-=The Official 49ers Offseason Thread=-

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Chree

Medicated
Dec 7, 2005
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#2
Lelie Leaves with Little, Plans to be Back

Chrissy Mauck
January 07, 2008
Maybe it’s was just his Hawaiian upbringing and a general preference to roll lightly, but while some players pushed out huge bins or lugged out heavy boxes on move out day, wide receiver Ashley Lelie carried only a few items when he exited the 49ers facility.

“Just my helmet and jersey from the year,” said Lelie. “I mean, I’ll be back.”

Although Lelie only signed a one-year deal last spring, the former Broncos first-round draft pick does plan to stay in the San Francisco 49ers fold.

“Definitely I plan to be back,” said Lelie. “I love the guys, I love the organization, the city. Even everything that happened, I was still having fun. As long as I’m having fun, I can’t complain.”

Most players in Lelie’s shoes probably would have complained. Next to Darrell Jackson, who was also brought in last off-season, Lelie was the only other receiver on the 49ers roster to have boasted a 1,000 yard season. He also came in with the reputation of being a deep threat after leading the NFL in highest yards per reception average in 2005 (18.3) and 2004 (20.1).

Unfortunately, Lelie fell behind the pack in the spring and early summer after suffering a quad injury the first day of mini camp. Although he churned out one of the better preseason performances, he rarely saw the playing field on Sundays this season, finishing the year with only 10 catches for 115 yards.

While just about everyone in the media covering the team raised a ruckus about Lelie not seeing the field, the sixth-year veteran stayed quiet and kept his gripes to himself.

“It’s probably a bit of my upbringing in Hawaii, and then also it’s just my personality not to complain or get too stressed,” said Lelie. “I just think in life, you can’t be too negative about things. You just have to enjoy every day that you breathe. We play a game for a living, you can’t really fault that too much. There are a lot of other worse things you could be doing.”

That doesn’t mean it was easy. Anyone watching the sidelines on Sundays could tell that winning mattered a great deal to Lelie, who was always up and roaming and cheering on his teammates.

“It was a long hard one,” said Lelie when asked about the season. “It was tough, but what doesn’t kill you, makes you stronger. There was a lot to learn from this year, me personally, and as a team. I think it will make us better in the long run. Hopefully everyone takes this feeling and keeps it close so they don’t want to feel like it ever again and then we just get better this off-season.”

Lelie doesn’t believe the 49ers are in need of a major overhaul to get better, echoing what many of his teammates have said all year in that the pieces to the puzzle are already on the roster, they just haven’t settled into place.

“I think it was just one of those years where things didn’t fall our way,” said Lelie. “If you look at our first two wins, a play here or there, we could have started off 0-2. But the same is true of some of our losses, a play there, or a call here and we could have won them. Obviously you have to have skill and good coaching, but sometimes it comes down to luck, calls and everything entwining. We were on the short end of the stick this year. There are a lot of teams going to the playoffs right now who would probably say they had a lot of things bounce there way to get there.”

As already mentioned, Lelie prides himself in not letting football stress him out, which is why he won’t be watching those teams who did have things bounce their way.

“I don’t know why but that is the one thing that really does stress me out,” said Lelie. “I like to watch the Super Bowl but these other games just stress me out to watch.”

For Lelie, things would start to fall right this off-season by re-signing with what he calls a close knit ball club, a desire that seems to be matched by 49ers general manager Scot McCloughan.

“We want him back for the same reason we brought him here to begin with,” said McCloughan. “He adds a dimension we need to be successful on offense because he has, and can stretch the field.”

In the meantime, Lelie will pass the time with visits back to Hawaii and some trips to Florida.

“I’ll be somewhere warm and near the water,” said Lelie. “I usually do a lot of traveling and I spend a lot of time swimming and at the beach enjoying life. I just try to relax and come back refreshed and ready to go.”
 
May 3, 2002
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#3
Last night on CBS 5 Gameday, they had an interview with Mike Nolan. He was talking about Shaun Hill and that there is contract talks going on with him but that Hill is going to want to test free agency. But Nolan was saying that they wanna keep Hill.
 

Rich

Sicc OG
Jul 22, 2003
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#9
Who remembers that 4th and 2 vs Cinci? Dumb ass went for it when he should have kicked the FG to go up 2 possessions.
Well the season was already down the toilet. I actually applauded that decision. Larry Allen wanted to go for it. They should've ran that shit though. And yes he makes stupid mistakes. But he needs to get his shit together or else this may be his last head coaching job ever.
 
Feb 12, 2004
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If they don't resign Hill WTF he's the only positive besides Willis out of last season. I know he isn't the second coming of Joe Montana, but he's better than everything we've got.
 

Chree

Medicated
Dec 7, 2005
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#15
Showing Hill the Money
January 8th, 2008


The latest word out of Niner camp is that sometime this week, chief negotiator, Paraag Marathe will present unrestricted free agent Shaun Hill with a multi-year proposal. The 49ers are not wanting Hill to test the free agent market. The good thing is the 49ers have seven weeks until the start of free agency, during this time they are the only team that can negotiate with Hill.

The money offered to Hill is not confirmed but it is rumored to be a 3-year deal worth $12-$15 million according to RotoWorld.com.
 
Nov 27, 2006
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#18
49ERS HIRE MIKE MARTZ by Michael David Smith

Adam Schefter of NFL Network is reporting that the San Francisco 49ers have hired Mike Martz as their new offensive coordinator.

Martz replaces Jim Hostler, who had one disastrous year as the 49ers' offensive coordinator. Martz spent the last two years as the offensive coordinator in Detroit, and seven years before that in St. Louis, first as offensive coordinator and then as head coach.

Martz will now be tasked with the difficult job of making Alex Smith look like the franchise quarterback the 49ers thought he was when they chose him with the first pick in the 2005 NFL draft. This season Smith was limited by injury to just seven games, and he had a completion percentage of 48.7 percent, with two touchdowns and four interceptions.

This development makes agent Bob LaMont a powerful figure in San Francisco: LaMont represents Martz, head coach Mike Nolan and assistant head coach-defense Mike Singletary.
 
Nov 27, 2006
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#20
Showing Hill the Money
January 8th, 2008


The latest word out of Niner camp is that sometime this week, chief negotiator, Paraag Marathe will present unrestricted free agent Shaun Hill with a multi-year proposal. The 49ers are not wanting Hill to test the free agent market. The good thing is the 49ers have seven weeks until the start of free agency, during this time they are the only team that can negotiate with Hill.

The money offered to Hill is not confirmed but it is rumored to be a 3-year deal worth $12-$15 million according to RotoWorld.com.
haha $15 million for hill? wow thats retarded