2021 Preview: Offense
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Would be REAL CHILL if we have red zone trips ending like this [Jose Carlos Fajardo/Bay Area News Group]
Four questions (and four attempts at answers) that could shape our offense this year.
Should Trey Lance be starting?
[Jose Carlos Fajardo/Bay Area News Group]
No.
To be fair, I understand the appeal. After all, there are only two instances in my life where I can remember cackling with glee during a preseason game and both involved our rookie signal-caller. His first career pass completion:
And when Shanahan finally showed him in an inside-out option look with Mostert going wide:
Iâll put out an in-depth write-up about our option game once we get into the thick of the regular season, but the CliffsNotes version is this: LOL
Iâm too removed from coaching to know what the terminology for this play is called, so Iâll just call it QB Counter Read. In the simplest of terms, our offensive line runs counter leftâa blocking scheme that we already know from past yearsâwhile Lance has the option to keep the ball running inside to the offensive left or hand it off to Mostert, who has an unblocked (or ânakedâ) sweep to the right. The first defender this puts into a bind is the end man on the line of scrimmage (orange triangle), who is our read key.
On the snap, Lance sees that the defensive end is flat-footed and trying to play both him and the running back. If the end were to crash down the line it would be an easy give. If he were to immediately widen, it would be a keep. But since heâs flat-footed, and a defensive end, and Mostert still has a jet pack strapped to his back, it doesnât matter how much the end tries to read and react off the option mesh. Heâs getting beat outside.
Also highlighted above is the inside linebacker. Yes, he could theoretically scream outside to try and cut off Mostert before he can get the edge. If combined with the defensive end crashing down the line, the two defenders would basically be switching gap responsibilities, effectively replicating the squeeze-scrape technique used commonly to combat option plays. However, everything about our blocking says that this play is counter left. So unless told specifically not to, the linebacker needs to stay true to his reads. Because if he was to guess wrong and immediately chase Mostert towards the sideline, a Lance keeper would feature a convoy of Trent Williams and Mike McGlinchey lead blocking onto air. The linebacker has to stay put through the handoff, which meansâby the time he makes contact with Mostertâthe ball carrier is already ten yards down the field.
TLDR: no flat-footed defensive end is gonna be setting the edge against the fastest man in football on a fly sweep.
But I digress. And despite all the tantalizing potential of Lanceâs arm talent and running ability, he is still a work in progress. A work that is far closer to completion than we likely thought when we drafted him, but a work in progress nonetheless. While the Niner staffâas well as Lance himself and his private coachesâhave done a tremendous job of cleaning up his throwing mechanics, those improvements still waver when heâs hurried or pressing. Heâll clean it up with time, but at the moment, it leads to bouts of inaccuracy.
While Shanahanâs offense may make things easier on quarterbacks, thatâs only after they get comfortable in his notoriously complex scheme. This is the same core offense that took a thirty-year-old Matt Ryan a year to get accustomed to in Atlanta. Expecting a rookie who has played one game in two years to immediately pilot it without issue is simply unrealistic.
After seeing clusters of inaccurate throws and short passes rocketed a bit behind receivers on routes across the middle, itâs hard to make the claim that right now, for the 2021 season, Lance is a more efficient passer than a healthy Garoppolo. This is especially true given how much we like to rely on in-breaking routes and chunk plays to guys like Kittle, Deebo, and Aiyuk.
But the best argument IN FAVOR of starting Lance right away isnât really thinking about 2021. Instead, this argument posits Lanceâs development as an extension of Malcolm Gladwellâs 10,000 hours concept. In short, give the kid as many reps as possible so that he can master the craft as quickly as possible. Under this thinking, a second-string Lance would be losing both valuable game AND practice snaps, soâby not starting himâweâd be stunting his growth. Like many Gladwellian concepts, thereâs legitimacy to parts of this concept but issues as well.
First off, this assumes that Lance wonât be getting any practice snaps or seeing the field if Garoppolo is the starter. More on that later, but itâs safe to say that wonât be the case. Second, it simplifies the idea of growth to the point where time spent is mutually exclusive: youâre either getting reps and growing or youâre not. This fails to look at how growth can occur outside of game reps through film study, meeting rooms, side work with coaches, etc. Next, it neglects the inherent downside of immediate playtime. Whereas practicing the violin to become first-chair in the LA Philharmonic only has the potential pitfalls of growth inefficiency (if youâre practicing the wrong way or with the wrong teacher) or burnout (a potential downside of literally anything), we only need to look at the recently jettisoned Josh Rosen to see how the idea of playtime = progress is more complicated in team sports. Throwing someone âinto the fireâ is a nice expression to use by suits in pre-game shows, but itâs not especially productive if all they do is burn. While Lance seems to have the team support and mental makeup to avoid the crippling fate of a high draft pick thrown to the wolves, putting someone into play before theyâre ready always comes with the risk of developing bad habits or debilitating mental blocks. And finally, the 10,000 hours approach doesnât take into account team success. This is a group with championship aspirations, and Shanahan is trying to tow a line where we can win now and later, rather than one or the other.
Are we really running a two-quarterback system?
[Randy Vazquez/ Bay Area News Group]
Not in week 1 at least, as Lance is still recovering from a minor bone chip in his finger. But given the way Shanahan rotated quarterbacks in our final preseason game (and the fact that heâs openly stated that both QBs will have a role moving forward), thereâs a natural curiosity as to how much weâll really see Lance and how effective a true committee approach can be at the position.
In general, football heads and media members alike are equally skeptical of a two-quarterback approachâespecially on the NFL level. And as the importance of the position has grown (and the mythology of its importance has grown exponentially), so too has that skepticism. Youâve undoubtedly heard the oft-repeated idiom that âif you have two starting quarterbacks, you have no starting quarterbacks.â If you havenât, expect to hear it plenty this season. Any Garoppolo or Lance miscue will likely be followed by a meathead color guy saying something along the lines of âyou gotta wonder if they canât get in a rhythm because theyâre coming in and out of the game like this.â If thereâs a miscommunication with a wideout, questions will undoubtedly follow about whether âeither quarterback has gotten enough reps in practice to get on the same page with his guys.â
To be fair, these are all legitimate concerns. No coach wants less reps for his players, especially when that player touches the ball on every snap. And miscommunications and mistakes can arise from lack of familiarity. But if youâre doing a two-quarterback system right, the practice reps that youâre losing should be offset by the practice reps your opponent loses while preparing for two separate offenses.
While rare, quarterback rotation is something weâve seen before. Our fan base has actually seen it multiple times. Colin Kaepernick had a few run plays each game as he got brought along slowly as a rookie, but that could hardly be considered a rotation. Joe Montana would get pulled for Steve Young at times, but that was more along the lines of Bill Walsh trying to get the best out of two Hall of Farmers at once. Even Montana, when he was a rookie, would come in for Steve Deberg during red zone trips. But probably the most successful instance of full-on quarterback rotation was the 2006 Florida Gators, who rode a senior Chris Leak and a battering ram freshman Tim Tebow to the BCS Championship. More recentlyâand perhaps more importantly, on the NFL levelâthe gold standard has been the twilight Drew Brees and Taysom Hill combo.
Shanahan has openly referenced the Saints duo as a framework for what the Niners may do with Lanceâespecially in how the threat of a QB run game opens things up offensively. But in this case, our change-up is considerably more dangerous than theirs, as Lance is not only a tremendous athlete, but heâunlike Hill in his rotational roleâcan actually throw the ball. Perhaps we see Lance as a match-up-based change-up, sprinkled in like a wildcat formation that actually works. Perhaps he sees the field as regularly as he did in our preseason finale. At the very least, I think he gets good play on short-yardage situations and in the red zone, where his running ability can help the offensive arithmetic and his play-action potential will force defenses to make some tough decisions.
While most teams likely cannot (or should not) run a two-quarterback system, there are reasons to believe that the Niners can be the exception. We have one of the top offensive minds in all of football, two players with distinctly different styles and strengths, a strong locker room run by veteran leaders, and a young quarterback who weâre trying to groom to be our 2022 starter. There will be hiccups, and you have to imagine that the first time Lance puts the ball on the ground off an option mesh, Tim Ryan or whoever his regional away-game-equivalent is will remind you of this fact. But if the Niners can weather the early storm and get into a groove playing both Jimmy G and Lance, this could be our most exciting offense in decades.
And that is exactly how Shanahan plans to bridge the present and the future.
What does our extra beefy wideout corps mean for our offensive identity?
[Sean M. Haffey/Getty Images]
After roster cutdowns, the six wideouts on our opening day squad average 214 pounds, making us one of the thicccer receiving corps in the NFL (and thatâs including Deebo at a dubious listed weight of 215). A filled-out Brandon Aiyuk is the lightest of the bunch at 200 pounds, with former running back Jalen Hurd topping them off at 230, but whatâs really keeping the average weight up is the fact that this is the first roster of Shanahanâs tenure that has simply declined to keep a traditional slot receiver.
During the ShanaLynch era, the Niners have always rostered at least one player to fill the role of a smaller, quicker slot receiver. Whether it was Trent Taylor (5-8, 178 pounds) or Richie James (5-9, 185 pounds), their job was to create separation underneath on short-to-intermediate routes and act as the quarterbacksâ security blanket. So why the change of heart now?
Granted, James was put on IR just before cutdown day, so itâs not like the Niners are just done with him (although since he was put on IR before the roster cutdown he is NOT eligible to return later this year). But the decision to keep all bigger bodies in the receiving corps despite keeping one more wideout (6) than they have in the past, strikes me as a calculated one.
If I had to guess, there could be a few reasons behind this decision. First off, the slot receiver as a security blanket was cool in practice but largely nonexistent in reality. With the exception of Taylorâs rookie year back in 2017, none of our slot-type bodies have come close to replicating the kind of play that [insert undersized white receiver from New England] made a living off of. When we needed a short completion underneath, it usually went to Kittleâwho often split out into the slot and replaced a âslot-type bodyâ anywaysâand our second man up was typically Kendrick Bourneâwho did the majority of his damage on slants and square ins from out wide. The last time our slot receiver felt like a slot receiver was Shanahanâs first year, before Taylorâs explosiveness was sapped by injury, and as part of an offense that was more of a hybrid between what Shanahan wanted to run and what Jimmy Gâwho was obtained mid-seasonâwas used to with the Patriots. That meant more shotgun sets and more of a reliance on option and pivot routes from slot receivers like Taylor. Four years later and with a roster shaped to his liking, perhaps Shanahan figured the drawbacks of an undersized slot outweighed the benefits.
The second more obvious reason for the change is that Shanahan wants to run the ball, and a bigger roster of wideouts will allow him to do that. When Taylor finally came back from injury last year, it was his superior blocking that kept him ahead of James in the pecking order until the latterâs breakout game against Green Bay. When Dante Pettis was deep in Shanahanâs dog house, it was often a lack of urgency and physicality that sent him there (and kept him there) for long periods of time. Ultimately, I think Shanahan got fed up with the outside runs that we sprung so easily in 2019 getting shut down last year because of a single missed block on the edge. So he sought out a receiving corps filled with willing and capable blockers. By focusing more on size and physicality out wide, Shanahan is likely hoping to eliminate the sporadic edge blocking of last year that often turned a fifteen-yard gain into a five-yard one and a would-be house call into a third-and-short.
Iâd also guess that this changeâlike our constant attempts to bolster the interior lineâhas something to do with the Super Bowl loss. As stated before, that game included an inordinate amount of uncalled holding calls. And while the lack of offensive holding was more obvious and showed up more readily during the Chiefsâ big plays, the lack of defensive holdingâin conjunction with Chris Jonesâstymied our passing attack. Shanahan has always prioritized separation ability from his wideouts, but perhaps his opinion on what that meansâlike his opinion on the benefits of a quarterback who can create off-scriptâhas shifted in step with the NFLâs changing enforcement of their rules. Since defensive holding has plummeted in lieu of pass interference, bigger wideouts are more likely to be able to fight through grabby defensive backs at the line and create defensive PI calls down the field. Sure, weâre poking at theoretical margins here, but Shanahanâs attention to detail and his ability to be one step ahead of the curve when it comes to offensive trends is one of the things that makes him such a great offensive mind.
Finally, our focus on XXL wideouts certainly points to an interest in finding a way to lighten the offensive burden on Kittle. We kept one more wideout and one fewer tight end than we normally do, which likely means that (A) the staff is happy with Charlie Woernerâs progression, and (B) our wideouts will be tasked with doing some of the things Kittle does when heâs lined up in the slot or in the wing. Kittleâs style of play and tremendous blocking ability mean that heâll always be an injury risk, and the best way to minimize that risk is to get him a breather every once in a while. Since his emergence as one of the NFLâs premier tight ends, weâve been trying (and failing) to do just that. But with a stable of wideouts who can all block down into the box and two would-be âjumbo slotsâ in Jalen Hurd and Jauan Jennings, perhaps this is the year where we can finally give Kittle a break.
Have we finally fixed our interior OL issues?
[Thearon W. Henderson/Getty Images]
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Alex Mack will be a massive upgrade at center over the rotating door we had at the position last year, and the presence of Jake Brendel on the practice squad means that Daniel Brunskill can focus solely on right guardâa starting position that he all but secured after the struggles and ensuing injury of Aaron Banks. Mike McGlinchey has put on 25 pounds of solid weight in the off-season to help him deal with bull rushers on the edge, andâentering a quasi-contract yearâseems focused and motivated to clean up the sporadic pass protection whiffs that routinely infuriate our fan base. Barring injury, our offensive line will definitely be better than last yearâs unit. But how much better? And what happens if someone misses time?
Our track record at offensive guard hasnât been stellar. Banksâwho we wanted to start right awayâstruggled mightily in his only preseason action and then missed the rest of training camp with an injury. While heâs now healthy, it would be difficult to expect muchâif anythingâfrom him in his rookie year. After regressing in 2020, Justin Skule slid inside from tackle to guard before going down for the season prior to training camp. Colton McKivitz, last yearâs fifth-rounder, didnât even make the active roster. He now resides on the practice squad. While he had a rough start to the preseason, he settled down and looked better than he did last year. But again, heâs on the practice squad for a reason. If we get anything from him itâll be a bonus. If thereâs a bright spot itâs been the play of Tom Compton, who was greatly hindered by last yearâs nonexistent off-season and an injury he sustained mid-season. Word out of camp is that he returned a much better player, and the staff seems confident that he can step in on the interior if called upon. But what does that look like?
Outside, there are just as many questions. Fifth-rounder Jaylon Moore has acquitted himself better than anyone could have expected given his draft position, but he had some struggles in the first preseason game and may not be ready for heavy snaps. While his future looks bright (be it inside or out), you never feel great about a Day 3 rookie being your swing tackle. Shon Coleman finally wrapped up a three-year stint on the team in which he played in 0 games despite theoretically being our swing tackle. And Skuleâas noted aboveâis both hurt and potentially destined for the interior. While Moore likely gets the nod if either Williams or McGlinchey misses time, we may be looking at⊠all-purpose swing Tom Compton?
Ultimately, youâd be hard-pressed to find many squads who are THAT deep at offensive line, and I am cautiously optimistic that Compton can fill-in for spot duty if needed. Thereâs also the classic âthrow Brunskill at the problem and move someone into his placeâ approach, but after a full calendar year of that, I think we can safely say that isnât the best outcome for anyone (including Brunskill). A world where Banks took the starting job and Brunskill could learn behind Mack while being a true swingman across all five positions would have naturally alleviated many of our concerns. But alas, that isnât the world we live in.
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2021 Team Preview: The Rookies
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Trey 2 Trey, hot new 90âs RnB group or dynamic backfield? [USA Today]
Training camp is a few days in. Our first pre-season game is just over a week away. Itâs about that time to dust off the old hype train and get back to it.
Weâll start with the rookies. But first, a few thoughts on the draft class as a whole.
DRAFT TRENDS
Fit over perceived value: Fit over perceived value: More than a few experts have said we reached on our second-day picks while getting great value on our third-round picks. Ultimately, everything after the first few tiers of players becomes very much up for debate, but whatâs clear is that the Niners really narrowed in on their dudes and got themâsome higher than many would expect theyâd go. Weâve talked before about the Niners potentially being too aggressive when it comes to moving up and âgetting their dudesââas opposed to accumulating more picks and thus more swings at the plateâbut those moves have also led to guys like Brandon Aiyuk and Dre Greenlaw. Time will tell if we reached on some of these guys or not, but the Niners clearly prioritized fit in this class, both schematically and within the locker room.
Guys they could scout the most: While Lanceâs lack of film is well-known, the Niners had weeks of in-depth scouting courtesy of their connection with John Beck and Lanceâs second pro day. He was thoroughly scouted. And in a year when prospect interaction was down across the league due to COVID restrictions, the Niners really leaned into picking guys who they could scout the most. Out of the eight draftees, five played in the Senior Bowl. One who didnâtâDeommodore Lenoirâhas a mentor and former high school coach who is close with Richard Sherman. Aaron Banks was vouched for by Mike McGlinchey and Notre Dameâs OL coachâwho Chris Foerster has a good relationship with. In a year when they couldnât meet most prospects in person, the Niners relied heavily on trusted confidants within coaching and scouting circles to ensure that the guys they were looking at were culture fits.
A weird year for roster building: While the bevy of picks that we sent away to draft Lance would make one assume that our goal was to trade back and accumulate as many picks as possible, that would have been hard to do given our roster make-up. With so many returning veterans on one-year contracts, we donât actually have many viable roster openings for the 2021 season. So while accumulating picks for the 2022 draft and beyond makes total sense (when weâll have plenty of openings), simply adding more guys who would then get cut after training camp would have been a waste of capital. Itâs an odd position to be in and likely not one that weâll see again next off-season.
Round 1, Pick 3: QB, Trey Lance, North Dakota State
[Dai Sugano / Bay Area News Group]
Despite putting Fields ahead of Lance in my final QB rankings, this was a case where my head said Fields while my heart said Lance. So, as a fan, I am absolutely thrilled with this pick. While that may sound like Iâm changing my mind after the fact, Fieldsâ ranking was always based on the idea that his larger sample size and superior accuracy made meâas someone who had never sat down with either player and who did not have access to All-22 film of Trey Lanceâwant to hedge risk. It was a final ranking made knowing that I had considerably less information on one of the prospects than the other, and it always came with the stated caveat that if the Niners were blown away by Lance in the interview process and if they thought he had already taken big steps towards improving his accuracy, that they ought to take the swing and lean towards the superior upside. Clearly, that wound up being the case.
Remember, the teamâs goal is to draft players not for what they are or what they can be, but what they are most likely to become. In that regard, Lanceâs intangibles, intelligence, processing speed, and physical traits were always going to help his cause, butâif early training camp reports have any merit (and training camp reports must always be taken with a giant grain of salt)âwe may have struck gold on the trait that is so often hard to predict and regularly undervalued: growth trajectory. When we talk ad nauseam about how Lance accomplished this and that at only 19 or 20 years-old, itâs not simply to commend a prodigious talent but to use his past accomplishments as a means for gauging how high and how fast he may grow to hit future ones. And from beat reporters to players to the head man himself, everyone agrees that Lance has improved dramatically from the beginning of OTAs to nowâjust a few days into training camp. Which could mean weâll be seeing him sooner than anticipated.
That said, I am perfectly fine with taking our time and letting Lance really grow into the starting quarterback role before handing him the keys. The benefits heâd get from a few extra games of starting experience are dwarfed by the potential drawbacks of throwing him into the fire a few games too early. And while weâre far too talented and well-run of a team to see a repeat of an Alex Smith/Josh Rosen scenario (knock on wood), tossing Lance into the deep-end right away could still hinder his growth, andâunlike Smith or Rosen or countless of other highly drafted quarterbacks heading to bad teamsâLance would be facing the expectations and pressures of being a point-man for a team with championship aspirations. Whereas someone like Burrow or Herbert can toss the ball around and learn through costly mistakes as a rookie because their teams are a ways away from contention, those same mistakes will be more disheartening and impactful for a team two years removed from a Super Bowl and in the toughest division in the NFL. Per usual, any argument that âthe Niners didnât trade away x number of picks to sit Lanceâ is the equivalent of saying âyou didnât buy those green bananas to not eat them all before they ripenâ or âyou didnât open that retirement account to not withdraw half of it to purchase a PS5.â There are reasons to play Lance early, but the people giving that particular reason are likely the same ones who KNEW that Mac Jones was the pick at No. 3. Believe me, I am as excited to see Trey Lance as you are, but we need to be patient.
But regardless of when Lance gets his first NFL start, expect to see him in sub-packages right away. For a team that has struggled in the red zone during Shanahanâs tenure, adding a 6-4 225-pound battering ram at the quarterback position will certainly make for some interesting option and run-pass looks when the field gets tight. And those same looks could be shown between the 20âs as well. While a tightened field means that a running quarterback can even the blocking up front, a 3rd-and-inches from midfield puts defenses in an entirely different predicament. Do you shift down and commit to the runâwhich weâll likely be showing both in personnel and formationâor do you play it safe to not get burned over the top, which in turn makes the short-yardage conversion easier?
Weâll get more into the specifics of what the Niners could do with Lance when he actually starts getting in-game snaps. But know this. The first time he lines up in the gun with Deebo and Kittle in the backfield, itâs gonna be six-to-midnight in a hurry.
Round 2, Pick 48: OG, Aaron Banks, Notre Dame
[Ninerswire]
First with the addition of Alex Mack, then the drafting of Aaron Banks, the Niners have spent a lot of resources cleaning up the interior line issues that have plagued us for the greater part of a year and change. In Banks, the Niners have a massive (6-5 338-pound) mauling-type guard with great strength, a bay area kid coming home (El Cerrito), and a dude whoâas mentioned aboveâMcGlinchey and NDâs former OL coach vouched highly for. But many have questioned both the value of the pickâhe was largely considered a third-rounderâand his fit within the Ninersâ stretch-heavy scheme. Hereâs what Iâd say about that.
The Niners traded down five spots before taking Banks. I donât think itâs beyond the realm of possibility that theyâknowing Banksâ perceived valueâwere trying to move down again before taking him andâunable to find any suitorsâpulled the trigger on the guy they had highest on their board. Much of the criticism about Banks is that he doesnât move that well in space and lunges a bit in his blocking, leading to questions of whether or not heâs an immediate starter on the interior. Adam Peters has gone on record vouching for Banksâ quickness, saying that Banksâat a svelte 325 poundsâmoved incredibly well for his size at his Pro Day. That weight loss and athletic potential, combined with the fact that the All-American guard allowed just two sacks and nineteen career pressures despite starting two-and-a-half years straight, made the Niners confident in picking Banks both for his polishâeven if he does need hand workâand his upside.
As for fit, if his greater quickness at a still-humongous 325 pounds is any indicator, the transition to the Ninersâ scheme wonât be as dramatic as some would believe. Itâs also worth noting that itâs our tacklesâwho are regularly out of the box making difficult reach blocksâthat truly NEED to be plus athletes in order to succeed in this scheme. While our guards have to be able to move and to get up to the second level, I think the Niners actually prefer a bit more heft on the interior. Teams have been overcommitting like crazy to stop our stretch running game, which opens the door for the gap runs that can punish them inside, and weâas stated aboveâare still looking for better short-yardage and red zone performance. Some extra pounds may help both those causes. Ultimately, Banksâ scouting reportâa big, super strong dude with great durability and some questions about his ability in spaceâgreatly mirrors that of Laken Tomlinson. And the Niners would be more than happy to shore up our interior with another Tomlinson-type.
I like Daniel Brunskill, but I feel like the Niners see him as either the all-important sixth man swing along the offensive line or a future center who can learn under Mack. Brunskill after all is a converted tight end, whoâup until about a year agoâwas listed as 252 pounds(!) on the NFLâs official site. While heâs played quality snaps at both center and guard, he may physically be better suited for the point position. If Banks wins the starting right guard position outright in training camp, thatâs a good sign both for him and the overall composition of our offensive line.
Round 3, Pick 88: RB, Trey Sermon, Ohio State/Oklahoma
[NFL.com]
Consider me surprised that the Niners traded up into the third round to take a running back when we already have Mostert, Wilson, and Gallman under contract with JaMycal Hasty waiting in the wings. But thatâs a testament to how highly the team thinks of Sermon. And since the selection comes with the blessing of Bobby Turner, thatâs good enough for me.
Turner is probably the least appreciated contributor to the Niners staff. As the running backs coach under Kyle and Mike Shanahan since 1995(!), heâs unearthed gems like Breida, Mostert, Wilson, Alfred Morris (6th), Olandis Gary (4th round), Mike Anderson (6th round), and Hall-of-Famer Terrell Davis (6th round). He is the best running back coach on the planet. So we should probably trust his judgment.
Sermon also fits our scheme like a glove. While his deep speed isnât incredible, heâs got great burst through the hole (with an impressive 10-yard split time on his 40), excellent cutback vision, and tremendous balance. He runs hard but has the ability to make guys miss in space, and catches the ball well out of the backfield.
Sermon DESTROYED this post-season, running for a Big Ten Championship Game-record 331 yards against Northwestern in a game where the Buckeyes passing attack needed much bailing out, then put up another 193 against Clemson.
But a dislocation of his SC shoulder joint on the first play of the national champ game caused him to miss that contest, and unfortunately, injuries are a red flag. He had a cracked L5 vertebrae in high schoolâcausing him to miss his junior yearâ and tore the LCL in his left kneeâcausing him to miss the end of his collegiate junior year. With only five games missed in college (plus the majority of the NC) and 45 games played in, perhaps heâs not actually that injury-prone. But given our luck in recent years⊠itâs always worth mentioning.
Shanahan wants AT LEAST three healthy running backs at all times so that he can rotate bodies and keep people fresh. Many people critiqued that strategy when Mostert exploded at the end of 2019, then immediately walked back said criticism when all of our running backs were continually injured a year later. With Jeff Wilson already down and likely to miss some time, stockpiling running backs looks smarter by the day.
Mostert should continue to start, but Sermon will be among the three backs in that rotation, andâbased on where he was selectedâthe Niners likely expect him to have a more featured role in years to follow. After all, heâll be the only running back on roster locked up into 2022.
Itâs also worth noting that Peters gushed about Sermonâs character, in particular his ability to deal with adversity while not letting it effect his outlook on life. This is likely due in large part to Sermonâs impressive mother, who lost two brothersâone shot to deathâboth her parentsâwithin two weeks of each otherâand her first two childrenâthe youngest murdered by a former boyfriend who is now serving a life sentence in prison before Trey and his sister were born. Needless to say, no one expects Sermon to complain about sharing the load in the backfield.
Round 3, Pick 102: CB, Ambry Thomas, Michigan
No, that is not Emmanuel Moseley. E-Man switched to #4 with the new jersey rules⊠and then Jimmie Ward switched to #1⊠and then Thomas switched to #20 [NBC Sports]
Iâll admit I was worried when three straight cornerbacksâtwo of which I was highly interested inâwent directly before the Niners picked at the bottom of the third, but I think they got a good one in Ambry Thomas. There are a number of draft experts who graded Thomas lower than a third rounder, butâas someone who (often sadly) watches every Michigan gameâI can confidently say that I felt Thomas was undervalued on most draft boards.
Heâs long, athletic, and tenacious with experience both in Don Brownâs man-press scheme and a handful of zones that the Wolverines had to throw into the mix to offset some personnel issues in 2019. But since Ambry was only a full-time starter for one year and sat out the 2020 seasonâfor medical reasons that weâll get to in a secondâpeople kind of forgot about him. If anyone watched a Michigan game last year, rest assured that fans of Michigan missed him dearly. So did the coaches, as they gushed about Thomasâ competitive spirit and tenacity in their talks with the Niners leading up to the draft.
As a testament to his work ethic, Thomasâwho was diagnosed with colitis in the summer before the 2019 seasonâlost 35 pounds while hospitalized for a month, missed all of fall camp, and was told he should medically redshirt⊠then wound up not missing a single start en route to a highly successful junior year.
Itâs interesting because Syracuseâs Ifeatu Melifonwuâwho went a single pick before Thomas and combines elite movement skills alongside a 6-2 205-pound frameâis basically the physical prototype of an NFL corner. Yet he dropped to the third round based on some questions about instincts, anticipation, and consistency. In many ways, he was a more polished Ahkello Witherspoon. While itâs impossible to know if the Niners had him higher on their board than Thomas, itâs easy to wonder if their focus on toughness and physicality over raw physical tools is in part because things never fully materialized with Spoon.
To be clear, Thomas is no slouch athletically. He returned kicks at Michigan and even played a little offense when he was further down the depth chart at cornerback. Heâs got good top speed, quick feet, and very good hands, but tends to get a bit grabby at times. And while physical and willing, itâs unclear if he can really add any more mass onto his rather slender frame. Heâs definitely a guy who needs more in-game experience, but I wouldnât be shocked to see him get some snaps as a rookie. In terms of long-term projection, this is definitely a guy who can become a fixture outside. Perhaps as soon as 2022.
Round 5, Pick 155: OL, Jaylon Moore, Western Michigan
[49ers.com]
A three-year starter at left tackle, Mooreâs lack of ideal length and power initially had him sliding inside to guard with the Niners. But after Justin Skule went down with a torn ACL in OTAs, Moore has been running with the second team at tackle. While itâs a bummer for Skule, I donât mind Moore getting a shot outside first. A popular prospect in scouting circles, the experts are near-unanimous that the Niners got both a steal in the fifth round and a dude whose quickness, movement skills, and second-level climbing ability make for an outstanding schematic fit. To me, he seems like the perfect swing tackle and hopefully getting early snaps outside will help him transition to such a role.
However, considering Moore was drafted initially to play inside, his selection brings up a lot of questions about our two-deep on the offensive line. Was Skule, before his injury, on his way out anyway after taking a big step back from his mostly-solid substitute cameos in 2019? Is it getting late early for Colton McKivitz, who looked totally overwhelmed during his rookie year? Or will a more normal off-season help him in year two? Will Shon Coleman ever play a snap for us? Still plenty of questions along our offensive line. Hopefully, theyâll be answered by the time the regular season rolls around.
Round 5, Pick 172: CB, Deommodore Lenoir, Oregon
[R. Ross Cameron / USA Today]
A scrappy corner out of Oregon who started three straight seasons in what wasâbefore COVID opt-outsâperhaps the most talented secondary in the country, Lenoir is a tad undersized and lacks the twitch to really make up for it, but heâs a physical and intelligent DB who plays under control. As evidenced by a rookie camp clip that quickly made the roundsâŠ
âŠand possibly got the Niners in trouble for their OTAs having âcontact.â
Lenoirâs basically the Ninersâ answer for the void in the slot vacated by DJ Reedâa player who he greatly resemblesâbut the Niners see Lenoir with a bit more inside/outside potential (although Reed currently starts outside for the Seahawks soâŠ). Similar to Reed, expect him to get shots at subpackage work on the inside and for him to work his way up from there.
Round 5, Pick 180: S, Talanoa Hufanga, USC
[Sports Illustrated]
The reigning Pac-12 defensive player of the year and AP first-team All-American, Hufanga seems like an absolute steal where we got him. Super instinctual and physical with great intelligence (he was one of two Ninersâ drafteesâthe other Trey Lanceâwho got the coveted Golden Helmet designation during the draft process), Hufanga slipped because he ran an atrocious forty time (4.63) and has serious medical questions about his shoulders. With TWO season-ending right collarbone surgeriesâthe second of which led to a metal plateâand a dislocated shoulder that wound up requiring surgery after his sophomore year, the medicals could have taken him off the boards of some teams.
That said, this is the fifth round. You take risks somewhere, and Hufanga could well exceed his draft slot if he can stay healthy. People question his coverage ability due to his lack of elite speed and ask if he can play deep middle or even deep half. Totally fair. But his tape is faster than his timed speed and he doesnât HAVE to play deep coverage in order to see the field with the Niners. In fact, Iâd guess Hufangaâs first snaps (other than special teams, where he should immediately be a difference-maker) will be in a similar role as what Marcell Harris was doing for us by the end of last year. A matchup-specific subpackage outside linebacker who can cover better than most while being physical enough not to get overwhelmed in the box. If Hufanga tops out as Marcell Harris, weâll easily take that for the next four years on a fifth-rounder deal. But he at least has the potential to carve out a bigger role, and thatâs great value in the fifth.
Round 6, Pick 194: Elijah Mitchell, Louisiana-Lafayette
[Stan Szeto / USA Today]
Despite eyeing linebackers in this round, the Niners ended up pulling the trigger on Mitchell for the same reason they did on Moore and Banks and Sermonâhe just fit their value chart. Mitchell is a speedy guy (4.38 forty) with a one cut running style who ran plenty of outside zone in college. You donât see a lot of dynamic moves or creativity in his running style, but heâs fast, usually hits the right hole, and runs harder than his size would indicate. Thatâs certainly enough to have some success in our scheme.
While the injury to Wilson will likely push some difficult roster decisions to a later date, the battle for the fourth running back spot between Wayne Ellington, JaMychal Hasty, and Mitchell will be one to keep an eye on in training camp.
Next Up? Guys with pictures that were NOT taken from the rookie minicamp.
Go Niners đđ
Shitâs About To Go Down
AAAAAAHHH
AAAAAAAAH [Getty Images]
By approximately 5:30 tonight, booze will be had. The only question is what type, in what fashion, and in what state of mind. Weâre just hours away from learning who will be the Ninersâ quarterback for (hopefully) the next 10+ years. Here are some final thoughts and my final QB rankings.
Smoke Season in Full Swing
Once the dust settles, itâll be interesting to see which reporters were ârightâ and what was simply conjecture and smokescreens. Every other day there have been new âreportsâ from âsourcesâ about the direction the Niners are going. Personally, I think a lot of those reports are based on people guessing. But Iâd also be willing to accept some level of gamesmanship.
The current Niners regime hasnât had ANY leaks through their first four years. Not when they traded for Garoppolo, or when they traded away DeFo, or when they moved up to take Foster or Aiyuk in the draft, or even when they made this massive blockbuster trade that seemingly came out of nowhere. It would be foolish to think that after all that, they are now the most loose-lipped team in the country.
While itâs easy to ask âwhat do we have to gain?â from all this drama when the top two picks in the draft seem set in stone, itâs even easier to ask âwhat do we have to lose?â People do crazy, stupid shit on draft day, Trent Baalke and Joe Douglas are still picking 1 and 2, andâin the incredibly unlikely scenario that the Niners feel confident enough in the picks below them and the talent at quarterback that we try to trade down and still get their guyâthe cloud of smoke at least gives us the competitive advantage of knowing who we want when no one else does. At the very least it means that the teams after us will be scrambling once our pick comes in. Even that is a minor win.
That said, itâs not hard to envision this being a YOLO. The Niners know that the first two picks have been solidified for a month now so perhaps theyâre allowing information to seep out about their process and their preferences because they frankly donât care what anyone knows at this point. No one is going to move ahead of them. No one is going to prevent them from getting their guy at No.3. And the entire point in moving all the way up to three was to assure themselves that kind of freedom in their scouting process. But while moving up to three allows us to do things like host second pro days for two quarterbacksâone of whom we convinced to work with a coach who we know very wellâthe endless contradictory sources assures that at least some of whatâs been reported is totally made up.
Either way, weâll find out tonight.
Donât Make a One-Year Decision on a Ten-Year Investment
Stop me if youâve heard this one before: âMac Jones is the most pro-ready of the prospects and the Niners donât want to keep Jimmy G around, so naturally, the Niners should draft Mac Jones.â
I donât remember which fallacy of reasoning this falls under, but Iâm sure it checks about half of them. And Iâll bring up later the question of Mac Jonesâ pro-readiness. But the Niners are making this pick for one reason and one reason only: to get the best guy to lead them for the next 10+ years. NOT the guy who makes Jimmy G the most expendable in 2021. NOT the guy who is gonna look the best right out of the gate. We just traded three first-round picks to hand-select our franchise quarterback. There is quite literally no time like right this second when we should be making a long-term decision.
Yes, in an ideal world the rookie is so good and weâre so confident that giving him immediate snaps is the best path to helping him reach his potential that we can trade Jimmy before the season, save $25M in cap space, and start the [whoever we draft] era immediately. But the single most important part of that equation isâwithout questionâgetting the right guy and doing whatever we can to make sure he reaches his potential.
Everything else isâat bestâa distant second.
The Scheme is More Flexible Than You Think
We talked about what qualities Shanahan and Lynch were likely to prioritize when evaluating the quarterbacks in this draft, but while traits like accuracy and intelligence will always be important within our scheme, we need to stop acting like Shanahanâs current playbook is exactly what he wants to run.
Shanahanâs a smart dude. When he got a new starting quarterback midway through his first year in San Francisco, he adapted the offense to better fit what that quarterback could do. Quick hitters inside, more shotgun, less outside-the-hash and down-the-field work; these were not decisions made in a vacuum but ones made to best accent Garoppoloâs strengths and minimize his weaknesses. A year before that, Shanahan led Matt Ryan to an MVP season while leading the league in yards/attempt, adjusted yards/attempt, and touchdown percentage. Four years before that, Shanahan led RG3 to rookie of the year honors as he rushed for 800+ yards on a league-leading 6.8 yards/carry. Thereâs flexibility to what this offense can become.
Shanahanâs offense will always feature a handful of staples, but looking at the Ninersâ scheme now and saying âthis is exactly what Shanahan wantsâ is a bold claim. If anything, we should be expecting changes. Because this was a hell of an aggressive move up the draft to stand pat offensively.
The âMahomes Planâ is Still Viable
Thereâs been a lot of talk about how no one gets drafted as high as No.3 to sit for a year behind another quarterback. While the idea of Jimmy being moved before or during the draft has certainly picked up some steam of lateâand could ultimately be the right decisionâthe thought process that many are using to justify it is greatly flawed.
These are the most common arguments Iâve heard:
1 - Sitting your QB means you lose a year of savings off their rookie contract: In absolute terms, this is obviously false. The rookieâs salary number is going to be the same regardless of if they start in 2021 or not. But the argument thatâs trying to be madeâthat you want to get as many starting years out of a rookie contract as possibleâis also false, but for different reasons.
I sort of talked about this already, but the combination of savings you get from cutting a veteran starter and milking every year out of a depressed rookie contract is never more important than ACTUALLY WINNING GAMES. None of that other stuff matters if it hinders the selection and development of your future quarterback.
If you asked the Chiefs if theyâd have rather played Mahomes as a rookie as opposed to letting him learn under Smith but with the caveat that it could hinder his development, the answer would be a resounding hell no. Penny pinching is great when you have your core players at important positions locked up and are trying to save money to build up the rest of the roster. But saving money just to save money in a hard salary cap league run by billionaires where approximately 90% of their salary caps are paid by revenue sharing should never be mistaken for doing the thing you set out to do as a franchise in the first place: win games.
Once again, your decisions need to be made based on the best player and the best way to help him develop into the franchise quarterback that you just traded all those picks for.
2 - The best way to get better is to get meaningful snaps as quickly as possible: For some people, sure. In the right system, with the right coaches and supporting cast. But there are decades of evidence refuting this claim as an absolute. Just ask Josh Rosen.
3 - The Mahomes situation was âa different timeâ: No it wasnât. When Mahomes was drafted in 2017, the NFL was still under the same collective bargaining agreement that weâre under now, the rookie pay scale was already in effect, and teams were already slinging the ball all over the place due to changes in rules and the growing popularity of RPOs. While rule changes are perpetual and the way the NFL has shifted things in the past calendar year has moved the goal posts a bit in terms of optimizing your offense, player acquisition and development has largely stayed unchanged.
Itâs also worth noting, thatâeven for itâs timeâMahomeâs patient developmental schedule was rareâjust as Aaron Rodgersâ was before him. Thatâs probably becauseâfor the most partâa teamâs not drafting a quarterback in the first round when theyâve already got an above average-or-better performer at the position. Most teams taking first-round quarterbacks are subpar squads attempting to add a crucial piece who will help them ascend to relevancy, not perennial playoff contenders. But in the case of both Mahomes and Rodgers, they entered into teams with capable multi-year starters at quarterback and playoff-worthy supporting casts. They were not needed to save the franchise. Thus, they were given time to develop. As a team one year removed from a #1 seed and a Super Bowl appearance with the quarterback who got us there still on the roster, weâre in a similarly unique position as the Chiefs and the Packers once were. Where most teams picking this high would not have the luxury of sitting a rookie, we do. And because of that, it should at least be considered.
If we believe our rookie will develop best by sitting on the bench all year, then so be it. If we think getting thrown into the fire will be the best way for them to improve, then thatâs the route we should take. But just because the situational dynamics of most teams picking a first round quarterback dictate that said quarterback should see meaningful snaps as a rookie, doesnât mean that we need to/nor should follow in their footsteps.
Final QB Rankings
Not including Trevor Lawrence, for obvious reasons
1. Justin Fields: Despite Shanahan seemingly going out of his way at the post-trade presser to debunk this very claim, everyone still seems to think that his ideal quarterback is Kirk Cousins. This is a guy who grew up watching his dad win three chips with Steve Young and John Elwayâmobile Hall of Fame quarterbacks with rocket arms. You canât tell me that after all that, Cousins is his ideal quarterback.
Yes, Fieldsâ ugliest film can get pretty ugly, but his mobility, accuracy, and intelligence all fit our scheme like a gloveâwhile his skill set would allow us to open up the offense beyond what weâve seen thus far in the Shanahan era. His incredible ball placement raises his floor and makes him less risky than someone like Lance, heâs already shown the ability to improve considerably between seasonsâwhich is great for his long-term trajectoryâand heâs started two straight years at a high level against top tier competition, which again hedges some of the inherent risk in taking a quarterback this high.
To me, Fields has the best chance to be that guy who had the tape, had the tools, and had the production, but somehow managed to slip on draft day regardless. The dude who people spend the next decade saying âhow did this happen?â That is, unless the Niners pick him at No.3
T-2. Trey Lance: Lance had more inaccuracy issues on tape than Iâd originally thought, and those are genuine concerns, but that doesnât mean Iâve soured on him. I just canât get over what he accomplished at his age and how everyone else that weâve been evaluating is not only multiple years older but is being scouted based on newer tape and a better supporting cast. Thereâs a real chance that Lance has already fixed some of the issues that he had in 2019 because he was a 19 year-old redshirt freshman at the time and heâs had plenty of time since then to work one-on-one with QB coaches to improve his mechanics. Projected growth is a major part of the scouting process that many tend to ignoreâespecially when it comes to this position, and to me, Lanceâs trajectory is a rocket heading into space. Think back to how you were at 19 versus 22, audibly cringe, and then look at what Lance has already accomplished before he can legally drink.
Maybe heâs not a guy who starts in 2021, but I also wouldnât be shocked if heâs closer to pro-ready than many people are saying. Remember, this is a guy who was a much more efficient passer in his first year as a starter than Carson Wentzâa four-year player in the exact same systemâwas throughout his career. While Wentz has had his ups and downs in the league, he was still a rookie starter and nearly won the MVP in his second year en route to a Super Bowl. Everyone has said that Lance needs to sit a year enough that people seem to take it as fact. Maybe he does. But thereâs at least a chance he doesnât.
As far as the scouting process goes, I cannot stress enough how brilliant the move was by the Niners to reach out to Lance and get him hooked up with John Beck. Not only has that connection given Lance some high-level coachingâheâs already working on improving his lower body mechanics to help his accuracy issuesâbut it gives the Niners an in-depth look from a trusted eye on a player with a lot of question marks during a COVID-altered scouting process. For a player with so little on tape and so much projection, that extra look is a massive deal that makes me much more comfortable if Lance is the pick at No.3.
To be certain, Lance is still a MAJOR risk. I donât want to minimize the question marks that come along with inconsistent accuracy and lack of tape. I get that, and thatâs probably the main reason I have Fields ahead of him in these rankings. But Iâd be more than happy to get either of those two at No.3.
T-2. Zach Wilson: As much as I love Wilsonâs improvisational ability and off-platform arm, after watching more film, Fields and Lance certainly have more physical talent. Combine that with BYUâs soft schedule (although they did play two top 20 defenses in SDSU and Coastal Carolina) and the fact that their offensive line was absolutely amazing last year, and thatâs led to a slight slip from Wilson in my rankings. Overall, some of his production may not have matched his process last year and that will be harder to get over in the NFL.
To be clear, Iâm still really high on Wilson, and he and Lance are kneck-and-kneck for me at two. Thereâs also certainly some inherent Niners optimism bias in this rankingâas Wilson is nearly a lock to be off the board by the time that weâre picking. But Iâm hoping that counteracts the inherent bias the other way that came from Wilson being someone who I diagnosed as both a first-round talent and a nice schematic fit before most experts did. With this ranking, Iâm basically trying to balance out my two favorite things: the Niners winning games and me being right. Ultimately, itâs unlikely to matter, as the Jets are picking Wilson at two. But if he does somehow fall to us, I would have zero qualms swooping him up.
4. Mac Jones: Distant fourth. The other guys are quite simply in another tier, and while I think Jonesâand any of the above quarterbacksâwould succeed in Shanahanâs system, the more Iâve watched of other players in the running the more I realize how big the gap is between them and Jones. I just donât see the ceiling to warrant the pick. Not this high. Not with what we gave up. And after watching film of everyone else, I think some of the strengths of Jonesâ game are overrated as well.
As an example, with all the (inaccurate) talk of Fields or Lance being âone read and runâ quarterbacks, I was curious to see if anyone actually charted out data to back up those claims. It turns out, someone has. And while I canât speak to the methods nor the accuracy of this data, The Draft Networkâs findings on rate of success for throws thrown beyond the quarterbackâs first read were very interesting:
I have no idea how they measured âplacementâ or âaccuracyâ for this study so letâs just ignore those categories. Itâs also worth noting that Mac Jones had DeVonta Smithâthe best receiver in the countryâas his No.1, so he definitely should have thrown to him more often than average, andâwhen you think about the other weapons that were at his disposalâit was likely harder for opposing defenses to double or commit extra help Smithâs way. So he definitely definitely should have thrown to his No.1 more often than average. Basically, there is a ton of noise in the stats above, and you donât want to punish someone for having a good play caller and receivers who get open. But while I would NOT hold these figures as gospel, they do point to two things for me: (1) Alabamaâs current offense (not their offense four years ago) is more RPO-heavy and less pro-style than most would have you believe, while Ohio Stateâs current offense (not their offense with Haskins or under Urban Meyer before that) runs more multi-progression passes than youâd think; and (2) neither Fields nor Lance are anything close to âone read and runâ quarterbacks.
So how does this relate directly back to Jones? Much of his appeal is polish. Itâs that heâs the âsafestâ of the high picks because the other guys are much less developed. But as we chip away at some of the myths about Fieldsâ and Lanceâs ability to process the field and their pro-readiness, Jonesâ supposed advantage begins to lessen. And ultimately, I donât think Mac Jones is as âsafeâ a pick as weâve been led to believe. A lack of physical tools means you have no margin for error, and itâs easier for me to bank on Fields improving his processing speed under Shanahanâs tutelage or Lance improving his accuracy with continued throwing mechanics work than Jones becoming one of the smartest quarterbacks in the entire NFL. Oftentimes when quarterbacks are deemed more âpro-readyâ thatâs really just subconscious code for âtheyâre closer to tapping out their ceiling.â And oftentimes when scouts gush endlessly about someoneâs smarts itâs because thereâs nothing else traits-wise to talk about in their game. While Jones may indeed wind up the most pro-ready, heâs clearly the closest to his ceiling, and Iâm not comfortable with his projected growth. As stated above, this pick is about long-term return, not short-term return, and in the case of Jones vs. Fields/Lance, you could argue the latter two have Jones beat in both categories.
Given this particular situation, it would also be malpractice not to point out how the narrative is different for white and black quarterbacks, with Jonesâdue to no fault of his ownâbeing the beneficiary in this three-man race. The whole âseems like a good kid from a good familyâ and âI could see myself cracking a beer and hitting the links with himâ line of thought has basically been unavoidable this draft season and that could easily be inflating Jonesâ perceived value. For example:
Lance led his team to an undefeated championship at nineteen, Fields was recruited by Harvard and Yale, and yet Jones is the one who is lauded for his prodigious smarts. Jones had the fewest starts of any of these top quarterback prospectsâtied with Lance only because of COVIDâand ran the same offense that was just criticized last year in Tuaâs evaluation for being too-RPO-heavy, but is immediately the most âpro-ready?â Jones was arrested for a DUI at the same age Lance was winning a chip and the Walter Payton Player of the Year Award, but Fields is the one who is getting called out by âanonymous sourcesâ over âcharacter concerns?â Lance was a two-star recruit whose only quarterback offer was to North Dakota State, yet Jones is the âscrappy underdog?â
Seeing the comparisons between Jones and the other prospects reminds me of every time Michael Bluth met his sonâs girlfriend in Arrested Development:
I just donât see it.
This isnât meant to rip Jones. Heâs got talent. Heâs accurate. He processes quickly. Heâll get the ball out of his hands in a hurry, which I know Shanahan would appreciate, and if he ends up being the pick I will be rooting as hard as possible for him to succeed. Which I think he would. Because Shanahan is our coach. But any time I think of picking Jones ahead of Fields and Lance, my mind immediately turns to opportunity cost. What draft capital did we give up to get him? If weâre getting just an average starting quarterback, where else could those picks have gone? What are we giving up schematically in terms of improving and evolving our offense by passing on the superior physical tools of Fields and Lance? And just as importantly, what does Mac Jones give us that Lance or Fields doesnât? And for that last question, I donât have an answer.
Iâve said it before and Iâll say it (thankfully) for the last time here. Whether Iâm right or wrong (and itâs happened before), please for the love of our collective sanities, make the right pick. Whoever that may be. Because the right pick could launch us into Super Bowl contention for the next decade. And I really donât want to spend another April looking at quarterbacks in another three or four years.
Go Niners đđ
Draftables: Justin Fields
Somehow underrated?
Whereas a lack of All-22 footage made for a frustrating evaluation of Trey Lance, coaches film was massively beneficial in scouting Justin Fieldsâwho certainly has his faults but looks much better when those faults are viewed in context.
In short, weâre looking at another dude with tremendous physical tools and college production whoâll need to iron out a few things that wonât fly on the NFL level, but if he can show those improvements, Fields has all the makings of an ideal triggerman for Shanahanâs offense.
(Some lazy pun) Fields Forever [G Fiume/Maryland Terrapins]
Ht: 6-2.5â
Wt: 227 lbs.
Age: 22
School: Ohio State
Stats
Build: Justin Fields measured in at 6-2.5â and 227 pounds at his pro day. Like Lance, he basically has the prototypical build for a modern NFL quarterback.
Experience: A two-year starter at Ohio State who also played in all 12 games at Georgia in a sub-package role as a freshman, Fields has more starts (22) and legitimate game experience than either Jonesâwho didnât see meaningful snaps until Tua went down late in the 2019 seasonâor Lanceâwho redshirted after a few games as a freshman then saw his sophomore year postponed due to COVID.
As Lance and Wilson get knocked for playing against subpar competition, itâs also worth noting thatâwhile Ohio State only played in eight games this season due to COVID outbreaks in the midwestâthree of them were against defenses ranked in Football Outsidersâ top five. He absolutely torched one of them (#3 Clemson) while showing warts against the other two (#1 Northwestern; #5 Indiana). If not for those latter two games, I think thereâs little chance heâs slipping past the Jets at #2.
As for Fieldsâ schedule comparison versus Mac Jones? Despite Bama being the national champs and playing a full schedule in the SEC, the SEC had a very down year in terms of defensive performance in 2020. Of the 13 schools, only two made it into FOâs top 44 defenses (#12 Georgia and Bama themselves at #20). Combine that with their playoff opponents (#24 Notre Dame and #47 Ohio State), and Jones played against a considerably easier slate of defenses while being surrounded by better offensive talent.
Injuries: Despiteâand in part, because ofâhis mobility, Fields has taken some big hits in college (too many, which weâll touch on later), but heâs shown excellent toughness throughout. He had some kind of knee injury on the back end of his first year in Columbus, but he played through it into the playoffs, and he suffered a rib injury in the semifinals last year, whichâafter taking what I have to assume was the biggest cortisone shot in the history of mankindâhe returned from and promptly had the best game of his career. Knock on wood, as long as he learns to protect his body in the NFL, he doesnât seem like a major injury risk.
Scouting Breakdown
Like Bullseye-ing Womprats: When I first popped on Fieldsâ tape, my immediate reaction was âwhoa, this guy is way more accurate than Mac Jones.â And then I got to the Northwestern game. Ultimately, I still think Fields is the most accurate quarterback in this draft, and hereâs why.
Accuracy is really a two-pronged evaluation. Itâs about throwing consistently catchable balls and high-end placement. If you are consistently throwing within the catch radius (or âgood enoughâ) thatâs one form of accuracy. If you are breadbasket or bust thatâs another type of accuracy (although you canât miss THAT much and ever truly be considered accurate). And if youâre regularly blowing up the Death Star with your eyes closed (peak Brady, Brees, Montana), thatâs the ideal blend of both.
Jones, with his excellent and repeatable mechanics, had fewer misses than Fields, but his placementâdue in part to his lack of arm strength leading to some issues on crossing routes across his body and deep ballsâis closer to a B+ than an A. Jonesâ record-setting completion percentages are due in part to an incredible cast of pass catchers around him and an offense that prioritizes quick releases and RPOs. While Fields has more missesâ which are largely clustered around that two-game stretchâhis placement is absolutely incredible on all three levels.
Fields excels at throwing over underneath defenders with both accuracy and anticipation when attacking the intermediate zones of a defense:
He shows great placement when flushed and throwing on the move:
And he has impressive touch while dropping money balls down the field:
Advanced stats seem to back this up as well. According to PFF, Justin Fields was tops in the nation in ball placement over the past two years, whileâaccording to ESPNâFields led this quarterback class in the lowest percentage of off-target throws between 11-20 yards (6.9% to Jonesâ 7.7%) and was considerably better than anyone else hitting those depths on passes thrown outside the hashes (4.4% to Trevor Lawrenceâs 11.9%). That second stat seems a testament to Fieldsâ arm strength as well.
Those are field-side deep outs on a college field, where the hashes are wider than in the NFL. While Fields doesnât have the absolute howitzer that Lance possesses, his arm is very strong, even by NFL standards.
Granted, when Fields misses he typically misses worse than someone like Jones, and heâll need to clean some things up mechanically to iron that out, but considering he still threw well enough to lead the nation in so many accuracy metrics, heâs not as hot-and-cold as some would have you believe.
Bigger, Faster, Stronger (than you probably think): Despite his size, Fields ran a 4.44 at his pro day. And he slipped in the middle of it.
Needless to say, the kid is athletic. Ohio State ran a lot of play action boot looks (although typically from the gun) to take advantage of the wider hashes and to allow Fields run-pass options if routes werenât open. Fields has also shown the ability to use his athleticism to create dynamic plays on the ground when plays break down.
Not Dwayne Haskins: Just as itâs impossible not to mention the slew of Bama quarterbacks who have won championships and put up gaudy stats in college only to flame out in the NFL, there will always be some hesitation about drafting an Ohio State quarterback until a single one of them pans out. If that sounds like hyperbole, the Ohio State alum whoâs had the most success as an NFL quarterback was Mike Tomczak, who went undrafted in 1985 (despite the draft being 12 rounds) and was mostly a backup. He was, however, the only former Buckeye I saw (in a five-minute search) who started more than 10 games in a single season. In the history of the NFL.
Some of that can be attributed to the Buckeyesâ formerly conservative nature and their time as an option team, but the fact that the last OSU quarterback to enter the league was cut less than two seasons after being a first-round pick means Fields is fighting history. Luckily for Fields, he seems like the exact opposite of Haskins.
Ohio State has been much better and more consistent with Fields under center than they were in the years leading up to his arrival. While some of that can be attributed to Ryan Day and his coaching staff, Fields has been lauded for his leadership, for his approach to the game, and for his intelligenceâwith Mark Sanchez dropping this tidbit about Fieldsâ coachability and mental acumen on the Pat McAfee Show:
While cognitive analytics are far from a certain science, one of the impressive qualities about Fieldsâand one that often goes unmentionedâhas been how much heâs improved over his two years in college. That points to a certain level of effort and ability to soak in coaching. And with the exception of some random takes from a few anonymous sources, Fields has been highly lauded for his leadership ability. He was the face of the Big Tenâs player/parent movement to restart football after the season was canceled during the summerâa campaign that obviously worked when the Big 10 returned to play months laterâhe returned for the Clemson game after missing only one or two plays despite (potentially) suffering broken ribs, and there are plays like this on his tape.
While itâs impossible to say what kind of person and leader someone is from the outside looking in, Fields seems to check all the boxes.
So About Those Two GamesâŠ: The Indiana and Northwestern games were ugly enough that they warrant an entire section to themselves. Iâll start with the latter.
In the Big 10 Champ game against Northwestern, Fields looked like a totally different player than weâd seen all season. He was inaccurate, out of rhythm, forced some bad throws that led to turnovers, and at times looked lost on the field. Some of that was Northwesternâs defense (ranked #1 in the nation based on Football Outsiders), which may have hadâas weird as it is to say itâthe best secondary in the country last year. Some of that was indeed issues that we saw against Indiana once again emerging in Fieldsâ game. But there were also some very extreme circumstances in that Northwestern game that imply it could have been more of an outlier than a massive red flag.
Ohio State had to cancel two of their past three games leading up to the champ game due to COVID issues in either their program or their opponentâs and entered the Northwestern game with 22(!) players out due to COVID tests and contact tracing. Among those missing were stud wideout Chris Olave, three other receivers, and a tight end. Chemistry is especially important in the Buckeyesâ offense due to its aggressive structure and how many downfield option routes they run. On more than one occasion in this game, you see Fields holding on his No.1 optionâwaiting for him to get out of his breakâonly for the two to wind up on the wrong page and the play go south. Granted, Fields isnât always going to have a No.1 wideout who can get open all the timeâand his performance in this game didnât help the critique that he doesnât process the field quick enough. Nor was a lack of chemistry and missing players the only reason Fields was off this game; he was also just off. But to me, the extenuating circumstances of the NU game make me want to write it off more as a potential outlier and focus more on the issues he had across both games.
Such asâŠ
Processing Speed Concerns: One of Fieldsâ biggest knocks is that heâs either a âone-readâ quarterback or that he takes too long going through his progressions. He definitely is NOT a one-read quarterback, but the second critique is valid⊠to an extent. When the Buckeyes run horizontal concepts like meshâmy least favorite concept to scoutâyou can see Fields quickly get through his progressions and hit the right man. Itâs when they run their single-side vertical reads where he seems to lock on too long to his primary receiver.
When I talk about single-side vertical reads Iâm basically talking about your standard high-low concepts. Two- or sometimes three-man route combos like âsmashâ (hitch/quick out and corner) or âlevelsâ (square-in and dig or vice versa), which use routes layered vertically to read the underneath defender and throw the ball where heâs not. However, Ohio State often runs these route combinations like less of a âhigh-lowâ and more of a âhigh-higher.â In essence, they bank on their superior athleticism outside to push the entire progression further down the fieldâcausing the defenders to cover more ground for longer and encouraging the big play down the field. This is great when they can protect it, but when you canât you get a few instances like this.
A free-rusher with zero check downs available because the receivers arenât even out of their downfield breaks yet. The running back here may look open from this angle, but he popped and released the rusher, so thereâs zero lane to throw that pass, and the backside out is good in theory but potentially disastrous in practice; youâre asking for trouble if you want your quarterback to regularly open play-side then hit an out to the field-side blind if he feels pressure. The result of this play and a handful like it throughout Fieldsâ tape is him staring at his No.1 receiver for seemingly too long then bailing or looking frantic when the pass rush gets to him. On broadcast, that looks like heâs lost, lacks poise, or canât get through his progressions. But in the All-22, you can see that sometimes itâs just the inherent downside of an aggressive offense.
That said, I still think processing speed an area where Fields can improve. But in Fieldsâ case, I think the problem stems less from an inability to process quickly (which is a major red flag) and more from a mindset that is at times too aggressive (which can be fixed). Finding and throwing to an open receiver is always a cost-benefit analysis, and Fields is someone who needs to learn when to cut his losses and take the higher percentage safer throw, rather than wait out a deeper route that may or may not open up. Itâs when these deep routes are being called but not opening up and Fields is forcing things that you get the lowlights of his tape. These are the times where you find yourself screaming at the screen to âthrow it away!â
Overall, Fields does need to process quicker. And he needs to get better at knowing when to bail off the deep route for a safer throw or when to throw the ball away and live to fight another down. A lot of guys can just beast through broken plays in college because of their overwhelming talent, but learning to recognize the plays where you canât make a play is crucial towards succeeding in the NFL.
Blitz Misses: This goes hand-in-hand with the above questions on Fieldsâ processing speed. Indiana and Northwestern had tremendous success against the Buckeyes by utilizing complex blitzes, whichâin partâled to Fields throwing five of his six interceptions on the season over that two-game span. Sometimes the blitzes hit home due to Ohio Stateâs pass protection breaking down or the offense getting too aggressive in its playcalling. Sometimes it was Fields missing the extra rushers and thus failing to speed up his clock to get the ball out faster.
In each of the clips below, you can see checkdown options called underneath in the middle of the field. But in each of the plays, Fields either misses the blitz or holds onto the ball too long in hopes of hitting a deeper route.
That first clip is a perfect example. Fields needs to recognize that heâs in emptyâthus any sixth rusher is fully his responsibilityâsee that the play-side man on the LOS is dropping into coverage, and know immediately that he should be looking for his hot route inside. Instead, he takes a massive hit which could have easily led to a turnover.
Summary
NFL Comp: Russell Wilson
I think the majority of Fieldsâ comps are selling short both his accuracy and his intelligence, and while Fields lacks the level of polish that a four-year starter like Wilson had coming out of Wisconsin, you can see the resemblance in their athleticism, sideline accuracy, and affinity for the deep ball.
Despite being listed as 1B to Trevor Lawrence for most of the college football season, Fields seems to have been a victim of overanalyzing this draft season. Yes, heâs got some stuff to clean up and his lowlights are ugly, but the tools, production, leadership, and growth potential are all sky-high. With his accuracy, mobility, and intelligence, a fully-weaponized Fields would basically be the prototype for running our offense and would open up our vertical passing game and off-script offense in ways weâve yet to see in Shanahanâs tenure.
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Draftables: Trey Lance
Great football name, greater physical tools
Trey Lance is largely considered the most difficult evaluation among quarterback prospects in this yearâs draft. Iâd tend to agree, in part because I havenât been able to find any All-22 film of him! Therefore, this breakdown is going to be built mostly off of (sigh) broadcast cut-ups. That means there are a few thingsâlike route combinations and the ensuing progressions and anticipation paired with themâthat I just wonât be able to see clearly.
Oh, well. Letâs give it a shot anyway.
*Shoutout to whoever the hell zzLIAMzz11 is on YouTube because I lifted 90% of all the game footage I watched from his uploads (marked with the ZZ logo in the clips below). You the real MVP đ
One day heâll be able to legally drink [Sam Wasson/Getty Images]
Ht: 6-4
Wt: 224 lbs.
Age: 20(!)
School: North Dakota State
Stats
Build: Basically the physical prototype of a modern quarterback, Lanceâs 6-4 224 pound frame may actually fill out more, as he will be only 20 years old (!) by the time the draft rolls around. For all you math majorsâthat means that Lance wasnât even born when Tom Brady was drafted, andâunless he sees a precipitous fall on draft dayâLance will be the first person born in the 21st century to be drafted into the NFL. Yes, we are that old. đ”đ»
Experience: Lance has two major knocks on his game and this is one of them. While heâs been the Bisonâs starter for the past two years, NDSUâs entire fall season (except for one game) was delayed until spring due to COVID. Thus, Lance has only 17 college starts under his belt. This is actually the same number as Mac Jones, but due to the Bisonâs level of playâtheyâre FBS and Lance has never faced an FCS schoolâand the fact that Lance only played a single game of football in the past calendar year, the lack of starts is a bit more concerning.
What is NOT concerning is Lanceâs absurd production. As a redshirt freshman, Lance threw for 2,786 yards and 28 scores on 66.9% completion percentage, rushed for an additional 1,100 yards and 14 scores on a healthy 6.5ypc (remember, this includes sacks as theyâre counted against rushing yards in college), and had ZERO(!) interceptions. This while leading the Bison to an undefeated national championship season and winning the Walter Payton Award given to FCSâ top player. He was 19 at the time. Lance finishes his college career 17-0 as a starter and 32-0 including his redshirt freshman year. After he left school to prepare for the draft, the Bison lost their very first game of the spring season by 24 points.
Injuries: Lance had a âlower body surgeryâ in the spring of last year to address something from high school (I know itâs vague, itâs all I got), but it didnât affect him come fall and he seems plenty durable. Similar to how Auburn used Cam Newton, the Bison (pronounced BI-Zuhn for some reason) often used Lance as their defacto fullback on inverted veers and quarterback powers. He is the rare quarterback who can threaten both as a short-yardage runner and with big runs down the sideline. Granted, I donât think itâs ever a good idea to regularly use your quarterback as an interior runner in the NFL, so like other dual-threat quarterbacks before him, Lance will need to learn when to avoid taking unnecessary hits.
Scouting Report
Bombs Away: When we talked about Zach Wilson, we compared his arm talent to Mahomes or Rodgers, but that was more in regards to the ability to improvise and throw off-platform. While Wilson has plenty of arm strength, the pure velocity that the ball fires out of his hand isnât on par with the two names above. Lance on the other hand will have an arm that is as good as anyone in the leagueâs from the second he steps into an NFL locker room. Kid has a hose-and-a-half.
The ball absolutely launches out of his hand on underneath passes with tremendous velocityâŠ
Yet he also shows the natural touch to throw catchable deep balls over defenders.
*If youâre wondering why three of those four clips are incompletes, letâs just say Lance wasnât working with the best receiver corps in Fargo, North Dakota. More on that later. In general, the cut-ups for this write-up arenât particularly eye-opening as only a handful show anything that broadcast cameras donât. That said, I would highly recommend checking out the highlight video at the top to get a sense of his pure physical talent. If we go with Lance weâre going for the upside.
I donât like to spend too much time on pro day workouts cause youâre literally throwing scripted against air, but since we donât have any All-22 film and Lance couldnât play except for one game in the fall, Iâll include this embed here.
Lanceâs ability to put the ball anywhere on the field is tailor-made for todayâs NFL.
Dual-Threat: Given his rushing stats, it should come as no surprise that Lance is an excellent athlete. While his athleticism is harder to gauge against FCS competition and it would have been nice to see him run the forty-yard dash during the pre-draft process, GPS tracking during the 2019 FCS Champ game clocked him at 21.54mph on the touchdown scamper that kicks off the clips below.
That time would have been good for 12th-best in the NFL last year and definitely seems faster than he truly is, that at least validates some of his speed. He has good burst and is faster than you think, but also runs with a ton of power and is hard to bring down.
As has been the warning given to Cam Newton, Josh Allen, Lamar Jackson, and every other dangerous dual-threat quarterback, these are not the kind of collisions we want to see in the NFL. But it is nice to see that he has the strength to escape sacks in the pocket and can lower a shoulder when need be.
Work Ethic / Experience: I know I already touched on Lanceâs experience, but I wanted to elaborate just a bit more. His lack of games played and passes thrown has a lot of evaluators frightened because quarterback is typically a position where guys with fewer college starts do worse once they get to the NFL.
Quarterbacks like Dwayne Haskins and JaMarcus Russellâwho narrowly beat out future seventh-rounder Matt Flynn for the starting gig entering his final year at LSUâare just two examples of one-year starters who quickly flamed out in the league. That said, Blake Bortles, Josh Freeman, and Josh Rosen all started upwards of 30 games in college and none of them panned out or were âpro readyâ as they entered the NFL. Conversely, there was another dude in Haskinsâ draft class with even fewer college starts (Kyler Murray), and he seems to have turned out alright.
In the 2017 draft I compared one-year starter Mitch Trubiskyâwho was getting tons of draft love over accomplished long-time starters DeShaun Watson and Patrick Mahomesâto a dude at a bar with a beard. He may have the shittiest jaw line ever, but since you havenât yet seen it, you just pretend itâs not a problem and hope for the best. The same goes for quarterbacks with only a single year of film. Itâs easy to ignore the warts because you havenât yet seen them on tape while propping up whatâs missing from their game by saying the quarterback âwill get there with time.â
Ultimately, the red flag of âlack of experienceâ is both the worry that a prospect will be bypassing important developmental steps as well as the fact that you have less evidence to make a decision on whether they can take those steps once they reach the NFL. Teams adapt to quarterbacks after having an off-season to look at film and figure out tendencies (just ask Freddie Kitchens-era Baker Mayfield), so everyone wants to see that second starting season to take out some of the guess-work from their evaluations.
All this to say, experience is absolutely a red flag for Lanceâboth in the number of games he played and the level of competition he was playing against. If heâs handled incorrectly and put in the wrong scheme with the wrong supporting cast, maybe he never develops to reach his potential. That said, people absolutely RAVE about his work ethic, leadership, and locker room presence, despite him beingâonce againâonly twenty years old. He also ran considerably more pro-style concepts than any of the other top-billed quarterbacks in this draft as NDSU asks a lot of its quarterbacks mentally. Lance was tasked with adjusting protections, making checks at the line of scrimmage, and running play action from under centerâall traits that will serve him well in the leagueâand heâs already shown the ability to go through his progressions and process the field quickly.
TLDR, Lanceâs lack of experience is a very real worry, but itâs likely an overblown one. And due to his high marks in regards to character and work ethic, I am less worried about him developing than most.
Wavering Accuracy: This, however, is my big worry with Lance. He simply loses the strike zone too much, andâlike anticipation and processing speedâconsistent accuracy is a trait that some quarterbacks simply never grasp. Obviously, if you canât be consistently accurate, you cannot succeed in the NFL, and you especially canât succeed in Shanahanâs offense, which places a high priority on ball placement.
Lanceâs misses vary from deep balls that sail to theoretically simple underneath passes.
*For context, Lance has a worse supporting cast than the other guys in contention but is also given fewer easy passes in NDSUâs offense. Plus, his receivers rarely get much separation or come down with tough contested catches. So a wheel route thrown behind a receiver on Lanceâs film may tumble out of bounds and incomplete while the same pass in Mac Jonesâ filmâas we literally saw in his cutupsâbecomes a casual highlight-reel catch from this yearâs Heisman winner.
There were times where I was watching film and thought he put the ball in the right place to keep his receiver from running into coverage or where he underthrew a deep ball specifically to get PI (his wideouts were very good at drawing these calls). Without access to All-22, it becomes even harder to tell who was right, and that doesnât even take into account the inherent issues with not knowing how each program coaches these routes differently.
As for Lanceâs consistency issues on ball placement, I donât know nearly enough about quarterback mechanics to make a claim as to whatâs causing these streaks of inaccuracy. His stroke itself looks pretty good, so if anything Iâd assume his accuracy problems have more to do with his shoulders, alignment, etc. To me, that means the potential for fixing the problem is much greater thanâfor exampleâsomeone with a Tim Tebow-esque release.
Will it be fixed? Again, Iâm not the guy to make that call, but one would think the coaching staff would be able to assess the likelihood of it after seeing him in person, and his work ethic and coachability will certainly help his cause.
Summary
NFL Comp: Josh Allen
Allen was massively criticized coming out of Wyoming becauseâin many waysâhe went against many of the old-school teachings about what makes a successful NFL quarterback. He was inaccurate, his play dropped off during his last year in college, he didnât dominate despite playing at a small school, he had poor numbers against Power 5 competition, and people questioned his maturity and leadership skills. But good lord did he have physical tools. And now, three years removed from being picked #7 by the Bills, Iâd easily take Allen over any other QB in that draft class.
The Bills had a plan to surround Allen with talent, to let him grow into the position, and to give him extensive one-on-one tutoring in regards to his mechanics. Now, heâs an MVP candidate that just led his team to the AFC Championship game. But his success was due in large part to a wholesale restructuring of the roster and offensive scheme to fit his talents and the ability to lean on a dominant defense until he became the focal point of the team. The Niners seem dead-set on competing this year before having whoever we draft take the reins a year from now. With a roster built to compete now, will we have the patience to invest in what could be a developmental project?
I donât know if anyone has the physical tools of Allen, but Lance is close, and I think he is more intelligent and mature than Allen was coming out of college. He also lacks any of Allenâs âcharacter concernsââwhich, to be fair to Allen, seems to have stemmed from nothing more than high school tweets. Itâs also worth noting that weâre evaluating Trey Lance based on his 2019 season while everyone else has the luxury of leaning on their 2020 tape. If we were to compare Lanceâs 2019 film to Zach Wilsonâs or Mac Jonesâ from the same year, Lance would come out on top without question. If his team had a season this fall, he could easily be the favorite to go #2 overall to the Jets.
Thatâs a lot of âifs,â even if theyâre entirely out of Lanceâs control, and the accuracy concerns worry me. What Shanahanâs looking for in a quarterback may have evolved over the years, but itâs never going to migrate away from accuracy as a vitally important trait, and if the Niners think Lance will never become consistent with his ball-placement, theyâll take him off their board. However, the Ninersâ current interest is very realâso much so that Lance started working with John Beckâthe mutual connection QB coach to Shanahanâa few weeks ago per the Ninersâ request, and today (Monday, April 19th), Lance will have his pro day shaped specifically to cater to the Ninersâ offense. This gives the Ninersâ another trusted eye in the evaluation process and is a borderline brilliant means of getting a lengthier, hands-on evaluation of a prospect who has been hard for scouts to nail down.
Ultimately, Iâm bullish on Lanceâs potential. He seems to have the mental makeup to overcome the lack of experience, and I think if the Ninersâas experts on quarterback coaching and mechanics and with the help of Beckâcome away from Lanceâs second pro day confident that they can clean up his accuracy, that he could absolutely shred in our system for years to come.
Either way, someone on the Niners is gonna owe John Beckâwho also works with Justin Fields and Zach Wilsonâa beer. That is unless he doesnât drink beer (he did go to BYU after all). Or if we draft Mac JonesâŠ
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