Tuesday, November 30, 2010

49ers vs. Cardinals: Mike Singletary Day After Press-Conference - Frank Gore Placed on IR

Mike Singletary had an interesting exchange today with some of the media (transcript after the jump).  They discussed whether his opinion matters on the possible 18-game schedule and discussed crying.  You don't usually here crying discussed when talking football but what do I know.

The big news out of today is the Frank Gore has a fractured right hip and was placed on injured reserve along with receiver Dominique Zeigler after he suffered a torn left ACL last night.  Obviously, the Frank Gore injury hurts the most as definitely causes the 49ers to change their "run all the time" game plan.  Brian Westbrook and rookie Anthony Dixon will take over as the primary backs with Westbrook getting most of the load.  The 49ers are concerned about his concussion problems in the past so it defintely will not be a one-back system any longer. 

To fill the roster up after making those moves they elevated running back DeShawn Wynn to the active roster along with safety Chris Maragos.  They also released kicker Shane Andrus as Joe Nedney is supposed to be ready to play this weekend.  Finally, they released tackle Xavier Fulton from the practice squad as well.

49ers 24, Cardinals 6: Post-Game Press Conference - When a Win Is Not Really a Win!!!

With a win over the Arizona Cardinals the 49ers moved within one game of the division lead.  The unfortunate part is that this win comes with consequences, which could ultimately take away their chance of making it to the playoffs.  The consequences are the injuries to both starting running back Frank Gore and starting center David Bass.  Gore left the game with a hip injury that was being reported as a season-ending injury and Bass left the game with a concussion.  Without Gore, who is their bell cow, the 49ers may not have what it takes to get those must needed wins within the division.  Gore offered the 49ers and Head Coach Mike Singletary the ability to not have a NFL caliber quarterback.  Now, without Gore, the 49ers may have to depend more on the Smiths and that could lead us down a road that does not end well for Mike Singletary.

Head Coach Mike Singletary
November 30, 2010
San Francisco 49ers

Opening Statement:
"First of all, I want to thank God for our players and coaches hanging in there and fighting and doing everything they need to do to win games.

On how Frank Gore was injured:
"I really don't know that. I'd have to look at the film to see really how he got hurt. We will know more tomorrow after we have some x-rays. We'll just have to be more definite about the injury tomorrow."

On if Frank Gore wanted to go back in:
"We put his helmet away. We hid his helmet. That'll answer your question."

On what Brian Westbrook showed on the field:
"The same thing he showed us in practice. He wants to play and it's really nice for him to have a chance to step up and make some plays. He did a nice job today."

On the team winning against the Arizona Cardinals three times in a row:
"I don't know. I'm sure that we look at their film, and some other things will jump out. We're still very fortunate to come in and win the game today."

On if winning against the Arizona Cardinals for the third time in a row is a confidence builder:
"I think it's just one of those things where the match-ups are what they are. We try to come in and play the best we can and go from there."

On how much of a carrot it is having the division title right there:
"When I look at our team and I look at our staff, the guys continue to work. They continue to fight and they continue to practice, it says a lot about who they are."

On if being able to do so well in the run game at the beginning made it easier to stick to the run:
"The game plan was really to try and establish the run. You're right, we were able to do it early on. It just made sense to continue to go back to it. Our offensive line did a really nice job."

On what the mentality was after the Cardinals fumbled and the 49ers went straight for the end zone:
"We were just trying to take advantage of everything that we could get. I think the offense responded well and made a play."

On if going with Westbrook was just a matter of going with the hot hand:
"The thing that we wanted to do, of course when you think about what he's able to do, the little guy, I just think the experience shows up. That's the thing that you really want to go with. You want to go with the experience. Of course, after we got going, they (Anthony Dixon and Westbrook) were both able to run the ball effectively so it turned out pretty well."



On how Brian Westbrook was able to have this kind of game after not getting very many carries up to this point:
"He's a pro. He's a guy that when he came in, we told him that it's a long year and you just never know when your number is going to be called. Just be ready to step up. He works hard and continues to play his role. I think tonight he had to step forward and he did."

On if he looks at Troy Smith's numbers and wishes that he had done better, or if the effectiveness in the run game made up for that:
"When I look at Troy, this is kind of what we would like to be able to do. It's not necessarily the group blueprint, but we would like to be able to run the ball more successfully. Our offensive line, hopefully they're continuing their maturity and their development and we can do that. We'd like to take all the pressure off Troy that we can and just allow him to make plays that are there and not try and force anything."

On if Troy Smith will remain their starter for another week:
"Yes."

On if this game put them on track:
"We're not on track yet. I just think that we have a big game coming up next week, and I think that will say a lot about who we are."

On if David Baas was injured:
"Yes. It was something like a slight head to head deal. I'm not sure if it was a concussion, I just know that they have to do all of the evaluating tomorrow. He was doing fine on the sidelines, but I think that the doctors were being smart, as well as our trainer, just decided ‘you know what, why don't we just keep him out.' We did that and I think it was a smart move."

On their secondary and how they always seem to have a good game against the Arizona Cardinals:
"We had a decent plan coming in and we executed. When you're able to do that, it makes a difference."

On how Vernon Davis had tears running down his face before the game and how he inspired the guys on the sideline:
"Vernon is always a guy that's very emotional. He loves the game. He loves football. Our guys know that. He's a guy that makes a big difference. There were a few guys with tears in their eyes before the game. It was interesting."

On Vernon Davis' message to the guys:
"I just feel like the guys know that we can play better. They know that it's been a year where we've had some tough losses. I just think it comes down to guys wanting to take a step forward and be who we can be." 

Giants Agree to One-Year Deal with Miguel Tejeda

Tejada already looks good in orange and black.
The San Francisco Giants lost Juan Uribe yesterday to the Los Angeles Dodgers and today they have found a possible replacement.  According to Enrique Rojas of ESPN Deportes, the San Francisco Giants have agreed to a one-year contract with Miguel Tejada for $6.5 million.  The deal is said to include $500,000 in performance-based incentives.  Michael Urban of CSN Bay Area has confirmed the story and has also mentioned that the Giants expect him to be an everyday player.

It seems the Tejada is being brought in to be the everyday shortstop but this deal does not preclude the Giants from picking up a shortstop and having Tejada played third.  This would allow the Giants to move Pablo Sandoval to first if he turns out to make the starting roster.


Miguel Tejeda started last season with the Baltimore Orioles but was traded to the San Diego Padres for the last 59 games of the season.  In 2010 Tejeda batted .269/.312/.381 with 15 homeruns and batted in 71.  His defense on the other hand is not overly impressive.  He played 58 games last season at shortstop and rated average at best (0.1 UZR, 0.3 UZR/150). 


Tejeda is a very similar player to Juan Uribe, statistically, except that he seems to always make contact.  At this point in his career he is a .280 hitter at best but unlike Uribe he seems to not strikeout as much.  Last year his strikeout percentage (SO/AB) was 10.5% compared to Uribe's which was 17.7%.  With the Giants able to sign him to just a one-year deal, I prefer having Tejeda over Uribe.

Monday, November 29, 2010

NFL Injury Report: 49ers-Cardinals (Saturday) - 49ers Thought Broncos Would Tape Walk-Through

The final injury report was released on Saturday for the game.  The big question on the report is whether Dashon Goldson will be playing.  We will have the inactive list later today and that may give us an indication if he will start.

After the jump I posted the transcript of the media session with Mike Singletary.  The biggest news at the point was that news that a member of the Denver Broncos taped the 49ers walk-through.  All indications are that the 49ers knew that this could happen and did not have a traditional walk-through as they had been leary that this could happen.

San Francisco

Out: T Joe Staley (fibula)
Doubtful: CB William James (concussion), K Joe Nedney (knee)
Questionable: S Dashon Goldson (ankle)
Probable: CB Nate Clements (ankle), T Anthony Davis (ankle), TE Vernon Davis (ankle), RB Frank Gore (ankle), WR Josh Morgan (shoulder)

St. Louis

Questionable: WR Steve Breaston (knee), DE Calais Campbell (ankle), LB Clark Haggans (groin), RB LaRod Stephens-Howling (hamstring), CB Gregory Toler (foot), DT Dan Williams (toe)
Probable: CB Michael Adams (ribs), DT Darnell Dockett (shoulder), WR Early Doucet (head), S Kerry Rhodes (hand, back), LB Reggie Walker (hamstring)

Uribe Close to Signing with Dodgers

It’s starting to look like Juan Uribe will not be signing with the San Francisco Giants.  According to Buster Olney of ESPN.com, the Los Angeles Dodgers are “closing in on a three-year deal” with infielder Juan Uribe.  The Dodgers are looking to have Uribe play second base primarily as the Dodgers already have Rafael Furcal at shortstop.

Ken Rosenthal of FOXSports.com is reporting that the deal is in the $21 million dollar range.  A large increase over the one-year, $3.25 million dollar deal he signed last offseason with the Giants.

Whether you think the Giants should have signed him or not, it is clear that Uribe signing with the Dodgers is bad news for the Giants.  The last thing we need to see is “jazz hands” as he hits a walk-off homerun.

Friday, November 26, 2010

NFL Injury Report: 49ers-Cardinals (Friday) - The More Westbrook Promises Continue

Since the 49ers and Cardinals play on Monday, this will not be their last injury report for the week.  We should expect to have one out tomorrow which will last the status of the players for Monday's game.  The one concern when I look at the 49ers injuries is safety Dashon Goldson.  It is not good for the 49ers that one of their best defensive backs could not play against one of the best wide receiver corps in the league.  The 49ers cannot afford to put both Reggie Smith and Taylor Mays against the likes of Larry Fitzgerald and Steve Breaston.

Offensive Coordinator Mike Johnson met with the media for his bi-weekly discussion (transcript after the jump).  The topic was again brought up about the lack of playing time for Brian Westbrook and it was the same song as before (below is the specific discussion).  It's all how Frank Gore is such a great player that the 49ers cannot afford for him not to be in every play and about how he is so good at pass protection. Let me really translate this for you.  The only reason Westbrook doesn't play is that he is not a "smashmouth" guy and Singletary doesn't want any part of a guy who is not smashmouth. 

If I am Westbrook, I've got to be pissed.  They act like he is some sort of rookie who cannot pass protect and therefore is a liabiliy or someone who doesn't understand the offense.  What's to understand?  You run up the middle towards the defenders and then get tackled.  Simple enough, right?

What happened to balance, Singletary?  If Singletary had half a clue on how to be a head coach he would be splitting these guys 50/50.  That kind of adjustment would be worht at least another win.  Westbrook is more versatile than Gore in the fact that he can doing different things.  He is a better pass catcher, better outside runner, and if needs to he can run up the gut.  Those things make a defense think when Westbrook comes in the game.  Now Gore is great, and one of the best running backs to ever play for the 49ers but he basically runs powers and dives and that's about it.  He can catch out of the backfield but is not as elusive as Westbrook.  Having both of them is a great asset as you have two premier running backs and a 50/50 ball carry split is what the 49ers need to do.  


On why RB Brian Westbrook hasn’t seen much of the playing field this year:
“Because when you put Brian Westbrook in the game you have to take Delanie Walker out of the game, or you have to take [RB] Frank Gore out of the game. Now you’re doing something on first and second down where you are taking two of our best players and sitting one of those guys down. We just talked about Delanie Walker being a matchup problem. Well when you put Brian Westbrook in the game, it’s a different matchup problem. Now you have to add a whole new part of an offense that we haven’t had a training camp to install. So you see him doing certain things in small pieces, but to utilize both Frank Gore and Brian Westbrook, those things have to be taught and they have to be detailed in a longer period of time. When you do that, it takes one of those guys off the field and I’m just trying not to take Frank Gore off the field unless he is tired. We need Frank Gore to be who he is. You look at him, he is a good running back, he is a good pass receiving back out of the backfield, probably one of the best. He is the one guy out of our entire offensive group that is probably the soundest on our protection schemes. So he is a very valuable part of our offense, and you are trying to put Brian Westbrook into the game in certain areas to utilize his skills and he played a little bit more last week. Had we done a better job on first down he would have played more, but then we had to get away from that part of it, so it’s one of those deals where you are trying o utilize his talents and not take Frank Gore off the field for 15 plays a game and that is the process. It is something that can be done, but it is something that will have to be developed over time. It’s something that you really need to do in training camp so you can get all the small details taught and have all the compliments so that you can’t just say, ‘Brian Westbrook is going into the game and he’s running a screen.’ Or every time he comes into the game, ‘he is a wide receiver running a flat’, so you try to do things to diversify his package and not be predictable with him, and it just takes time and it’s something that needs to be taught through a longer period of time like training camp.”

On how much Gore helps set pass protection:
“He does. He’s the guy that’s trying to do his job in the pass protection scheme, but he does a very good job at doing his job. And we need everybody on our offense to play better in certain areas, but he’s a guy that understands the protection schemes, he understands defenses, he understands what they are trying to do on third down nickel packages, and he’s valuable to us in that role. But he’s not doing more than what he should do, he is just a guy that’s back there doing his job and he does it well.”

On why RB Brian Westbrook doesn’t know every facet of the playbook:
“He does. He’s at that point now. He’s at that point where he is now understanding everything that he has to do. There was a plan last week to use him in the run game. The first time we gave him the ball on the run game we get a holding penalty. So now we’re 2nd and 17, so therefore, that was a series that he was going to go in the game and he was going to run. But certain things happen in the game that you have to change and you do certain things and you get away from that. But he’s at the point now where he’s comfortable. So, he’s understanding everything we’re trying to do and he’s ready.”

San Francisco

Out:
T Joe Staley (fibula)
Did Not Participate: S Dashon Goldson (ankle), K Joe Nedney (knee),
Limited Participation: WR Josh Morgan (shoulder)
Full Participation: CB Nate Clements (ankle), TE Vernon Davis (ankle), T Anthony Davis (ankle), RB Frank Gore (ankle)

Arizona

Did Not Participate:
DE Calais Campbell (ankle)
Limited Participation: WR Steve Breaston (knee), DT Darnell Dockett (shoulder), WR Early Doucet (head), LB Clark Haggans (groin), RB LaRod Stephens-Howling (hamstring), CB Gregory Toler (foot), DT Dan Williams (toe)
Full Participation: CB Michael Adams (ribs), S Kerry Rhodes (hand), LB Reggie Walker (hamstring)

Wednesday, November 24, 2010

49ers-Cardinals: Can Ahmad Brooks Get to the Next Level?

Mike Singletary spoke with the media today (transcript after the jump).  After reading the transcript, I wanted to discuss one of the topics that the media brought up.  The media asked Singletary about Ahmad Brooks and his inability to become a top-notch pass rusher after the success he had last season.  Last year, against the Arizona Cardinals, Brooks had his best game as a pro and he started to look like he could be the pass rusher the 49ers had been looking for.  In that game, Brooks caused havoc with his three sacks and if I remember right he caused two forced fumbles.  I am sure that Kurt Warner still has nightmares about that game.  But after that game he hasn't got that type of performance.  Mike Singletary was asked why Brooks hasn't taken the next step:



On why LB Ahmad Brooks hasn’t taken the next step to solidify himself as a top-notch pass rusher:
“You know it’s a hard thing, it’s really unfortunate because he was having such a tremendous training camp, but sometimes it’s just hard to get back after you’ve been injured and that type of injury because even when you come back there’s still things that you have to fight through, and then you haven’t won a starting position and you have to play special teams, and then you get banged up and nicked up in that situation, and sometimes it can take your focus away from where it was when you originally started.”


The injury that Singletary is referring to is the ruptured spleen that he suffered in training camp.  The answer he gave sounds like more excuses than anything.  Brooks is one of Singletary's guys (like Chilo Rachal and Vernon Davis) and once he takes those guys under his wing as his "project" he never will admit that their not as good as he thought they were.  Look at the refusal to bench Chilo Rachal even though everyone knows that Snyder is a better option, especially next to a struggling rookie lineman.  To be fair, Brooks doesn't get the love he got last year with playing time with the addition of Travis LaBoy and hasn't had as much opportunity. 

Maybe Cardinals will get Ahmad Brooks going like they did last year.

Raiders-Dolphins: Replacing Trevor Scott

Tom Cable spoke with the media today (transcript after the jump) with a large discussion around the injuries that have plagued the Raiders.  Trevor Scott was placed on injured reserve and the Raiders replaced his spot with Jarvis Moss.  The problem is replacing Trevor Scott on the field.  The Raiders are going to try Shaughnessy at the spot for now with the possibility of either having Bruce Davis or Jarvis Moss eventually fill in as well.  Cable was asked about moving Richard Seymour to defensive end, a position he played when he was with the Patriots and he said that wasn't likely to happen.

NFL Injury Report: Raiders-Dolphins (Wednesday) - New Raider Jarvis Moss at Practice

The newly signed DE Jarvis Moss was at practice today for the first time as a Raider.  Moss had been with the Denver Broncos until he was recently released after three seasons.  Moss was the number 17 pick out of Florida but never had any success while with the Broncos.  In the three seasons he was with the Broncos, Moss appeared in 28 games and amassed 21 tackles with 3.5 sacks.

Richard Seymour released a statement after being fined $25,000 for his blow to Ben Roethlisberger

“I apologize to my teammates, fans and coach for my actions in yesterday’s game. This is an emotional game that sometimes triggers frustrated reactions when you are out on the field. I reacted in a way that was unprofessional to the game and not in line with the respect that goes along with wearing the NFL shield and for that I apologize.’’

Miami

Did not participate: WR Brandon Marshall (hamstring)
Limited participation: C Joe Berger (knee), T Vernon Carey (knee), LB Karlos Dansby (toe), QB Chad Henne (knee), WR Roberto Wallace (knee)
Full participation: S Chris Clemons (groin), S Tyrone Culver (ankle), S Reshad Jones (shin), T Jake Long (shoulder)

Oakland

Did not participate: CB Chris Johnson (groin), WR Chaz Schilens (foot)
Limited participation: CB Nnamdi Asomugha (ankle), S Tyvon Branch (shoulder), S Hiram Eugene (neck), G Robert Gallery (fibula), WR Darrius Heyward-Bey (hamstring), TE Zach Miller (foot)

Game 15 Preview: Golden State Warriors vs. Houston Rockets - Someone Rebound the Ball, PLEASE!!!


 
Records: Golden State Warriors (7-7) vs. Houston Rockets (3-10)

Time: 7:30 p.m. PST
Place: Toyota Center, Houston, TX
TV: Comcast SportsNet Bay Area
Radio: KNBR 680

Previous Meeting: Win, 132-128 on October 27, 2010
Starting Lineups:

Warriors:
PG Stephen Curry, SG Monta Ellis, SF Dorell Wright, PF Andris Biedrins, C Dan Gadzuric
Rockets: PG Kyle Lowry, SG Kevin Martin, SF Shane Battier, PF Chuck Hayes, C Luis Scola

Injuries:

Warriors: F David Lee (elbow), F Louis Amundson (finger), F Ekpe Udoh (wrist), F Brandan Wright (back)
Rockets: G Aaron Brooks (ankle), C Yao Ming (ankle)

The Warriors are in Houston for the first game of their three-game roadtrip.  The Rockets have a 3-10 record but are not a 3-10 team.  They have been hit with the injury monsoon just like the 2009 Warriors.  They will be playing without their starting point guard, Aaron Brooks, and starting center, Yao Ming.  Unfortunately, that doesn't guarantee a win for the Warriors.  Rockets have these things that the Warriors and their fans have only heard about, rebounding big man, and they have a lot of them.  As the Lakers showed on Sunday the Warriors are not good against teams with big men and Houston has Luis Scola who is playing out of his mind right now.  He is leading the Rockets with 34.2 minutes/game and is averaging 22.4 points/game (#2) and 9.5 rebounds/game (#1).  Jordan Hill, another big man, is coming off a wonderful game against the Phoenix Suns where he picked up his first career double-double (14 points, 10 rebounds).  The Rockets will also throw at the Warriors the likes of Brad Miller, Chuck Hayes, and Shane Battier who are good for 5 rebounds a game. 

What does all this mean?  It means the Warriors are going have to rebound the crap out of the ball and their bigs (Biedrins & Gadzuric) are going to have to have monster games.  Without David Lee and Brandon Wright it has hurt the Warriors ability to rebound the ball and therefore even the guards have had to get involved in the rebounding. 

For the Warriors, they are going to have to play better defense than they have and get out and run.  The Rockets will have trouble stopping Curry and Ellis with their two starting guards, Kevin Martin doesn't know what defense is and there is no way that Kyle Lowry could keep up with Ellis.  Dorell Wright is also going to have to start playing like the guy we saw the first couple games as Curry and Ellis need his help.

Tuesday, November 23, 2010

Raiders vs. Steelers - Tom Cable Day After Press-Conference - A Different Raider Team

I may have been a bit overzealous on Sunday when I suggested that the Raiders should win this game and if they didn’t then they are not as good as their recent win streak suggested.  After all they were playing arguably the best team in the AFC.  I should have expected a result like this especially with the Raiders traveling across country and playing an early game.  That never works out for the traveling team.
Cable said in his post-game press conference (transcript after the jump) that Jason Campbell will be the starter against Miami.  I’m glad that he didn’t go back to Bruce Gradkowski.  I am sure many Raiders fans think Bruce should be the starter but that’s the story of the backup quarterback.  According to fans, he should always be the starter.  Almost assuredly, had Gradkowski been the starter the result would have been the same.  Pittsburgh is a good team and they are not easy to beat at home unless you’re the 2009 Raiders, but that wasn’t really easy.
Just like Cable said, I expect the Raiders to bounce back.  I will even go as far to say that they will beat the Miami Dolphins next week.  The first reason is that Miami doesn’t have a good quarterback and they are in a state of flux but more importantly this Raider team is not like the past year’s Raiders.  This is a good team that can win on the road and has an identity, something the team across the Bay does not.
A final note is that Richard Seymour was fined $25,000 for his hit on Ben Roethlisberger.  He will not be suspended for his action even though Steelers linebacker, James Harrison, thinks so.  Last time I checked, Harrison wasn’t suspended for his dirty play.  So why should Seymour?  Someone should ask Harrison that….

Aubrey Huff: Did Brian Sabean Make the Right Move?

Was the San Francisco Giants signing Aubrey Huff to a two-year deal the right move?  It depends on who you ask, Giants fans seem to be in love with this guy for the Rally Thong and for him being an integral part of winning the World Series.  But does that make him worth $22 million?  Probably not.  Bill James 2011 projections have him as a .269/.348/.453 hitter that will hit about 19 homeruns and drive in 68.  Would you pay a guy that does that $11 million per?  I don’t think so.

Keith Law seems to agree as well.  On Law’s blog (Insider required), he says the Giants made a huge mistake by resigning Huff when they have Brandon Belt in the wings.  Here’s an excerpt from his blog post:


The San Francisco Giants, meanwhile, made the worst mistake a GM can make after winning the World Series -- they're overpaying one of the guys who got them there, just because he got them there. After pulling a left-for-dead Huff off the scrap pile last offseason and getting far more than they paid for from him in 2010, the Giants re-upped Huff for two years and a vesting option at more than twice the annual salary they gave him on the just-expired one-year deal. I've outlined many times why I think Huff's 2010 season was a fluke, from the fact that he's 33 to his regression in the final two months (plus October) to his history of bad defense at several positions, and paying him more than he's likely to be worth just ten months after nobody wanted the guy makes little sense. It's worse when you consider that San Francisco's best prospect, Brandon Belt, is a first baseman who finished the year in AAA and was the best everyday player in the Arizona Fall League. There's every indication that he'll be ready for a major league role by midyear. The Giants have to put one of these two in left field, unless they intend to use Belt as trade bait for something else, but the ideal move was to let Huff walk if he wanted more than a year, given his age and the big performance risk in giving him a multi-year deal.

Giants Resign Aubrey Huff to Two-Year Deal

The San Francisco Giants have made their first move in free agency.  According to a report by Jon Paul Morosi of FOX Sports, the Giants have agreed to re-sign Aubrey Huff to a two-year deal worth approximately $22 million which will include a club option for 2013.  The official Giants twitter feed (@SFGiants) is also confirming the same details as Morosi and adds that the deal is pending a physical.

There was a wonder whether Huff would resign with the Giants as he was likely looking for a three-year deal coming off such a good season.  Based on this signing it would seem to suggest that Huff was not being offered anything longer than a two-year deal and all things being equal he preferred to come back to San Francisco to defend the World Series title.

Aubrey Huff is coming off one of his best seasons as a major leaguer in which he won a World Series Championship and came in 7th place in MVP voting.  Huff played in 157 regular season games for the Giants with a line of .290/.385/.506 and hit 26 homeruns with 86 RBIs.

Huff was considered a defensive liability at first base coming into Spring Training.  Surprisingly, he played superb defense at first base (9.7 UZR/150, 5.4 UZR) which was not expected based on his career numbers at first (3 UZR/150, -6.5 UZR).  It is very possible that he may not see first base next year though and could be moved to the outfield.  With top prospect Brandon Belt looming and a question about whether Pablo Sandoval is a viable option at third base it is likely that Huff will the starting left fielder in 2011.

Monday, November 22, 2010

Video: Like A Bosh

And just to round up the day of posting, there is nothing like a good comedic video.


TBJ exclusive: Like A Bosh from The Basketball Jones on Vimeo.

Cincinnati Reds Sign Dontrelle Willis

The Dontrelle Willis expirement is over for the San Francisco Giants.  According to Jerry Crasnick of ESPN.com, Dontrelle Willis has signed a minor league contract with the Cincinnati Reds.

Willis pitched in eight games while in the Giants minor league farm system and had an ERA of 6.14 with a 0-1 record.  He gave up 5 earned runs in just 7.1 innings.  The plan for the Giants was to try and have pitching guru Dick Tidrow work with Willis and try to get him back to the player he was.  In fact, Willis signed with the Giants over other teams to work with Tidrow. 

According to Andrew Baggarly, the Giants were interested in resigning Dontrelle Willis but I would speculate that Willis figured he had a better chance to start with the Reds.

49ers vs. Buccaneers: Mike Singletary Day After Press-Conference - Singletary Puts a Nail in His Coffin

It is pretty clear at this point that Mike Singletary should be fired.  Yes, I said it.  After yesterday's press conference, in which he could give no real answer to any football related questions and in fact forgot why he made the decisions he did in a crucial part of the game.  His last hope was today in his press conference to take the blame for their ineptness in hopes that it could possibly motivate the players.  This is the last motviational tool that Singletary has left and it's clear he sees the writing on the wall.  His opportunity to be "one of the greatest coaches" is closing.

The only reason Singletary still has a job is ironically the reason that he is failing at his job.  He has no talented coaches on his coaching staff that are capable of becoming a head coach.  But that's the way he wanted it.  Singletary never wanted a coach that would get up and leave at the end of the season--he wanted guys that would be around for a while, guys who would be loyal.  That decision has made it very hard for Jed York to fire Singletary because their is no potential replacement on staff.

But just like Singletary was hired minutes after the regular season was over, that is the way he will be fired.  Expect Jed York to get started working on his next hire before Singletary's office is even empty.  York will need to make a big splash in his coaching hire, by the way I think he will, if he hopes keep the seats full and the support for a new stadium moving in the right direction.  

I have posted the transcript for Mike Singletary's press conference after the jump.

Head Coach Mike Singletary
November 22, 2010

Opening Statement:
“Injuries: [WR] Josh Morgan, shoulder sprain; tight end Vernon Davis, ankle sprain; [S] Dashon Goldson, ankle sprain, leg contusion. Existing injuries, I think you already know about; [T/G] Joe Staley. I think [CB] Will James will be coming back this week; [K] Joe Nedney, don’t know yet.

“The thing that I want to say to you is I am very thankful to be the 49ers head coach. We’re working to get where we need to be. Obviously, we are not there yet. My job is to lead, to motivate, and prepare. Win football games. Did I lead yesterday? I think so. Did I motivate through the week? I think so. Did I prepare? Did we prepare our players? Obviously not as well as we should have because they didn’t execute as well as they could have, and that’s on us and that’s on me, as the head coach. As you look at our team, in particular as we talk about the game yesterday, why we lost the game? That would be on me. That would be on me when our receivers don’t run the right route, that’s on me. When we have a turnover, that’s on me. Anything that happened in the game is on me because it all ultimately comes back to me. I understand that. When I make a decision in the game, in terms of having to call a timeout because I decided against punting the ball after telling our coordinator at a third-and-five, and our quarterback ended up scrambling and it’s fourth-and-three or something like that, I told him if it’s fourth-and-one, we’re going to go for it. It ends up being fourth-and-three, and I still decide to go for it. ‘Do you have a call for fourth-and-three, can we do this?’ ‘Yes.’ That’s on me. That’s on me. Fourth-and-three, I figured it was a critical time in the game. I wanted to make sure that we had the right call. The call that we had was for fourth-and-one. Fourth-and-three is a bit different. Had a pretty good call, did not execute. The other situation in the game where we have a fourth down situation and the question was why did I not kick a field goal. There are a number of reasons I would not kick a field goal without [K] Joe Nedney being on the field in that situation. Number one, because of the weather. Number two, because it’s a 51-yard field goal. I did not want to put us in the situation where the punter – where the field goal kicker that I don’t know a lot about – put us in a situation where we could possibly get it blocked, or miss it and have them be in good field position. I did not want to do that. So I elected to punt the ball, and trust our punter, because we have an All-Pro punter. Trust our defense, because our defense plays pretty well, and try and force them to make errors. So on those two, fourth-and-three and fourth-and-whatever, that was the situation for those. Any other questions that you might have from the game, just understand in terms of whose fault was it for this, whose fault was it for that, it is all on me. If you have any questions about that, just before you even ask the question, just put ‘the head coach’ and that will be acceptable. Now, any other questions that you might have?”

On his comment in the locker room that he would look at which players were and were not playing, and whether there are examples of which players were not playing:
“Did I say that to you yesterday? I didn’t say that to you? Okay, then I don’t want to address that then. I’m going to address it with the players.”

On whether he has made a decision on who will be the quarterback against Arizona:
“Yes. Troy Smith is going to be the quarterback.”

On why he brought up being accountable after this particular loss and not other losses:
“Because the question came up yesterday. For no other reason. If you had asked me in any other loss that we had, I would say I’m accountable for that. But yesterday the question was asked, whose fault was it? And I said it was me.”

On whether he is accountable for the 3-7 record and whether he is doing a good job:
“I will put it this way. You have to go through every game and you’re going to say am I doing a good job? Obviously, at 3-7, no. I wouldn’t say – I wouldn’t even dare to say I’m doing a good job. But it’s not over yet. I think the most important thing for me is that we have a game coming up Monday night. And a few more after that. But particularly, the one that I’m excited about is the one on Monday night. Ask me after that game if I do a good job. And that’s what I’m excited about.”

On his thoughts on the NFC West division:
“The only thing I’m going to say about that is I feel very fortunate to be in a situation where we play Monday night in Arizona, and I want to do everything that we can. I want to focus only on that game. Everything that we’re talking about, everything that is possible, is dependent upon that game. So that’s what my focus is going to be.”        

On whether this is a playoff team:
“Is this a playoff team? If we win. If we win.”

On whether the team is playoff-worthy:
“If we win.”

On whether he went back and saw that it was a better game than the stats showed with regard to QB Troy Smith and why he decided that Smith will start against Arizona:
“I just think that Tampa Bay had a couple of games of film on him and game planned some and just really took away some of the things that he had done well. There were still opportunities to make plays in the game, but fewer of them, and we just did not execute properly. And that’s really the bottom line.”

On whether Smith needs to do a better job of getting the ball out so he is not taking sacks:
“I think we have to do a better job with him, and just doing a better job at making sure that we keep him out of situations that can be tough. I think we have to get back to the focus of doing what he does well, and making sure that we keep it that way.”

On whether there is a concern that Smith struggles when he has to operate inside the pocket:
“I think there were plays that he had – when he was in the box, there were opportunities to make plays as well, and he has made plays in the box. So there’s not a concern – we’re not overly concerned about that, no.”

On his thoughts on the right side of the offensive line with T/G Chilo Rachal and T Anthony Davis and whether they can play at a winning level:
“I think Davis continues to make strides and every now and then he does what a rookie will do, as an offensive lineman, has a breakdown here or there. I think Chilo, for the most part, is playing pretty decent football, but every now and then will have a breakdown. So it’s just something that we have to continue to work at. I think week-in and week-out, there are offensive lines that – you know, very good offensive lines – that have breakdowns. We just have to continue to work at it.”

On whether T/G Chilo Rachal is a better choice at right guard than T/G Adam Snyder:
“I think, as the coaching staff, when we look at it, we have to make the final decision from week to week. This is the business where you’re trying to win football games. Chilo is not playing just because we like him; just because he’s the only guy we can put there. He’s playing because we feel he gives us the best chance to win. Does he have breakdowns? Yes. You just have to continue to get better.”

On whether the amount of the time the defense was on the field took a toll late in the game:
“Absolutely.”

On whether the defense was tired:
“Yes.”

On whether T Barry Sims earned another start with his performance on Sunday:
“I think it’s something that we have to look at and evaluate more closely this week, and overall, I thought he did a pretty decent job.”

On whether he currently has the staff to prepare for the future and whether he will look for outside help:
“No, I don’t think looking for outside help is really necessary. We’ll work with the people we have and we just have to get better.”

On whether opposing defenses have known what’s coming at the line of scrimmage from the 49ers:
“I’m not sure; that’s the first time that I’ve heard that. You know, if they were getting tipped, well, good. Like I said before; sometimes when you have young guys, that can happen from time to time. But I think overall it’s just a matter of our guys continuing to get better down the stretch here.”

On whether he will be more hands-on in his preparation and what he will change moving forward:
“I don’t want to start sounding like I feel that I felt going into the game we were not prepared. You know, every week, you have a preparation time for a team and you prepare for them. You really don’t know what they’re going to do game day; that’s something that as you look at it you have to make adjustments as you go. Sometimes with a young quarterback, you just want to make sure that you’re giving him every opportunity to step in and win football games. If they’re doing something a little bit different; if the other team’s trying to work on something to take away something that you’ve done, then you just have to continue to play that chess match during the game. I’m not going to say that I felt that we were just really not prepared, no. We were prepared for what we felt they were going to do, and once they did some things a little bit differently, then we tried as best we could to counter those things. So this week I would just make sure that we continue to look at the things that work in our favor. On the offensive side of the ball they’ve been working their tails off to get the best plan possible. You know Troy is working his tail off to try and make sure that everything we’re talking about; everything he needs, you know he’s here day and night. So I’m, I’m confident that we will get where we need to go.”

On the team’s performance with in-game adjustments on both sides of the ball:
“I just think that some games a team just has your number, or things just don’t work the way you want them to work. There are going to be some games that you have. I don’t care who is supposed to be the best team in the league right now, they’re going to have a game where somebody just has you’re number, and yesterday was ours.”


49ers vs. Buccaneers: Post-Game Press Conference – “Go back and watch the film”

What an embarrassment.  For the first time since 1977 the San Francisco 49ers were shutout at home.  The Tampa Bay Buccaneers beat the 49ers 21-0.  With a loss such as this we get to enjoy an excellent press conference by the 49ers fearless leader.  I've posted Singletary's transcript below and more quotes from the players after the jump.

I have to wonder if the head coach does not have some sort of bet with the other coaches on how many times he can answer a question with the phrase "go back and watch the film."
Mike Singletary’s response to ever “football” question seems to be “we just have to go back and watch the film.” He says it so much, that I had a hard time not laughing while watching it on TV. Out of the sixteen questions he was asked, nine of them had responses that included going back and watching the film.

Head Coach Mike Singletary
 Post-Game Quotes - November 21, 2010 
San Francisco 49ers vs. Tampa Bay Buccaneers

On how much the loss is a setback to the progress this season:
"Well obviously a big setback, something that we expected to come out here today and play well. Did not. But we'll just have to get back and watch the film and look at the things that we need to do and correct and go forward."

On whether they expected to run the ball and why they couldn't:
"You know, I have to look at the film on that. But yes, we did expect to run the ball. We tried early on, to see if we could run, and you know, it just didn't pan out. Why we didn't run? I'm not sure."

On assessing the quarterback situation today and moving forward:
"Well, once again, we have to look at the film. Obviously it's something that we have to address, something that we have to look at to see what was the miscommunication, the fan in the pocket, was it them, were they doing things to not allow him to get outside and try and make plays? We just have to look at it."

On whether they were too conservative to open the game:
"I won't say that we were too conservative. I just think that it was hard to get in the rhythm early on. We didn't make many first downs so there was no - it wasn't like it was an ongoing thing. You had a chance to get a rhythm going, and I think that's one of the problems in this game."

On whether it was a matter of time before defenses found a way to contain QB Troy Smith better:
"Well, you could say yes you know that defenses are going to try to do that, but at the same time, if you look at the film, you just have to - we know that there were plays there. We just have to look at it and try and figure it out where we can put him in better situations or try and not allow a defense to come in and dictate what we're doing."

On the discussions before the fourth down play at the beginning of the fourth quarter:
"The time when we decided to go for it? We just made the decision, after talking to the coordinators leading up to it, just made the decision to try and go for it and pick it out."

On what happened when it didn't look like TE Vernon Davis was looking for the ball on the incompletion:
"Miscommunication, obviously, between the quarterback and Vernon on that play. So once again, just have to look at it and see exactly what the heck happened."

On his thoughts during the play when they went for it on fourth down:
"I think at that time we felt like we had to play, that we could pick it up, and that's why we went for it, obviously."
On his thoughts during the punt when they were on the Tampa Bay 33 at fourth down:
"Obviously I guess we felt we wanted to pin them back, and maybe having a new kicker, the thought process was how about we just go ahead and try to put it on the defense."

On the decision to have S Reggie Smith play most of the game and not bring in S Taylor Mays until the end:
"I just think we - Reggie got in a rhythm, and he was playing pretty well, and just didn't want to disrupt that."

On whether the team was over-confident about their talent level and ability to win games:
"You know, I think talent level, I'm not mistaken on that. Leadership, I think sometimes when you have inconsistency at the quarterback position that that injury can cause you to have an issue. And what I mean by inconsistency, you get one, you get hurt, you get another one, you come in and play for a couple of weeks there, and he's doing pretty well, and at the same time you're trying to feed him the offense as fast as you can, so there's a lot going on. But I just think that right now we just have to - we're still in it, I think we just have to continue to fight it and work through where we are. As far as [QB] Troy [Smith] is concerned, I just think we have to continue to look at the things that he does well, things that he doesn't, and just have to stick with it."

On Tampa Bay RB LeGarrette Blount:
"LeGarrette had a pretty good day. I thought he was what I thought he was coming out of college, he's a big guy that can run the ball. And he just shoved it up in there, just pushing and shoving and moving the pot."

On whether it would have made a difference if T Joe Staley and T/G Adam Snyder were healthy and able to play today:
"It definitely would have made a difference, particularly Joe."

On the quarterback situation moving forward:
"I've got to look at the film. We understand right now, Troy is really trying to learn everything as quickly as he can. We understand that there's going to be some limitations that hopefully we felt that we can overcome them going forward. I think we just have to continue to look at it. And once we look at the film we'll be able to figure out how we want to do that."

On how much of the team's performance is on the head coach and coaching staff:
"Well you know what, it always starts with the head coach, always. So that's something that we're all in this together. It is not, put it on the team, put it on - it always starts with the head coach. I'm very much aware of that, and that's something I take into consideration and something that I always look at."

On the fourth down time out and whether that was because the decision was being made too late:
"Yes. It was made too late. We took a little too much time trying to figure out exactly what we wanted to do, exactly if we should go for it, and once we decided to go for it, it took a little too much time to make the call in the huddle and get going."