Mission: Impossible Dreaming in Seattle

In the immortal words of Kyle Shanahan, “We embrace the shit out of doing it the hard way.” Yeah, this is true. This weird season just keeps on getting weirder. In the immortal words of Hunter Thompson, “When the going gets weird, the weird turn pro.” Well, let’s get weird. Fred Warner has officially been cleared to practice even as the LB corps is gelling into a pretty damn good unit as we have rolled to our 4th MLB with Erik Kendricks manning the green dot and the middle, and the freshly plucked Garret Wallow from Denver doing great things in place of Curtis Robinson.

Throw in the fact that Trent Williams is healthy for this game cracks open the window to victory a little bit. Plus, there’s the added factoid that Brock Purdy has never lost in Seattle, going 4-0 there, and 6-2 overall vs the Seachix.

What does it all mean? Nothing really. My hope is we do what we did in the 2nd half of the Philly game and show a lot more 5-6 man fronts and not give up so many easy runs. I’m sure they will try to burn us deep, but Saleh just has to swallow that bitter pill and somehow generate pressure. The D didn’t allow a lot of point that last game, but they did control the ball for 2/3 of the game. Even the Philly game was 35/25 Eagles.

Speaking of hope, they need to get the run game going somehow. And I would really like to see the occasional slant and some quick passes rather than the constant diet of sideline fades.

In that vein, Ricky Pearsall is limited in walkthroughs today. At least he’s out there. Tomorrow will tell a lot about his status for fucking Saturday. Nice to see the NFL throwing more adversity at us.

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About unca_chuck

Lifelong SF 49ers, SF Giants, and Golden State Warriors fan
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5 Responses to Mission: Impossible Dreaming in Seattle

  1. willedav's avatar willedav says:

    As far as what Kat said about the indy college coach going to Raiders with Mendoza, the college guy has it so much easier. He doesn’t need a GM to change roster, he can add them through portal as they did with Mendoza from Cal or based on past success recruit at top of food chain. plus, he is the one who has control and power as long as things go well. This guy has grace of at least a couple years, win or lose CFP Finals.

    Meanwhile, Sirianni wins the SB and now he’s vulnerable, forced to change OC and maybe more. at NFL level, far too much distance btw HC and individual players Even Shanahan has had to change Special teams and strength/conditioning staff repeatedly and navigate complications of salary cap. And it can all go sideways on you in a year, or a week.

  2. unca_chuck's avatar unca_chuck says:

    Yeah, like I said, U of Indy just dumped close to a billion dollars into their football program. Their coach ain’t going anywhere.

    Sirianni is Jim Harbaugh with a little more luck. Rah rah rah and all that. Harbaugh did exactly what Pete Carroll did with USC. Broke the rules and did all he could to get that national championship and then jumped off the program he laid to waste to sign a huge NFL deal.

    Winning college coaches get unfettered dark money from boosters and the like, but Super Bowl winning NFL coaches get more glory.

    When is the National Championship game anyway? It always gets to the point that I’ve completely forgotten about the last game by the time it rolls around.

  3. Winder's avatar Winder says:

    It’s Seattle’s defense that we have to figure out, they along with Texas have the best in the NFL and it’s been getting better as they go. I don’t know if Purdy can get the ball out any faster but I do know he’s gonna be pressured the whole game. We will have no room for error in this one and our coaching needs to be spot on. This one should be fun.

  4. unca_chuck's avatar unca_chuck says:

    I feel better with Trent back. And our LBs playing better.

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