went over quite well with his teammates, who selected him as the team's Len Eshmont Award winner, a top internal honor given for inspiratio­nal and courageous play.

“It's like watching manslaught­er, you know what I'm saying?” defensive tackle Javon Kinlaw said of Bosa. “No matter who he goes against, the odds are in his favor at all times.”

 ?? JOSE CARLOS FAJARDO — BAY AREA NEWS GROUP ?? San Francisco 49ers' Nick Bosa (97) and San Francisco 49ers' Trent Williams (71) celebrate after defeating the New Orleans Saints during their NFL game at Levi's Stadium in Santa Clara on Nov. 27, 2022.
JOSE CARLOS FAJARDO — BAY AREA NEWS GROUP San Francisco 49ers' Nick Bosa (97) and San Francisco 49ers' Trent Williams (71) celebrate after defeating the New Orleans Saints during their NFL game at Levi's Stadium in Santa Clara on Nov. 27, 2022.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States