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DubbC415

Mickey Fallon
Sep 10, 2002
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Tomato Alley
i really wanted JTO to work out, but obviously it just hasnt. 11 fumbles, 11 picks, 32 sacks, it cant all be the lines fault. he hasnt made the passes hes needed to, and he holds onto the ball WAY TOO LONG. fuck going deep if u cant do it, those slants and short outs work well enough to go with hill. and with a player like gore, u dont need to worry about 60 yard bombs.
 
May 11, 2002
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JTO reminds me ALOT of David Carr when he was playing for the Texans. I know the line took alot of the blame for the unsuccessful time he had while there but, you cant put all of those rushed throws or poor decisions on the line.
 

PoLLo LoC831

NINER EMPIRE
Mar 20, 2005
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Took the day off from making the trek to Santa Clara this morning, but I can still deliver a slice of Santa Clara to you.

Here are some comments from Mike Singletary, J.T. O'Sullivan and Shaun Hill, courtesy of the 49ers' PR department.



* * *



MIKE SINGLETARY



Q: Why the change at quarterback Mike?

Singletary: "I just think it gives us the best opportunity to win right now. I think it brings some stability, some consistency. I think with Shaun Hill, the guys right now overall, the staff, the guys, the players, it gives us the confidence in terms of, 'You know what we are going to keep this thing together and we're going to cut down on the mistakes, the turnovers, what have you and let's give ourselves a chance to win.'"



Q: Do you expect this offense to have a different look now that Shaun is in charge of it?

Singletary: "I can't say that it has a good look. I just feel that right now with him in there, it's just one of those things that Shaun is a natural leader. He leads in a different way. I just think, obviously, with him in there right now, he feels good, there's an energy about it. Going forward, I'm just excited to see what he does with the opportunity."



Q: Do you sense, after the events of the weekend, a different tone today?

Singletary: "I think the guys came out and responded very well. I mean they ran to the ball, they did all the things we talked about last week and they understand the task at hand. They understand where we have to go. They understand where we want to go. These guys want to win, they really do. They want to win. You sit down and have one-on-one conversations with them, they want to win and it's evident by the consistency and the practices that we had from last week and today, and all we are going to do is build on it. So we'll just keep getting better."



Q: Who's your starter at split end? It seems like Josh Morgan got the start but then dropped a slant early in the game and then it was Bryant Johnson who was in for most of the game. Is that a permanent shift or will they be again alternating?

Singletary: "It depends. I think right now, Coach [Mike] Martz wants to really sit back and kind of analyze how everybody is doing. When you have young players...you have Josh. He has a world of talent and when you hear Coach Martz say this guy has more talent than just about any receiver he's ever coached, that's a huge statement. For him it's just a matter of confidence. He is doing great and then all of sudden something happens. He might drop a ball, he may miss a block, and then boom. You just have to work at getting him back. Once he learns that, he's going to be really explosive. I'm really excited about him."



Q: Mike, you played the game. Sometimes when you make changes at positions like the quarterback it makes players realize that you have to be accountable.

Singletary: "Absolutely, that's a huge word that we use in terms of everybody doing their job, building the trust, building the confidence - all of those things you need in order to get out there and be successful. So accountability definitely is a huge word."



Q: A lot of coaches might've said the same thing to Vernon [Davis] privately. Why did you make those comments publically?

Singletary: "This is a day and time where everybody wants to be so private and 'This is my business and this is...and be nice to the guy.' I love these guys. I really do. At the same time, I know Vernon wants to win. And at the same time, I know he wants to be a man. So the comments that I made, there's nothing about the comment that I wouldn't have said to him. So for me to say, 'Well, that's a private matter.' It's the way I felt and I wasn't thinking about being politically correct. Now if it was something private that he did, it was something that was no one else's business, that's something that I would not do. But to me, the team needs to know that it will not be tolerated. Everyone needs to understand that if this is the course you want to take, chances are this is the way we're going to deal with it. Nothing big and bad and bold. It's nothing like that. To me it's just carrying out the nature of a bet. And just being real."



Q: Is that how you were coached in Chicago?

Singletary: "I'm a lot nicer than I was coached in Chicago. [Laughing.]"



* * *



J.T. O'SULLIVAN



Q: What's your reaction to the quarterback change?

O'Sullivan: "What's my reaction?"



Yes.

"Just disappointed."



Q: Would you look at the quarterback position as still fluid - that there's a chance that you might get back in and play this season?

O'Sullivan: "I think every backup in the league thinks like that. You have to be ready to take advantage of an opportunity if it comes."



* * *



SHAUN HILL



Q: How does it feel to be back in the saddle?

Hill: "It's very exciting. I'm really looking forward to this challenge. I know this team as a whole is not satisfied with how the first half of the season went and we're all excited to get this second half started and get this thing turned around."



Q: Where are you now versus mid-August as far as understanding the offense and how has that progressed since then?

Hill: "Obviously, I feel like I'm a lot further along than I was in training camp in the offense and being able to sit back and watch J.T. in the offense helped as well - to kind of see some of those things in action that Coach Martz was talking about in training camp. So it's been good. These eight weeks I've continued to learn the offense and I feel far more advanced in it now than I was back in August."



Q: It's always tough when they make a change. Has J.T. been supportive of it?

Hill: "Yeah, he's been very supportive. That says a lot about his character. He was supportive during the game as well, and that's a tough thing. It really is. I can't say enough about how great he's been."



Q: After the first game with Mike [Singletary], everything that went on, you see the emotion he has. Is the team feeling a little different right now, this week?

Hill: "Coach Singletary's been around and he's given speeches to the team over the three years that I've been here, or two and a half years at this point. So we know what kind of guy he is. He's been vocal to the team and everybody appreciates it and responds to it - just his honesty and the way he tells it like it is. He's not going to sugarcoat it for you, and I think everybody really respects that and responds to it."



Q: How is this offense going to be different with Shaun Hill leading it?

Hill: "I don't think...the structure is definitely going to be the same. Everything's going to be the same. No matter what, if you put two guys together and they have the same training no matter how long, you send the two guys out there it's going to be two completely different games and that's just the way it is. Guys see things different out there and when you get to the game just play different. I don't know. It'll just be different, that's all I can tell you. Everything's going to be the same, though. It's going to be the same offense, just two different guys play the game totally different, no matter if they have the same training and no matter how long they've had that training."



Q: Two of the team's longest drives came under you in the second half. Are you a guy who's going to have more of those longer, methodical drives?

Hill: "I think a lot of that is a product of how they were playing. They had a pretty good lead in the second half and didn't want to give up quick strikes down the field and things like that - and quick drives. They were going to make us take the ball methodically down the field, and we were going to have to score on every drive. I think more than anything it was a byproduct of how they were playing us at that time of the game."



Q: What do you think the players learn from what he [Mike Singletary] expects?

Hill: "I know one thing that's very evident to everybody is he's going to hold everybody accountable, it doesn't matter who. He was a star in this league and held himself accountable. He expects stars and role players alike to be accountable and do their job. That's one thing I really appreciate."
 

PoLLo LoC831

NINER EMPIRE
Mar 20, 2005
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49ers notes
Hill isn't only change Singletary has made
http://www.sacbee.com/sf49ers/story/1355711.html
By Matthew Barrows
[email protected]
Published: Thursday, Oct. 30, 2008 | Page 6C

SANTA CLARA – Mike Singletary has said he would stick to the foundation Mike Nolan built in San Francisco, but the new coach hasn't been afraid to use some of the players Nolan kept on the sideline.

The most prominent player in that category, of course, is quarterback Shaun Hill, who will start the 49ers' Nov. 10 game at Arizona. Hill has appeared in five games in seven seasons, but the Monday night affair against the Cardinals will be his first on the road.

Singletary also replaced Adam Snyder at left guard with David Baas. Singletary said he wants to return to a more physical style of offense and that Baas, who was slated to start before tearing a pectoral muscle in the offseason, fit that philosophy.

Singletary on Wednesday said Baas did a "decent job" in his first start of the year Sunday but expected him to improve with time.

"We want people in the trenches – because that's where it starts – that can really get off the ball and create lanes for the running game and protect our quarterback, and do the things that we want to do," Singletary said. "We're not trying to trick anybody. We're not trying to be Houdini. We're trying to be a good, solid, attacking-style football team on both sides of the ball."

Singletary also has mentioned two other players in the last two weeks, rookie guard Chilo Rachal and linebacker Ahmad Brooks, neither of whom has played in a game this season.

Rachal was the team's second-round draft pick in April and, like Baas, is known for his physical style. Brooks, meanwhile, was added to the roster Aug. 31 after he was let go by Cincinnati.

The 6-foot-3, 260-pound Brooks mostly has practiced at the two inside linebacker spots since joining the 49ers. But Singletary recently has been looking at him at defensive end.

"We put him out there, and he looked pretty good," Singletary said. "But we'll see where he's most comfortable."

Canton calling – This week, the Pro Football Hall of Fame released a list of 133 nominees for its class of 2009, and it contains several former 49ers. Prominent ex-49ers include Roger Craig, the first NFL player with 1,000 yards receiving and rushing in the same season; Randy Cross, a three-time Pro Bowl center; Kevin Greene, third on the all-time sack list; and Chris Doleman, fourth on that list.

Also on the list, under the category of contributors, is former team owner Edward DeBartolo, who was inducted into the Bay Area Sports Hall of Fame in April.

Et cetera – When tight end Delanie Walker injured his elbow Sunday, he said he was worried the injury was similar to the dislocated shoulder he suffered in his rookie season. It is not. Walker is out of the sling he wore early in the week and said he would be ready for the Arizona game.

• Frank Gore has been overtaken by former University of Miami teammate Clinton Portis in total yards from scrimmage this season. The Washington Redskins running back has 1,021 yards; Gore is second with 940 yards. The top three players in that category – Portis, Gore and Dallas Cowboys running back Marion Barber – have not had a bye week yet.

• The 49ers canceled this morning's practice and will meet instead.
 

PoLLo LoC831

NINER EMPIRE
Mar 20, 2005
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49ers defensive lineman gets look at defensive end
Because of the bye week, Niners will evaluate changes at certain positions
http://www.pressdemocrat.com/article/20081029/sports/810290228
By MATT MAIOCCO
PRESS DEMOCRAT STAFF WRITER

Published: Wednesday, October 29, 2008 at 5:36 p.m.
Last Modified: Wednesday, October 29, 2008 at 11:43 p.m.

SANTA CLARA — Defensive coordinator Greg Manusky paid a visit to third-year linebacker Ahmad Brooks last week to inform him of a possible position change.
“He said they were talking about putting me at defensive end to rush the passer,” Brooks said Wednesday. “It’s not definite, but he said it would be the quickest way to get me on the field.”

The 49ers have a bye week. They do not return to action until Nov. 10 when they face the Arizona Cardinals on “Monday Night Football.” The week off affords the 49ers’ coaching staff a chance to evaluate whether changes at certain positions are warranted.

“It gives us a chance to really put players in situations where maybe if it were a regular practice we wouldn’t have that time to make those changes and implement certain situations to find out if that player can do this or do that,” 49ers interim coach Mike Singletary said.

Brooks is one of those players getting a closer look.

Brooks was inside linebacker the past two seasons with the Cincinnati Bengals. But the 49ers are looking for help with their pass rush, so they’re turning to the 6-foot-3, 259-pounder to see what he can do.

The 49ers claimed Brooks off waivers on Aug. 31 from the Bengals. In the eight games that have followed, Brooks has not suited up. He has been one of the team’s eight inactive players every game.

Singletary said the coaching staff is examining whether they can find a role for Brooks.

“We’re trying to see if that’s a possibility,” Singletary said. “But since he’s been here, he’s worked really hard and done everything that we’ve asked him. He has a ton of talent. We’ll see. But right now we’re just trying to see if there’s a way to get him in. If there is, then great. If not, then we’ll have to wait a little longer.”

Brooks played 13 games (seven starts at middle linebacker) in two seasons with the Bengals. He recorded 54 tackles with two sacks. As a sophomore in 2004 at Virginia, he recorded eight sacks. He played just five games as a junior before declaring for the NFL supplemental draft in 2006.

After coming to the 49ers, Brooks mostly was asked to learn the strong inside linebacker position behind Takeo Spikes. Also, he has some familiarity with the weak inside position behind Patrick Willis.

But, now, the experimenting continues.

“He could be outside linebacker, he could be rushing,” Singletary said. “But we’ll figure it out. We’re figuring out the best way to get him out there and to make sure that he enhances and we don’t have to take anybody else off the field that’s helping us a lot right now. So we’ll see going forward.

“At defensive end, we put him there and he looked pretty good. But we’ll see where he’s most comfortable.”

Brooks said he feels comfortable rushing the quarterback from the outside on passing downs.

“It feels natural,” he said. “I still have a few things to get down. I’m not so good at taking on the run at defensive end.”

The first lineup change under Singletary was unveiled in the 49ers’ 34-13 loss to the Seattle Seahawks on Sunday. David Baas was elevated into the starting lineup at left guard, replacing Adam Snyder.

“We know that in order to be who we want to be, we want to be a physical football team,” Singletary said. “David Baas is a physical guy, and he gives you that physical presence. I thought he did a decent job in the game. He’ll get much better.

“We’re not trying to trick anybody. We’re not trying to be Houdini. We’re trying to be a good, solid, attacking-style football team on both sides of the ball, and that’s what we want to do.”

For more on the 49ers, go to Instant 49ers at pressdemocrat.com/49ers. You can reach Staff Writer Matt Maiocco at 521-5492 or matt.maiocco@press
 

PoLLo LoC831

NINER EMPIRE
Mar 20, 2005
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Sources say Carroll would listen to 49ers if price is right
http://blogs.mercurynews.com/49ers/...roll-would-listen-to-49ers-if-price-is-right/
Posted by Dan Brown on October 31st, 2008 at 10:15 am | Categorized as Uncategorized

How much would it take for Pete Carroll to consider a 49ers offer? Sources tell the Mercury News’ Jon Wilner that $5 million per year might perk up Carroll’s ears.

Wilner just got back from a visit with the USC coach in Southern California and spelled out a few hypothetical scenarios in this blog post.
 
DEACON JONES SPEAKIN ON MIKE SINGLETARY AND VERON DAVIS

DEACON JONES AKA Secretary of Defense said:
Deacon Jones would like that to be the case. The man dubbed the "Secretary of Defense," who's never short on opinion, doesn't always like what he sees on Sunday afternoons. "That's the greatest thing that could have happened to that kid," growls Jones. "If I was his teammate I would whup his ass myself. On our teams, when someone acted up like that, it wouldn't even get to the coaches. We would [mess] him up ourselves. That's the problem now. They outlawed all the ass whuppin."
CLASSIC
 
Mar 26, 2006
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Deacon Jones would like that to be the case. The man dubbed the "Secretary of Defense," who's never short on opinion, doesn't always like what he sees on Sunday afternoons. "That's the greatest thing that could have happened to that kid," growls Jones. "If I was his teammate I would whup his ass myself. On our teams, when someone acted up like that, it wouldn't even get to the coaches. We would [mess] him up ourselves. That's the problem now. They outlawed all the ass whuppin."

so true, in all sport when some people get paid too much they become brats and need to be checked.
 

PoLLo LoC831

NINER EMPIRE
Mar 20, 2005
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Jed York ready to tackle 49ers' many challenges
http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/c/a/2008/11/01/MNJA13PPOQ.DTL
His first NFL game was in Cleveland at age 3. He sat on Jennifer Montana's lap.
"I'm still searching for a better seat," he says.
He was 7 when John Madden nearly ran him into a locker at Giants Stadium in Madden's haste to interview Jerry Rice, who had caught a last-minute, game-winning touchdown bomb from Jennifer's husband, Joe.

Fifth grade marked the first time in four years that he hadn't made a trip to the White House to celebrate a sports championship.

Jed York was one lucky kid. But he's no longer the youngster the Super Bowl 49ers used to stash in lockers. Now, at age 27, as the front man for the whole operation, he has challenges that would stymie a managerial graybeard.

He's trying to repair a franchise that broke down years ago and is still leaking oil all over the Candlestick parking lot. He recently told the head coach to hand over his whistle. While San Francisco officials are trying hard to keep the team in town, he's trying just as hard to get a stadium built in Santa Clara - and partly with public money in the midst of a global financial crisis.

As if that's not daunting enough, he's trying to do it with a fan base reared on NFL championships, an ornery herd that's convinced everything the Yorks touch turns to radioactive waste.

York has the odd title of "vice president of strategic planning/owner" of the 49ers. He has other less-defined but more expansive responsibilities with the 49ers, namely their face and their future. He doesn't make all the important decisions yet, but he will someday.

His parents, John York and Denise DeBartolo York - who have been the team's principal owners for eight years - flee from the spotlight. Not Jed.

When Mike Nolan was dumped and Mike Singletary replaced him as interim head coach, the parents were out of town, but it probably wouldn't have made any difference. It was Jed who presided over the news conference. That's the way all three Yorks want it.

He doesn't mind looking into TV lights, a willingness he traces to the scores of game trips he made with his grandfather. Edward J. DeBartolo Sr. was a construction magnate who practically invented the shopping mall and who expanded his fortune with hotels, office parks, condos, racetracks and department store chains. He purchased the 49ers in 1977 and gave them to his son, Ed Jr. The elder DeBartolo also owned the NHL Pittsburgh Penguins from 1981 to 1991. He died in 1994.

"A roomful of reporters - that's not going to bother me," York said, although in his 3 1/2 years with the organization he has rarely given interviews until recently. He may have weaknesses, but a lack of confidence is not one of them, despite the fact he's younger than 24 of the 53 players on the roster.

"People look at me and think my age is a negative," he said. "Well, when you're 6 years old and you're playing gin with your grandfather, who is one of the most successful businessmen in the country, if not the world, and some of his buddies - and you're beating them - it makes it easier for me to sit across the table from somebody. ... I never feel uncomfortable being around people."
Engaging manner

York got rid of his beard this year at the behest of his girlfriend. He has good looks, an engaging manner, almost startling maturity. His voice calls to mind Tom Cruise, minus the loopy worldview.

In an interview, he was comfortable and eager to make his points, although a 49ers media relations person sat in, raising the possibility the organization didn't think he was ready to go solo. She explained later that she wanted to be available in case there were questions she needed to follow up on. She said York's parents had nothing to do with her presence.

York said he didn't insist on it either, although he said the biggest lesson he learned from uncle and godfather Eddie DeBartolo Jr., the beloved former owner of the franchise, was: "Don't read the papers."

"I lied," DeBartolo said from his office in Tampa, Fla. "I read everything, and I probably shouldn't have."

DeBartolo succeeded in a difficult business, he said, because "I had more than my share of street sense. It's important that you get bloodied a little bit. You have to take your lumps, then go right back."

Does York have street sense?

"He's getting it," DeBartolo said. "This is something new to him."

One of York's main tasks is the effort to build a stadium in Santa Clara. He said the financial crisis hasn't stopped that. "We're looking at a ballot in either June or (next) November. Hopefully we can get the environmental process done so we can go in June."

He expressed strong support for general manager Scot McCloughan. "Scot's going to be here." Forever? "I don't know about forever, but Scot's going to be here. We just gave him a contract extension at the end of last season."

Asked how tough it has made his job that his parents have nowhere near the popularity Eddie had, he said comparisons between them and his uncle are unfair. He pointed out Denise was club president of the Penguins when they won the Stanley Cup in 1991 and is one of the few women whose name is engraved on it.

"Did they step into a difficult situation when they took over operational control of the 49ers? Yeah. It was difficult," York said. "That's why I'm here and why I'm so passionate about putting that winning tradition back."

He admitted it eats at him that the 49ers have been losers since 2003 and that they have to play in antiquated Candlestick Park.

"Somebody asked me this weekend what I do for fun," he said. "I go to work for fun. I love what I do here. But until I feel like the 49ers are where I expect them to be, it's very hard for me to let steam off and do other things."

Although he has traveled extensively to Europe and China, he said, "I can't relax if I travel right now. It would make him "sick to my stomach to not be here."

He served as best man recently at the wedding of his closest friend but couldn't really enjoy the celebration. "Every Saturday night around 9 o'clock, it clicks. I can't be out."

He tried to explain.

"It's hard for me to accept losing," he said. "It's hard for me knowing that we've got the oldest stadium in the NFL. We're trying to do things to make that stadium better, but we also know we need to move forward and solidify the 49ers' position in the Bay Area for the long-term future. Until those things happen, it's really hard for me to focus on anything but that."

Veteran sports executive Andy Dolich, who joined the team in January as chief operating officer, said York is perfectly suited to his role.

"He's grown up in this organization and in this business," Dolich said. "There's a lot to be said for that. ... He's seen the best, the worst and stuff in the middle from the day he was born. He was born a 49er."

His given name was a combination of John, for his dad, and Edward, for his grandfather. Growing up in Youngstown, Ohio, he was an A student, as were his brother, Tony, 25, who runs an Internet job search company, and his twin sisters, Mara and Jenna, 22, who work in the wine business in Napa.

He and his family visited the White House with the 49ers after their 1988 and '89 championship seasons. He went again in 1991 after the Penguins won the Stanley Cup. He remembers thinking George H.W. Bush was almost as powerful as Grandpa DeBartolo.

Jed played youth football, packing 210 pounds in eighth grade - "It wasn't a pretty 210 either." He didn't play at Cardinal Mooney High School but was student body president and captain of the baseball team.

Friends say he never flaunted his family's wealth. High school pal Brian Brooke said some mutual friends "never knew his financial background or what his connection was to the 49ers. He never acted like he had money."

Brooke, the son of a steel-mill worker, got to travel with the York family to New Orleans for a weekend. Other York chums had similar experiences. Jed mainly attended 49ers road games in the East and Midwest and lots of Penguins games in Pittsburgh, an hour's drive from Youngstown. The family rule was that you had to make sure you were in school the next day.

"I always wanted to follow in my grandfather's footsteps, whether that was in the real estate business or in the professional sports business," York said.

That, of course, meant going to Notre Dame, where his grandfather, father and uncles went. His mother attended St. Mary's, Notre Dame's sister school. John York pulled her name out of a hat for a blind date, and the rest is 49er history.

The family also has contributed millions to Notre Dame. Many of the classrooms are in DeBartolo Hall on DeBartolo Quad. Later came the Marie P. DeBartolo Center for the Performing Arts, named for Jed's grandmother. Few people on campus knew he was part of the philanthropic family.
Low-key in college

James Durkin, now a Chicago attorney, had known York for weeks on the campus when the subject came up of the 49ers' victory over Durkin's heroes, the Bears, in the bone-chilling 1989 NFC title game. York mentioned that he was at the game. "That's when it came out (that his family owned the team)," Durkin said.

That 28-3 victory in Chicago that sent the team to Super Bowl XXIII is one of Jed's favorite 49er memories. "It was 25 or 30 below, windchill," he said. "The Gatorade was freezing on the sidelines. I'll never forget that feeling, of everybody celebrating and getting ready to go on to Florida to play the Bengals."

One of his worst memories is watching on TV when Montana injured his elbow in the NFC title game in January 1991. "I'll never forget the sick feeling I had as a 10-year-old, watching the team lose and seeing Joe get hurt."

His parents insisted that before the children worked for any of the family businesses, they had to work elsewhere first. Jed joined Guggenheim Partners, a financial services firm in Manhattan. He started in the private wealth management group, then studied risk analysis in the hedge fund group and later worked on leveraged debt.
Helpful experience

The experience has come in handy with the 49ers, especially when it comes to borrowing big bucks for a new stadium during a credit crisis. The economy is "a double-edged sword" when it comes to stadium financing, he said.

"You look at some stadiums being built now (Giants-Jets, Cowboys, Yankees, Mets), I think they're continuing to do pretty well on presales, naming rights and seat licenses, but obviously the climate has changed dramatically from where we were six months ago. They're on the hook with lenders for hundreds of millions of dollars.

"We're not to that point yet. It's good that we don't have loan documents and construction costs signed, because I think you're going to see some cost deflation."

He said cost inflation previously ran 5 to 10 percent annually in the Bay Area. He thinks the credit market will start to calm down in the next six to 12 months. "We'll be in a much better position at that point to find the right financing partner," he said.

Finding the right people to manage the football operation, of course, is just as important. He had hoped to spend five years in New York before joining the 49ers. Instead, he decided in 2004 to cut short his Guggenheim stay because the team was about to dump general manager Terry Donahue and coach Dennis Erickson, and he wanted to be on board when their successors were named.

With the title "coordinator of special projects," he spent six months rotating through each department - legal, marketing, scouting, even the equipment room. He learned how to tie an ice bag while wrapping an ankle.

Fortunately, he needs only five hours of sleep. He leaves his Marina district apartment at 5:15 a.m., unless he's staying at the family's apartment in Santa Clara. He gets a workout in, then works about a 12-hour day.

"He's tougher than people may suspect," said ex-linebacker Keena Turner, the 49ers' vice president of football affairs. "What I like the most is he's competitive as hell. This is all he thinks about the entire day."

On the other hand, York's reaction to a question about the wisdom of making quarterback Alex Smith the No. 1 overall draft pick in 2005 is telling. "I'm not a football guy," he said. "It's hard for me to give a football opinion. Alex is obviously very talented. We hope we can find a way for him to stay with the organization."

So he isn't likely to micromanage the football operation. He says McCloughan will make the major football decisions, but York (and his parents) undoubtedly will have to OK them. Will Singletary be more than an interim coach? Will Mike Holmgren be pursued as a Bill Parcells-type overseer? Will feelers go out to Pete Carroll?

The committee will decide. Who holds the key vote? According to Denise York, "Nobody is God."

As unseasoned as he is, Jed is bound to make mistakes, just as Uncle Eddie did when he took over at age 30.

"There's always impetuousness in youth," Dolich said, before quickly adding, "There's a maturity in him that's beyond his years. I've worked with a lot of wild and crazy sons and daughters of ownerships, and in my eight franchises I would rank him up at the top as somebody that 'gets it.' "
Temperament like uncle's

Jed and Eddie talk about once a week. What always stood out the most about Eddie, Jed said, is "his passion and his fire. I've seen my uncle put some holes in walls. I don't know if I'm proud or not to say it, but I've done the same thing."

Eddie DeBartolo suspects his sister and her husband would have sold the team if Jed hadn't pulled the sword from the stone, because none of the other children were interested in running the club. "But that's just an opinion," DeBartolo said.

"Eddie suspects a lot of things that aren't true," Denise York said. "We would have made that decision as a family."

It's a moot point because Jed "felt so strongly about carrying on the family name, trying to right the bad information that's been put out there about us," she said.

Jed is "obsessed and rightfully so," Eddie said.

Whether he can restore the 49ers to competitiveness, if not greatness, is anybody's guess. If he can't, it won't be for a lack of energy.

"It wasn't that my uncle or my grandfather put me under their wing and said, 'This is how you run a professional sports team,' " York said. "You saw it. You saw everything click. You knew the feeling that was there and was meant to be there. That's something I've taken with me. That's really what I see myself bringing to the 49ers today - re-establishing that culture of winning."
 

PoLLo LoC831

NINER EMPIRE
Mar 20, 2005
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Niners get back to work from bye on Tuesday
http://sfo.scout.com/2/807599.html
By SFI staff
Posted Nov 2, 2008
The Mike Singletary Show hits the road for the final half of the season, as the 49ers play five of their final eight games away from Candlestick Park. But home has not exactly been a sanctuary, either. The 49ers enter the second half of the season with a 2-6 record, including four losses in five games on their home field.

"Unfortunately, it's been difficult, period, road or home," Singletary said. "We have to go get it."

The 49ers will begin preparation for the second half of their season with their first practice after their bye on Tuesday. That will end a stretch of five consecutive days without practice for the team, which held meetings Thursday before being excused for a four-day weekend.

The 49ers will then have Wednesday off and return Thursday to full-scale preparation for their Nov. 10 Monday night game at Arizona that begins the second half of their schedule.

Singletary took over Oct. 20 after the 49ers fired Mike Nolan. He has wasted little time in trying to establish a new mindset.

He benched turnover-prone quarterback J.T. O'Sullivan. He banished tight end Vernon Davis to the locker room after an unnecessary-roughness penalty. Then, Singletary blasted Davis for not being a "team player."

And at halftime of his first game, Singletary dropped his pants in front of his team to illustrate that his team was getting its butts whipped by the Seattle Seahawks. The 49ers would go on to lose 34-13 in Singletary's debut.

"I needed to do something to dramatize my point," Singletary told the team's official website. "There were other ways I could have done it, but I think this got the message across."

The 49ers can take a major step forward when they return after the against the Cardinals, who are running away with the NFC West after defeating the Rams in St. Louis on Sunday. The 49ers opened their season with a 23-13 loss to the Cardinals in San Francisco.

GOOD NEWS
The 49ers have two players -- running back Frank Gore and linebacker Patrick Willis -- performing at Pro Bowl levels. Gore, whom offensive coordinator Mike Martz describes as the central figure of the team's offense, is averaging 117.5 yards from scrimmage.

Gore is closing in on becoming the first player in 49ers history to record a third consecutive 1,000-yard season. He has 629 yards at the halfway point of the season. Gore also leads the 49ers with 32 receptions on the season.

Willis was named to the Pro Bowl after his first NFL season. He is on pace to return to Honolulu. Willis has 72 tackles, one sack and one interception through eight games. He returned the interception 86 yards for a touchdown in the 49ers' Week 2 victory over the Seahawks.

Willis was recently named to The Sporting News’ midseason All-Pro team. He was the only 49er honored.

BAD NEWS
Things got so bad that coach Mike Nolan was fired after seven games. In 3½ seasons, Nolan compiled an 18-37 record as head coach. Things showed no signs of getting better with Singletary's first week on the job, though.

Martz's offense leads the league in turnovers and quarterback sacks.

Just three days after Martz said quarterback J.T. O'Sullivan was doing an outstanding job, Singletary benched him.

O'Sullivan has a league-worst 17 turnovers (11 interceptions and six lost fumbles). Shaun Hill takes over as the team's new starter.

The 49ers defense has been a major disappointment. The veteran unit ranks 31st in the league in points allowed. Despite the recent additions of high-priced free agents Nate Clements and Justin Smith, the 49ers have experienced difficulty getting off the field on third downs.

Singletary said he is trying to convert the 49ers defense into an attacking style. The 49ers rank in the lower third in the league with just 14 sacks in eight games.

QUOTE TO NOTE
"I don't talk a whole lot, but when I am talking, I do know what I feel and I do know what I want to say. What you see now, that is what I am. And that's not going to change any time soon." --- Singletary on his notable public comments during his first week on the job