:::[Official] San Francisco 49ers 2024 Offseason Thread [NFC CHAMPIONS]:::

Should UnicornHunter’s faithful card be revoked for his blasphemous Patrick Willis comments?

  • Yes permanently

    Votes: 31 79.5%
  • Yes temporarily

    Votes: 5 12.8%
  • No

    Votes: 3 7.7%

  • Total voters
    39
  • Poll closed .


hopefully dr. hyver can get joe's vision back to 20/20 because that boy looked utterly lost on that Demarcus move

still can't believe that stacked broncos team didn't get to the superbowl this year...ehh, they would have been washed by the seahawks again.
 
i cant wait to see what deandre white does in preseason. could we have the next victor cruz on our hands? 
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cruz was the best wide receiver i could think of that went undrafted.



 
 49ers Undrafted Rookie WR DeAndrew White: 'I Feel Like I Belong Here'
 

At any given point in the early goings of the San Francisco 49ers offseason program, one curiosity-induced sight could be witnessed on repeat.

No. 18 catches pass. Onlooker glances down at roster to learn who No. 18 is.

This happened so many times that by the end of minicamp, no one questioned who No. 18 was.

DeAndrew White, the player in that jersey, came to the 49ers as a largely unknown undrafted free agent in early May. In the two months since, the wide receiver has done nothing but make plays. And in the process, he’s drawn praise from media, coaches and teammates alike.
“The type of person he is; he motivates himself,” co-wide receivers coach Adam Henry said. “He has a little chip on his shoulder, and he brings it to the building each and every day.”
White is only 23 years old, but he’s experienced enough highs and certainly enough lows to understand the opportunity ahead of him.

Need convincing? Here’s a snapshot of his football career to date: hometown hero, blue-chip prospect, injury-plagued collegian, afterthought to a Heisman Trophy contender and draft-day snub. Now he’s striving to ensure the next bullet point added to that list isn’t “NFL roster cut.”

“I’m a hard-worker and ultra-competitive,” White said. “I just can’t wait for the opportunity to showcase my talent. I know what I want to achieve, and I know that I need to get better than what I’ve been doing.

“The NFL is not for everybody, but I feel like I’m at home; I feel like I belong here. I know I’m going to succeed. This is just the beginning.”

***

In early September of 2008, Hurricane Ike swept through the Houston area and left significant flooding and power outages in its wake.

At the time, White was a junior at North Shore High School, a perennial powerhouse in Texas football whose home stadium seats more than 10,000 fans.
When the storm hit, North Shore lost electricity for 16 days. The school was forced to cancel three games as its city recovered from the third-costliest hurricane in U.S. history.
But as they often do, sports provided a temporary distraction from the destruction. In this case, North Shore was on the cusp of history. Sitting on 72 consecutive regular-season victories, the team needed one more win to break the state record.

Following the layoff, North Shore went on the road to face another elite program in Lufkin High School, which owned a 27-game home winning streak.

White caught a team-high seven passes for a 120 yards that night, but coach David Aymond remembers one reception with vivid detail.

Tied at 21 with 26 seconds remaining in the fourth quarter, White, a slot receiver who won the Texas Class 5A 200-meter dash in the spring, had his number called.

White dug his cleats into the turf, broke off the line scrimmage and caught a slant route. Using his sprinter speed, White split the safeties and raced into the end zone for a 26-yard touchdown. The score gave North Shore the victory and the state record.

 “He always had a penchant for making the big play,” Aymond said. “It didn’t surprise me at all. That’s DeAndrew.”

White arrived at Alabama in 2010 as the seventh-best wide receiver prospect in the nation. He redshirted as a true freshman before earning sporadic playing time in 2011, his first season suiting up for the Crimson Tide.

White’s breakout campaign was supposed to occur as a sophomore in 2012. He won a starting job over an incoming freshman named Amari Cooper and even caught a 51-yard touchdown pass in the team’s season opener against Michigan.

But just a few games later, White’s ascension came tumbling down when he sustained a season-ending ACL injury.

“I was blocking on a play, and my knee just popped,” he said.

Cooper took over with White sidelined and went on to earn consensus Freshman All-America honors. Cooper continued his rise to stardom over the ensuing two seasons while White battled not only the ACL injury, but also a fractured toe, separated shoulder and pulled hamstring.

In his final season in Tuscaloosa last fall, White regained a starting role, playing in 12 games opposite of Cooper. But while the Heisman Trophy finalist dominated the SEC by hauling in 124 passes for 1,727 yards, White recorded a modest 40 receptions for 504 yards.

He turned in his best performance in the SEC championship game against then-No. 16 Missouri, catching four balls for 101 yards including a 58-yard touchdown.

“I just played my role,” White said. “It wasn’t for me to say or complain about.  I just wasn’t the No. 1 receiver at Alabama, so I did what I could to help the team.”

***

Nick Saban urged NFL scouts and general managers not to ignore White. In the buildup to the 2015 NFL Draft, the Alabama coach told anyone who would listen that his wide receiver could make an impact at the next level.

“DeAndrew White is probably the guy that I would say, if you said, 'Who would be most underappreciated by the NFL?' because he has a lot more ability than what his production maybe has been here,” Saban said after Alabama’s pro day. “He's got great speed. He's got great size. He's a great special teams player.

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"I think he's going to be a real value for somebody. Somebody's going to get a guy who has great ability and probably could develop into something special.”

When word of Saban’s comments about White were relayed to Cooper, this year’s fourth overall pick expressed similar support.

“Nick said that? Nick was correct," Cooper said. "Great athlete. Great route runner, and he's getting better. He's always getting better, and he always wants to work. He's driven, and he can go out and make plays. I’m telling you, he can go out there and make plays.”

Yet despite the high-profile endorsements and a 4.34-second 40-yard dash time at his pro day, White sat through 256 picks of the draft without hearing his named called. The wideout knew his injury history would be a deterrent, but he still thought a team would take a shot on him in the later rounds.

“I was surprised,” White said. “I had been hearing a lot of good stuff from coaches and scouts but things worked out that way.”

Shortly after the draft concluded, White fielded a call from nearly every NFL team, all reaching out to gauge his interest in signing as an undrafted free agent. White said he was offered more money elsewhere, but he chose to join the 49ers because San Francisco represented the best opportunity to stick long-term.

“I decided I didn’t want to do the money grab,” White said. “I made the best choice for my career. I don’t regret it at all. I love the facility, I love the program, I love the staff and I love the team.”

***

Although no official stats were taken during the 49ers offseason program, it’s a safe bet that White was the most targeted wide receiver throughout the nine-week schedule.

He displayed strong hands, solid route-running, impressive leaping ability, and most importantly, top-end speed. White said he felt no lingering effects from the laundry list of injuries he dealt with in college.

“Oh yeah, I’m good,” White said. “I haven’t had a problem with my knee since the year I did it or anything else. I’m recovered. I’m full-go.”

White appeared to mesh well with all three 49ers quarterbacks. He rarely, if ever, mishandled a pass from Colin Kaepernick, famous for being a gunslinger.

“He throws like no other,” White said. “You watch his windup, and he just lets it go like a rocket. It’s challenging to catch but it makes you think faster. You just have to focus on the ball. It’s really a reflex with him.”

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As of now, the 49ers have 12 receivers on their roster. White fully understands that at least half of those players will not make the final 53-man roster out of training camp. That’s why he wants to prove his value beyond catching passes.

“The more versatile you are, the better chance you have to be on the field,” White said. “I like to try to take advantage of that because I’m an athlete. I can do a lot of things.”

Along with the likes of Reggie Bush  and Jarryd Hayne, White received reps in the punt and kick return game during OTAs and minicamp. He also has experience playing gunner on special teams at Alabama.

“He’s not afraid of anything,” special teams coordinator Thomas McGaughey Jr. said. “He’s not afraid of competition. He goes out there every day and works his tail off. You can’t ask for much more from a rookie free agent. I think he’s on his way.”

Famous undrafted wide receivers that went on to star in the NFL include names like Wes Welker, Victor Cruz and Rod Smith. White obviously still has everything to accomplish, but those players prove that successful careers can start from humble beginnings.

The highlight of White’s standout offseason came on the final day of minicamp. In a hurry-up, red-zone period, White ran down the left side of the field, leaped over his defender and hauled in a touchdown pass fromBlaine Gabbert.

Without breaking stride, White returned to same line of scrimmage to run another play, this time on the opposite side of the field. He ran a skinny post toward the back of the end zone, where Gabbert targeted him again. The pass was high and behind the receiver, but White displayed excellent body control by snatching the ball midair and tapping both feet inbounds for another dazzling score.

“He’s made some incredible plays,” said Quinton Dial, White’s teammate at Alabama. “I like how he’s looking out there.”

Added co-wide receivers coach Ronald Curry, “I like his competitiveness. He’s a savvy player, too. If you’re out there working hard every day, the ball will find you. He got hot during minicamp.”

Coincidentally, White’s new home is not far away from the player whose shadow he couldn’t escape in college. Across the Bay in Oakland, Cooper is beginning his career with the Raiders.

“We talk almost every day. That’s my boy,” White said. “We tell each other what we did at practice and how we routes. We still compete even now that we’re not on the same team. We still compete. I think that’s pretty cool.”

White doesn’t like to look too far ahead, but for the Houston native, it’s difficult not to imagine what it will be like on Aug. 15 when the 49ers visit the Texans to open the preseason. A football career with so many twists and turns comes full circle to the place where it started.

“I can’t wait, honestly,” White said. “Going back home for my first NFL game, it would be a dream come true. We’ll have to see what happens, but I’ve circled that date. And when it’s my time, it’ll be my time.”
 
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Only one RB in the league is better after contact, and that's beast mode. Los loves to run ************* over. However, I worry about him taking too much unnecessary punishment. Marshawn Lynch is the most durable RB i've ever seen for how physical he is. I don't know if Los will hold up if he continues to try to run dudes over he doesn't have to.
 
The Around The NFL  crew will document the players we believe will be "Making the Leap" in 2015. This could be a player emerging from no-name status to a quality starter. Or it could mean an excellent player jumping to superstar status.
The list continues with No. 7, Carlos Hyde.[h3]Why Carlos Hyde is on the list[/h3] 
Opportunity + talent = leap.

With Frank Gore  departed to Indy, Hyde is the most logical workhorse back candidate on the San Francisco 49ers' roster.

Hyde toted the rock just 83 times as a rookie -- missing the final two games of the season due to injury -- for 333 yards, 4.0 yards per carry and four touchdowns. Now that Gore's 255 carries are out the door, those opportunities will increase for the second-year back.

The 6-foot, 235-pound back displayed power and quick one-cut ability as a rookie. According to Pro Football Focus, Hyde forced 25 missed tackles on his 83 carries (30.1 percent), a rate that puts him just below the likes of Marshawn Lynch  (31.4).

The 49ers' new offense plans to add more stretch zone concepts  into the rushing attack this season. Those sprinkles will be a boon for Hyde, who performed well in that type of scheme in college. After dropping weight this offseason, he should be able to hit those wide runs more cleanly.

In his 83 carries, Hyde showed flashes of brilliance when given a lane. He displayed occasions of shiftiness on the second level and a plant-and-go ability that allows him to make defenders miss at close range -- see his juke of Bobby Wagner  in the video below. For a bigger back, Hyde was able to get to the edge with some frequency, which should improve with more outside-zone runs and a lighter frame.

While he didn't do much in terms of the passing game -- 12 caches for 68 yards -- his skills at blocking as a rookie were well beyond most first-year players. That added component will allow the 49ers  to keep him on the field in any situation.
[h3]Obstacles[/h3] 
The biggest obstacle to Hyde's upside is how new offensive coordinator Geep Chryst will utilize his backfield rotation.

Reggie Bush  was brought in the offseason to provide a shifty change of pace and could siphon carries from Hyde early in the season. Bush played well at times last season, but health is always a risk with the former Heisman Trophy winner. Sooner or later, he'll be on the shelf again. Bush also isn't as big a pass-catching threat, despite what he's made out to be. The return of Kendall Hunter  is Hyde's biggest threat on third downs and passing situations, but Hunter is coming off an ACL tear. The Niners also have fourth-round rookie Mike Davis.

The next question is whether Hyde can handle the workload. It's not easy being an every-down runner, especially in an NFC West division loaded with dominant front lines. A revamped 49ersoffensive line will likely be worse than last season, so Hyde will need his entire tackle-breaking muster. His tendency to run up-right and provide a big target for tacklers could be troubling if he's not given lanes.

Finally, we need to see improvement in Hyde's vision, patience and understanding of the offense. Too often his tape on NFL Game Rewind  showed a tendency to pick the wrong hole or not see a wide-open cutting lane. He must display improved patience and let holes develop in his second year. Balancing decisiveness and patience is tough for rookies; we expect Hyde to improve in those areas in Year 2.
[h3]Expectations[/h3] 
With Bush and Hunter on the roster, it might take a few weeks to sort out, but Hyde should eventually take over as the primary back. His combination of size and speed is the best bet for the 49ers  to get consistent production from their backfield.

As a runner, Hyde is a suped-up version of Joique Bell, who spilt carries with Bush last season (frankly, if healthy, I like Hunter as a better option to steal carries than Bush). The 49erswill also run more frequently and effectively than Bush's Lions  did last year, so his per-snap production should exceed what Bell put up. 

After it all sorts itself out on the field, Hyde should be in line for a stat line of around 200 carries, 900 yards and nine touchdowns in 2015.

http://www.nfl.com/news/story/0ap3000000500632/article/making-the-leap-no-7-carlos-hyde
 
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( peep how many Saints were like 'nah im good' at around the 5 yard line :lol: )


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Not only is he a physical runner but seems to have pretty good vision especially when he seems to welcome 1 person trying to take him down :lol:



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Hyde v. Borland :x




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El Guapo :pimp: :pimp:
 
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Los' cutback is filthy.

not to mention, he's gonna be getting some lessons from Bush, who was great at doing so at one point.
 
That coach got blown up LOL


Man seeing that video of Borland.... it sucked when P Willy retired but the little hope I had was that we had Borland in the cut...then he retires like 3 days later :\
 
6 days! 

btw if we bomb this year, i want scooby wright in next year's draft.
 
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I am really excited for training camp and preseason to begin.  I actually like the fact that we are in a position where it seems like everyone is simply dismissing our team because of how rough the offseason was on paper.  I think we are going to surprise everyone this year.  We may not be a playoff team, but we are far better than some of the 4-6 win predictions I have seen.

I mean lets really break it down......

RUNNING GAME:

Look....I love Frank Gore.  We all did.  But does anyone really believe that his departure means the end of a solid rushing attack?  I wholeheartedly believe that a trio of Carlos Hyde, Reggie Bush and Kendall Hunter will be better than what we had last year.....especially with Bush's change of pace running and ability to catch the ball out of the backfield.  I also expect more designed runs for Kaepernick this season and will see more of a 2012 Kap than 2014.

PASSING GAME:

Losing Crabtree wont be too big of a loss.  I actually like Crabtree much more than most Niner fans.  But we simply have a better WR corps than we did last season.  The WRs compliment each other much better.  Boldin and Torrey as a 1 & 2 is nice.  And if one of Patton, White or Ellington can step up (which I would bet a lot of money one will), we will have a very good WR trio.  Hopefully Vernon will be motivated in what could be his last year here and have a big year.  I am not much of a Vance McDonald guy, but if he can make a little bit of an improvement, he should be helpful too.   And as I alluded to earlier, I expect to see Bush involved in the passing game, which will also open everything else up.

A lot of our success falls on Kaepernick.  He had a bad season last year, but if you really think about it, it wasn't THAAAT bad.  A lot of teams would kill to have a QB produce what he did last year, and we all thought Kap had a bad season.  If he can make a few strides, we will have a good offense.

OFFENSIVE LINE:

Losing Davis hurts.  I will admit that.  But he basically did nothing last season.  So really, we were grooming his replacement already.  Iupati is far less of a loss than the media is making out.  He was downright awful in pass protection.  While he was very good in run blocking, I think he can be replaced.  We wont have the dominant offensive line we had in the past, but we will still have a formidable line.

If you asked every NFL team if they would be willing to trade their own offensive linemen for a group that consists of Joe Staley, Alex Boone, Daniel Kilgore, Marcus Martin, Brandon Thomas, Trenton Brown and Erik Pears, I bet you at least half of the NFL would be willing to do this trade.  I think there will be some mistakes made early by this young group, but provided this line can stay healthy, they will gel into a very nice line.

DEFENSE:

People focus on us losing Willis, Borland and Justin.  But really.....how much of a loss is this?  Willis obviously is the man.  An all time great.  But he hasn't been the same in recent years and he missed much of the season last year.  Justin played in like 60% of the snaps (IIRC), and was no where near the Cowboy we all grew to love.  And Borland, well, he was awesome but whatever.  We added Dockett.  Aldon Smith will be around for a full year instead of like 40% of one.  Bowman is back.  Our defense will be just fine.  I expect Lynch to take strides as well.

If you were to compare Bowman, Aldon, Brooks and Lynch to the linebacking corps of all other NFL teams, we are still in the top 5 easily.  Our defense will be just fine.

Basically, this team has enough talent to be a very competitive team.  It all comes down to coaching, and for some reason, I have a lot of faith in Tomsula.

Sorry for the rambling.  But bottom line is, we have been the deepest team in football for the past few years which has prepared us greatly for the losses we have taken this offseason.  I am not expecting a 13-3 Superbowl contender.  But I am certainly expecting better than a 4-6 win team which most people have pegged us as.  Cant wait to shock the world this season.

Go Niners!
 
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