Cam Inman – Chico Enterprise-Record https://www.chicoer.com Chico Enterprise-Record: Breaking News, Sports, Business, Entertainment and Chico News Tue, 02 Apr 2024 12:41:29 +0000 en-US hourly 30 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.4.3 https://www.chicoer.com/wp-content/uploads/2018/05/cropped-chicoer-site-icon1.png?w=32 Cam Inman – Chico Enterprise-Record https://www.chicoer.com 32 32 147195093 49ers mailbag: Stop envisioning Super Bowl dynasty (other than the Chiefs’) https://www.chicoer.com/2024/04/02/49ers-mailbag-stop-envisioning-super-bowl-dynasty-other-than-chiefs/ Tue, 02 Apr 2024 12:35:07 +0000 https://www.chicoer.com/?p=4404100&preview=true&preview_id=4404100 SANTA CLARA — Watching Super Bowl LVIII replays is one way to kill time in the 49ers’ offseason. A more productive way: asking questions in our social-media huddles for our first mailbag of NFL Draft Month:

One thing you would do as GM of the 49ers to make sure we beat the Chiefs in the Super Bowl? (@connor_p.g)

One thing? Have you seen how much the 49ers have altered their defense since the Chiefs outlasted them in Vegas? They’ve changed defensive coordinators. They’ve welcomed new defenders and bid farewell to others, including Arik Armstead, Javon Kinlaw, Chase Young, Clelin Ferrell, and Oren Burks. And they haven’t re-signed Tashaun Gipson or Logan Ryan. One more thing? I’d use the first-round pick on a defensive end who was born to sack Patrick Mahomes — or stop him on a fourth-and-1 run with the Super Bowl on the line.

49ers Super Bowl dynasty? LIX (59) and LX (60)? (@jbati_8052)

Look, they need to win their first Super Bowl in THIRTY years before banking on a repeat. It reminds me of when a 49ers rookie walked up to John Madden some 20 years ago; he asked Madden how many Super Bowls he’d won, and after Madden replied one (the Raiders’ first in 1976), the player said he was going to win three, to which Madden countered: “I’d just worry about getting that first one, if I were you.” That player won none.

If the 49ers trade up in the first round, what position do they target? (@podman61)

Offensive tackle or defensive end, although wide receiver is in play if the 49ers trade Brandon Aiyuk or Deebo Samuel. Tackle is the more common prediction, but I say that’s more for insurance in case Trent Williams retires in the next year or two, rather than an immediate replacement for right tackle Colton McKivitz, who just got an extension through 2025. Not a lot of defensive ends are generating hype, which could allow the 49ers to sneak up for one to learn behind Nick Bosa and Leonard Floyd.

Why is Jed talking about Purdy asking for something no one has ever asked for before? (@dcl24sc)?

York, at last week’s NFL owners meeting, foreshadowed how Brock Purdy’s 2025 extension could be the largest in team history. If he joins the club of NFL quarterbacks making over $40 million annually, Purdy’s deal would eclipse the 49ers’ last year for defensive end Nick Bosa (five years, $170 million), as well as the 2018 gamble that briefly made Jimmy Garoppolo the NFL’s highest-paid quarterback (five years, $137.5 million).

Purdy’s contract can’t be adjusted until after he completes this upcoming, third season. On top of his $870,000 last season, he received $739,795 from the NFL’s performance-based pay program, the NFL announced Monday. (Cornerback Deommodore Lenoir earned an additional $790,744 through that system that factors in playing time and compensation compared to teammates; he had a $940,000 in base salary.)

Who gets a long-term deal first, Aiyuk or J.J.? (@bigev49er)

My money (OK, the Yorks’ money) is on Jauan Jennings, only because his contract should be less complicated than the extension that Aiyuk should get as training camp opens. Both wide receivers are under 49ers control for 2024: Aiyuk’s fifth-year option calls for a $14.1 million salary, while Jennings drew a $4.9 million tender he’s expected to sign as a restricted free agent. Whereas Jennings might give the 49ers a hometown discount, AIyuk should not.

Please keep Brandon Aiyuk!! (@mj_arroyo)

Your wish should be granted in about four months, seeing how the 49ers typically let their money accrue interest in the bank until camp approaches and urgency prompts them to make a deal for their annual homegrown star. Aiyuk is understandably anxious, saying he wants what he deserves or else he’ll walk, though the 49ers shouldn’t dare trade Brock Purdy’s favorite target. “We’ve got professionals working on both sides, so hopefully we can come to a professional agreement and continue to play professional football,” Aiyuk said on last week’s Nightcap podcast.

 

Aiyuk said he was in the facility last week. Do the players normally use the equipment for working out or rehab? (@Michael21985873)

Aiyuk, on that same podcast, indeed noted that he’d been at the 49ers’ headquarters, though he didn’t specify if he was looking into contract matters or training on his own. Players rehabilitating from injuries can do so there. Otherwise, the voluntary offseason program starts April 15, with six organized team activity sessions set between May 20-31; the mandatory minicamp is June 4-6.

When does the season start? (@lowkss_213)

Thursday, Sept. 5 is the scheduled start, kicking off with The Team That Beat The 49ers in Super Bowl LVIII. The next day, the NFL plays its first regular-season game in Brazil, between the Philadelphia Eagles and a team to be announced, though reports predict it will be the Cleveland Browns or the Green Bay Packers. The 49ers have opened on the road five of the past six seasons.

Likelihood the Niners get to the Super Bowl next season and avoid the typical hangover? (@the_blair__)

Their offense returns intact, their defense welcomes back stars at every level, and their overall experience makes them the widespread favorite to win Super Bowl LIX, according to the sportsbooks. A runner-up hangover hasn’t derailed their past two seasons after NFC Championship Game defeats. The Silver Slugger Award is theirs come Feb. 9 in New Orleans.

Are we done signing (free agents), and, if not, what are names we might add? (@matty__maff; @Michael_budd)

I’d expect a signing or two, just not a cap-crunching deal. They can fill their receiver/returner need by bringing back Richie James or Trent Taylor, or by chasing Deonte Harty or Jamal Agnew. A slew of veteran safeties remain available. Mid-April signings in recent years brought in defensive lineman Arden Key (2021), running back Wayne Gallman (2021), defensive end Kemoko Turay (2022), wide receiver Chris Conley (2023), and defensive end Kerry Hyder Jr. (2023).

Is anyone around the league recruiting special-teams players or coaches from the XFL to deal with the new kickoff rules? (@sluggishcheetah)

The XFL merged with the USFL to form the UFL, whose season began Saturday. So, those experts are busy, but the 49ers can rely on veteran special-teams coordinator Brian Schneider to plot their approach. More kickoff returns are expected, but that would not entice me to expose a big-time playmaker such as Christian McCaffrey or Deebo Samuel in that still-hazardous, specialized role, at least not until the stakes rise for the playoffs.

Given Kyle’s comments during the league meetings and their past draft history (or lack thereof), how certain are we that they’ll actually address the offensive line in the draft? (@KevinAMolina)

They have 10 picks. They have needs, at least for better competition and depth. Just because they did not draft an offensive lineman last year doesn’t mean they hate doing so. Their starters include left guard Aaron Banks (2021 second round), right tackle Colton McKivitz (2020 fifth round) and, at times, right guard Spencer Burford (2022 fourth round). Anybody they draft in the first three rounds could challenge for a starting job, and if it’s a tackle, then he perhaps he’s envisioned as a successor to All-Pro Trent Williams.

Will Dre Greenlaw be ready for Week 1? (@jacob.problemz.19)

The 49ers are not publicly pushing for that timeline, even if Greenlaw is personally intending to come back in time from his Achilles tear in the Super Bowl. Lynch indicated last week that Greenlaw could very well start the season on the Physically Unable To Perform list, which would keep him out at least the first four games. Hence, they signed De’Vondre Campbell in free agency as both a potential replacement and starter.

Will the 49ers go with the best-player-available malarkey from the draft or select players to fit specific roster needs? (@MrEd315)

It’s typically a balance of both, but they should lean more on BPA because this roster is not as needy as those of past years. Then again, this draft should pay off in 2025-27 and beyond, not necessarily 2024.

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4404100 2024-04-02T05:35:07+00:00 2024-04-02T05:41:29+00:00
A’s 4, Guardians 3: Only 4,118 see walk-off winner to cap season-opening series https://www.chicoer.com/2024/03/31/as-4-guardians-3-only-4118-see-walk-off-winner-to-cap-season-opening-series/ Sun, 31 Mar 2024 22:42:52 +0000 https://www.chicoer.com/?p=4397685&preview=true&preview_id=4397685 OAKLAND – Only 4,118 fans scattered across the Coliseum’s green seats on a sunny, Easter afternoon. What they saw was the A’s improbably rally for their first win: a 4-3, walk-off triumph Sunday that kept the Cleveland Guardians from sweeping the four-game, season-opening series.

“It’s hard to win here, so to put those three games behind us, we can come out here with a good taste in our mouth and get ready for Boston,” said A’s starter Paul Blackburn, who took a perfect game into the fifth inning and a shutout through seven.

Indeed, as the Red Sox (2-2) arrive in town for a three-game series, the A’s won’t be wallowing in a winless start to a still very suspect season, one that could end a 57-year residency here unless negotiations with Oakland officials keep them longer before a planned move to Las Vegas in 2028.

“Nobody wants to start 0-4,” A’s manager Mark Kotsay said. “I was proud of the effort there, and the fight-back we showed after the eighth inning. That’s a good sign of this club not folding or not having the energy to bounce back from what was pretty ugly, to turn things out to a positive day.”

Blackburn was intent on delivering that victory, exiting with a 3-0 lead. The Guardians promptly scored three runs in the eighth off A’s relievers Lucas Erceg and Austin Adams, setting the stage for a ninth-inning nail-biter.

Abraham Toro’s bases-loaded, four-pitch walk brought in Darell Hernaiz for the game-winning run in the bottom of the ninth.

The A’s loaded the bases in the ninth, behind Ryan Noda’s walk and back-to-back singles from Shea Langeliers and Lawrence Butler. Hernaiz, pinch-running for Noda, got a bad jump on Butler’s hit to center field, thus delaying the A’s walk-off celebration. Eli Morgan entered for the Guardians and didn’t throw a strike to Toro, who watched a 90-mph fastball sail high to essentially end the 2 ½-hour affair.

The season-opening series attracted a total of 26,902 fans, not counting the thousands who stayed in the Coliseum parking lot on Thursday’s Opening Night as a protest of the A’s planned move to Las Vegas by 2028.

The official crowd count for that 8-0 opening loss was 13,522, or about half of last year’s home debut, when 26,805 saw the A’s beat the Angels and eventual two-time MVP Shohei Ohtani. But that A’s team stumbled to a 3-16 start and lost 23 of their its 28 games.

“Getting this first (win) out of the way, you can relax, get the edge off, have fun and go play baseball,” said catcher Shea Langeliers, after the A’s first Easter-day win in 10 years.

Blackburn said he and Langeliers stuck to their game plan inning after inning, up until Blackburn got pulled before the eighth. He allowed three hits and one walk in 88 pitches, with three strikeouts.

“You have to kind of realize it’s still March. I wanted to go all nine (innings) today but in the big scheme of things, this is a marathon,” Blackburn said. “My pitch limit was 85 to 90 my first time out and that’s about right where I landed.”

Josh Naylor broke up Blackburn’s perfect game in the fifth with a leadoff single to right field. Blackburn soon found himself in a bases-loaded jam after allowing an infield single to former A’s star Ramón Laureano and a four-pitch walk to Estevan Florial. The shutout stayed intact, however, when Blackburn got No. 9 hitter Gabriel Arias to fly out to shallow right field, where second baseman Zack Gelof battled the sun to snare the third out.

In the seventh, Laureano reached on a two-out single, and with Erceg up in the A’s bullpen, Blackburn got Bo Naylor to pop out to Gelof to end that threat.

Blackburn didn’t allow a base runner through four innings. His day opened with a 92.1-mph fastball for a called strike against Steven Kwan, who eventually lined out to right.

Blackburn’s dominance shouldn’t have been too stunning after his 4-0 showing in spring training. That ended with six no-hit innings against the Chicago Cubs on March 20, then just two hits by the Giants over 5 2/3 innings last Tuesday.

Blackburn, 30, was the A’s 2022 All-Star representative, and the Heritage High-Brentwood product deserved a win Sunday that would have improved his career record as a starter to 17-24.

Dany Jimenez came on to pitch the ninth for the A’s and immediately found trouble: Bo Naylor walked, and Florial reached on a Gelof error. Langeliers picked off Naylor at third base to slow the rally, and although Jimenez had an ensuing pickoff attempt sail into center field, the Guardians couldn’t scratch across a go-ahead run in the frame.

But in the equalizing eighth inning, Erceg allowed a leadoff triple to Florial, who would score on a groundout to spoil the A’s shutout bid. Once Erceg allowed a two-out single to Andres Gimenez,  Adams entered and promptly threw his first pitch behind Jose Ramirez. The lead was cut to 3-2 when the Guardians scored off an error by shortstop Nick Allen, and Blackburn’s potential win officially vanished when Naylor’s single off Allen drove in a tying run.

The A’s jumped out to a 2-0, first-inning lead via J.J. Bleday’s RBI triple and Seth Brown’s single that scored Bleday. Esteury Ruiz scored the initial run after leading off with an infield single and stealing second. That marked only A’s second lead all season. Their first was short-lived, having gone ahead 3-2 in Saturday’s third inning, only for the Guardians to answer with three runs in the fourth inning to spark their 12-3 rout.

Sunday’s lead grew to 3-0 in the fourth, as Ruiz tripled down the right-field line and again scored on a Bleday hit, this time on a single to right.

“We need to add onto a lead to make things more comfortable,” Kotsay said, “but a win is a win.”

They’ll try for the next one against the Red Sox. First pitch Monday is set for 6:40 p.m.

“The Red Sox coming to town is always exciting,” Langeliers said. “But’s it’s the big leagues and, in my head, I’m excited to play anybody.”

NOTES

The A’s claimed infielder Tyler Nevin off waivers from the Baltimore Orioles, while designating pitcher Adrián Martínez for assignment. Martinez went 4-8 with a 5.51 ERA in 34 appearances (13 starts) the previous two seasons.

Nevin, 26, is the oldest son of former big-leaguer Phil Nevin. A 2015 first-round draft pick by the Colorado Rockies, he made his Major League debut in 2021 with the Orioles. Primarily a third baseman, he’s batted .203 in 266 career at-bats (five home runs, 29 RBI) between the Orioles (2021-22) and the Detroit Tigers (2023). He played 41 games for the Tigers last year when he wasn’t splitting time at Triple-A Toledo (.326 batting average, 15 home runs, 58 RBI).

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4397685 2024-03-31T15:42:52+00:00 2024-03-31T17:32:31+00:00
Guardians 8, Athletics 0: Sparse crowd ushers in Oakland’s 57th (perhaps final) season https://www.chicoer.com/2024/03/28/guardians-8-athletics-0-sparse-crowd-ushers-in-oaklands-57th-perhaps-final-season/ Fri, 29 Mar 2024 04:36:18 +0000 https://www.chicoer.com/?p=4380052&preview=true&preview_id=4380052 OAKLAND – One of the smallest Opening Day crowds in the Oakland A’s 57-year history showed Thursday night for possibly their final season debut at the Coliseum — an 8-0 shutout loss to the Cleveland Guardians.

While some fans bunkered in the parking lot to protest the A’s planned relocation to Las Vegas, there wasn’t much for the home fans to cheer amid the announced crowd of 13,522.

“I would have liked to seen all those guys inside the stadium tonight. But they’re fighting for something they believe in,” A’s starting pitcher Alex Wood said. “As long as they’re supporting us, whether it’s inside the stadium or watching the game outside, Oakland has such a rich history of baseball and you see how much it means to people.”

That was officially the seventh-smallest attendance in the A’s Opening Day history, although that includes debuts limited by the COVID pandemic in 2020 (no fans) and 2021 (10,436). Ironically, the A’s record for lowest attendance of a season opener came in 1996 when 7,294 showed in Las Vegas, where that series against Toronto got moved because of the Coliseum’s “Mt. Davis” construction for the Raiders.

Seven of the A’s first nine batters struck out, and Guardians’ starter Shane Bieber totaled 11 strikeouts while shutting out the A’s on four hits through six innings.

“We didn’t have an answer for Bieber tonight,” A’s manager Mark Kotsay said. “That was pretty good. We were swinging at the right pitches. Outside of JJ (Bleday, 2-for-4), he pretty much dominated tonight up and down the lineup. He has that ability and there’s a reason he won the Cy Young in ’20.”

Bieber’s exit allowed for some hope during the seventh-inning stretch, at which point the crowd also came alive trying to catch baseballs being thrown down to them by the A’s new television-broadcast crew of Dallas Braden and Jenny Cavnar.

Wood, formerly of the cross-bay Giants, threw a 1-2-3 first inning. A five-run rally in the fourth inning ended his debut, however, and the crowd was large enough to serenade Wood with boos after a two-run double by No. 9 hitter Brayan Rocchio, for a 6-0 deficit.

“It was one of those games you leave and feel your stuff was good and should have had a better result,” Wood said. “… It was super cool and it’s a big honor to take the ball on Opening Day. You wish you could win at home on Opening Day. But baseball’s back and I’m excited for the year.”

It was the A’s first Opening Day shutout loss since 2014, when Cleveland won 2-0 here. And this one made for a victorious debut for Guardians’ manager Stephen Vogt, who ended his playing career here two years ago with a home run for the A’s in his final at-bat.

“It was really a special night overall to be back in Oakland, to see people I care about and love and have been such a big part of my history,” said Vogt, who had about 30 friends and family in attendance from his native Visalia. “And then for our guys to come out and play the way they did, it was just a real special night.”

Chants of “Sell-The-Team” faintly followed in the fifth inning, just over an hour into the season. The occasional “Let’s-Go-A’s” chant proved just as futile. Some of those fans presumably ditched the outside gathering to fill pockets of seats around the Coliseum’s first and second decks.

“It was pretty awesome for what we were told was going on, to still see the Oakland faithful come out and support us inside the stadium,” first baseman Ryan Noda said, who further complemented the outfield fans who are “always going to show up and we love that from them.”

“Good for them. Good for them,” Noda added of those who left the boycott. “We just want the fans in the stadium cheering for us, pushing one way with us. That’s all we care about. Anything else is out of our control.”

The A’s anemic offense nearly broke through against Bieber in the middle innings, only to be denied. In the fifth, Lawrence Butler got tagged out at third when he slid past the bag on Nick Allen’s two-out single. In the sixth, Bleday reached on a two-out double, then designated hitter Brent Rooker flew out short of the centerfield warning track.

Back-to-back, second-inning doubles by David Fry and Tyler Freeman put the A’s in a 1-0 hole. The A’s sought to answer as J.D. Davis reached on a one-out, opposite-field single in the ex-Giants’ cross-bay debut; Bieber struck out the next two batters he faced, giving him six Ks through two frames.

No home runs were hit, but a ninth-inning, RBI triple by José Ramírez hit the right-field wall for a 7-0 deficit.

The night wasn’t without defensive highlights: Right fielder Seth Brown made a diving catch in the ninth for the Guardians’ final out; first baseman Ryan Noda made a sliding catch on Steven Kwan’s infield popup of Wood’s first pitch, and, second baseman Zack Gelof repeatedly flashed grace by cutting off a couple of grounders up the middle.

The A’s first hit of the season: Bleday’s opposite-field, broken-bat single in the first, but Rooker followed with a strikeout, the same fate that Noda and Gelof endured in the A’s opening at-bats.

The shutout was the fourth time in Oakland history the A’s were blanked at home to start the season.

NOTE: Losing 8-0 tied a team record for the most lopsided shutout defeat in Oakland history, matching the mark from 53 years ago when Vida Blue was shelled by the Washington Senators in an 8-0 loss, giving up four runs in 1 2/3 innings. It’s difficult to envision the A’s or their starting pitcher Thursday bouncing back like the team did in 1971. Not only did Oakland go on to win the American League West for the first time in its history, Blue turned in what remains one of the most dominant years in baseball history. Blue, who died at 73 on May 6, won both the AL Most Valuable Player Award and Cy Young Award in 1971 while going 24-8 with a 1.82 ERA. Blue had 301 strikeouts, 24 complete games and eight shutouts that year.

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4380052 2024-03-28T21:36:18+00:00 2024-03-29T02:40:03+00:00
Oakland A’s pregame: Fan boycott doesn’t ruin Opening Night sentiments, especially for Stephen Vogt https://www.chicoer.com/2024/03/28/oakland-as-pregame-fan-boycott-doesnt-ruin-opening-night-sentiments-especially-for-stephen-vogt/ Fri, 29 Mar 2024 00:41:18 +0000 https://www.chicoer.com/?p=4377119&preview=true&preview_id=4377119 OAKLAND — Whether or not this will be the A’s final Opening Night lineup from the Coliseum, and whether or not this is their final season here, manager Mark Kotsay is not ignoring fans’ feelings of abandonment.

“My heart is with the fans,” Kotsay said while many were protesting in the parking lot rather than enter to watch the A’s host the Cleveland Guardians.

“I understand the emotion and the impact, not just from this organization’s history of being here 55 years or more,” Kotsay added, ahead of season No. 57. “Their emotion and passion to want to keep this team here, and the way they express it, is with passion. I wouldn’t express anything less from Oakland A’s fans. When they come out, they come out with support and love, and they do it full force.”

Cleveland Guardians manager Stephen Vogt greets Oakland Athletics manager Mark Kotsay before their MLB opening day game at the Coliseum in Oakland, Calif., on Thursday, March 28, 2024. (Jose Carlos Fajardo/Bay Area News Group)
Cleveland Guardians manager Stephen Vogt greets Oakland Athletics manager Mark Kotsay before their MLB opening day game at the Coliseum in Oakland, Calif., on Thursday, March 28, 2024. (Jose Carlos Fajardo/Bay Area News Group)

Echoing those words in the opposing dugout was Kotsay’s counterpart, Stephen Vogt, who’s making his managerial debut in front of some 30 friends and family from his native Visalia. Vogt played for the A’s from 2013-17 before returning two years ago to make a storybook exit — hitting a home run in his final plate appearance in a 3-2 win over the Angels at the Coliseum.

“Obviously I’ve followed the Oakland news closely and my heart goes out to the fans and the people of Oakland and obviously the organization as well,” Vogt said. “They’re in a tough place right now and hopefully they get some answers and clarity soon.”

After back-to-back seasons with over 100 losses, the A’s are at a crossroads, in that they look to improve this season while unsure where they will play next year and thereafter until relocating to a new stadium in Las Vegas, presumably in 2028.

During Vogt’s farewell in the 2022 finale, a scoreboard showed some of his Oakland highlights, including a walk-off single in Game 2 of the 2013 American League Divisional Series against the Detroit Tigers when he was a 28-year-old rookie.

“The playoff atmosphere here is better than any in baseball,” Vogt said. “I’ve experienced a number of different playoff atmospheres, but the Oakland Coliseum packed at playoff time, it’s tough to beat.

Oakland Athletics manager Mark Kotsay speaks to the media before their MLB opening day game at the Coliseum in Oakland, Calif., on Thursday, March 28, 2024. (Jose Carlos Fajardo/Bay Area News Group)
Oakland Athletics manager Mark Kotsay speaks to the media before their MLB opening day game at the Coliseum in Oakland, Calif., on Thursday, March 28, 2024. (Jose Carlos Fajardo/Bay Area News Group)

“Just those memories of those teams and what we went through together — from being one of the best teams in baseball, to going through a rebuild, to seeing people go to seeing people come — you become a family here in Oakland,” Vogt added. “That includes the fans and the stadium workers. All the people here in this organization mean the world to me.”

As Kotsay enters his third season as the A’s manager, he knows the franchise’s relocation efforts are a familiar storyline to him and most of his players. “The key to my messaging is to focus on what we have control over, and that’s how we play the game, night in and night out,” Kotsay added.

A’S STARTING LINEUP

Only two players return from last year’s Opening day lineup (Seth Brown, Shea Langeliers), and that matches the fewest in Oakland history (1977, ’98, 2015, 2023). Here is the debut lineup:

1B Ryan Noda (#49)

2B Zack Gelof (#20)

CF J.J. Bleday (#33)

DH Brent Rooker (#25)

LF Seth Brown (#15)

3B J.D. Davis (#5)

C Shea Langeliers (#23)

RF Lawrence Butler (#4)

SS Nick Allen (#10)

LHP Alex Wood (#57)

* * *

GUARDIANS LINEUP

LF Steve Kwan

3B Jose Ramirez

RF Ramon Laureano

1B Josh Naylor

DH David Fry

CF Tyler Freeman

2B Andres Gimenez

C Austin Hedges

SS Brayan Rocchio

P Shane Bieber

 

* * *

OPENING-DAY ROSTER 

The A’s opening day roster:

PITCHERS (13): Austin Adams, Paul Blackburn, Joe Boyle, Lucas Erceg, Dany Jimenez, Michael Kelly, T.J. McFarland, Mason Miller, Kyle Muller, JP Sears, Mitch Spence, Ross Stripling, Alex Wood.

CATCHERS (2): Shea Langeliers, Kyle McCann

INFIELDERS (6): Nick Allen, J.D. Davis, Zack Gelof, Darell Hernaiz, Ryan Noda, Abraham Toro

OUTFIELDERS (5): JJ Bleday, Seth Brown, Lawrence Butler, Brent Rooker, Esteury Ruiz

NOTES

Catcher Kyle McCann, a 2019 fourth-round draft pick, suited up for his major-league debut, as did pitcher JP Sears and infielder Darell Hernaiz. Kotsay said of McCann: “He came into camp in great shape, motivated to make the roster and really performed. He did everything he needed to be on this roster, make an impression, and build trust, which is key to being a catcher.” … Pitcher Zach Jackson was optioned to Triple-A Las Vegas.  … Placed on the 60-day injured list were pitcher Sean Newcomb and infielder Aledmys Diaz; onto the 15-day IL were pitchers Scott Alexander, Luis Medina and Freddy Tarnok; sent to the 10-day IL was outfielder Miguel Andujar. … Also on the 60-day IL are Ken Waldichuk and Trevor Gott. … The A’s are 1-5 against Cleveland in openers, including an 0-3 mark since moving to Oakland, the last such opener coming in 2014 (2-0 loss).

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4377119 2024-03-28T17:41:18+00:00 2024-03-28T21:17:28+00:00
49ers brace for Brock Purdy to reset quarterback market in 2025: CEO York https://www.chicoer.com/2024/03/26/49ers-jed-york-bracing-for-brock-purdy-to-reset-quarterback-market-in-2025/ Tue, 26 Mar 2024 20:32:41 +0000 https://www.chicoer.com/?p=4341531&preview=true&preview_id=4341531 Brock Purdy’s payday is on the 2025 horizon, and 49ers CEO Jed York is embracing that vision.

“It’s a good problem when you’re quarterback is one of the highest-paid guys on your team and in the league,” York told Bay Area reporters Tuesday at the NFL’s annual owners meetings in Orlando, Fla.

Purdy must finish out the third year of his especially modest rookie contract — at a 2024 salary of $985,000 — before the collective bargaining agreement allows him to get a new deal, one befitting a starting quarterback who guided the 49ers to back-to-back NFC Championship Games as well as last month’s Super Bowl overtime defeat.

“It’s what the market is. Brock is going to ask for something that no one has ever asked for before,” York said without trepidation. “I don’t know how many players are making over $40 million (annually) as a quarterback right now.”

The answer is nine, including four who crested the $50 million annual mark: Joe Burrow (Bengals, $55 million), Justin Herbert (Chargers, $52.5 million), Lamar Jackson (Ravens, $52 million) and Jalen Hurts (Eagles, $51 million), according to OverTheCap.com. The Cowboys announced Tuesday that Dak Prescott will play out his contract this season that pays him a $29 million salary before he, Purdy and surely others vie for new deals in 2025.

With Purdy still anchored to his rookie contract — a $3.7 million deal as the 2022 draft’s final pick — the 49ers have had the financial wherewithal to pay top-end salaries at other positions, a luxury that threatens to become endangered once Purdy strikes it rich like Jimmy Garoppolo did in 2018 (five years, $137.5 million).

“When we signed Jimmy several years ago, it was the largest deal in the history of the NFL, for three minutes,” York said. “But Jimmy was at ($27.5 million). That’s what the market is and you have to accept the reality of the world.

“To me, the quarterback is the most important position not just in football, but all of sports, and those guys should be paid a lot of money.”

The 49ers’ more pressing contract situation revolves around wide receiver Brandon Aiyuk, who is slated to make $14.1 million on his fifth-year option. Coach Kyle Shanahan and general manager John Lynch have insisted they want to keep Aiyuk and reward him with a multi-year deal, after the 2020 first-round pick evolved into a 1,000-yard receiver each of the past two seasons.

A year ago, Purdy’s future was in question as he underwent surgery on his right elbow. In his ensuing comeback, he set the 49ers’ record for most passing yards in a season (4,280) and he became their first Pro Bowl quarterback in 20 years.

York is not wincing at eventually having to again pay top dollar for a quarterback, saying: “There’s a lot of planning that goes into it. I’m glad we have Paraag (Marathe), J.L. (John Lynch), Kyle (Shanahan). They’re the ones that are going to figure out the details of it, and I just have to sign the check. My part in that is kind of easy.”

York is adamant about rewarding homegrown stars rather than relying on higher-risk, high-priced signings in free agency. “Brandon, guys that you drafted, I’d much rather pay guys we drafted than guys we didn’t draft,” York said. “We’ll do everything we can, like we have in the past, to find a way to make those work.”

At this week’s NFL meetings, York is expected to ascend from 49ers CEO and replace his mother, Denise DeBartolo-York, as principal owner of a franchise in which their family controls 97 percent of the stakes. While that would give him the 49ers’ power as their lone representative in NFL meetings, he has essentially served as the ownership group’s spokesman for his 13 years as CEO, though that’s essentially amounted to a once-a-year press conference. Instead while deferred to Shanahan and Lynch.

“It’s a move from a family standpoint to just keep this team in our family for generations to come,” York said. “It’s reflective of how we’ve sort of operated. My parents are going to stay the co-chairmen. I don’t think you’re really going to see any change. It’s more of a long-term planning thing. … Estate planning stuff is always a unique process within families. It’s something we’ve always discussed. Watching different family successions and seeing how reading a will can be very different than having a conversation with everybody still around, to walk through and talk through, we thought it was a better process to transition into it smoothly. Being a very close family, I don’t ever anticipate any problems with my family. But it’s an easier, smoother transition to make sure this team stays in our family.”

As for losing a third Super Bowl since his parents assumed ownership in 2000 from his uncle, Eddie DeBartolo, York is preaching not only patience but the need to take pride in those championship close calls.

“You can’t be ashamed of a successful season,” York said. “Our goal is always going to be to win Super Bowls. Even if we won the game, it’s not like, ‘OK, well, we can take off 2024 because we won the Super Bowl in 2023.’ Our goal is always going to be the same.

“… It’s almost worse to a Super Bowl than not make the playoffs, and I don’t think that’s how teams should feel. I would give anything to have this game or four years ago against Kansas City, you can’t leave and say the whole season was a disgrace. It’s a disappointment to not win, but you can’t destroy yourself and everything you built because you didn’t finish and hit your ultimate goal. That doesn’t mean we’re not going to work towards it and do everything we can to build this thing so we get back there and go win it in New Orleans this year.”

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4341531 2024-03-26T13:32:41+00:00 2024-03-27T04:18:28+00:00
49ers: Ten key topics Kyle Shanahan discussed at NFL owners meeting https://www.chicoer.com/2024/03/26/top-10-topics-49ers-kyle-shanahan-discussed-at-nfl-owners-meeting/ Tue, 26 Mar 2024 15:04:10 +0000 https://www.chicoer.com/?p=4337910&preview=true&preview_id=4337910 Kyle Shanahan sounded upbeat and confident Tuesday morning in his first press conference since two days after the 49ers lost Super Bowl LVIII.

That loss was not rehashed in his 30-minute session with reporters at the NFL’s annual owners meeting in Orlando, Fla.

Instead, Shanahan mostly spoke about changes to his coaching staff and the Niners’ defense, going so far as to say the 49ers’ run defense last season was the worst in his seven seasons at the helm.

Here are the top 10 topics Shanahan covered, as captured in a video posted by The Athletic’s David Lombardi:

1. SORENSEN AS DEFENSIVE COORDINATOR

Nick Sorensen’s familiarity with Shanahan, his two-year apprenticeship on the defensive staff, and his ability to relate well with players earned him a promotion to defensive coordinator, a role Steve Wilks was fired from after one season.

“I just love where he’s at from a football mind,” Shanahan said. “Our players love him. He’s been talking to our team every Thursday, doing the Ball (turnover-oriented) meetings. Our players are used to him and it’s a great opportunity for him. We’re happy to put him in this position.

“I’ve been with him the last two years, mainly. When you’re with somebody, it’s not really an interview that changes it. It’s being with somebody in the building every day. I thought he was close last year to being ready, and I think he’s even more ready now.”

2. RUN DEFENSE ISSUES

The 49ers allowed the NFL’s third-fewest rushing yards in the regular season before they proved vulnerable in the playoffs, where their three opponents averaged 5.2 yards per carry and each ran for at least 130 yards. The Detroit Lions ran for 182 yards and three touchdowns in the NFC Championship Game.

“We obviously got beat on some crack tosses too much, and once that did happen, it didn’t stop,” Shanahan said. “I mean, we got more ran on us last year than I’ve ever seen in my career. That’s what happens when you don’t stop that bleeding right away: People keep attacking it. That made it a bigger challenge for us and something we have to get better at.” (More on those defensive adjustments later in this story.)

3. AIYUK’S STATUS 

This offseason’s most publicized drama revolves around Brandon Aiyuk’s contract status, and whether the 49ers’ leading receiver will play under his fifth-year option ($14.1 million) or land a multi-year raise, presumably with the 49ers.

While Shanahan prefers removing himself from “sensitive” negotiations, he noted: “I’ve seen Brandon a couple of times. I actually ran into him in Cabo last week. He was randomly at our hotel; I don’t think he wanted to be. He’s doing good. Hopefully we’ll get this done sooner than later.”

Although Aiyuk has vented on social media, Shanahan said that hasn’t interfered with their relationship: “I’ve seen him a couple of times and we’ve been good. I don’t expect it, too. Brandon understands the situation and I know I do. I’m excited to get him back playing for us.”

Shanahan acknowledged that quarterback Brock Purdy’s success is tied to having quality receivers, adding; “It starts there with Brandon. It’s real big for Brock and his future, to make sure we have a good group for him going forward.”

4. PURDY’S PROGRESS

Once the 49ers reconvene April 15, Shanahan is excited for what will be Purdy’s first true offseason program as an entrenched starter, and he’ll have 19 games from last season to further review and improve upon with quarterbacks coach Brian Griese and his assistant, Klay Kubiak. (Mick Lombardi is expected to move into the pass-game specialist role previously held by Klint Kubiak, now the Saints’ coordinator).

“I’m just pumped that Brock gets an offseason,” Shanahan said. “His first year, he didn’t get much of one, just because he was the third quarterback. Last year, he couldn’t throw with us until training camp. This year, he just got married, he’s fully healthy, and he’ll come back in a couple of weeks when we get going. I’m just pumped to go through the film with him and be on the field with him, which he hasn’t had a chance to do yet in his career.”

Brought in as Purdy’s potential backup is Josh Dobbs, who impressed Shanahan by proving tough to beat in Week 4 with the Arizona Cardinals. “I loved how consistent he was,” Shanahan said. “You could tell whatever the game plan was, he executed extremely well. I loved how competitive he was when he ran, how physical he was in breaking tackles. He gave his team a good chance to win.”

5. BRANDON STALEY’S ROLE

Former Los Angeles Chargers coach Brandon Staley has joined Shanahan’s staff, though his role remains vague, presumably as the assistant head coach, a title that Shanahan and the 49ers have yet to announce.

“Brandon will be a big part of the game plans, implementing a lot of our defense here in the offseason and during each week,” Shanahan said. “He’s been a big part of free agency, helped us with the draft and he’ll be a huge asset to the whole coaching staff.

“… I know we looked into him for the coordinator role, but I really wanted to stay in-house, and keep it similar to what we’d done in the past with our scheme. Being able to get Brandon on board, it was huge.”

6. D-LINE CHANGES

In come defensive linemen Leonard Floyd, Yetur Gross-Matos, Maliek Collins, Jordan Elliott and perhaps more. “We really wanted to add some guys who had some good health history,” Shanahan said.

Most appealing is Floyd. “He goes all day. We played against him too much. I never liked playing against him,” Shanahan said. “He’s always been such a good player. It was real cool having Brandon on our staff, because he got to coach him in L.A., and just hearing the type of practice player he is, he goes all day, loves playing football, and I’m pumped to have him on our team.”

The most disappointing departure? Arik Armstead, who was released after nine seasons and struck a lucrative deal with Jacksonville.

“It wasn’t something we really wanted to happen. It’s one of the tough things when trying to keep a team together and where it goes with the salary cap,” Shanahan said. “He got in a good spot and real happy where he ended up, but hate to see him go.”

7. O-LINE CONTINUITY

Right guard Jon Feliciano’s return on a one-year deal ensured that the 49ers could field the same starting offensive line as last season. “We’ll always keep look to add and improve through the draft, to get more competition in there,” Shanahan said. “But I’ve been real happy with our group.”

That holds true with right tackle Colton McKivitz, who signed a one-year extension through 2025. “He’s the exact type of guy we want. He’s one of the real leaders on our team,” Shanahan said. “He did a hell of a job playing.”

The other starters: left tackle Trent Williams, left guard Aaron Banks, and, center Jake Brendel. Feliciano overtook Spencer Burford as the starting right guard after adjusting his style. “Once he got out there on the field, the way he was in games on Sundays, the way he reacted in the huddle, the ways guys gravitated to him, you could tell football wasn’t too big for him,” Shanahan said of Feliciano.

8. REMAINING ROSTER HOLES

The reigning NFC champs still have uncertainty at spots that, as the Super Bowl showed, could dictate an outcome.

At nickel back, Deommodore Lenoir could settle in there if Isaac Yiadom proves a reliable right-side cornerback. Ambry Thomas, Sam Womack and Darrell Luter are other options, and more could come from the 49ers’ 10-pick arsenal in next month’s draft.

Return specialist Ray-Ray McCloud left in free agency for Atlanta, opening the door for Ronnie Bell to “compete and get better at it,” said Shanahan, who again alluded to the draft as an avenue for replenishment.

McCloud also saw time as a No. 4 wide receiver, so the 49ers need to add depth there. But Shanahan said it was huge to yield a second-round tender to Jauan Jennings. “He’s only gotten more physical each year,” Shanahan said. “The style of how he plays, how big he is, people sleep on him. They don’t realize how big and physical he is until game day, and it catches a lot of guys off guard.”

9. SAFETY DEPTH

Although veteran safeties are idling in free agency and ex-Colts starter Julian Blackmon recently visited, the 49ers aren’t compelled to bid high for one when a starting spot is not up for grabs with Ji’Ayir Brown coming off his rookie year and Talanoa Hufanga returning from knee reconstruction.

“We’d like to add but I’m also real comfortable with how good Ji’Ayir (Brown) played last year,” Shanahan said. “Everyone knows what Huf’s done. It’s always scary coming back from an ACL, but once you come back in this day and age, it’s usually OK. I expect to get him some time in training camp. Getting back George Odum, he’s probably the best special teams player in the league, and he can also play safety well, too. And we’ll see how it goes in the draft.”

10. DRAFT REVIVAL 

Not only do the 49ers have 10 draft picks but they own a first-round spot for the first time since 2021, when they moved up to the No. 3 overall slot for quarterback Trey Lance and shipped multiple picks to the Miami Dolphins.

“It’ll be more fun,” Shanahan said. “It’s pretty miserable not having a first-round pick, just watching and having nothing to do that first day. We knew we weren’t going to have one the last (two) years, so we didn’t look as much at those top picks. We’ll be prepared for everybody this year. You never know whether we stay where we’re at or if we move around, but at pick No. 31, you have to be ready for anything.”

BONUS ITEM: KICKOFFS

The NFL approved a new kickoff role to “promote more returns” while also perhaps enhancing safety measures by aligning players closer together to reduce collision speeds. The 49ers were among three teams who voted against the rule, The Athletic’s Matt Barrows reported.

“It’s interesting. I don’t think anyone totally knows. When you put guys in different spots, there’s different timing,” Shanahan said. “It’ll be fun to watch. We’ll have to figure it out as we go. That’ll be a fun thing in the league but it will be different each week.”

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4337910 2024-03-26T08:04:10+00:00 2024-03-26T08:26:52+00:00
Nine 49ers additions that excite general manager John Lynch https://www.chicoer.com/2024/03/26/nine-49ers-additions-that-excite-general-manager-john-lynch/ Tue, 26 Mar 2024 12:35:39 +0000 https://www.chicoer.com/?p=4336904&preview=true&preview_id=4336904 John Lynch is understandably excited about the 49ers’ offseason additions. After all, he’s in charge of their mergers and acquisitions.

Speaking Monday for the first time since their “productive” free agency period opened two weeks ago, Lynch explained to Bay Area reporters how the 49ers should benefit from their latest hires.

One highlight is how multiple defensive linemen were secured under two-year pacts, thus pausing the 49ers’ annual shuffling in which linemen flee as one-year wonders. Even more reinforcements are coming in next month’s NFL Draft, where the 49ers own 10 picks to parlay into young players or better draft slots.

Here is what Lynch likes about nine newcomers, as he relayed Monday at the NFL’s annual owners meetings in Orlando, Florida:

On defensive end Leonard Floyd

Lynch: “Competes at a real high level. Really physical player. Really good at all facets of the game. He just gives us a very consistent guy opposite of (Nick) Bosa, that can make people pay when they have to give all the attention to Nick. He’s also really durable. He plays a ton. And I love the way he chases. He just plays with great effort. To be able to land him was great.”

On defensive lineman Yetur Gross-Matos

Lynch: “I told his agent he handled it like a house in Los Altos. Priced it low then got the whole league interested. He’s the guy we had the most people in the league saying, ‘Man, we were in on him,’ after we landed him. He’s a long, skilled athlete. We’ve been at our best when we’ve had a guy – Arden Key, Charles Omenihu — who can play outside and slide down inside. It gives you another layer of versatility to your D-line. There’s going to be some transition for him.”

On quarterback Josh Dobbs

Lynch: “We gathered and said let’s get one more option for competition at that No. 2. Dobbs is the guy we settled on. And we had competition for him. But we got him done and we’re excited about that. … To have that belief in Brock (Purdy), to have that stability, then two backups we like and compete for No. 2 … the trend is everyone is keeping three (quarterbacks). It’s nice in the building to have three options. It is nice to focus on the other parts on your roster.”

On linebacker De’Vondre Campbell

Lynch: “That was a blessing, because things fell through with (Eric) Kendricks (who signed with the Cowboys). It was like well we thought we had that, then two or three guys go, and it’s, ‘Man we have an an issue here.’ Green Bay happened to release De’Vondre. He’s a guy we really respected and liked in pass coverage. He’s an excellent player, and has played the run effectively. Kyle was in Atlanta when De’Vondre was there and knew about him from practicing against him. De’Vondre has had a very productive career. It was a blessing he became available and we pounced on that.”

On cornerback Isaac Yiadom

“I thought he had a career year. I asked him, what clicked, because he’s been a productive special teams player, and it’s never happened for him as consistently on defense as it did last year. He talked about something familiar to me in my career, because I didn’t become a full-time starter until Year 3: Stop doubting yourself and let’s go. He was able to find that and have that belief and it really flourished.”

On defensive tackle Maleik Collins

Lynch: “He’s a guy I’ve studied and admired for a long time, because Rod Marinelli, a guy I’m close with, coached him in Dallas. Rod thinks the world of him. Kris (Kocurek, the defensive line coach) obviously has a great voice on anything we do there. We just like the fit and he plays with tremendous effort. Quick. Disruptive. Had a really good year last year. I’m excited to land Maleik.”

On cornerback Chase Lucas, linebacker Ezekiel Turner

Lynch: “Adding another good special teams player to the mix is really critical, so with Chase and Ezekiel we add that. They can play good defense in a pinch, as well.”

On Brandon Staley, who’s expected to be named Assistant Head Coach

Lynch:“Brandon gives us an ability to add layers to who we are without compromising the integrity of who we are. Brandon is an intelligent guy. We scrimmaged against him a couple of years ago, and Kyle and I spent a lot of time talking and appreciating his mind for the game. Having a guy with a head-coach mindset, even in the free agent meetings, he’s real sharp there, being respectful and quiet until asked. It’s a great add for us. That defensive staff is meshing real well.”

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4336904 2024-03-26T05:35:39+00:00 2024-03-26T08:18:34+00:00
49ers GM Lynch disputes Aiyuk trade reports; Purdy ‘deadly’ combo with Shanahan https://www.chicoer.com/2024/03/25/49ers-roundup-no-aiyuk-trade-talk-purdy-deadly-combo-with-shanahan/ Mon, 25 Mar 2024 16:54:53 +0000 https://www.chicoer.com/?p=4329057&preview=true&preview_id=4329057 Trading Brandon Aiyuk may be a hot topic for some, but not the 49ers.

General manager John Lynch, speaking at the NFL owners’ meeting in Orlando, Fla., disputed reports that the 49ers are discussing any potential trade of Aiyuk.

“We’re actively talking to Brandon and trying to figure something out,” Lynch told Bay Area media, in an interview posted by The Athletic. “We have a good history of working with the guys we want to get done, to get something done. It takes two sides. So can we do that? We’ll see.”

Aiyuk, after posting a second straight season of over 1,000 receiving yards, is slated to make $14.1 million this year under the fifth-year option that closes out his rookie contract. Lynch said the 49ers are OK with Aiyuk playing at that salary.

Aiyuk, however, is seeking greater financial security and a multi-year contract that aligns with other receivers atop the NFL’s pay grade, at about $25 million annually.

Not long after Lynch spoke, Aiyuk used emojis on an Instagram story that essentially translated to: “Money talks, B.S. walks.”

Lynch acknowledged that contract talks would be difficult but the 49ers have overcome similar plights in past years en route to extending homegrown players, such as George Kittle, Fred Warner, Deebo Samuel and Nick Bosa.

“Are the trials in those things? Sometimes there are,” Lynch said. “But ultimately that’s all forgotten when you get something done, and I hope that’s the case here.”

Rumors swirled last week that the Pittsburgh Steelers could be vying for Aiyuk, who addressed a social-media post to Steelers coach Mike Tomlin if he thought they looked like twins.

Lynch scuttled that potential trade, saying: “I was just with Mike Tomlin at the Michigan pro day and Mike coached me (at the Tampa Bay Bucs), so we’re very close. He’s like, ‘Bro, what’s going on?’ I promise you, we’ve got nothing, and nothing is going on there.”

“There is a number of different directions it could go,” Lynch added. “But we appreciate the heck out of Brandon and who he is as a player. We want him to be a part of the Niners, so we’re going to work towards making that a reality.”

CHAMPIONSHIP CHATTER

Chiefs coach Andy Reid, six weeks after beating the 49ers in Super Bowl LVIII, believes coach Kyle Shanahan and quarterback Brock Purdy make up a “deadly” combination that is destined for more success. That said, Reid’s Chiefs will try to become the first team to win the Super Bowl in three straight seasons.

“A lot of respect for Brock,” Reid told reporters, according to The Athletic. “He does a nice job. I don’t really care where he got picked; that doesn’t matter to me.

“He’s just a good player, he sees the field, he’s got good accuracy, great timing with his receivers, and he’s calm. You feel like he’s got everything kind of under control.”

Reid also praised Shanahan as “a smart guy and a heck of a football coach,” adding that their Super Bowl encounters in the 2019 and ’23 seasons “could have gone either way. It was just a toss-up. … So you just keep plugging, just keep doing what you’re doing, and somewhere you pop over the hill there. I know he’s got a great young quarterback, and him with a great young quarterback is deadly.”

Shanahan, in a Sunday interview with NFL Network, also endorsed Purdy’s potential and the potential benefits of this upcoming offseason work.

“Brock’s gone through a lot in two years in these games, so that’s been great for him. But the way you get better is doing it over and over in practice and just drilling it. It’s all about getting those 10,000 reps,” Shanahan told NFL Media’s Steve Wyche. “He spent it all last year knowing what he had to do, but he was just focusing (on getting) his arm healthy. Now he can go into this offseason knowing what he has to do but training his footwork, training his arm, training his mind. Just getting in the reps.”

Reid noted that the 49ers were “potentially” among the teams who tried to hire away defensive coordinator Steve Spagnuolo for a similar role.

HEALTH UPDATES

Tight end George Kittle and cornerback Charvarius Ward underwent core-muscle surgery and should be fully healthy by training camp, NBC Sports Bay Area’s Matt Maiocco reported. Both Kittle and Ward earned Pro Bowl and All-Pro honors.

“I’ve had that surgery myself when I was playing and it’s pretty a high success rate of healing and it feels a lot better once it’s done,” Lynch said. “It hurts constantly having that core tugging at you.”

Linebacker Dre Greenlaw is aiming to play in the season opener if all goes well in his recovery from an Achilles tear in the Super Bowl; Greenlaw could start training camp on the Physically Unable To Perform list and, if he remains on it in Week 1, he’d have to miss at least the first four games.

“De’Vondre (Campbell) gives us a guy who plays the way we play, a guy who has a ton of experience that can fill in for Dre if he’s not there,” Lynch said. “Then we have three guys who’ve played at a high level once Dre is back.”

ACCOUNTING PENALTY

Docked a 2025 fifth-round draft pick last week for an accounting error, Lynch said the 49ers mistakingly paid $75,000 extra to an unspecified player and unsuccessfully tried to recoup it rather than initially reporting their gaffe to the league prior to 2023, Maiocco reported.

ARMSTEAD EXIT

The 49ers granted defensive tackle Arik Armstead his release this month so he could test the market rather than get traded to the Houston Texans, subject to working out a new contract with them.

“Ultimately he wanted to see his value and good for him. It was robust with what he got in Jacksonville,” Lynch said. “He bet on himself and good for Arik. … Arik’s done so much for our team. He’s such a fabric of who we are, the work he does in the community. The opportunity to be on the 10-year wall was important to me and organization and Arik.”

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4329057 2024-03-25T09:54:53+00:00 2024-03-25T12:20:18+00:00
49ers set for ownership shift: Jed York to succeed mother as primary owner https://www.chicoer.com/2024/03/25/49ers-stage-ownership-shift-jed-york-to-succeed-mother-as-primary-owner/ Mon, 25 Mar 2024 15:22:52 +0000 https://www.chicoer.com/?p=4328732&preview=true&preview_id=4328732 Jed York is on the verge of succeeding his mother as the 49ers’ primary owner, a title change that isn’t surprising after his past 13 years as CEO and face of the ownership group.

Such a move is meant to “ensure the 49ers stay in the York family for generations to come,” according to a team source.

Fellow NFL owners are expected to vote on that switch today in Orlando, Florida, the site of the league’s annual owners’ meeting, according to Sports Business Journal’s Ben Fischer, who was first to report that York had bought some of his mother’s equity in the franchise.

Denise DeBartolo York, along with her husband, Dr. John York, took over control of the 49ers in 2000 from her brother, Eddie DeBartolo, a Pro Football Hall of Famer under whom the franchise won the Lombardi Trophy five times. Their father, Edward J. DeBartolo, bought the 49ers in 1977 from the Morabito family, which founded the franchise in 1946.

Jed York, 43, has spent nearly 20 years working amid the 49ers’ hierarchy, taking on the CEO role in 2010. Three Super Bowl trips have followed, including last season’s under coach Kyle Shanahan and general manager John Lynch, who both had their contracts extended prior to the season.

“Our team speaks for itself,” Jed York said on Feb. 1, after the 49ers clinched their Super Bowl LVIII berth. “When you hear from me, it’s generally not good. It’s during a coaching change. It’s during an off-field incident that needs ownership commenting. My goal is to build an organization that speaks for itself. We have two great leaders in this organization. We have unbelievable people all around. I would much rather have this organization speak for itself than have me speak for it.”

Denise DeBartolo York, who’s believed to be in her mid-70s, attended the 49ers’ NFC Championship win and has preferred a low-key profile during her tenure. Dr. John York has been a constant presence at games and occasionally at practices over the past two decades, though it has been Jed York who has spoken on behalf of ownership for nearly a decade.

San Francisco 49ers quarterback Brock Purdy (13) celebrates while holding The George Halas trophy after winning the NFC Championship Game at Levi's Stadium in Santa Clara, Calif., on Sunday, Jan. 28, 2024. The San Francisco 49ers defeated the Detroit Lions 34-31. (Jose Carlos Fajardo/Bay Area News Group)
San Francisco 49ers quarterback Brock Purdy (13) celebrates while holding The George Halas trophy after winning the NFC Championship Game at Levi’s Stadium in Santa Clara, Calif., on Sunday, Jan. 28, 2024. The San Francisco 49ers defeated the Detroit Lions 34-31. (Jose Carlos Fajardo/Bay Area News Group)

Jed York is the oldest of four siblings. Twin sisters Jenna and Mara lead the 49ers Foundation charity wing. Younger brother Tony passed away in 2018 at age 35. Jed York and his wife, Danielle, have two sons, Jaxon and Brixton.

After a contentious ownership transfer following Eddie DeBartolo’s legal issues, Denise DeBartolo York became one of the NFL’s first female owners. Others currently recognized as primary or co-owners in the NFL are: Kim Pegula (Buffalo Bills), Virginia Halas McCaskey (Chicago Bears), Dee Haslam (Cleveland Browns), Sheila Ford Hamp (Detroit Lions), Janice McNair (Houston Texans), Carol Davis (Raiders), Gayle Benson (New Orleans Saints), Jody Allen (Seattle Seahawks), and Amy Adams Strunk (Tennessee Titans). The Houston Texans are also expected to request a transfer of primary ownership, from Janice McNair to her son, Cal, according to ESPN.

NFL owners have approved these rule changes: a hip-drop tackle is now banned; coaches will get a third replay challenge after a successful challenge; and, enforcement of a major foul by the offense prior to the change of possession when fouls are flagged on both teams.

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Cal’s Jackson Sirmon uses Pro Day audition to bolster NFL Draft stock https://www.chicoer.com/2024/03/21/cals-jackson-sirmon-uses-pro-day-audition-to-bolster-nfl-draft-stock/ Thu, 21 Mar 2024 21:35:38 +0000 https://www.chicoer.com/?p=4302186&preview=true&preview_id=4302186 BEREKELY – Linebacker Jackson Sirmon is undaunted by the NFL Draft bubble, as are myriad prospects across the country, looking to land their dream job out of college.

“I’d love — and it wouldn’t surprise me — to get drafted,” Sirmon said after Cal’s pro day workout Thursday. “But it doesn’t really matter to me. I’m just excited to be with a franchise and get to show what I can do on a football field.”

Two years ago, a quarterback out of Iowa State almost wasn’t drafted, then was claimed by the 49ers with the 262nd and final pick. That didn’t stop Brock Purdy’s meteoric rise to becoming a Super Bowl quarterback.

An inspirational tale for any NFL hopeful? Of course.

“It’s really neat to see,” Sirmon said. “But it’s different for different positions. At quarterback, that’s a pretty unique thing to happen.

“At linebacker, it’s a little more common for guys to go undrafted or get drafted late, then really have great careers and take advantage of opportunities.”

His dad, Peter Sirmon, was a 2000 fourth-round draft pick who spent seven seasons as a Tennessee Titans linebacker. He then took on the nomadic life of being a college coach, ultimately leading in 2018 to Cal, where he reunited with Oregon teammate Justin Wilcox and currently serves as his defensive coordinator.

Running back Raleek Brown #14 of the USC Trojans can't reach a pass in front of linebacker Jackson Sirmon #8 of the California Golden Bears in the second half of a NCAA football game at the Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum in Los Angeles on Saturday, November 5, 2022. (Photo by Keith Birmingham, Pasadena Star-News/ SCNG)
Running back Raleek Brown #14 of the USC Trojans can’t reach a pass in front of linebacker Jackson Sirmon #8 of the California Golden Bears in the second half of a NCAA football game at the Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum in Los Angeles on Saturday, November 5, 2022. (Photo by Keith Birmingham, Pasadena Star-News/ SCNG)

NFL teams can’t resist asking about his dad as Jackson Sirmon navigates his post-Cal job hunt, including an impressive showing at last month’s Senior Bowl in Mobile, Alabama. That was his first on-field action since tearing his left biceps six games into last season.

It didn’t earn him a trip to the NFL Scouting Combine, but it did remind NFL teams of his college production and leadership. Upon transferring from Washington in 2022, Sirmon had 15 tackles in Cal’s seven-point loss at Notre Dame, and, even bigger, he became a Big Game hero by scoring a go-ahead touchdown against Stanford on a 37-yard fumble return.

Peter Sirmon casually looked on Thursday at Memorial Stadium as his son went through drills before some 20 NFL scouts, most of whom paid closer attention to Patrick McMorris, potentially the sixth safety in five years to get drafted out of Cal. Scouts from the 49ers and the Miami Dolphins spoke to the younger Sirmon afterward.

What fatherly advice has been given?

“He said there’s a lot of frustrations, a lot of highs and lows, and there’s a lot of criticism that you’re hearing, because that’s really all the process is – people telling you why you can’t play in the NFL,” Jackson Sirmon said. “So, block it out, keep working, and good things will happen.”

Something bad happened to end Sirmon’s collegiate career, which began at Washington (2018-21) and finished at Cal the past two years. He tore his left biceps six games into last season, in his 51st career game.

On April 15, Sirmon turns 24 – the same age as Purdy – but he has shown throughout his career key traits for any linebacker: make plays, swarm to the ball, and astutely know what’s going on across the field.

“Obviously the Fred Warners (of the 49ers) and Roquan Smiths (of the Baltimore Ravens) are super fun to watch and learn from,” Sirmon said.

He has also admired the Cincinnati Bengals’ Logan Wilson, the Buffalo Bills’ Matt Milano, and the Chicago Bears’ T.J. Edwards, the latter of whom went undrafted in 2019.

“If I were to go undrafted or get taken late, it’s been done before, it happens,” Sirmon said, “and it’s not the end of the world. … I just really enjoy football, and if you do, it gives you a chance.”

Southern California wide receiver Tahj Washington gets past California linebacker Jackson Sirmon for a touchdown during the second half of an NCAA college football game Saturday, Nov. 5, 2022, in Los Angeles. (AP Photo/John McCoy)
Southern California wide receiver Tahj Washington gets past California linebacker Jackson Sirmon for a touchdown during the second half of an NCAA college football game Saturday, Nov. 5, 2022, in Los Angeles. (AP Photo/John McCoy)

A month remains in the pre-draft evaluations, and several Cal players will partake in the 49ers’ pro day tryout next month for locals. Others participating in Thursday’s audition at Cal: wide receivers Brian Hightower and Monroe Young, running back Isaiah Ifanse, defensive tackle Darius Long Jr., and center Matthew Cindric.

Thursday’s workout did not include a 40-yard dash time as he focused on other drills with his chiseled frame (6-foot-2, 240 pounds).

But before NFL scouts could head to Stanford for the Cardinal’s afternoon pro day, Sirmon worked out as a long snapper, a role he has never played in a game but served as a backup the past three seasons.

“It’s just something to really add value,” Sirmon said. “If I can play linebacker or do special teams and long snap, it might be something a team finds useful.”

In the NFL, versatility is coveted, especially for an entry-level linebacker. If Sirmon follows in his father’s footsteps to the NFL, even he isn’t sure how similar his style will be.

“I would love to know that. I would assume it is,” Sirmon said. “But he played so long ago, there’s no footage anymore. I mean early 2000s? That‘s like ancient. Nah, I’m just trying to give him a hard time.”

And he’d like to give NFL opponents a harder time for years to come.

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