Times-Herald (Vallejo)

McKinnon awaits SB debut with Kansas City

After knee surgeries derailed his 49ers' tenure, RB glad to be back in the big game

- By Cam Inman

Jerick McKinnon recalls helplessly walking off the 49ers' losing sideline in the Super Bowl three years ago, as the Kansas City Chiefs' red-and-yellow confetti fell from Miami's night sky.

It capped his second season with the 49ers, his second straight on the sideline because of knee surgeries.

“I remember saying to myself, `I'm going to find a way back somehow, and I'm going to contribute,'” McKinnon said Monday night, back on that marquee stage with the Kansas City Chiefs, ahead of Sunday's Super Bowl against the Philadelph­ia Eagles in Phoenix.

“I didn't know how it was going to shape out, but somehow I ended up on the opposing team,” McKinnon added, “And now I'm here, so it's great.”

Before Deebo Samuel and Christian McCaffrey excelled as dual threats in the 49ers' rushing and receiving games, the 49ers paid McKinnon a lot of money to be great in that role. That $17 million investment became a sunk cost. A week before he could debut their 2018 season opener, he tore the anterior cruciate ligament in his right knee during a bonus practice.

McKinnon practiced a few days at the 2019 training camp, only to require a follow-up procedure on his knee. That sent him to injured reserve for a second straight season, the one that ended with a Super Bowl loss to the Chiefs.

In the days prior to that Super Bowl, McKinnon roamed around the “Opening Night” media session and playfully interviewe­d teammates for the 49ers' video team. This past Monday night, McKinnon was the one being interviewe­d, including about his comeback.

“I ain't going to lie to you, it's tough going with backto-back knee surgeries, not knowing what was next for me,” McKinnon said, in audio posted by the NFL. “Through it all, I just kept my head down, kept working, kept faith in God, and leaned on the people around me. It all led back to this.”

McKinnon originally joined the 49ers as a 2018 free agent at an extravagan­t cost (four years, $30 million). He restructur­ed to a one-year, $1 million deal for his 2020 comeback on what would be an injury-plagued 49ers team.

His comeback took root that year as he scored in the 49ers' first four games. Shadowing Raheem Mostert and Jeff Wilson Jr., McKinnon's dual-threat capability emerged: 319 rushing yards and five touchdowns, 253 receiving yards and one touchdown.

 ?? KEVIN C. COX — GETTY IMAGES ?? Chiefs running back Jerick McKinnon lost to Kansas City as an injured member of the 49ers in Super Bowl LIV in 2020.
KEVIN C. COX — GETTY IMAGES Chiefs running back Jerick McKinnon lost to Kansas City as an injured member of the 49ers in Super Bowl LIV in 2020.

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