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SAN FRANCISCO 49ERS (2-1) AT PHILADELPHIA EAGLES (1-2) Sunday, October 2, 2011 • 1:00 p.m. ET • Lincoln Financial Field • Philadelphia, PA • TV: FOX This week, the 49ers travel to Philadelphia to face the Eagles, marking the fourth consecutive year that the two teams have faced each other. The 49ers hold a 17-12-1 edge in the all-time series, including a 9-4-1 advan- tage in Philadelphia. The 49ers will be looking to snap the Eagles current 5-game winning streak in the series. The 49ers look to win consecutive road games for the first time since 2006 [at Sea. (12/14) and at Den. (12/31)] and consectuive road games with a 1 ET start time since 2001 [at Car. (11/18) and at Ind. (11/25). With a win last week vs. Cin. (9/25), head coach Jim Harbaugh became just the 3rd coach in franchise history to win his first road game [Monte Clark - 26-24 at GB (9/12/76) and George Seifert - 30-24 at Ind. (9/10/89)]. SAN FRANCISCO 49ERS GAME RELEASE FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE The 49ers 2011 media guide is now available online at http://media.49ers.com and will be updated weekly throughout the season. The 49ers media center is updated daily and contains all of the necessary information to cover the team. On the site, you will find a compilation of 49ers game releases, rosters, updated player bios, gamebooks, transcriptions, statistics, audio files and much more. To access the site, please visit http://media.49ers.com. 93.8 Since last year’s game vs. Phi. (10/10/10), QB Alex Smith ranks 8th in the NFL with a QB rating of 93.8. 78.0 Since 2006, RB Frank Gore has averaged 78.0 rushing yds./gm. vs. Phi., the most by any player in the NFL against the Eagles in that span (min. 4 games). 29.6 The 49ers avg. starting field position on kickoffs is the 29.6 yd. line, ranking 1st in the NFL. 24 According to gamebook statistics, the 49ers have registered 24 passes defensed this season, ranking 2nd in the NFL. 17.3 The 49ers haved allowed just 17.3 pts./gm. this season, ranking 4th in the NFL. 5 The 49ers have notched 5 INTs this season, ranking t-2nd in the NFL. TELEVISION: FOX Play-by-Play: Ron Pitts Color Analyst: Jim Mora 49ERS RADIO NETWORK The Bone 107.7 FM - KNBR 680/1050 AM Play-by-play: Ted Robinson Color Analyst: Eric Davis Sideline Reporter: Rod Brooks SPANISH RADIO: KIQI 1010/KATD 990 AM Broadcasters: Armando Botello, Juan Carlos Sierra, Matias Godinez and Melvin Moran COMPASS MEDIA NETWORKS Play-By-Play: Chris Carrino Color Analyst: Brian Baldinger 49ERS AT EAGLES MEDIA CENTER RADIO & TV COVERAGE THE NUMBERS GAME 2011 MEDIA GUIDE

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Page 1: SAN FRANCISCO 49ERS GAME RELEASEprod.static.eagles.clubs.nfl.com/assets/docs/PDF_49ers... · 2011-09-28 · ˇ ˆ SAN FRANCISCO 49ERS (2-1) AT PHILADELPHIA EAGLES (1-2) Sunday, October

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SAN FRANCISCO 49ERS (2-1) AT

PHILADELPHIA EAGLES (1-2)Sunday, October 2, 2011 • 1:00 p.m. ET • Lincoln Financial Field • Philadelphia, PA • TV: FOX

This week, the 49ers travel to Philadelphia to face the Eagles, marking the fourth consecutive year that the two teams have faced each other. The 49ers hold a 17-12-1 edge in the all-time series, including a 9-4-1 advan-tage in Philadelphia. The 49ers will be looking to snap the Eagles current 5-game winning streak in the series.

The 49ers look to win consecutive road games for the first time since 2006 [at Sea. (12/14) and at Den. (12/31)] and consectuive road games with a 1 ET start time since 2001 [at Car. (11/18) and at Ind. (11/25).

With a win last week vs. Cin. (9/25), head coach Jim Harbaugh became just the 3rd coach in franchise history to win his first road game [Monte Clark - 26-24 at GB (9/12/76) and George Seifert - 30-24 at Ind. (9/10/89)].

SAN FRANCISCO 49ERS GAME RELEASEFOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

The 49ers 2011 media guide is now available online at http://media.49ers.com and will be updated weekly throughout the season.

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The 49ers media center is updated daily and contains all of the necessary information to cover the team. On the site, you will find a compilation of 49ers game releases, rosters, updated player bios, gamebooks, transcriptions, statistics, audio files and much more. To access the site, please visit http://media.49ers.com.

93.8 Since last year’s game vs. Phi. (10/10/10), QB Alex Smith ranks 8th in the NFL with a QB rating of 93.8.

78.0 Since 2006, RB Frank Gore has averaged 78.0 rushing yds./gm. vs. Phi., the most by any player in the NFL against the Eagles in that span (min. 4 games).

29.6 The 49ers avg. starting field position on kickoffs is the 29.6 yd. line, ranking 1st in the NFL.

24 According to gamebook statistics, the 49ers have registered 24 passes defensed this season, ranking 2nd in the NFL.

17.3 The 49ers haved allowed just 17.3 pts./gm. this season, ranking 4th in the NFL.

5 The 49ers have notched 5 INTs this season, ranking t-2nd in the NFL.

TELEVISION: FOX

Play-by-Play: Ron PittsColor Analyst: Jim Mora

49ERS RADIO NETWORKThe Bone 107.7 FM - KNBR 680/1050 AM

Play-by-play: Ted RobinsonColor Analyst: Eric Davis

Sideline Reporter: Rod BrooksSPANISH RADIO: KIQI 1010/KATD 990 AMBroadcasters: Armando Botello, Juan

Carlos Sierra, Matias Godinez and Melvin Moran

COMPASS MEDIA NETWORKSPlay-By-Play: Chris Carrino

Color Analyst: Brian Baldinger

49ERS AT EAGLES

MEDIA CENTERRADIO & TV COVERAGE

THE NUMBERS GAME

2011 MEDIA GUIDE

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Jim Harbaugh is in his first season as the head coach of the 49ers. Harbaugh brings 17 years of coaching experience and 15 years as a NFL quarterback to San Francisco. He joined the 49ers after a four-year stint as the head coach at Stanford University, composing the biggest turnaround in school history over a four-year span (2007-10). He posted a 20-6 record over the last two seasons, which included a historic

12-1 season (2010) that was punctuated by an Orange Bowl win in the first Bowl Championship Series bowl appearance in school history. He orchestrated two of the highest scoring teams in school history, three of the top four rushing teams in program history and back-to-back bowl appearances for the first time since 1995 and ’96. Along his coach-ing trail, Harbaugh served stints as the head coach at the University of San Diego (2004-06) and as an offensive assistant with the Oakland Raiders (2002-03). As a first round draft pick by the Chicago Bears in 1987, Harbaugh played for five teams over 15 seasons and ranks in the NFL’s top-50 in two career passing categories - completions (41st) and pass attempts (45th). As a player, he helped lead the University of Michigan to two bowl appearances, garnering Big Ten Player of the Year honors.

Jim Harbaugh Andy Reid2-1 (.667) Record as Head Coach (win %) 119-76-1 (.610)2-1 (.667) Record with Current Team (win %) 119-76-1 (.610)

1st Years as Head Coach with Team 13th1st Years as Head Coach in NFL 13th3rd Years as an NFL Coach 20th

Andy Reid is in his 13th season as head coach of the Eagles. As the longest tenured current head coach in the NFL, Reid has earned NFL coach of the year honors twice (2000, 2002). He has captured 6 division titles and a fran-chise best 10 postseason wins, including a trip to Super Bowl XXXIX. In 2010, the Eagles earned a postseason berth after finishing the regular season 10-6 as the NFC East Champi-

ons. Reid became the 37th coach in NFL history to reach the 100-win plateau in 2008. During his tenure, Reid has compiled the best win total (119), winning percentage (.630), and playoff victory total (10) in Eagles history. Prior to his time with Philadelphia, Reid spent 7 sea-sons with the Green Bay Packers, spending his first 5 seasons as tight ends coach/assistant offensive line coach (1992-96) before being el-evated to quarterbacks coach (1997-98). During that span, the Packers reached the playoffs 6 times and defeated New England in Super Bowl XXXI. Reid entered the coaching ranks as a graduate assistant at BYU (1982) and later moved to San Francisco State to help them lead the na-tion in passing and total offense 3 consecutive years (1983-85).

HARBAUGH’S COACHING BACKGROUNDYEARS COACHING BACKGROUND HEAD COACH2011-current Head Coach, San Francisco 49ers Jim Harbaugh2007-10 Head Coach, Stanford Jim Harbaugh2004-06 Head Coach, University of San Diego Jim Harbaugh2002-03 Offensive Assistant, Oakland Raiders Bill Callahan1994-2001 Vol. Asst. Coach, Western Kentucky Jack Harbaugh2001 *QB, Carolina Panthers George Seifert1999-2000 *QB, San Diego Chargers Mike Riley1998 *QB, Baltimore Ravens Ted Marchibroda1994-97 *QB, Indianapolis Colts T. Marchibroda/L. Infante1987-93 *QB, Chicago Bears M. Ditka/D. Wannstedt1983-86 *QB, Michigan Bo Schembechler* Player

THE HEAD COACHES

Jim Harbaugh becomes one of nine current NFL head coaches who have playing experience in the League. Harbaugh was selected by the Chicago Bears in the 1st round of the 1987 NFL Draft with the 26th overall pick.

Harbaugh played 15 NFL seasons, earning Pro Bowl, AFC Offensive Player of the Year and NFL Co-Comeback Player of the Year in 1995. That season, he led the NFL with a 100.7 passer rating, edging out Brett Favre (99.5) and Troy Aikman (93.6).

The 49ers head coach finished his career with 26,288 passing yards and 129 TDs on 2,305 of 3,918 passes in 177 games (140 starts). He ranked in the NFL’s top 10 for completion percentage four times.

HEAD COACHES WITH NFL PLAYING EXPERIENCECoach Reg. Season Record Years Played in NFLJim Harbaugh (SF) 2-1 (.667) 15Mike Munchak (Ten.) 2-1 (.667) 12Jack Del Rio (Jac.) 66-65 (.504) 11Ken Whisenhunt (Arz.) 33-34 (.493) 9Gary Kubiak (Hou.) 39-44 (.470) 9Ron Rivera (Car.) 1-2 (.333) 9Jason Garrett (Dal.) 7-4 (.636) 8Leslie Frazier (Min.) 3-6 (.333) 5Sean Payton (NO) 51-32 (.614) 1

NFL EXPERIENCE

Team W L PF PA Home Road AFC NFC DIV Streak

San Francisco 2 1 70 52 1-1 1-0 1-0 1-1 1-0 W1

Seattle 1 2 30 67 1-0 0-2 0-1 1-1 1-1 W1

Arizona 1 2 59 56 1-0 0-2 0-0 1-2 0-1 L2

St. Louis 0 3 36 96 0-2 0-1 0-1 0-2 0-0 L3

‘11 NFC-W STANDINGS

NFC NFL

Player Category Mark Rank Rank

Alex Smith Quarterback Rating 91.3 7 13

Alex Smith Completion Pct. 68.9 2 4

Alex Smith 4th Qtr. QB Rating 109.8 5 8

David Akers Scoring, Kickers 28 t-3 t-6

David Akers Touchbacks on KO 9 t-5 t-9

Andy Lee Punting, Gross Avg. 52.8 1 3

Andy Lee Punting, Net Avg. 46.3 1 1

Ted Ginn Jr. Punt Return Avg. 13.0 6 10

Ted Ginn Jr. Kickoff Return Avg. 39.2 2 2

Tramaine Brock Interceptions 2 t-2 t-3

RANKING UP THERE

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ROSTER FACTSOldest 49ers player: K David Akers 36, 12/9/74Youngest 49ers player: LB Aldon Smith, 21, Born 11/30/89 Most seasons as a 49er: TE/LS Brian Jennings - 12 Most NFL seasons: K David Akers - 13Most Consecutive starts: 156, DT Justin Smith Most Consecutive Games Played: 177, TE/LS Brian Jennings Most Playoff Experience: 19 games, K David Akers (10-9 record)Heaviest 49er: G Mike Iupati – 331 lbs. Tallest 49er: T Alex Boone - 6-8 Shortest 49er: RB Kendall Hunter - 5-7Former 1st round draft picks: 13 – WR M. Crabtree, T A. Davis, TE V. Davis, WR B. Edwards, WR T. Ginn, G M. Iupati, CB C. Rogers, QB A. Smith, LB A. Smith, DT J. Smith, T J. Staley, S D. Whitner and LB P. Willis Pro Bowlers: 8 – K D. Akers, WR B. Edwards, C J. Goodwin, RB F. Gore, LS B. Jennings, P A. Lee, DT J. Smith and LB P. Willis Coaches who played in the NFL: 6 - Reggie Davis, Bobby Engram, Jim Harbaugh, Greg Jackson, John Morton and Tom RathmanCollege with the most 49ers: Ohio State - 4

49ERS (rank) EAGLES (rank)2-1 (1st NFC-W) Record 1-2 (4th NFC-E)

23.3 (12th) Points Per Game 26.0 (10th)213.7 (32nd) Total Offense 408.7 (6th)69.7 (30th) Rushing Offense 182.0 (2nd)144.0 (28th) Passing Offense 226.7 (19th)31:53 (11th) Possession Average 32:23 (7th)17.3 (4th) Points Allowed Per Game 25.7 (t-24th)

306.3 (7th) Total Defense 329.0 (12th)62.7 (3rd) Rushing Defense 131.3 (30th)

243.7 (16th) Passing Defense 197.7 (8th)7 (t-16th) Sacks 12 (2nd)5 (t-2nd) Interceptions 2 (t-20th)

52.8 (3rd) Punting Avg. (Gross) 42.0 (23rd)+6 (t-1st) Turnover Differential -4 (t-28th)

49ERS EAGLES PASSING YARDS Alex Smith .....................504 Michael Vick ...................605 Mike Kafka ....................... 107

RUSHING YARDSFrank Gore .................... 148 LeSean McCoy ...............345Alex Smith ........................43 Michael Vick .................... 153

RECEPTIONSVernon Davis ................... 15 Jeremy Maclin ................... 19Joshua Morgan .................7 DeSean Jackson ...............10

RECEIVING YARDSVernon Davis ................ 179 Jeremy Maclin ...............260Joshua Morgan ..............80 DeSean Jackson ............ 153

INTERCEPTIONSTramaine Brock ................2 Asante Samuel .....................1Three players .................... 1 Nnamdi Asomugha .............1

SACKSJustin Smith ...................2.0 Jason Babin ......................4.0Parys Haralson ............2.0 Cullen Jenkins .................4.0Ray McDonald ...............2.0 Trent Cole ..........................3.0

2011 COMPARISONTEAM IN 2011 Overall 2-1At Home 1-1On the Road 1-0In Primetime 0-0In Dome 0-0In September 2-1In October 0-0Vs. NFC 1-1Vs. NFC West 1-0Vs. NFC East 0-1Vs. NFC North 0-0Vs. NFC South 0-0Vs. AFC West 0-0Vs. AFC East 0-0Vs. AFC North 1-0Vs. AFC South 0-0Scoring on opening drive 0-0Scoring first 1-1Leading at half 1-1Leading after three quarters 1-1Winning time of possession 2-0Out-rushing opponent 1-1Out-passing opponent 1-0Out-gaining opponent 0-0

OFFENSE40% + 3rd down conversions 0-150% + 3rd down conversions 0-1Not throwing an INT 2-0Passing for 300+yards 0-0Having a 100+ yard rusher 0-0Having a 100+ yard receiver 1-0Scoring 20+ points 1-1Scoring 30+ points 1-0Rushing for 150+ yards 0-0Having 20+ first downs 0-0Not allowing a sack 1-0Allowing two or fewer sacks 1-0 DEFENSEOpponents less than 40% on 3rd down 2-0Opponents less than 30% on 3rd down 1-0Scoring a defensive TD 0-0Returning an INT for a TD 0-0Returning a fumble for a TD 0-0Recording 3+ sacks 1-0Recording 5+ sacks 1-0Winning the turnover battle 2-1Allowing 17 or fewer points 2-0Allowing a 100-yard rusher 0-0Allowing a 100-yard receiver 0-1Not allowing a rushing TD 2-1Not allowing a passing TD 1-0

49ERS RECORD WHEN

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IT’S A SMALL WORLDCOACHING CONNECTIONS

• Defensive coordinator Vic Fangio coached with the Indianapolis Colts (1999-2001) with Eagles offensive line coach Howard Mudd.

• 49ers running backs coach Tom Rathman and Eagles assistant head coach/offensive coordinator Marty Mornhinweg coached together with the 49ers from 1997-2000.

• Eagles offensive line coach Howard Mudd played on the offen-sive line for the 49ers from 1964-69 and later returned as a coach in 1977.

49ERS-PHILADELPHIA CONNECTIONS• Director of player personnel Tom Gamble entered the NFL as an

assistant for the Eagles player personnel department in 1996. He is the son of former Eagles president Harry Gamble.

• Defensive coordinator Vic Fangio spent the 1984 and 1985 sea-sons as a defensive assistant with the Philadelphia/Baltimore Stars of the USFL, helping the team to back-to-back league titles.

• K David Akers joined the 49ers as a free agent on 7/30/11. Ak-ers spent the previous 12 seasons (1999-2010) with Philadelphia, where he was the Eagles all-time leader in regular and postsea-son games played, points, field goals and PATs.

EAGLES-NOR CAL CONNECTIONS• Eagles head coach Andy Reid was the offensive coordinator at

San Francisco State from 1983-85.• Eagles offensive line coach Howard Mudd began his coaching ca-

reer at Cal from 1972-73. • CB Joselio Hanson, a native of Playa del Rey, CA, was originally

signed by the 49ers as a rookie free agent in 2003. He appeared in 13 games for the 49ers.

• Eagles offensive coordinator Marty Mornhinweg attended Oak Grove HS in San Jose, where he was the Northern California POY and an all-state performer.

• CB Nnamdi Asomugha (2000-02) and WR DeSean Jackson (2005-07) both played at Cal.

COLLEGIATE CONNECTIONS• TIGER TEAMMATES – 49ers CB Carlos Rogers and Eagles RB

Ronnie Brown were teammates at Auburn from 2002-04.• TIGHT TERPS – 49ers TE Vernon Davis was teammates in 2005

with Eagles LB Moise Fokou at Maryland. • THE BIG HOUSE – 49ers WR Braylon Edwards and Eagles WR

Jason Avant played on the same squad at Michigan from 1999-2001.

• MISSOURI MAGIC – 49ers LB Aldon Smith was teammates with Eagles WR Jeremy Maclin in 2008 at Missouri.

• LONGHORN LOVE – 49ers CB Tarell Brown and Eagles QB Vince Young were teammates at Texas from 2003-05.

• TROJAN TIES – 49ers G Chilo Rachal played at USC (2004-07) with Eagles T Winston Justice (2002-05), DT Mike Patterson(2001-04) and WR Steve Smith (2003-06).

• HOKIE HOMIES – 49ers WR Joshua Morgan and Eagles DE Darryl Tapp were teammates from 2004-05 at Virginia Tech.

SERIES HISTORY

Winning Year Team Score Loc.1951 Eagles 21-14 (P)1953 49ers 31-21 (SF)1956 Tie 10-10 (P)1958 49ers 30-24 (P)1959 49ers 24-14 (SF)1964 49ers 28-24 (P)1966 Eagles 35-34 (SF)1967 49ers 28-27 (P)1969 49ers 14-13 (SF)1971 49ers 31-3 (P)1973 49ers 38-28 (SF)1975 Eagles 27-17 (P)1983 Eagles 22-17 (SF)1984 49ers 21-9 (P)1985 49ers 24-13 (SF)1989 49ers 38-28 (P)

Winning Year Team Score Loc.1991 49ers 23-7 (P)1992 49ers 20-14 (SF)1993 Eagles 37-34 OT (SF)1994 Eagles 40-8 (SF)1996 49ers (w) 14-0 (SF)1997 49ers 24-12 (P)2001 49ers 13-3 (SF)2002 Eagles 38-17 (SF)2003 49ers 31-28 OT (P)2005 Eagles 42-3 (P)2006 Eagles 38-24 (SF)2008 Eagles 40-26 (SF)2009 Eagles 27-13 (PHI)2010 Eagles 27-24 (SF)(w) - NFC Wild Card

49ers Lead All-Time Series 17-12-1

Matchups: 30Series Record: 49ers lead series 17-12-149ers Road Record vs. Eagles: 49ers lead series 9-4-1First Meeting: 10/6/51, Eagles win, 21-14, at PhiladephiaLast Meeting: 10/10/10, Eagles win, 27-24, at San FranciscoCurrent Streak: Lost 5Longest 49ers Win Streak: 5 (9/23/84 - 11/29/92)Longest Eagles Win Streak: 5 (9/18/05 - Present)Most 49ers Points: 38 (Two Times), Last: 38-28, at San FranciscoMost Eagles Points: 42 (9/18/05), 42-3, at San Francisco49ers Shutouts: 1 (12/29/96), 49ers win 14-0, at San FranciscoEagles Shutouts: None

SERIES HIGHLIGHTS

NOT SO MUCH IN THE FIRST• The 49ers defense has only allowed 3 points in the 1st qtr. this

season, ranking t-1st in the NFL (Hou.).YOU SHALL NOT PASS• The 49ers are one of two teams not to allow a rushing TD this

season (Chi).GOT A GOOD HANDLE• The 49ers have only committed 2 turnovers on the year, rank-

ing t-1st in the NFL for fewest turnovers.GET OUTTA HERE• The 49ers defense has allowed only 30.8 pct. on 3rd down con-

versions, ranking t-4th in the NFL.EFFECTIVE IN THE 30• QB Alex Smith has a QB rating of 127.9 inside the opponents 30-

yd. line, ranking 2nd in the NFL.WHAT BLITZ?• Smith has registered a QB rating of 143.1 against the blitz this

season, ranking 3rd in the NFL.NICE DECISIONS• Since 10/17/10, Smith has appeared in 9 games and completed

137 of 226 atts. for 1,645 yds., 10 TDs and 2 INTs. His INT pct. of 0.9 is the lowest in the NFL (min. 224 atts.) over that time span.

A C-NOTE FOR VERNON• TE Vernon Davis registered his 6th career 100-yd. game last

week at Cin., tying TE Monty Stickles for the most 100-yd. games by a TE in franchise history.

NIFTY 50• With FGs from 55 and 54 yds. in each of the last two games, K

David Akers tied his career high for most FGs from 50+ yds. in a season (5 times, last time in 2008).

THIS & THAT

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OFFENSEWR 19 Ted Ginn Jr.

Led the team in recepts. vs. Dal. on 9/18 (4 recepts. for 38 yds.).Ginn became the 1st player in franchise history to return a kickoff and punt for a TD in the same game vs. Sea. (9/11).

-OR-WR Braylon Edwards

Signed by the 49ers on August 4. Originally drafted in 2005 (3rd overall) has appeared in 90 games (84 starts), tallying 326 recepts. for 5,142 yds. and 39 TDs.Played in his 1st game with the 49ers vs. Sea. (9/11), hauling in 3 recepts. for 27 yds.

LT 74 Joe StaleyStarted all 53 games in which he has appeared since being drafted in the 1st round (28th overall) of the 2007 NFL Draft.Only offensive lineman on the roster to score a TD [vs. NYJ (12/7/08) - fumble recovery in the endzone].

LG 77 Mike IupatiBecame the highest drafted guard in franchise history when he was selected in the 1st round (17th overall) of the 2010 NFL Draft.Was the first rookie to start at LG on opening day for the 49ers since G Leo Nomellini vs. NY Yanks (9/17/50).

C 59 Jonathan GoodwinSigned by the 49ers on August 3 and started his first game with San Francisco vs. Sea. (9/11).Was selected to the 2010 Pro Bowl.

RG 62 Chilo RachalA 2nd round draft pick (39th overall) in the 2008 NFL Draft, has played in 42 games (38 starts).

RT 76 Anthony DavisHas started every game at RT with the 49ers.Along with G Mike Iupati, became just the 3rd set of rookies to start every game on the offensive line since the 16-game schedule was instituted in 1978 (T Adam Meadows and T Tarik Glenn in 1997 with Ind. & C Nick Mangold and T D’Brickshaw Ferguson in 2006 with NYJ).

TE 85 Vernon DavisRecorded his 6th career 100-yd game at Cin. (last at GB - 12/5/10 - 126 yds.), finishing the day with 8 recepts. for 114 yds.Became the 1st TE in franchise history to lead the team in recepts., rec. yds. and rec. TDs in consecutive seasons.In 2010, earned Pro Bowl recognition as an alternate after being named a starter in the 2009 game.

WR 84 Joshua MorganHauled in 2 recepts. for 17 yds. last week at Cin. (9/25) and ranks 2nd on the team with 7 recepts. for 80 yds.Set a career high with 698 rec. yds. in 2010.

FB 44 Moran NorrisHas helped lead the way for five, 1,000 yd. rushers in his career, including 2006-07 & 2009 with the 49ers (RB Frank Gore).

RB 21 Frank GoreHis 6,562 rus. yds. ranks 3rd in franchise history.Named the team’s 2010 Bill Walsh Award winner as voted on by the coaches, given annually to the 49ers team MVP for his outstand-ing individual performance. It marked his second time earning the award (2006).In 2010, earned Pro Bowl recognition as an alternate.

QB 11 Alex SmithCurrently ranks 4th in the NFL with a 68.9 completion percentage trailing only Packers QB Aaron Rodgers, Patriots QB Tom Brady and Titans QB Matt Hasselbeck.Has a QB rating of 127.9 inside the opponents 30-yd. line, ranking 2nd in the NFL.

PROBABLE STARTERSDEFENSE

LDT 91 Ray McDonaldRegistered his 7th career sack vs. Dal. (9/25), marking the 1st time he has recorded sacks in back-to-back weeks since 9/13/09 at Arz. and 9/20/09 vs. Sea.Has played in 59 games (12 starts), registering 169 tackles, 7 sacks, 1 INT (returned for a touchdown), 2 FRs (one returned for a touch-down) and 8 PDs.

NT 90 Isaac SopoagaIs part of a defensive unit that has allowed only 62.7 rush. yds. per game in 2011, which ranks 3rd in the NFL.Tied his career high with 1.5 sacks during the 2010 season (2006 & 2007).

RDT 94 Justin SmithPosted his 11th career multi-sack game vs. Sea. (9/11), dropping QB Tarvaris Jackson in the 1st quarter. Smith was able to get to Jackson again in the 4th quarter for his 2nd sack of the day.Has an active streak of 158 consecutive starts, ranking 5th among all active NFL players, 3rd among defensive players and 1st among defensive linemen.

LOLB 55 Ahmad BrooksHas played in 45 career games (11 starts).Now in his 3rd season with the 49ers, has tallied 14.0 sacks, 6 FFs and 1 INT.

ILB 53 NaVorro BowmanIs 1st on the team with 35 total tackles in 2011, and led the team with 13 tackles at Cin. (9/25).In 4 career starts, has tallied 50 tackles and 4 TFLs.

ILB 52 Patrick WillisCurrently is 2nd on the team in tackles through the first 3 weeks with 33.Became the first 49er since Ronnie Lott to be selected to the Pro Bowl in each of his first four seasons. The four-time Pro Bowl and All-Pro selection has led the NFL in tack-les in two of his four seasons (2007, ‘09).

ROLB 98 Parys HaralsonWith 2.0 sacks vs. Sea. (9/11), ranks t-2nd in franchise history with LB Julian Peterson for the most sacks by a linebacker with 21.5. He trails only LB Tim Harris (26.0).Registered a FF on each of his two sacks vs. Sea. (9/11), marking the first two FFs of his career.

LCB 22 Carlos RogersRecorded 2 PDs at Cin. (9/25) last week. His 81 PDs rank t-10th in the NFL since 2005.Had his 1st INT as a member of the 49ers at Cin. (9/25).Originally drafted in the first round (9th overall) by the Redskins in the 2005 NFL Draft, Rogers has played in 81 games (71 starts), registering 301 tackles, 9 INTs (returning 1 for a TD), 4 FFs, 3 FRs and 81 PDs.

RCB 25 Tarell BrownNow in his 5th season with the club, has played in 58 career games (8 starts). During the last game of the 2010 season, registered his 1st career INT vs. Arz. (1/2/11), returning it 62 yds. for his first-career TD.

FS 38 Dashon GoldsonStarted his 1st game of the season at Cin. and recorded 8 tackles in the 13-8 victory.Started all 16 games in 2010, and ranked 4th on the team and led all 49ers DBs with 102 tackles.Notched his 1st career TD, returning an INT off Seahawks QB Matt Hasselbeck 39 yds. to the end zone vs. Sea. (12/12/10).

SS 31 Donte WhitnerNotched his 1st INT as a Niner vs. Dal. (9/18). It marked his 1st INT since 12/5/10 at Min. as a member of the Buffalo Bills.Signed by the 49ers on August 6, Whitner started all 16 games in 2010 and posted a career-high 140 tackles to go along with 7 PDs, 1 INT, 1 FF, 1 FR and a half sack.

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The 49ers defense has made a point of getting off the field quickly. Since 2009, the 49ers rank 2nd in the NFL, forcing op-ponents to 3-n-outs in 27.9% of their drives. This year, the 49ers rank t-1st in the NFL, having forced their opponents to 12, 3-n-out drives.

MAKING IT QUICK

OPPONENT 3-n-OUT DRIVES 2009-11 Team Def. Series 3-&-Out Drives Pct. 1. New York Jets 430 134 31.2% 2. San Francisco 438 122 27.9% 3. Minnesota 407 113 27.8% 4. Seattle 422 111 26.3% 5. San Diego 382 100 26.2%

Through the first three weeks of the 2011 season, the 49ers are +6 in the turnover ratio, ranking t-1st in the NFL, including winning the turnover battle in each of the first three games. Since 2009, the 49ers are 14-2 when winning the turnover battle.

WIN THE BATTLE

2011 NFL TURNOVER RATIO LEADERS Takeaways Give Aways Team Fum. INTs Total Fum. INTs Total Ratio1t. San Francisco 3 5 8 1 1 2 +6

Detroit 4 4 8 0 2 2 +6 Baltimore 5 5 10 2 2 4 +64. Buffalo 3 6 9 0 4 4 +55t. Green Bay 2 5 7 2 1 3 +4

NY Giants 3 3 6 0 2 2 +4

2011 OPP. 3-N-OUT LEADERS TEAM 3-n-outs 1t. San Francisco 12 Detroit 12 Jacksonville 12 4t. Chicago 11 Philadelphia 11 Seattle 11

Below are highlights of selected 49ers against the Eagles during their careers.

WR MICHAEL CRABTREE• Registered 9 recepts. for 105 yds. and 1 TD vs. Phi. (10/10/10), mark-

ing his first career 100-yd. performance. His 9 recepts. also set a new career high. Became the first 49ers wide receiver to register a 100-yd. game since WR Isaac Bruce at Dal. (11/24/08 - 8 recepts. for 125 yds. and 1 TD).

• Along with TE Vernon Davis (104 rec. yds.), the duo became the first set of 49ers teammates to eclipse the 100-yd. receiving plateau in the same game since 1/3/00 at Atl. [WR Jerry Rice (143 rec. yds.) and WR J.J. Stokes (130 rec. yds.)].

TE VERNON DAVIS• Since 2008, Davis ranks 1st among all TEs in both yds./recept. (15.9

– min. 8 recepts.) and rec. yds./gm. (74.0 – min. 3 games) vs. Phi.• Registered 5 recepts. for 104 yds. and 1 TD vs. Phi. (10/10/10). Along

with WR Michael Crabtree (105 rec. yds.), the duo became the first set of 49ers teammates to eclipse the 100-yd. receiving plateau in the same game since 1/3/00 at Atl. [WR Jerry Rice (143 rec. yds.) and WR J.J. Stokes (130 rec. yds.)].

WR TED GINN JR. • As a member of the Miami Dolphins, registered an 87-yd. punt re-

turn for a TD at Phi. (11/18/07). Ginn Jr. is the only player to return a punt for a TD vs. Phi. since 2007.

RB FRANK GORE• Since 2008, Gore is the only player in the NFL to register 2, 100-yd.

games against Phi. [101 yds. vs. Phi. (10/12/08) and 107 yds. at Phi. (12/20/09)].

• Since 2006, Gore has avg. 78.0 yds./gm. vs. Phi., the most by any player in the NFL over that span (min. 4 games).

• Rushed for 107 yds. on 16 carries at Phi. (12/20/09), becoming the first player in 20 regular season games to rush for over 100 yds. against the Eagles.

WR JOSHUA MORGAN• Set a career-high with 7 recepts. for 61 yds. and 1 TD, while adding

122 kickoff return yds. at Phi. (12/20/09). His 183 all-purpose yds. were also a career-high.

CB CARLOS ROGERS• As a member of the Washington Redskins, totaled 6 tackles and 1 FF

at Phi. (10/3/10), helping limit DeSean Jackson and Jeremy Maclin to a combined 4 catches for 34 yds.

• As a member of the Redskins, recorded a career-high 12 tackles at Phi. (9/17/07).

TOP PERFORMANCES

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The 49ers defense has been extremely stingy against the run since 2009, and has continued to be a strong suit of the defense. Since 2009, the Niners rank 4th in the NFL with 93.9 rush-ing yds. allowed per game, and rank 1st in the NFL with an op-ponent average of 3.51 yds. per carry. After finishing 3rd in the NFL in opposing rushing yards per carry at 3.64 in 2009, the Niners ranked 2nd in the NFL in 2010, allowing 3.46 yds. per carry, in 2010. In 2011, the 49ers are allow-ing just 2.94 yds. per carry, ranking 2nd in the NFL.

Over the last three seasons, the 49ers rank 1st in the NFL for car-ries allowed that gained 4+ yds. (35.1 pct.). In 2010, San Francisco al-lowed only 33.8 pct. of opponent rushes to go for 4+ yds, which ranked 2nd in the NFL. The Niners finished 2nd in the NFL over the past two seasons in opponent rushes of 4+ yards.

The Niners rank 1st in the NFC and 2nd in the NFL with only 74 car-ries of 10+ yds. allowed since 2009. In 2011, San Francisco ranks 3rd in the NFL, allowing just 3 carries of 10+ yds. Since 2009, San Francisco has not allowed an opposing rusher to gain more than 43 yds. on a single rush. Only the Steelers (37 yds.) and Packers (42 yds.) have allowed shorter rushing gains, which ranks the Niners 2nd in the NFC and 3rd in the NFL.

PERCENTAGE OF OPPONENT RUSHES OF 4+ YARDS, NFL (2009-11)

TEAM Rushes 4+Yards Pct. 1. San Francisco 937 329 35.1 2. Baltimore 890 331 37.2 3. Pittsburgh 770 291 37.8

OPPONENT RUSHING YARDS PER GAME, NFL (2009-11)

TEAM RUSHING YPG 1. Pittsburgh 78.3 2. Minnesota 92.3 3. Baltimore 92.8 4. San Francisco 93.9 5. Green Bay 95.3

2011 OPP. 10+ YARD CARRIES, NFL

TEAM 10+ Carries 1. Dallas 1 2. Green Bay 2 3. San Francisco 3 4. Tennessee 4 5t. Seven teams 6

OPP. 10+ YARD CARRIES, NFL (2009-11)

TEAM 10+ Carries 1. Pittsburgh 63 2. San Francisco 75 3. Baltimore 82 4t. San Diego 83 Dallas 83

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OPP. YARDS PER CARRY, NFL (2011)

TEAM AVG 1. Cincinnati 2.90 2. San Francisco 2.94 3. Dallas 2.97 4. Green Bay 3.06 5. Tennessee 3.07

OPP. YARDS PER CARRY, NFL (2009-11)

TEAM AVG 1. San Francisco 3.51 2. Pittsburgh 3.56 3. Baltimore 3.65 4. New York Jets 3.78 5. Minnesota 3.85

SHUTTIN’ ‘EM DOWN The 49ers take pride in having a tough run defense as is evident by the run-stopping numbers put up since 2007. For just the 5th time in fran-chise history and first time since 1997, the 49ers defense did not allow a 100-yd. rusher during the 2010 season (1997, 1990, 1971 and 1967). San Francisco was one of only two teams in 2010 that did not allowed a 100-yd. rusher (Pittsburgh).

Not only did the Niners not al-low a 100-yd. rusher in 2010, the defense has not allowed a run-ning back to gain over 100 yds. in the past 25 games. The 25-game streak is the longest active streak in the NFL to date.

• Below is a list of the leading rusher for each of the 49ers opponents in the 25 game streak.

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CONSECUTIVE GAMES NOT ALLOWING A 100-YD. RUSHER

TEAM GAMES 1. San Francisco 25 2. Chicago 12

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SEASONS IN 49ERS HISTORY NOT ALLOWING A 100-YD. RUSHER

YEAR GAMES 1. 2010 16 2. 1997 16 3. 1990 16 4. 1971 14 5. 1967 14

LEADING RUSHERS VS. THE 49ERS SINCE 11/29/09

DATE LEADING RUSHER TEAM RUSH. YARDS 11/29/09 Maurice Jones-Drew vs. Jacksonville 75 12/6/09 Julius Jones at Seattle 67 12/14/09 Chris Wells vs. Arizona 79 12/20/09 Leonard Weaver at Philadelphia 52 12/27/09 Maurice Morris vs. Detriot 37 1/3/10 Steven Jackson at St. Louis 63 9/12/10 Justin Forsett at Seattle 43 9/20/10 Pierre Thomas New Orleans 46 9/26/10 Jamaal Charles at Kansas City 97 10/3/10 Michael Turner at Atlanta 50 10/10/10 LeSean McCoy Philadelphia 92 10/17/10 Michael Bush Oakland 47 10/24/10 DeAngelo Williams at Carolina 44 10/31/10 Knowshon Moreno Denver 40 11/14/10 Stephen Jackson St. Louis 81 11/21/10 LeGarrette Blount Tampa Bay 82 11/29/10 Chris Wells at Arizona 13 12/5/10 John Starks at Green Bay 73 12/12/10 Michael Robinson Seattle 33 12/16/10 Ryan Mathews at San Diego 56 12/26/10 Stephen Jackson at St. Louis 48 1/2/10 Tim Hightower vs. Arizona 30 9/11/11 Marshawn Lynch vs. Seattle 33 9/18/11 Felix Jones vs. Dallas 25 9/25/11 Cedric Benson at Cincinnati 64

KEEPIN’ IT UNDER 100

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Currently in his 5th season in the NFL, LB Patrick Willis has accumulated the following ac-colades - 4 Pro Bowl appearances, 3 All-Pro se-lections, 2 NFL Alumni Linebacker of the Year Awards and NFL Defensive Rookie of the Year. This year his teammates have already named him a 2011 team captain.

On May 5, 2010, the 49ers and arguably the game’s best defensive player agreed on a 5-year contract extension, ensuring that he will be donning the Red & Gold through the 2016 sea-son. “We will bring the sixth championship back here and I’m just thank-ful today to know that I will be able to be here to do that,” said Willis.

Willis’ Career Highlights:

All-Pro honors in 2007 as he was named the AP Defensive Rookie of the Year. He became first 49ers defensive rookie to make the Pro Bowl and first-team All-Pro since CB Ronnie Lott in 1981. He joined CB Bruce Taylor (1970), DT Dana Stubblefield (1993) and DT Bryant Young (1994) as 49ers who have won the Defensive Rookie of the Year award.

career sacks.

since 2007.

20-or-more stops in 4 contests.

Bowl in each of his first four seasons.

The unquestioned leader of the 49ers, Willis’ soft spoken demeanor and unmatched work ethic shows the other players in the locker room what it takes to be the best.

“There’s a lot of different leaders,” said Willis, “whether it’s vocal, whether it’s physical, but I’ve always been the type of person – I won’t ask you to do something that I can’t do. I won’t get on you for something that I won’t do myself. I will speak at times, when it’s necessary, but I

don’t believe in talking just because you can. I believe in doing it the right way. I respect them as I want those guys to respect me. If it’s necessary, then yes, I will. And vice versa.”

Willis plays the game with a fury and a passion that no one can match. His determination to work harder than everybody else day in and day out has been noticed by people throughout the NFL.

“If he stays on the path that he’s on right now, he will land in the Hall of Fame,” said NBC analyst Cris Collinsworth.

“In my opinion, I think he’s going to be on the best to play the game with his size, strength and speed combination and how he plays the game,” said Minnesota Vikings RB Adrian Peterson. “He’s got that deadly sting. I love Patrick Willis. I love the way he plays ball. He plays ball just like me. He’s the best defensive player in the league at his position - not to take anything away from Ray Lewis; I think even-tually he will be better than Ray Lewis. I think we play the game with the same passion. He’s a freak. He’s 245, (runs a) 4.3. He’s a perfect prototype for a linebacker.”

And to think Willis is only 26 years old and just finished his fourth season in the league.

“People think they’ve seen the best I’ve had to offer and they haven’t by far,” said Willis. “There so much more improvement in my game that I have to get to and I’m willing to work every day to get to that point, but the best is yet to be seen, by myself or my teammates or this team in general.”

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(Statistics taken from NFL Gamebook) Player G Total Solo Ast 1. Patrick Willis, SF 66 617 476 141 2. London Fletcher, Was. 67 561 388 173 3. Jon Beason, Car. 65 542 420 122 4. Ray Lewis, Bal. 65 536 386 150 5. Barrett Ruud, TB/Ten. 66 530 387 143

MOST TACKLES, NFL, 2007-PRESENT

“People think they’ve seen the best I’ve had to offer and they

WHERE THERE’S A WILLIS THERE’S A WAY

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Since 2007, the 49ers run de-fense has been one of the most stout groups in the NFL. From 2007-11, the Niners rank 2nd in the NFC and 4th in the NFL in opposing rushing average per carry at 3.66 yds.

From 2007 through 2011, the 49ers have allowed a 3.64 average rushing gain per carry, which is the 3rd best total in franchise history over a five-year span.

OPP. RUSHING AVG. PERCARRY, NFL (2007-11)

TEAM AVG.

1. Baltimore 3.422. Minnesota 3.553. Pittsburgh 3.59 4. San Francisco 3.64 5. New York Jets 3.87

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BEST 49ERS RUSHING DEFENSE OVER 5-YEAR SPAN

Year AVG1. 1994-98 3.582. 1995-99 3.623. 2007-11 3.644. 1974-78 3.655. 1993-97 3.66

THE RUN DOWN

The 49ers run defense has been one of the strong points on the de-fensive side of the ball, since 2010. The Niners rank 1st in the NFC and 2nd in the NFL by allowing only 3.29 yds. per rush on first down.

After allowing only 3.29 yds. per rush on first down, the 49ers buckle down even more on second down by allowing only 3.19 yds. per rush, ranking 1st in the NFL, since 2010. The stout run defense on first and

second down was a major reason why the Niners were able to not allow a 100-yd. rusher in the last 25 games.

RUSHING DEFENSE ON FIRST DOWN, NFL (2010-11)

TEAM AVG. 1. Pittsburgh 3.06 2. San Francisco 3.29 3. Miami 3.59 4. Chicago 3.61 5. New York Jets 3.63

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RUSHING DEFENSE ON SECOND DOWN, NFL (2010-11)

TEAM AVG. 1. San Francisco 3.19 2. Seattle 3.51 3. Miami 3.55 4. Pittsburgh 3.62 5. Tennessee 3.72

NOWHERE TO RUN

The 49ers defense has been stellar in the red zone since the start of 2010, giving up only 2.35 yds. per play, ranking 4th in the NFL. The Niners only allow a mere 1.95 yards per rush in the red zone to rank 4th in the NFL. San Francisco also ranks 8th in the NFL in passing yds. per play, registering 2.64 yds. allowed through the air.

OPPONENT RUSHING YARDS PER PLAY IN RED ZONE 2010-11

TEAM AVG. 1. New Orleans 1.82 2. Tennessee 1.89 3. Carolina 1.91 4. San Francico 1.95 5. Dallas 2.04

OPPONENT YARDS PER PLAY IN RED ZONE 2010-11

TEAM AVG. 1. Arizona 2.10 2. Green Bay 2.14 3. Chicago 2.27 4. San Francisco 2.35 5. Carolina 2.39

1. Green Bay 1.68 2. Arizona 1.92 3. Chicago 2.18 4. Cincinnati 2.25 5. Seattle 2.45

6. San Diego 2.46 7. Cleveland 2.59 8. San Francisco 2.64 9. Denver 2.78 10. Miami 2.91

OPPONENT PASSING YARDS PER PLAY IN RED ZONE 2010-11

IN THE ZONE

San Francisco has made a habit of forcing teams into third-and-long on many occasions since 2010. When the Niners got their opponents in 3-and-6-or-more, they did not al-low them to convert first downs very often. The 49ers ranked 3rd in the NFL by allowing only 21.0 percent of opponents to gain a first down when facing third and 6+.

OPP. 3RD-AND-LONG CONV. SINCE 2010

TEAM > 6 YD. PCT 1. Cincinnati 19.2 2. Arizona 21.0 3. San Francisco 21.0 4. New Orleans 22.0 5. Chicago 22.8

DOWN & OUT

The 49ers have been a physical force over the past three seasons, stripping the ball from QBs and ball carriers. With 37 FFs dating back to 2009, the 49ers rank 3rd in the NFL during that time span. The team has received hard hits from all over the field, constantly jarring the ball loose. This season, the 49ers rank t-6th in the NFL with 4 FFs and LB Parys Haralson ranks t-1st in the NFL with 2 FFs.

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FORCED FUMBLES, NFL (2009-11)

TEAM FF 1. New York Giants 51 2. Chicago 48 3t. San Francisco 37 Detroit 37 5. New Orleans 36

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PHYSICAL FORCE

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• In 2010, San Francisco only allowed 416 rushing yds. vs. the NFC West division. The 416 rushing yds. allowed ranks 3rd all-time in fran-chise history since 1960 for fewest rushing yds. allowed vs. own division in a single season.

• By allowing only 416 rushing yds. vs. the NFC West, the Niners rank 5th in the NFL for fewest rushing yards al-lowed against division opponents in a single season dating back to 2005.

From 2009-11, the 49ers defense has been particularly aggressive when playing its divisional opponents, allowing an average of only 14.5 points per game. The 49ers rank 1st in the NFC and 2nd in the NFL by allowing 14.5 points per game within a team’s own division, since 2009.

POINTS ALLOWED PER GAME VS. OWN DIVISION, NFL (2009-11) TEAM PA PPG Allowed 1. Baltimore 160 12.3 2. San Francisco 188 14.5 3. Green Bay 209 16.1 4. Cincinnati 210 16.2 5. Pittsburgh 217 16.7 While limiting points against their divisional foes, the 49ers defense racked up 44 sacks over the past two seasons, a total that ranks 1st in the NFL for teams playing within their division during that time span.

Since 2007, the Niners defense ranks 2nd in the NFL with 76 sacks against divisional opponents. The Niners have also picked off opposing divisional QBs 26 times over that time span.

San Francisco currently ranks 2nd in the NFL by al-lowing only 3.3 ypc, dating back to 2007. The 49ers have only al-lowed 11 rushing TDs against divisional opponents dating back to 2007, which ranks t-2nd in the NFL. San Francis-co’s defense has also only allowed 87.9 rushing yds. per game against division foes, ranking 2nd in the NFC in the NFL, since 2007.

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SACKS VS. OWN DIVISION, NFL (2007-11)

TEAM SACKS 1. Seattle 78 2. San Francisco 76 3t. Pittsburgh 74 New England 74 5. San Diego 70

SACKS VS. OWN DIVISION (2009-11) TEAM SACKS 1. San Francisco 44 2t. Pittsburgh 39 Oakland 39 Arizona 39 5. Minnesota 38

OPP. RUSHING YPC VS. OWN DIV.(2007-11)

TEAM AVG 1. Baltimore 3.2 2. San Francisco 3.3 3. Minnesota 3.5 4. Pittsbugh 3.6 5. New York Jets 3.7

San Francisco’s run defense over the past three seasons has been remarkable, especially against the NFC West. It is tough in the NFL to beat the same team twice in a season, let alone limit their offensive production on the ground in each game. The Niners have been able to limit their divisional opponents’ rushing efforts, leading the NFL in numerous run defense categories. • Since 2009, the 49ers defense has only allowed 960 yds. rushing

vs. their own division, ranking the team 1st in the NFL during that time span.

• The 49ers also rank 1st in the NFL in rushing yds. per game allowed vs. their own division by giving up only 73.8 yds. per game.

RUSH DEFENSE VS. OWN DIVISION (2009-11)

TEAM GAMES ATTS. YDS. YDS./GAME 1. San Francisco 13 293 960 73.8 2. Minnesota 12 319 1,141 87.8 2. Seattle 14 326 1,291 92.2 3. Pittsburgh 13 323 1,213 93.3 5. Cincinnati 13 316 1,232 94.8

OPP. RUSHING YDS./GAME(2007-11)

TEAM Yds./Gm. 1. Minnesota 81.9 2. San Francisco 87.9 3. Baltimore 88.0 4. Pittsburgh 88.4 5. Seattle 93.0

OPP. RUSHING TDs VS. OWN DIV. (2007-11)

TEAM RUSHING TDs 1. Minnesota 7 2t. San Francisco 11 Baltimore 11 Green Bay 11 Pittsburgh 11

FEWEST RUSHING YDS. ALLOWED IN 49ERS HISTORY VS. OWN DIVISION

YEAR RUSH. YDS 1. 1989 371 2. 1990 414 3. 2010 416 4. 1994 438 5. 1992 445 6. 2009 480

2005.FEWEST RUSHING YDS. IN SEASON VS. OWN DIVISION SINCE 2005

TEAM YEAR RUSH. YDS 1. Minnesota 2006 240 2. Pittsburgh 2010 313 3. Baltimore 2006 350 4. Minnesota 2007 360 5. San Francisco 2010 416

A DOMINANT DEFENSE IN THE DIVISION

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Gore broke RB Joe Perry’s franchise record of 20 career 100-yd. games after registering his 21st career 100-yd. rus. performance against NO (9/20/10). Gore added to his franchise record vs. Oak. (10/17) rushing for 149 yds. on 25 carries, and at Car. (10/24) notching 102 yds. on 19 carries. Gore tied his career high with his 3rd consecutive 100-yd. rushing performance vs. Den. (10/31), rushing for 118 yds. and 1 TD on 29 carries.

ALL-TIME 49ERS 100-YD RUSHING PERFORMANCES Player Years 100-Yd. Gm. 1. Frank Gore 2005-2011 (7) 24 2. Joe Perry 1950-1960, 63 (12) 20 3. Garrison Hearst 1997-2003 (5) 16

On August 31, 2011, Gore signed a three-year contract extension with the 49ers that will keep him with the club through at least 2014. He was later voted a team captain for the 2011 season by his teammates.

During his tenure in San Francisco, Gore has been more than productive after being selected in the 3rd round (65th overall) of the 2005 NFL Draft. His productivity in seven years has put him in position to be-come the franchise’s all-time leading rusher in just his sev-enth season.

Current franchise leading rusher and Hall of Fame run-ning back Joe Perry racked up 7,344 yards in his 12 NFL seasons with the Niners (1950-60, ‘63).

Ken Willard5,930 yards

Frank Gore6,562 yards

Roger Craig7, 064 yards

Joe Perry7, 344 yards

49ERS ALL-TIME LEADING RUSHERS

RB Frank Gore now has 6,562 career rus. yds., becoming just the 3rd 49er to rush for over 6,000 yds. in team history.

Gore surpassed WR Terrell Owens in Week 1 vs. Sea. to move into 3rd place in all-time yards from scrimmage in franchise history.

Throughout Gore’s seven seasons in the NFL, he has averaged 4.6 yds./carry, which ranks 4th in the NFL over that time span (min. 1,000 carries). His 4.6 career avg. ranks 4th in franchise history (min. 750 atts.) among running backs.

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ALL-TIME 49ERS RUSHING LIST Player Years Yds. 1. Joe Perry 1950-1960, 63 (12) 7,344 2. Roger Craig 1983-1990 (8) 7,064 3. Frank Gore 2005-2011 (7) 6,562 4. Ken Willard 1965-1973 (9) 5,930 5. Garrison Hearst 1997-2003 (5) 5,535

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ALL-TIME 49ERS YARDS FROM SCRIMMAGE Player Total Yds. Rush Receive 1. Rice, Jerry (1985-2000) 19,872 625 19,247 2. Craig, Roger (1983-90) 11,506 7,064 4,442 3. Gore, Frank (2005-11) 8,881 6,562 2,319 4. Owens, Terrell (1996-03) 8,734 162 8,572 5. Perry, Joe (1950-60, 1963) 8,624 7,344 1,280

NFL RUSHING AVG. LEADERS SINCE 2005 (min. 1,000 carries) Player Attempts Yds. Avg.

1. Adrian Peterson, Min. 1,256 6,078 4.82. Michael Turner, SD/Atl. 1,138 5,328 4.73. Maurice Jones-Drew, Jax. 1,207 5,555 4.64. Frank Gore, SF 1,430 6,562 4.65. Brian Westbrook, Phi./SF 1,045 4,717 4.5

ALL-TIME 49ERS RUSHING AVG. LEADERS (min. 750 carries) Player Attempts Yds. Avg.

1. Joe Perry 1,475 7,344 5.02. Hugh McElhenny 877 4,288 4.93. Garrison Hearst 1,189 5,535 4.74. Frank Gore 1,430 6,562 4.65. J.D. Smith 1,007 4,370 4.3

CLIMBING THE CHARTS THE QUEST FOR 7,345

“Frank is a true 49er. I’ve said that from when I first got here, that’s how I thought I would feel about Frank Gore. Now I know how I feel about Frank Gore. The guy is awe-some. Somebody should do a movie. Somebody should do the Frank Gore story, because it’s an awesome story. He’s a guy that really deserves all the credit. The way he’s worked. He’s so astute on so many fronts, and a guy that makes his life, changes his life, impacts other people in a positive way. He’s a team guy, he’s a great football player, and he’s got a big heart, most of all that’s what I like about Frank. He’s just enjoyable to be around. He works his tail off. I love his work ethic.” – 49ers Head Coach Jim Harbaugh

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On August 4, WR Braylon Edwards made the cross-country move to the Golden State to don the red and gold. A 7-year pro out of Michigan, Edwards is a big-bodied wideout who has been hauling in eye opening catches since he was taken 3rd overall in the 2005 NFL Draft. Edwards has been making noise every year in the league, including in 2007 when he hauled in 16 TDs and earned a Pro Bowl appearance. Since 2005, he ranks 2nd in the NFL for most receiving TDs in a single season.

Since 2005, Edwards ranks 2nd in the NFL averaging 15.7 yds. per recept. (min. of 300 recepts.).

MAKING NOISE

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MOST RECEIVING TDs IN A SEASON (Since 2007)

Player Year TDs 1. Randy Moss, NE 2007 23 2. Braylon Edwards, SF 2007 16 3t. Dwayne Bowe, KC 2010 15 Terrell Owens, Cin. 2007 15 5t. Vernon Davis, SF 2009 13 Larry Fitzgerald, Arz. 2009 13 Randy Moss, NE 2009 13 Terrell Owens, Cin. 2006 13

“He’s got the size and the body and know-how to bounce people up and make tight-area catches. He brings a physical nature when he caught the 9-yard stop route and turned back up field and ran physi-cally and with authority. That was impressive.” – 49ers Head Coach Jim Harbaugh

HIGHEST AVERAGE PER RECEPTION IN NFL(Since 2005)

Player Rec. Yds. TDs Avg.1. Greg Jennings, GB 340 5,485 42 16.12. Braylon Edwards, SF 330 5,190 39 15.73. Lee Evans, Bal. 331 5,136 34 15.54. Terrell Owens, Cin. 409 6,162 58 15.15. Randy Moss, Min./NE 380 5,716 63 15.0

Not only is RB Frank Gore a dangerous threat on the ground, but he also provides unique talents catching the ball out of the backfield. The do-it-all running back ranks in the top 5 in numerous receiving categories at his position. Since his rookie campaign in 2005, Gore cur-rently ranks 5th in the NFL with 276 recepts.

Gore ranks 4th among running backs in the NFL in rec. yds. with 2,319.

Since 2005, Gore also ranks t-6th in the NFL with 9 receiving TDs by a running back.

DUAL THREAT

MOST RECEPTIONS BY A RUNNING BACK (2005-11)

Player Recepts. 1. Brian Westbrook, Phi./SF 323 2. Steven Jackson, StL 308 3. Reggie Bush, NO/Mia. 305 4. LaDainian Tomlinson, SD/NYJ 303 5. Frank Gore, SF 276

MOST RECEIVING YDS BY A RUNNING BACK (2005-11)

Player Rec. Yds. 1. Brian Westbrook, Phi./SF 2,819 2. LaDainian Tomlinson, SD/NYJ 2,497 3. Steven Jackson, StL 2,481 4. Frank Gore, SF 2,319 5. Reggie Bush, NO/Mia. 2,213

MOST RECEIVING TDs BY A RUNNING BACK (2005-11)

Player Rec. TDs 1. Brian Westbrook, Phi./SF 20 2. Reggie Bush, NO/MIA 13 3t. Mike Sellers, Was. 12 Darren Sproles, SD/NO 12 5. LaDainian Tomlinson, SD/NYJ 10 6t. Frank Gore, SF 9 Joseph Addai, Ind. 9

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One of the most athletic and versatile play-ers in the NFL, TE Vernon Davis has emerged as a premier tight end. Davis earned Pro Bowl rec-ognition as an alternate at season’s end last year after having been named a starter for the annual game a year prior.

Season Highlights:

12/5/10 - 126 yds.), finishing the day with 8 recepts. for 114 yds.

Among NFL TEs Since 2009...

which ranks t-5th among all players.

gm.

the catch.

Davis’ Career Highlights:

(3,190) and TDs (29).

with 78 recepts., 965 rec. yds. and 13 TD recepts., in 2009. He was one of only two TEs to lead their team in all three categories (Kel-len Winlsow, TB). His rec. yds. and TD totals were both single-season records among 49ers tight ends all-time.

the NFL record for most in a season by a TE (Antonio Gates - 13 TDs in 2004). Davis’ TD re-cepts. also were tied for the most in the NFL with Patriots WR Randy Moss and Cardinals WR Larry Fitzgerald, making him the first tight end in the Super Bowl era to lead (or tie for the lead) league in TD re-cepts.Has 6, 100-yd. rec. games, which ranks t-1st in franchise history among TEs (TE Monty Stickles - 6).

SINGLE-SEASON REC. YDS. BY 49ERS TIGHT END

Player Yds. 1. Vernon Davis, 2009 965 2. Vernon Davis, 2010 914 3. Eric Johnson, 2004 825

eaoag

SAN FRANCISCO 49ERS RECEIVING LEADERS AMONG TIGHT ENDS Player Rec. Yds. TDs 1. Brent Jones (1987-97) 417 5,195 33 2. Vernon Davis (2006-11) 252 3,190 29

SHINING STAR

MOST TDS IN A SEASON BY A TIGHT END IN NFL HISTORY

Player TDs1t. Vernon Davis, 2009 13

Antonio Gates, 2004 133t. Todd Christensen, 1983 12

Mike Ditka, 1961 12 Jerry Smith, 1967 12 Wesley Walls, 1999 12

TE Vernon Davis dubbed it the “11-85 Connection,” speaking of his relationship with QB Alex Smith. “It’s just talking about the chemistry,” said Davis. “When I first got here, it was getting to know Alex and trying to figure him out and get-ting to know who he really was. I think we’ve come a long way as far as the chemistry.” Davis has accounted for 20 of Smith’s 53 career TD passes (37.7%), the 2nd highest percentage among all active teammates. The two have connected on a TD pass in 6 of the last 11 games Smith has started.

11-85 CONNECTION

HIGHEST TD PERCENTAGE AMONG ACTIVE TEAMMATES

Quarterback Receiver TDs Total TDs Pct. 1. Matt Ryan Roddy White 27 71 38.0% 2. Alex Smith Vernon Davis 20 53 37.7% 3. Philip Rivers Antonio Gates 44 140 31.4% 4. Matt Schaub Andre Johnson 26 89 29.2% 5. Aaron Rodgers Greg Jennings 27 95 28.4% 6. Tavaris Jackson Sidney Rice 7 26 26.9% 7. Ben Roethlisberger Hines Ward 39 147 26.5%

Smith has proved to be strong and consistent in his past 8 starts, helping the 49ers to a 5-3 record, including winning 3 of the past 4. Over the past 8 starts, Smith has tallied 10 TDs (9 pass, 1 rush.) and 2 INTs.

HITTING HIS MARK

CHARTING QB ALEX SMITH’S LAST 8 STARTS

Date Opp. Atts. Comp. Yds. TDs INTs Rating10/17/2010 Oak. 33 16 196 2 0 87.410/24/2010 @Car. 19 9 129 1 0 87.412/12/2010 Sea. 27 17 255 3 0 130.912/16/2010 @SD 29 19 165 0 1 66.01/2/2011 Arz. 29 15 276 2 0 107.89/11/2011 Sea. 20 15 124 0 0 90.49/18/2011 Dal. 24 16 179 2 1 99.19/25/2011 @Cin. 30 20 201 0 0 85.6TOTALS 211 127 1,525 10 2 94.2

After three weeks running Jim Harbaugh’s West Coast Offense, QB Alex Smith has been con-sistently on target with his passes. A vital part of the WCO is precision-timed passing and Smith has been capitalizing on that aspect.

Through the first 3 games of 2011, Smith com-piled a 75% completion percentage in Week 1 vs. Sea. (9/11), 66.7 % total in Week 2 vs. Dal. (9/18) and 66.7% total in Week 3 at Cin. (9/25), marking the 1st time in his career that he has posted completion percentages of 66.7%-or-higher in 3 consecutive weeks. He currently ranks 4th in the NFL with a 68.9% completion percentage.

h h d b d h

ALEX SMITH’S COMPLETION PERCENTAGE IN WEST COAST OFFENSE

Date Opp. Atts. Comp. Comp. % Yds. TDs INTs 9/11/2011 Sea. 20 15 75.0 124 0 09/18/2011 Dal. 24 16 66.7 179 2 19/25/11 @Cin. 30 20 66.7 201 0 0TOTALS 74 51 68.9 504 2 1

2009-11 NFL RECEIVING TD LEADERS

Player TDs1. Calvin Johnson, Det. 21 2t. Miles Austin, Dal. 22

Roddy White, Atl. 224. Larry Fitzgerald, Arz. 215t. Vernon Davis, SF 20

Dwayne Bowe, KC 20

“Vernon is a great person, great to work with, very attentive, very much interested in the details of things, always looking for the ways to get better. Just an all around asset to have and really enjoy, really thankful that he’s here and a 49er.” – 49ers Offensive Coordinator Greg Roman

Smith has a QB rating of 127.9 inside the opponents 30-yd. line, ranking 2nd in the NFL.Smith has registered a QB rating of 143.1 against the blitz this sea-son, ranking 3rd in the NFL.

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P Andy Lee has been one of the NFL’s top punters since the 49ers drafted him out of Pittsburgh in the 6th round of the 2004 NFL Draft. A 2-time Pro Bowler, he has already set the franchise record for most punting yds. and also ranks 1st in franchise history with a 45.3 yd. gross avg.

In his first game of the 2011 season vs. Sea., Lee set new highs in his career as well as scribing his name in the NFL record books. Lee averaged a whopping 59.6 avg., which ranks 3rd all-time in NFL history for the highest punting average in a single game. Lee didn’t stop there as he compiled a 54.2 net avg. vs. Sea. as well, which ranks 2nd in NFL history behind Rohn Stark’s (59.5 vs. Hou. 9/13/92) [stat has only been tracked since ‘76].

49ERS PUNTING YDS. LEADERS Player Yds. 1. Andy Lee (2004-11) 30,0492. T. Davis (1959-69) 22,833 3. T. Wittum (1973-77) 15,4944. M. Runager (1984-88) 11,3945. S. Spurrier (1967-75) 8,818

49ERS PUNTING AVG. LEADERS Player Gross Avg. 1. Andy Lee (2004-11) 45.3 2. T. Davis (1959-69) 44.7 3t. T. Thompson (1995-97) 41.9 F. Albert (1950-52) 41.9

A five-time Pro Bowler and one of the NFL’s most reliable kickers, David Akers signed a three-year deal with the 49ers on July 30. He is the highest scoring NFL player in the 2000s decade with 1,340 points and was named to the NFL’s All-Decade squad. Akers is a true “rags to riches” story, having landed on the waiv-er wire three times before settling into a position with the Eagles in 1999. A for-mer waiter and subsititue teacher, Akers spent his first season with Philadelphia as a long field goal and kickoff specialist before winning the full-time position in 2000.

Season Highlights:In his first game with the Club, Akers connected on 4 of 4 FG atts. (27, 24, 31, 18) and all three PATs, giving him an opening day career-high of 15 pts. Akers’ 15 points were the 2nd most in the NFL in Week 1 (SD RB Mike Tolbert – 18 pts.). Akers connected on a 55-yd. FG, marking the 3rd longest FG in franchise history (Joe Nedney, 56 yds. at StL - 12/24/05 and Mike Cofer, 56 yds. at Atl. - 10/14/90). It also marked the longest FG at Candlestick Park, surpassing K Bruce Gossett’s 54 yarder vs. NO (10/21/73). The 55-yd. FG is the 2nd longest of his career (57 yds. vs. NE – 9/14/03).Akers is currently t-9th in the NFL with 28 points. His 55-yd. FG is t-2nd longest FG in the NFL this season (Raiders K Sebastian Jan-ikowski, 63 yds. and Jaguars K Josh Scobee, 55 yds.).Connected on his 300th career FG on a 23-yarder at Cin. (9/25), ranking him 6th among active players for career field goals made.

Career Highlights:A 5-time Pro Bowler (‘01, ‘02, ‘04, ‘09 and ‘10), he is ranked 3rd in NFL history among Pro Bowl nominated kickers behind Morten Andersen (7) and Jan Stenerud (6). Also earned Associated Press 2nd team All-Pro and The Sporting News 1st team All-Pro honors in 2009.

Has recorded 298 field goals and 1,340 points since 2000, mark-ing the most amond NFL kickers during that span. Has 31 FGs in the postseason to rank 3rd in NFL history behind Adam Vinatieri (45) and Gary Anderson (32).Ranks 3rd in NFL history with 134 career post season points, trailing only Gary Anderson (153) and Adam Vinatieri (187).

A LETHAL LEG NEW FOOT IN TOWN

FIELD GOALS MADE SINCE 2000

Player FGM 1. David Akers, Phi./SF 298 2. Matt Stover, Bal./Ind. 269 3t. Sebastian Janikowski, Oak. 267 Ryan Longwell, Min. 267 5. Adam Vinatieri, Ind. 261

MOST POINTS SINCE 2000

Player PTS 1. David Akers, Phi./SF 1,340 2. Ryan Longwell, Min. 1,246 3. Adam Vinatieri, Ind. 1,212 4. Sebastian Janikowski, Oak. 1,168 5. Jason Elam, Den./Atl. 1,137

y y ( ) ( )

ALL-TIME POSTSEASON FIELD GOALS MADE

Player FGM 1. Adam Vinatieri, Ind. 45 2. Gary Anderson 32 3. David Akers, Phi./SF 31 4. Matt Stover 25 5t. Two Tied 22

ALL-TIME POSTSEASONSCORING LEADERS

Player PTS 1. Adam Vinatieri, Ind. 187 2. Gary Anderson 153 3. David Akers, Phi./SF 134 4. Matt Stover 132 5t. Two Tied 126

d d ’ h h l d ll

HIGHEST NET PUNTING AVERAGE IN SINGLE GAME, NFL HISTORY(min. 4 punts)

Player Opp. Date NO Yds. Avg. 1. Bob Cifers, Det. Hou. 11/24/46 4 247 61.75 2. Roy McKay, GB Chi. 10/28/45 5 308 61.60 3. Andy Lee, SF Sea. 9/11/11 5 298 59.60 4. Mike Scifres, SD StL 10/17/10 6 357 59.50

HIGHEST PUNTING AVERAGE IN SINGLE GAME, NFL HISTORY(min. 4 punts)

Player Date Opp. Punts Yds. Net Avg. 1. Rohn Stark, Ind. 9/13/1992 Hou. 4 233 59.5 2. Andy Lee, SF 9/11/2011 Sea. 5 298 54.2 3. Brian Moorman, Buf. 12/13/2009 KC 4 212 53.0 4. Dave Zastudil, Cle 9/14/2008 Pit. 5 265 52.8

In addition to being the top punter in franchise history, Lee also ranks 4th in NFL history in gross avg. (45.3) and 4th in net avg. (38.5).

NFL CAREER GROSS PUNTING AVG. LEADERS

Player Gross Avg. 1. Shane Lechler, Oak. 47.4 2. Mat McBriar, Dal. 45.5 3. Donnie Jones, StL 45.5 4. Andy Lee, SF 45.3 5. Brandon Fields, Mia. 45.2

NET PUNTING AVG. LEADERSSINCE 1976

Player Net Avg. 1. Donnie Jones, StL 39.1 2. Dustin Colquitt, KC 38.7 3. Shane Lechler, Oak. 38.7 4. Andy Lee, SF 38.5 5. Mat McBriar, Dal. 38.3

* Min. 250 Punts

In his 8th year with the 49ers, Lee has his name at the top of nearly every punting category in franchise history. He currenlty holds the top spot in punting yds. (30,049) and punting avg. (45.3).

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AS OF SEPTEMBER 27, 2011OFFENSEWR 19 Ted Ginn Jr. -OR- 17 Braylon Edwards LT 74 Joe Staley 75 Alex Boone LG 77 Mike Iupati 67 Daniel Kilgore C 59 Jonathan Goodwin 68 Adam Snyder RG 62 Chilo Rachal 68 Adam Snyder RT 76 Anthony Davis 78 Mike Person TE 85 Vernon Davis 46 Delanie Walker 81 Justin Peelle WR 84 Joshua Morgan 15 Michael Crabtree 10 Kyle WilliamsFB 44 Moran Norris 49 Bruce Miller RB 21 Frank Gore 32 Kendall Hunter 24 Anthony Dixon QB 11 Alex Smith 7 Colin Kaepernick 3 Scott Tolzien DEFENSELDT 91 Ray McDonald 96 Demarcus Dobbs NT 90 Isaac Sopoaga 95 Ricky Jean Francois 93 Ian WilliamsRDT 94 Justin Smith 92 Will Tukuafu OLB 55 Ahmad Brooks ILB 53 NaVorro Bowman 54 Larry Grant ILB 52 Patrick Willis 56 Tavares Gooden 51 Blake CostanzoOLB 98 Parys Haralson 99 Aldon Smith LCB 22 Carlos Rogers 26 Tramaine Brock RCB 25 Tarell Brown 36 Shawntae Spencer 29 Chris CulliverFS 38 Dashon Goldson 20 Madieu Williams SS 31 Donte Whitner 30 Reggie Smith 27 C.J. Spillman

SPECIAL TEAMSPR 19 Ted Ginn Jr. 10 Kyle Williams KOR 19 Ted Ginn Jr. 32 Kendall HunterP 4 Andy Lee K 2 David Akers H 4 Andy Lee LS 86 Brian Jennings Underline - rookies [player] - injuredInjured Reserve - WR Dontavia Bogan, TE Nate Byham,CB Curtis Holcomb

NaVorro Bowman .............. nuh-VARR-oh, BOH-minnTramaine Brock .......................... truh-MAINAhmad Brooks .............................. uh-MAHDTarell Brown ................................... tuh-RELLGeep Chryst .............................. JEEP, KRISTBlake Costanzo ................... kuh-STAN-zohDemarcus Dobbs .................duh-MAR-kusEjiro Evero ......eeh-JEE-row, EV-uh-rowDashon Goldson ......................duh-SHAWNTavares Gooden .......................TUH-var-usParys Haralson ......................................ParisMike Iupati ...............................yoo-PAH-teeRicky Jean Francois ...gene-FRAN-swah

Colin Kaepernick .....................CAP-ur-nickJim Leavitt...............................................LEV-itMoran Norris ............................... more-ANNChilo Rachal .......CHEYE-low, ray-SHELLMike Solari ..............................soh-LAR-eehIsaac Sopoaga ................soh-poh-AH-guhJoe Staley .........................................STAY-leeScott Tolzien .................................. toll-ZEENJim Tomsula ............................. tom-SOO-luhWill Tukuafu ......................too-koo-AH-fooMark Uyeyama ..........ooh-eeh-YAH-muhDelanie Walker ......................duh-LAY-neeDonte Whitner ..................................don-tayMadieu Williams ..................muh-DEE-yoo

Jim Harbaugh ..................................................................Head CoachBrad Seely .................................................Assistant Head Coach/ Special Teams CoordinatorGreg Roman ...............................................Offensive CoordinatorVic Fangio ...................................................Defensive CoordinatorMichael Christianson ...........Coord. of Football Technology/ Offensive Quality ControlGeep Chryst .................................................................QuarterbacksReggie Davis...................................................................... Tight EndsEd Donatell .........................................................................SecondaryTim Drevno ................................................................. Offensive LineBobby Engram ............................................... Offensive AssistantEjiro Evero ................................................................ Quality ControlPeter Hansen ........................Defensive Asst./Quality ControlGreg Jackson ................................................Assistant SecondaryJim Leavitt........................................................................LinebackersJohn Morton ............................................................Wide ReceiversTom Rathman............................................................ Running BacksMike Solari ................................................................. Offensive LineKevin Tolbert ....................Assistant Strength & ConditioningJim Tomsula ............................................................... Defensive LineMark Uyeyama ........................ Head Strength & Conditioning

2011 SAN FRANCISCO 49ERSDEPTH CHART

PRONUNCIATION GUIDE

COACHING STAFF

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AS OF SEPTEMBER 27, 2011NO PLAYER POS HT WT Birthdate EXP COLLEGE HOMETOWN2 Akers, David K 5-10 200 12-9-74 13 Louisville Lexington, KY75 Boone, Alex T 6-8 300 5-4-87 2 Ohio State Cleveland, OH53 Bowman, NaVorro LB 6-0 242 5-28-88 2 Penn State Forestville, MD26 Brock, Tramaine CB 5-10 197 8-20-88 2 Belhaven Long Beach, MS55 Brooks, Ahmad LB 6-3 259 3-14-84 6 Virginia Woodbridge, VA25 Brown, Tarell CB 5-10 193 1-6-85 5 Texas Mesquite, TX51 Costanzo, Blake LB 6-1 235 4-14-84 4 Lafayette Franklin Lakes, NJ15 Crabtree, Michael WR 6-1 214 9-14-87 3 Texas Tech Dallas, TX29 Culliver, Chris CB 6-0 199 8-17-88 R South Carolina Garner, NC76 Davis, Anthony T 6-5 323 10-11-89 2 Rutgers Piscataway, NJ85 Davis, Vernon TE 6-3 250 1-31-84 6 Maryland Washington, DC24 Dixon, Anthony RB 6-1 233 9-24-87 2 Mississippi State Terry, MS96 Dobbs, Demarcus DT 6-6 275 11-30-87 R Georgia Savannah, GA17 Edwards, Braylon WR 6-3 214 2-21-83 7 Michigan Detroit, MI19 Ginn Jr., Ted WR 5-11 180 4-12-85 5 Ohio State Cleveland, OH38 Goldson, Dashon S 6-2 200 9-18-84 5 Washington Carson, CA56 Gooden, Tavares LB 6-1 242 10-7-84 4 Miami Ft. Lauderdale, FL59 Goodwin, Jonathan C 6-3 318 12-2-78 10 Michigan Columbia, SC21 Gore, Frank RB 5-9 217 5-14-83 7 Miami Coral Gables, FL54 Grant, Larry LB 6-1 251 2-16-85 3 Ohio State Santa Rosa, CA98 Haralson, Parys LB 6-0 255 1-24-84 6 Tennessee Madison, MS32 Hunter, Kendall RB 5-7 199 9-16-88 R Oklahoma State Tyler, TX77 Iupati, Mike G 6-5 331 5-12-87 2 Idaho Anaheim, CA95 Jean Francois, Ricky DT 6-3 295 11-23-86 3 Louisiana State Miami Gardens, FL86 Jennings, Brian TE/LS 6-5 242 10-14-76 12 Arizona State Mesa, AZ7 Kaepernick, Colin QB 6-4 230 11-3-87 R Nevada Turlock, CA67 Kilgore, Daniel G 6-3 308 12-18-87 R Appalachian State Kingsport, TN4 Lee, Andy P 6-2 180 8-11-82 8 Pittsburgh Westminster, SC91 McDonald, Ray DT 6-3 290 9-2-84 5 Florida Belle Glade, FL49 Miller, Bruce FB 6-2 248 8-6-87 R Central Florida Woodstock, GA84 Morgan, Joshua WR 6-1 215 6-20-85 4 Virginia Tech Washington, DC44 Norris, Moran FB 6-1 250 6-16-78 11 Kansas Houston, TX81 Peelle, Justin TE 6-4 251 3-15-79 10 Oregon Dublin, CA78 Person, Mike G 6-4 299 6-17-88 R Montana State Glendive, MT62 Rachal, Chilo T/G 6-5 323 3-15-86 4 Southern California Compton, CA22 Rogers, Carlos CB 6-0 192 7-2-81 7 Auburn Augusta, GA99 Smith, Aldon LB 6-4 258 9-25-89 R Missouri Raytown, MO11 Smith, Alex QB 6-4 217 5-7-84 7 Utah La Mesa, CA94 Smith, Justin DT 6-4 285 9-30-79 11 Missouri Jefferson City, MO30 Smith, Reggie S 6-1 200 9-3-86 4 Oklahoma Edmond, OK68 Snyder, Adam C/G 6-6 325 1-30-82 7 Oregon Whittier, CA90 Sopoaga, Isaac DT 6-2 330 9-4-81 8 Hawaii Pago Pago, American Samoa36 Spencer, Shawntae CB 6-1 190 2-22-82 8 Pittsburgh Pittsburgh, PA27 Spillman, C.J. S 6-0 199 5-6-86 3 Marshall Louisville, KY74 Staley, Joe T 6-5 315 8-30-84 5 Central Michigan Rockford, MI3 Tolzien, Scott QB 6-3 208 9-4-87 R Wisconsin Rolling Meadows, IL92 Tukuafu, Will DT 6-4 293 1-3-84 1 Oregon Salt Lake City, UT46 Walker, Delanie TE 6-0 242 8-12-84 6 Central Missouri Pomona, CA31 Whitner, Donte S 5-10 208 7-24-85 6 Ohio State Cleveland, OH93 Williams, Ian NT 6-1 305 8-31-89 R Notre Dame Altamonte Springs, FL10 Williams, Kyle WR 5-10 186 7-19-88 2 Arizona State Scottsdale, AZ20 Williams, Madieu S 6-1 203 10-18-81 8 Maryland Freetown, Sierra Leone52 Willis, Patrick LB 6-1 240 1-25-85 5 Mississippi Bruceton, TN INJURED RESERVE 9 Bogan, Dontavia WR 6-1 188 10-6-88 R South Florida Thomasville, GA82 Byham, Nate TE 6-4 264 6-27-88 2 Pittsburgh Franklin, PA41 Holcomb, Curtis CB 5-10 190 9-3-88 R Florida A&M Miami, FL PRACTICE SQUAD 61 Beeler, Chase C 6-3 285 12-28-87 R Stanford Jenks, OK71 Hall, Derek T 6-5 307 11-23-87 R Stanford Overland Park, KS13 Hastings, Joe WR 6-0 185 5-5-87 R Washburn Wichita, KS28 Johnson, Ian RB 5-11 212 9-25-85 1 Boise State Monrovia, CA43 Jones, Colin S 6-0 208 10-27-87 R Texas Christian Bridgeport, TX23 Nelms, Cory CB 6-0 195 2-27-87 R Miami Neptune, NJ88 Reuland, Konrad TE 6-4 260 4-4-87 R Stanford Mission Viejo, CA50 Simmons, Monte LB 6-3 226 1-29-89 R Kent State Swissvale, PA

2011 SAN FRANCISCO 49ERSALPHABETICAL ROSTER

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AS OF SEPTEMBER 27, 2011NO PLAYER POS HT WT Birthdate EXP COLLEGE HOMETOWN2 David Akers K 5-10 200 36 13 Louisville FA in ‘113 Scott Tolzien QB 6-3 208 24 R Wisconsin W in ‘11 (SD)4 Andy Lee P 6-2 180 29 8 Pittsburgh D-6A in ‘047 Colin Kaepernick QB 6-4 230 23 R Nevada D-2 in ‘1110 Kyle Williams WR 5-10 186 23 2 Arizona State D-6C in ‘1011 Alex Smith QB 6-4 217 27 7 Utah D-1 in ‘0515 Michael Crabtree WR 6-1 214 24 3 Texas Tech D-1 in ‘0917 Braylon Edwards WR 6-3 214 28 7 Michigan FA in ‘1119 Ted Ginn Jr. WR 5-11 180 26 5 Ohio State TR in ‘10 (Mia.)20 Madieu Williams S 6-1 203 29 8 Maryland FA in ‘1121 Frank Gore RB 5-9 217 28 7 Miami D-3A in ‘0522 Carlos Rogers CB 6-0 192 30 7 Auburn FA in ‘1124 Anthony Dixon RB 6-1 233 23 2 Mississippi State D-6A in ‘1025 Tarell Brown CB 5-10 193 26 5 Texas D-5 in ‘0726 Tramaine Brock CB 5-10 197 23 2 Belhaven FA in ‘1027 C.J. Spillman S 6-0 199 25 3 Marshall W in ‘10 (SD)29 Chris Culliver CB 6-0 199 23 R South Carolina D-3 in ‘1130 Reggie Smith S 6-1 200 25 4 Oklahoma D-3 in ‘0831 Donte Whitner S 5-10 208 26 6 Ohio State FA in ‘1132 Kendall Hunter RB 5-7 199 23 R Oklahoma State D-4 in ‘1136 Shawntae Spencer CB 6-1 190 29 8 Pittsburgh D-2B in ‘0438 Dashon Goldson S 6-2 200 27 5 Washington D-4B in ‘0744 Moran Norris FB 6-1 250 33 11 Kansas UFA in ‘0946 Delanie Walker TE 6-0 242 27 6 Central Missouri D-6A in ‘0649 Bruce Miller FB 6-2 248 24 R Central Florida D-7A in ‘1151 Blake Costanzo LB 6-1 235 27 4 Lafayette FA in ‘1152 Patrick Willis LB 6-1 240 26 5 Mississippi D-1A in ‘0753 NaVorro Bowman LB 6-0 242 23 2 Penn State D-3 in ‘1054 Larry Grant LB 6-1 251 25 3 Ohio State FA in ‘1155 Ahmad Brooks LB 6-3 259 27 6 Virginia W in ‘08 (Cin.)56 Tavares Gooden LB 6-1 242 26 4 Miami FA in ‘1159 Jonathan Goodwin C 6-3 318 32 10 Michigan FA in ‘1162 Chilo Rachal T/G 6-5 323 25 4 Southern California D-2 in ‘0867 Daniel Kilgore G 6-3 308 23 R Appalachian State D-5 in ‘1168 Adam Snyder C/G 6-6 325 29 7 Oregon D-3B in ‘0574 Joe Staley T 6-5 315 27 5 Central Michigan D-1B in ‘0775 Alex Boone T 6-8 300 24 2 Ohio State FA in ‘0976 Anthony Davis T 6-5 323 21 2 Rutgers D-1A in ‘1077 Mike Iupati G 6-5 331 24 2 Idaho D-1B in ‘1078 Mike Person G 6-4 299 23 R Montana State D-7B in ‘1181 Justin Peelle TE 6-4 251 32 10 Oregon FA in ‘1184 Joshua Morgan WR 6-1 215 26 4 Virginia Tech D-6 in ‘0885 Vernon Davis TE 6-3 250 27 6 Maryland D-1A in ‘0686 Brian Jennings TE/LS 6-5 242 34 12 Arizona State D-7B in ‘0090 Isaac Sopoaga DT 6-2 330 30 8 Hawaii D-4A in ‘0491 Ray McDonald DT 6-3 290 27 5 Florida D-3B in ‘0792 Will Tukuafu DT 6-4 293 27 1 Oregon FA in ‘1093 Ian Williams NT 6-1 305 22 R Notre Dame FA in ‘1194 Justin Smith DT 6-4 285 31 11 Missouri UFA in ‘0895 Ricky Jean Francois DT 6-3 295 24 3 Louisiana State D-7B in ‘0996 Demarcus Dobbs DT 6-6 275 23 R Georgia FA in ‘1198 Parys Haralson LB 6-0 255 27 6 Tennessee D-5 in ‘0699 Aldon Smith LB 6-4 258 21 R Missouri D-1 in ‘11 INJURED RESERVE 9 Dontavia Bogan WR 6-1 188 22 R South Florida FA in ‘1141 Curtis Holcomb CB 5-10 190 23 R Florida A&M D-7C in ‘1182 Nate Byham TE 6-4 264 23 2 Pittsburgh D-6B in ‘10 PRACTICE SQUAD 13 Joe Hastings WR 6-0 185 24 R Washburn FA in ‘1123 Cory Nelms CB 6-0 195 23 R Miami FA in ‘1128 Ian Johnson RB 5-11 212 25 1 Boise State FA in ‘1143 Colin Jones S 6-0 208 23 R Texas Christian D-6B in ‘1150 Monte Simmons LB 6-3 226 22 R Kent State FA in ‘1161 Chase Beeler C 6-3 285 23 R Stanford FA in ‘1171 Derek Hall T 6-5 307 23 R Stanford FA in ‘1188 Konrad Reuland TE 6-4 260 24 R Stanford FA in ‘11

2011 SAN FRANCISCO 49ERS NUMERICAL ROSTER

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AS OF SEPTEMBER 27, 2011NO PLAYER POS HT WT DOB EXP COLLEGE HOMETOWN ACQUIREDQUARTERBACKS (3) 3 Tolzien, Scott QB 6-3 208 9-4-87 R Wisconsin Rolling Meadows, IL W in ‘11 (SD)7 Kaepernick, Colin QB 6-4 230 11-3-87 R Nevada Turlock, CA D-2 in ‘1111 Smith, Alex QB 6-4 217 5-7-84 7 Utah La Mesa, CA D-1 in ‘05 RUNNING BACKS (5) 21 Gore, Frank RB 5-9 217 5-14-83 7 Miami Coral Gables, FL D-3A in ‘0524 Dixon, Anthony RB 6-1 233 9-24-87 2 Mississippi State Terry, MS D6-A in ‘1032 Hunter, Kendall RB 5-7 199 9-16-88 R Oklahoma State Tyler, TX D-4 in ‘1144 Norris, Moran FB 6-1 250 6-16-78 11 Kansas Houston, TX UFA in ‘0949 Miller, Bruce FB 6-2 248 8-6-87 R Central Florida Woodstock, GA D-7A in ‘11 WIDE RECEIVERS (5) 10 Williams, Kyle WR 5-10 186 7-19-88 2 Arizona State Scottsdale, AZ D-6C in ‘1015 Crabtree, Michael WR 6-1 214 9-14-87 3 Texas Tech Dallas, TX D-1 in ‘0917 Edwards, Braylon WR 6-3 214 2-21-83 7 Michigan Detroit, MI FA in ‘1119 Ginn Jr., Ted WR 5-11 180 4-12-85 5 Ohio State Cleveland, OH TR in ‘10 (Mia.)84 Morgan, Joshua WR 6-1 215 6-20-85 4 Virginia Tech Washington, DC D-6 in ‘08 TIGHT ENDS (3) 46 Walker, Delanie TE 6-0 242 8-12-84 6 Central Missouri Pomona, CA D-6A in ‘0685 Davis, Vernon TE 6-3 250 1-31-84 6 Maryland Washington, DC D-1A in ‘0681 Peelle, Justin TE 6-4 251 3-15-79 10 Oregon Dublin, CA FA in ‘11 OFFENSIVE LINE (9) 59 Goodwin, Jonathan C 6-3 318 12-2-78 10 Michigan Columbia, SC FA in ‘1162 Rachal, Chilo T/G 6-5 323 3-15-86 4 Southern California Compton, CA D-2 in ‘0867 Kilgore, Daniel G 6-3 308 12-18-87 R Appalachian State Kingsport, TN D-5 in ‘1168 Snyder, Adam C/G 6-6 325 1-30-82 7 Oregon Whittier, CA D-3B in ‘0574 Staley, Joe T 6-5 315 8-30-84 5 Central Michigan Rockford, MI D-1B in ‘0775 Boone, Alex T 6-8 300 5-4-87 2 Ohio State Cleveland, OH FA in ‘0976 Davis, Anthony T 6-5 323 10-11-89 2 Rutgers Piscataway, NJ D1-A in ‘1077 Iupati, Mike G 6-5 331 5-12-87 2 Idaho Anaheim, CA D1-B in ‘1078 Person, Mike G 6-4 299 6-17-88 R Montana State Glendive, MT D-7B in ‘11 DEFENSIVE LINE (7) 90 Sopoaga, Isaac DT 6-2 330 9-4-81 8 Hawaii Pago Pago, American Samoa D-4A in ‘0491 McDonald, Ray DT 6-3 290 9-2-84 5 Florida Belle Glade, FL D-3B in ‘0792 Tukuafu, Will DT 6-4 293 1-3-84 1 Oregon Salt Lake City, UT FA in ‘1093 Williams, Ian NT 6-1 305 8-31-89 R Notre Dame Altamonte Springs, FL FA in ‘1194 Smith, Justin DT 6-4 285 9-30-79 11 Missouri Jefferson City, MO UFA in ‘0895 Jean Francois, Ricky DT 6-3 295 11-23-86 3 Louisiana State Miami Gardens, FL D-7B in ‘0996 Dobbs, Demarcus DT 6-6 275 11-30-87 R Georgia Savannah, GA FA in ‘11 LINEBACKERS (8) 51 Costanzo, Blake LB 6-1 235 4-14-84 4 Lafayette Franklin Lakes, NJ FA in ‘1152 Willis, Patrick LB 6-1 240 1-25-85 5 Mississippi Bruceton, TN D-1A in ‘0753 Bowman, NaVorro LB 6-0 242 5-28-88 2 Penn State Forestville, MD D-3 in ‘1054 Grant, Larry LB 6-1 251 2-16-85 3 Ohio State Santa Rosa, CA FA in ‘1155 Brooks, Ahmad LB 6-3 259 3-14-84 6 Virginia Woodbridge, VA W in ‘08 (Cin.)56 Gooden, Tavares LB 6-1 242 10-7-84 4 Miami Ft. Lauderdale, FL FA in ‘1198 Haralson, Parys LB 6-0 255 1-24-84 6 Tennessee Madison, MS D-5 in ‘0699 Smith, Aldon LB 6-4 258 9-25-89 R Missouri Raytown, MO D-1 in ‘11 DEFENSIVE BACKS (10) 20 Williams, Madieu S 6-1 203 10-18-81 8 Maryland Freetown, Sierra Leone FA in ‘1122 Rogers, Carlos CB 6-0 192 7-2-81 7 Auburn Augusta, GA FA in ‘1125 Brown, Tarell CB 5-10 193 1-6-85 5 Texas Mesquite, TX D-5 in ‘0726 Brock, Tramaine CB 5-10 197 8-20-88 2 Bellhaven Long Beach, MS FA in ‘1027 Spillman, C.J. S 6-0 199 5-6-86 3 Marshall Louisville, KY W in ‘10 (SD)29 Culliver, Chris CB 6-0 199 8-17-88 R South Carolina Garner, NC D-3 in ‘1130 Smith, Reggie S 6-1 200 9-3-86 4 Oklahoma Edmond, OK D-3 in ‘0831 Whitner, Donte S 5-10 208 7-24-85 6 Ohio State Cleveland, OH FA in ‘1136 Spencer, Shawntae CB 6-1 190 2-22-82 8 Pittsburgh Pittsburgh, PA D-2B in ‘0438 Goldson, Dashon S 6-2 200 9-18-84 5 Washington Carson, CA D-4B in ‘07 SPECIALISTS (3) 2 Akers, David K 5-10 200 12-9-74 13 Louisville Lexington, KY FA in ‘114 Lee, Andy P 6-2 180 8-11-82 8 Pittsburgh Westminster, SC D-6A in ‘0486 Jennings, Brian TE/LS 6-5 242 10-14-76 12 Arizona State Mesa, AZ D-7B in ‘00 INJURED RESERVE (3) 9 Bogan, Dontavia WR 6-1 188 10-6-88 R South Florida Thomasville, GA FA in ‘1141 Holcomb, Curtis CB 5-10 190 9-3-88 R Florida A&M Miami, FL D-7C in ‘1182 Byham, Nate TE 6-4 264 6-27-88 2 Pittsburgh Franklin, PA D-6B in ‘10

2011 SAN FRANCISCO 49ERSPOSITIONAL ROSTER

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ROSTER BY EXPERIENCE HOW THEY WERE BUILT PLAYER EXP GP/GS W/ SF YEAR PLAYER ACQ David Akers 13 192/0 3/0 2000 Brian Jennings D7b Brian Jennings 12 179/0 179/0 2004 Shawntae Spencer D2b Justin Smith 11 162/158 51/51 Isaac Sopoaga D4a Moran Norris 11 137/57 64/31 Andy Lee D6a Justin Peelle 10 138/66 1/0 2005 Alex Smith D1 Jonathan Goodwin 10 135/63 3/3 Frank Gore D3a Andy Lee 8 115/0 115/0 Adam Snyder D3b Isaac Sopoaga 8 97/57 97/57 2006 Vernon Davis D1a Shawntae Spencer 8 92/72 92/72 Parys Haralson D5 Madieu Williams 8 91/85 3/2 Delanie Walker D6a Adam Snyder 7 94/56 94/56 2007 Patrick Willis D1a Braylon Edwards 7 92/86 2/2 Joe Staley D1b Frank Gore 7 87/74 87/74 Tarell Brown D5 Carlos Rogers 7 81/71 3/3 Ray McDonald D3b Alex Smith 7 57/53 57/53 Dashon Goldson D4b Vernon Davis 6 75/73 75/73 2008 Chilo Rachal D2 Parys Haralson 6 73/55 73/55 Reggie Smith D3 Donte Whitner 6 72/69 3/3 Joshua Morgan D6 Delanie Walker 6 71/30 71/30 Justin Smith FA Ahmad Brooks 6 45/11 32/4 Ahmad Brooks W Patrick Willis 5 66/66 66/66 2009 Michael Crabtree D1 Ted Ginn Jr. 5 64/35 16/0 Ricky Jean Francois D7b Ray McDonald 5 59/12 59/12 Moran Norris UFA Tarell Brown 5 58/8 58/8 Alex Boone FA Dashon Goldson 5 52/35 52/35 2010 Anthony Davis D1A Joe Staley 5 53/53 53/53 Mike Iupati D1B Joshua Morgan 4 47/30 47/30 NaVorro Bowman D3 Blake Costanzo 4 48/0 3/0 Anthony Dixon D6A Chilo Rachal 4 42/38 42/38 Nate Byham* D6B Reggie Smith 4 32/8 32/8 Kyle Williams D6C Tavares Gooden 4 29/12 3/0 Ted Ginn Jr. TR Larry Grant 3 37/8 3/0 Tramaine Brock FA Michael Crabtree 3 29/27 29/27 Will Tukuafu FA C.J. Spillman 3 24/1 14/0 C.J. Spillman W Ricky Jean Francois 3 22/0 22/0 2011 Aldon Smith D1 Anthony Davis 2 19/19 19/19 Colin Kaepernick D2 Mike Iupati 2 19/19 19/19 Chris Culliver D3 NaVorro Bowman 2 19/4 19/4 Kendall Hunter D4 Anthony Dixon 2 19/0 19/0 Daniel Kilgore D5 Nate Byham* 2 14/3 14/3 Bruce Miller D7A Kyle Williams 2 6/0 6/0 Mike Person D7B Tramaine Brock 2 6/0 6/0 Curtis Holcomb* D7C Alex Boone 2 4/0 4/0 David Akers FA Will Tukuafu 1 3/0 3/0 Dontavia Bogan* FA Chris Culliver R 3/0 3/0 Blake Costanzo FA Kendall Hunter R 3/0 3/0 Demarcus Dobbs FA Bruce Miller R 3/1 3/1 Braylon Edwards FA Aldon Smith R 3/0 3/0 Jonathan Goodwin FA Demarcus Dobbs R 0/0 0/0 Larry Grant FA Colin Kaepernick R 0/0 0/0 Carlos Rogers FA Daniel Kilgore R 0/0 0/0 Donte Whitner FA Mike Person R 0/0 0/0 Ian Williams FA Scott Tolzien R 0/0 0/0 Madieu Williams FA Ian Williams R 0/0 0/0 Tavares Gooden FA Dontavia Bogan* R 0/0 0/0 Scott Tolzien W Curtis Holcomb* R 0/0 0/0 Justin Peelle FA * - Denotes player on the Injured Reserve List

2011 SAN FRANCISCO 49ERS ROSTER BREAKDOWN

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SEA DAL CIN PHI TB DET CLE WAS NYG ARZ BAL STL ARZ PIT SEA STL 9-11 9-18 9-25 10-2 10-9 10-16 10-30 11-6 11-13 11-20 11-24 12-4 12-11 12-19 12-24 1-1 GP GS DNP IAAkers, David P P P 3 0 0 0Beeler, Chase PS PS PS 0 0 0 0Boone, Alex P P P 3 0 0 0Bowman, NaVorro ILB ILB ILB 3 3 0 0Brock, Tramaine P P P 3 0 0 0Brooks, Ahmad OLB OLB OLB 3 3 0 0Brown, Tarell RCB RCB RCB 3 3 0 0Costanzo, Blake P P P 3 0 0 0Crabtree, Michael P IA WR 2 1 0 1Culliver, Chris P P P 3 0 0 0Davis, Anthony RT RT RT 3 3 0 0Davis, Vernon TE TE TE 3 3 0 0Dixon, Anthony P P P 3 0 0 0Dobbs, Demarcus IA IA IA 0 0 0 3Edwards, Braylon WR WR IA 2 2 0 1Ginn Jr., Ted P P P 3 0 0 0Goldson, Dashon IA IA FS 1 1 0 2Gooden, Tavares P P P 3 0 0 0Goodwin, Jonathan C C C 3 3 0 0Gore, Frank RB RB RB 3 3 0 0Grant, Larry P P P 3 0 0 0Hall, Derek PS PS PS 0 0 0 0Haralson, Parys OLB OLB OLB 3 3 0 0Hastings, Joe PS PS PS 0 0 0 0Hunter, Kendall P P P 3 0 0 0Iupati, Mike LG LG LG 3 3 0 0Jean Francois, Ricky P P P 3 0 0 0Jennings, Brian P P P 3 0 0 0Johnson, Ian NR PS PS 0 0 0 0Jones, Colin P PS PS 1 0 0 0Kaepernick, Colin DNP DNP DNP 0 0 3 0Kilgore, Daniel IA IA IA 0 0 0 3Lee, Andy P P P 3 0 0 0McDonald, Ray LDT LDT LDT 3 3 0 0Miller, Bruce P P FB 3 1 0 0Morgan, Joshua WR WR WR 3 3 0 0Nelms, Cory PS PS PS 0 0 0 0Norris, Moran P FB IA 2 1 0 1Omon, Xavier PS PS PS 0 0 0 0Peelle, Justin NR DNP P 1 0 1 0Person, Mike IA IA IA 0 0 0 3Rachal, Chilo RG RG RG 3 3 0 0Reuland, Konrad PS PS PS 0 0 0 0Rogers, Carlos LCB LCB LCB 3 3 0 0Simmons, Monte PS PS PS 0 0 0 0Smith, Aldon P P P 3 0 0 0Smith, Alex QB QB QB 3 3 0 0Smith, Justin RDT RDT RDT 3 3 0 0Smith, Reggie P P P 3 0 0 0Snyder, Adam P P P 3 0 0 0Sopoaga, Isaac NT NT NT 3 3 0 0Spencer, Shawntae P P P 3 0 0 0Spillman, C.J. P P P 3 0 0 0Staley, Joe LT LT LT 3 3 0 0Tolzien, Scott IA IA IA 0 0 0 3Tukuafu, Will P P P 3 0 0 0Walker, Delanie TE P P 3 1 0 0Whitner, Donte SS SS SS 3 3 0 0Williams, Ian IA IA IA 0 0 0 3Williams, Kyle IA P DNP 1 0 1 1Williams, Madieu FS FS P 3 2 0 0Willis, Patrick ILB ILB ILB 3 3 0 0

Position = Starter, P = Played, DNP = Did Not Play, IA = Inactive, IR = Injured Reserve, EQ = Emergency Quarterback, PUP = Physically Unable to Perform, NR = Not on Roster, PS = Practice Squad, NFI = Non-Football Injury, SUS = Suspended, EXP = Roster Exemption, PSI = Practice Squad/Injured, BYE – Week 7

2011 SAN FRANCISCO 49ERSPARTICIPATION CHART

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Opp WR LT LG C RG RT TE WR FB RB QB OtherSea Edwards Staley Iupati Goodwin Rachal A. Davis V. Davis Morgan Gore A. Smith WalkerDal Edwards Staley Iupati Goodwin Rachal A. Davis V. Davis Morgan Norris Gore A. Smith at Cin Crabtree Staley Iupati Goodwin Rachal A. Davis V. Davis Morgan Miller Gore A. Smith at Phi TB at Det Cle at Was NYG Arz at Bal StL at Arz Pit at Sea at StL

Opp LDT NT RDT OLB ILB ILB OLB LCB RCB SS FS OtherSea McDonald Sopoaga J. Smith Brooks Bowman Willis Haralson Rogers T. Brown Whitner M. Williams Dal McDonald Sopoaga J. Smith Brooks Bowman Willis Haralson Rogers T. Brown Whitner M. Williams at Cin McDonald Sopoaga J. Smith Brooks Bowman Willis Haralson Rogers T. Brown Whitner Goldson at Phi TB at Det Cle at Was NYG Arz at Bal StL at Arz Pit at Sea at StL

Opp Sea Tolzien/K. Williams/Goldson/Kilgore/Person/I. Williams/DobbsDal Tolzien/Crabtree/Goldson/Kilgore/Person/I. Williams/Dobbsat Cin Tolzien/Edwards/Norris/Kilgore/Person/I. Williams/Dobbsat Phi TB at Det Cle at Was NYG Arz at Bal StL at Arz Pit at Sea at StL

2011 SAN FRANCISCO 49ERSGAME-BY-GAME STARTERS

OFFENSE

DEFENSE

INACTIVES

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1-5 Signed K Fabrizio Scaccia, G Nick Howell, WR Kevin Jurovich, WR Lance Long and RB Xavier Omon to future contracts

1-7 Named Jim Harbaugh head coach1-14 Named Vic Fangio defensive coordinator, Greg Roman offensive co-

ordinator and Tim Drevno offensive line coach1-19 Named Ed Donatell secondary coach, Jim Leavitt linebackers coach

and Geep Chryst quarterbacks coach. Promoted Mark Uyeyama to head strength and conditioning coach

1-20 Named John Morton wide receivers coach1-21 Named Ejiro Evero quality control coach1-25 Named Brad Seely special teams coordinator and Kevin Tolbert as-

sistant strength and conditioning coach1-28 Named Bobby Engram offensive assistant2-4 Named Reggie Davis tight ends coach and Peter Hansen defensive

assistant/quality control coach Promoted Tom Gamble to Director of Player Personnel2-17 Named Greg Jackson assistant secondary coach2-23 Named Michael Christianson director of football technology/offensive

quality control coach3-2 Tendered one-year contracts to potential free agents S Dashon Gold-

son, LB Manny Lawson and DT Ray McDonald. Tendered one-year contract to exclusive rights free agent S C.J. Spillman.

4-28 Selected LB Aldon Smith in the first round (7th overall).4-29 Traded 2nd round (45th overall) and 4th round (108th overall) and 5th

round (141st overall) to Denver for the Broncos 2nd round (36th overall) draft choice in the 2011 NFL Draft. Selected QB Colin Kaepernick in the 2nd round (36th overall). Traded 3rd round (76th overall) to Jack-sonville for 3rd round (80th overall) and 6th round (182nd overall).

4-30 Selected RB Kendall Hunter in the 4th round (115th overall). Traded 6th round (174th overall) and 7th round (231st overall) to Green Bay for 5th round (163rd overall). Selected G Daniel Kilgore in

5th round (163rd overall). Selected WR Ronald Johnson in 6th round (182nd overall). Selected S Colin Jones in 6th round (190th overall). Selected FB Bruce Miller in 7th round (211th overall).

Selected G Michael Person in 7th round (239th overall). Selected CB Curtis Holcomb in 7th round (250th overall).

7-27 Signed the following Rookie Free Agents: Chase Beeler, Tyler Beiler, Dontavia Bogan, Brian Bulcke, Demarcus Dobbs, Donovan Ed-wards, Derek Hall, Joe Hastings, Chris Hogan, Jeremiah Masoli, Cory Nelms, Konrad Reuland, Kenny Rowe, Sealver Siliga, Seth Smith, Anthony West, Kenny Wiggins, Ian Williams.

Signed draft picks FB Bruce Miller and G Daniel Kilgore to four-year deals.

7-28 Signed draft picks LB Aldon Smith to a four-year contract that con-tains a club option for a fifth year. Also signed the following draft picks to four-year contracts: QB Colin Kaepernick, CB Chris Culliver, RB Kendall Hunter, WR Ronald Johnson, S Colin Jones, G Mike Person and CB Curtis Holcomb.

Signed rookie free agent LB Monte Simmons and McLeod Bethel-Thompson.

Released QB David Carr. Placed WR Michael Crabtree, LB Bruce Miller and WR Dominique Zeigler on the physically unable to perform list.

2011 SAN FRANCISCO 49ERSTRANSACTIONS

7-29 Released C Eric Heitmann and K Joe Nedney. Signed DT Ray McDon-ald to a five-year deal and QB Alex Smith and G Tony Wragge both to one-year deals.

7-30 Signed K David Akers to a three-year deal and FB Jack Corcoran to a one-year deal. The team tendered a one-year contract to S C.J. Spill-man.

Released CB Nate Clements. 7-31 Signed LB Antwan Applewhite and LB Larry Grant, both to one-year

deals.8-2 Signed CB Phillip Davis to a three-year deal.8-3 Signed CB Carlos Rogers, S Madieu Williams and LB Blake Costanzo

to one-year deals. Signed C Jonathan Goodwin to a three-year deal.8-4 Signed WR Braylon Edwards to a one-year deal.8-5 FB Bruce Miller was activated from the Physically Unable to Perform

list.8-6 Signed S Donte Whitner to a three-year deal.8-7 Placed WR Dontavia Bogan and CB Curtis Holcomb on the Injured Re-

serve list.8-8 Signed TE Chris Blohm to a three-year deal.8-9 Signed S Dashon Goldson to a one-year deal.8-11 Waived TE Chris Blohm.8-14 Signed TE Nate Lawrie to a one-year deal.8-15 Waived LB Thaddeus Gibson.8-17 Signed QB Josh McCown to a one-year deal.8-22 Waived QB Jeremiah Masoli and K Fabrizio Scaccia. Signed P Sam Paulescu to a one-year deal. Activated WR Dominique Zeigler from the Physically Unable to Perform

list.8-23 Waived TE Colin Cloherty. Traded S Taylor Mays to Cincinnati for an undisclosed draft pick.8-30 Activated WR Michael Crabtree from the Physically Unable to Perform

list. Released WR Tyler Beiler, C/G Donovan Edwards, G Nick Howell, WR

Kevin Jurovich, LB Scott McKillop, P Sam Paulescu, RB Seth Smith9-3 Placed TE Nate Byham on the Injured Reserve list. Released CB Phillip Adams, C Chase Beeler, QB McLeod Bethel-

Thompson, DT Brian Bulcke, FB Jack Corcoran, CB Phillip Davis, T Derek Hall, WR Joe Hastings, WR Chris Hogan, WR Ronald Johnson,

LB Alex Joseph, TE Nate Lawrie, WR Lance Long, S Chris Maragos, QB Josh McCown, CB Cory Nelms, RB Xavier Omon, TE Konrad Re-uland, LB Kenny Rowe, NT Sealver Siliga, LB Monte Simmons, FS Curtis Taylor, DB Anthony West, T Kenny Wiggins, G Tony Wragge, WR Dominique Zeigler

9-4 Claimed QB Scott Tolzien off waivers from San Diego. Waived LB Keaton Kristick. Signed C Chase Beeler, T Derek Hall, WR Joe Hastings, CB Cory

Nelms, RB Xavier Omon, TE Konrad Reuland and LB Monte Simmons to the practice squad.

9-6 Signed LB Tavares Gooden to a one-year deal and waived LB Antwan Applewhite.

9-12 Released RB Xavier Omon from the practice squad and signed RB Ian Johnson to the practice squad.

9-13 Waived S Colin Jones and signed TE Justin Peelle to a one-year deal. 9-14 Signed S Colin Jones to the practice squad.

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Date W/L Score Opponent Attendance9/11 W 33-17 Seattle 69,7329/18 L 24-27(OT) Dallas 69,7329/25 W 13-8 atCincinnati 43,36310/2 atPhiladelphia10/9 TampaBay10/16 atDetroit10/30 Cleveland11/6 atWashington11/13 NewYorkGiants11/20 Arizona11/24 atBaltimore12/4 St.Louis12/11 atArizona12/19 Pittsburgh12/24 atSeattle1/1 atSt.LouisTeamStatistics 49ers OpponentsTotalFirstDowns 42 52 Rushing 13 13 Passing 23 35 Penalty 6 4 3rdDown:Made/Att 14/43 12/39 3rdDownPct. 32.6% 30.8% 4thDown:Made/Att 0/1 2/2 4thDownPct. 0.0% 100.0%PossessionAvg. 31:53 28:07TotalNetYards 641 919 Avg.PerGame 213.7 306.3 TotalPlays 170 183 Avg.PerPlay 3.8 5.0NetYardsRushing 209 188 Avg.PerGame 69.7 62.7 TotalRushes 85 64NetYardsPassing 432 731Avg.PerGame 144.0 243.7Sacked/YardsLost 11/72 7/55GrossYards 504 786Attempts/Completions 74/51 112/64CompletionPct. 68.9% 57.1%HadIntercepted 1 5Punts/Average 18/52.8 18/47.4NetPuntingAvg. 46.3 36.5Penalties/Yards 26/197 25/195Fumbles/BallLost 4/1 7/3Touchdowns 7 5 Rushing 3 0 Passing 2 5 Returns 2 0ScoreByPeriods Q1 Q2 Q3 Q4 OT PtsTeam 0 30 10 30 0 70Opponents 3 7 14 25 3 52

Scoring TD Ru Pa Rt PAT FG 2Pt PtsD.Akers 0 0 0 0 7/7 7/7 0 28T.GinnJr. 2 0 0 2 0/0 0/0 0 12K.Williams 1 0 1 0 0/0 0/0 0 6K.Hunter 1 1 0 0 0/0 0/0 0 6A.Smith 1 1 0 0 0/0 0/0 0 6F.Gore 1 1 0 0 0/0 0/0 0 6D.Walker 1 0 1 0 0/0 0/0 0 6Team 7 3 2 2 7/7 7/7 0 70Opponents 5 0 5 0 5/5 5/6 0 52

Sacks:49ers:P.Haralson2.0,J.Smith2.0,R.McDonald2.0,A.Brooks1.0Total7.0,Opponents:11.0

FumblesLost:F.Gore1,Total:1OpponentFumbleRecoveries:W.Tukuafu1,P.Willis1,D.Walker1Total:3

Passing Att Cmp Yds Cmp% Yds/Att TD TD% Int Int% Long Sack/Lost RatingA.Smith 74 51 504 68.9% 6.8 2 2.7% 1 1.4% 39 11/72 91.349ers 74 51 504 68.9% 6.8 2 2.7% 1 1.4% 39 11/72 91.3Opponents 112 64 786 57.1% 7.0 5 4.5% 5 4.5% 77 7/55 75.2

Rushing No Yds Avg Long TDF.Gore 59 148 2.5 16 1A.Smith 10 43 4.3 12 1K.Hunter 11 30 2.7 11 1A.Dixon 1 6 6.0 6 0B.Miller 1 2 2.0 2 0T.Ginn 1 0 0.0 0 0V.Davis 1 -2 -2.0 -2 0A.Lee 1 -18 -18.0 -18 0Team 85 209 2.5 16 3Opponents 64 188 2.9 13 0

Receiving No Yds Avg Long TDV.Davis 15 179 11.9 39 0J.Morgan 7 80 11.4 26 0F.Gore 6 36 6.0 12 0B.Edwards 4 48 12.0 21 0D.Walker 4 46 11.5 29t 1T.GinnJr. 4 38 9.5 14 0M.Crabtree 4 28 7.0 8 0B.Miller 4 25 6.3 11 0K.Hunter 2 12 6.0 10 0K.Williams 1 12 12.0 12t 1Team 51 504 9.9 39 2Opponents 64 786 12.3 77 5

Interceptions No Yds Avg Long TDT.Brock 2 18 9.0 18 0R.Smith 1 11 11.0 11 0C.Rogers 1 0 0.0 0 0D.Whitner 1 0 0.0 0 049ers 5 29 5.8 18 0Opponents 1 15 15.0 15 0

Punting No Yds Avg Net TB In Lg BA.Lee 18 950 52.8 46.3 1 4 64 049ers 18 950 52.8 46.3 1 4 64 0Opponents 18 853 47.4 36.5 2 4 77 0

PuntReturns Ret FC Yds Avg Long TDT.GinnJr. 12 3 156 13.0 55t 149ers 12 3 156 13.0 55t 1Opponents 10 4 96 9.6 16 0

KickoffReturns No Yds Avg Long TDT.GinnJr. 6 235 39.2 102t 1K.Hunter 1 43 43.0 43 049ers 7 278 39.7 102t 1Opponents 9 194 21.6 28 0

FieldGoals 1-19 20-29 30-39 40-49 50+D.Akers 1/1 3/3 1/1 0/0 2/249ers 1/1 3/3 1/1 0/0 2/2Opponents 1/1 2/3 1/1 1/1 0/0

Akers:(27G,24G,31G,18G)(55G)(23G,53G)Opponents:(39)(21N,48G,19G)(22G,23G)

2-Pt.Converstions:49ers0/0,Opponents0/0

2011 SAN FRANCISCO 49ERS REGULAR SEASON STATISTICS

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TACKLES For QuarterbackPLAYER Total Solo Asst Loss Sacks Hits Pres INT PD FF FRN. Bowman 35 13 22 1 0.0 0 3 0 1 0 0P. Willis 33 13 20 0 0.0 1 1 0 2 1 1R. McDonald 20 11 9 5.5 2.0 8 16 0 0 0 0J. Smith 19 13 6 2 2.0 10 14 0 0 1 0D. Whitner 17 12 5 0 0.0 0 0 1 5 0 0I. Sopoaga 16 8 8 1 0.0 1 1 0 0 0 0C. Rogers 14 13 1 0 0.0 1 1 1 5 0 0A. Brooks 13 8 5 2 1.0 6 8 0 2 0 0M. Williams 12 3 9 0 0.0 0 0 0 0 0 0T. Brown 11 9 2 0 0.0 0 0 0 3 0 0D. Goldson 11 6 5 0 0.0 0 0 0 0 0 0P. Haralson 6 5 1 2 2.0 6 3 0 0 2 0R. Smith 6 5 1 0 0.0 0 0 1 1 0 0T. Brock 5 5 0 0 0.0 0 0 2 2 0 0R. Jean Francois 3 1 2 0 0.0 0 1 0 0 0 0W. Tukuafu 2 0 2 0 0.0 0 0 0 0 0 1A. Smith 1 0 1 0 0.0 5 6 0 2 0 0S. Spencer 1 1 0 0 0.0 0 0 0 1 0 0C. Spillman 1 0 1 0 0.0 0 0 0 0 0 0TOTALS 226 126 100 13.5 7.0 38 54 5 24 4 2

PLAYER Tot Solo Asst KDs FF FR BP PTSB. Costanzo 3 2 1 6 0 0 0 148C. Spillman 3 2 1 2 0 0 1 145B. Miller 1 0 1 0 0 0 0 124T. Gooden 3 2 1 0 0 0 0 123A. Dixon 1 1 0 1 0 0 0 118L. Grant 2 1 1 0 0 0 1 118T. Brock 1 1 0 2 0 0 0 101C. Culliver 1 0 1 0 0 0 0 101T. Ginn 0 0 0 0 0 0 7 98A. Lee 0 0 0 8 0 0 0 94D. Akers 0 0 0 6 0 0 0 82B. Jennings 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 69D. Walker 4 3 1 0 0 1 2 58R. Smith 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 56A. Smith 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 53K. Hunter 0 0 0 3 0 0 1 49M. Williams 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 46N. Bowman 3 2 1 0 0 0 0 44C. Jones 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 37S. Spencer 0 0 0 2 0 0 0 36P. Haralson 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 34A. Boone 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 30J. Goodwin 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 30M. Iupati 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 30C. Rachal 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 30A. Snyder 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 30J. Staley 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 30T. Brown 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 30A. Davis 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 29W. Tukuafu 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 26A. Brooks 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 26J. Smith 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 26I. Sopoaga 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 26P. Willis 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 26R. McDonald 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 26R. Jean Francois 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 20N. Bowman 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 13M. Norris 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 10J. Peelle 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 6D. Goldson 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 4D. Whitner 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 2Totals 24 16 8 32 0 1 12 2184

Haralson (2.0) - 2.0 vs. Sea.J. Smith (2.0) - 2.0 vs. Sea.

McDonald (2.0) - 1.0 vs. Sea., vs. Dal.Brooks (1.0) - 1.0 at Cin.

Brock (2) - 1-0 vs. Sea., 1-18 vs. Dal. Whitner (1) - 1-0 vs. Dal.

R. Smith (1) - 1-11 vs. Cin.C. Rogers (1) - 1-0 vs. Cin.

Tackles: 14 by Patrick Willis vs. Dal.Tackles for Loss: 4 by Ray McDonald vs. Sea.Sacks: 2.0 by Justin Smith and Parys Haralson vs. Sea.Passes Defensed: 3 by Donte Whitner vs. Dal.Interceptions: 1 - five times, last by Reggie Smith at Cin.Foreced Fumbles: 2 by Parys Haralson vs. Sea.Fumble Recoveries: 1 - three times, Last by Delanie Walker at Cin.Special Teams Tackles: 3 by Delanie Walker vs. Sea.

SpecialTeamsKey:Tot(totaltackles),Solo(solotackle),Asst(assistedtackle),KDs(knockdown),FF(forcedfumble),FR(fumblerecovery),BP(bigplay),PTS(productionpointsasgradedbycoachingstaff)

Ginn Jr. (2) - 102-yd. KOR vs. Sea.; 55-yd. PR vs. Sea.

2011 DEFENSIVE & SPECIAL TEAMS STATISTICS

DEFENSIVE STATISTICS

SACKS (7.0)

INTERCEPTIONS (5)

SINGLE-GAME BESTS

SPECIAL TEAMS

TOUCHDOWNS (2)

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Sea Dal at Cin at Phi TB at Det Cle at Was NYG Arz at Bal StL at Arz Pit at Sea at StL TotalsFirst Downs

Total 12 14 16 26Rushing 4 3 6 7Passing 4 10 9 14Penalty 4 1 1 5

Third Down Conversions 1 8 5 14Attempts 12 16 15 43Percentage 8.3 50.0 33.3 32.6

4th Down Conversions 0 0 0 0Attempts 0 0 1 1

Time of Possession 49ers 31:07 30:43 35:20 31:53

Total Net Yards Plays 52 54 64 170Yards 209 206 226 641Average 4.0 3.8 3.5 3.8

Rushing Attempts 32 24 29 85Yards 85 74 50 209Average 2.7 3.1 1.7 2.5

Passing Net 124 132 176 432Sacks 0 6 5 11Yards 0 47 25 72Gross 124 179 201 504Attempts 20 24 30 74Completions 15 16 20 51Percentage 75.0 66.6 66.6 68.9Interceptions 0 1 0 1

Punting Number 5 6 7 18Average 59.6 55.3 45.7 52.8Net 54.2 45.7 41.3 46.3

Penalties Number 9 5 12 26Yards 102 25 70 197

Fumbles Number 1 0 3 4Lost 0 0 1 1

Red Zone

Number 5 2 2 9Touchdowns 1 2 1 4Field Goals 4 0 1 5

Touchdowns

Rushing 1 1 1 3Passing 0 2 0 2Returns 2 0 0 2

2011 OFFENSIVE GAME-BY-GAMETEAM STATISTICS

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Sea Dal at Cin at Phi TB at Det Cle at Was NYG Arz at Bal StL at Arz Pit at Sea at StL TotalsFirst Downs

Total 18 20 14 52Rushing 5 3 5 13Passing 9 17 9 35Penalty 4 0 0 4

3rd Down Conversions 5 6 1 12Attempts 15 14 10 39Percentage 33.3 43.0 10.0 30.8

4th Down Conversions 1 1 0 2Attempts 1 1 0 2

Time of Possession

Opponents 28:53 32:10 24:40 28:07 Total Net Yards

Plays 64 66 53 183Yards 219 472 228 919Average 3.4 7.2 4.3 5.0

Rushing

Attempts 22 22 20 64Yards 64 45 79 188Average 2.9 2.0 4.0 2.9

Passing

Net 155 427 157 739Sacks 5 1 5 11Yards 42 5 25 72Gross 197 432 157 786Attempts 37 43 32 112Completions 21 26 17 64Percentage 56.8 60.5 53.1 57.1Interceptions 1 2 2 5

Punting

Number 7 4 7 18Average 48.9 48.5 45.3 47.4Net 32.9 37.3 39.7 36.5

Penalties Number 11 8 6 25 Yards 72 83 40 195 Fumbles

Number 3 3 1 7Lost 2 0 1 3

Red Zone

Number 2 3 2 7Touchdowns 1 1 0 2Field Goals 1 1 0 2

Touchdowns

Rushing 0 0 0 0Passing 2 3 0 5Returns 0 0 0 0

2011 DEFENSIVE GAME-BY-GAMETEAM STATISTICS

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Bests/High Opponent Date Worsts/Lows Opponent DateFirst Downs 16 at Cincinnati 9/25/11 12 vs. Seattle 9/11/11Third-Down % 8-16-50% vs. Dallas 9/18/11 1-12-8% vs. Seattle 9/11/11Total Net Yards 226 at Cincinnati 9/25/11 206 vs. Dallas 9/18/11Offensive Plays 64 at Cincinnati 9/25/11 52 vs. Seattle 9/11/11Avg. Per Play 4.0 vs. Seattle 9/11/11 3.5 at Cincinnati 9/25/11Rushing Yards 85 vs. Seattle 9/11/11 50 at Cincinnati 9/25/11Rushes 32 vs. Seattle 9/11/11 24 vs. Dallas 9/18/11Rushing Avg. 3.1 vs. Dallas 9/18/11 1.7 at Cincinnati 9/25/11Net Passing Yards 179 vs. Dallas 9/18/11 124 vs. Seattle 9/11/11Completions 20 at Cincinnati 9/25/11 15 vs. Seattle 9/11/11Attempts 30 at Cincinnati 9/25/11 20 vs. Seattle 9/11/11Completions % 75.0% vs. Seattle 9/11/11 66.7% 2 times: Last at Cin. 9/25/11Avg. Gain Per Passing Play 6.2 vs. Seattle 9/11/11 4.4 vs. Dallas 9/18/11Interceptions Thrown 1 vs. Dallas 9/18/11 0 2 times: Last at Cin. 9/25/11Fumbles Lost 1 at Cincinnati 9/25/11 0 2 times: Last vs. Dallas 9/18/11Turnovers 1 2 times: Last at Cin. 9/25/11 0 vs. Seattle 9/11/11Penalties 12 at Cincinnati 9/25/11 5 vs. Dallas 9/18/11Penalty Yards 102 vs. Seattle 9/11/11 25 vs. Dallas 9/18/11Gross Punting Avg. 59.6 vs. Seattle 9/11/11 45.7 at Cincinnati 9/25/11Net Punting Avg. 54.2 vs. Seattle 9/11/11 41.3 at Cincinnati 9/25/11Time of Poss. 35:20 at Cincinnati 9/25/11 30:43 vs. Dallas 9/18/11

Worsts/Lows Opponent Date Bests/Highs Opponent DateFirst Downs 14 at Cincinnati 9/25/11 20 vs. Dallas 9/18/11Third-Down % 1-10-10% at Cincinnati 9/25/11 6-14-43% vs. Dallas 9/18/11Total Net Yards 219 vs. Seattle 9/11/11 472 vs. Dallas 9/18/11Offensive Plays 53 at Cincinnati 9/25/11 66 vs. Dallas 9/18/11Avg. Per Play 3.4 vs. Seattle 9/11/11 7.2 vs. Dallas 9/18/11Rushing Yards 45 vs. Dallas 9/18/11 79 at Cincinnati 9/25/11Rushes 20 at Cincinnati 9/25/11 22 2 times: Last at Cin. 9/25/11Rushing Avg. 2.0 vs. Dallas 9/18/11 4.0 at Cincinnati 9/25/11Net Passing Yards 149 at Cincinnati 9/25/11 427 vs. Dallas 9/18/11Completions 17 at Cincinnati 9/25/11 26 vs. Dallas 9/18/11Attempts 32 at Cincinnati 9/25/11 43 vs. Dallas 9/18/11Completions % 53.1% at Cincinnati 9/25/11 60.5% vs. Dallas 9/18/11Avg. Gain Per Passing Play 3.7 vs. Seattle 9/11/11 9.7 vs. Seattle 9/11/11Interceptions Thrown 2 2 times: Last Cin. 9/25/11 1 vs. Seattle 9/11/11Fumbles Lost 3 vs. Dallas 9/18/11 1 at Cincinnati 9/25/11Turnovers 3 2 times: Last at Cin. 9/25/11 2 vs. Dallas 9/18/11Penalties 6 at Cincinnati 9/25/11 11 vs. Seattle 9/11/11Penalty Yards 40 at Cincinnati 9/25/11 83 vs. Dallas 9/18/11Gross Punting Avg. 45.3 at Cincinnati 9/25/11 48.9 vs. Seattle 9/11/11Net Punting Avg. 41.3 at Cincinnati 9/25/11 45.7 vs. Dallas 9/18/11Time of Poss. 24:40 at Cincinnati 9/25/11 32:10 vs. Dallas 9/18/11

2011 TEAM HIGHS & LOWS

OPPONENTS

SAN FRANCISCO 49ERS

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Long Plays Player Opponent DateLongest Run (yards) 16 Frank Gore vs. Seattle 9/11/11Longest TD Run (yards) 7 Kendall Hunter at Cincinnati 9/25/11Longest Pass Completion (yards) 39 Alex Smith - Vernon Davis at Cincinnati 9/25/11Longest TD Pass 29t Alex Smith - Delanie Walker vs. Dallas 9/18/11Longest Punt Return (yards) 55t Ted Ginn Jr. vs. Seattle 9/11/11Longest Kickoff Return (yards) 102t Ted Ginn Jr. vs. Seattle 9/11/11Longest Interception Return (yards) 18 Tramaine Brock vs. Dallas 9/18/11Longest Punt (yards) 64 Two times, most recently Andy Lee vs. Dallas 9/18/11Longest Field Goal (yards) 55 David Akers vs. Dallas 9/18/11

Single-Game Highs Player Opponent DateMost Points Scored 15 David Akers vs. Seattle 9/11/11Most Touchdowns 2 Ted Ginn Jr. vs. Seattle 9/11/11Most Field Goals 4 David Akers vs. Seattle 9/11/11Most Field Goal Attempts 4 David Akers vs. Seattle 9/11/11Most Rushing Yards 59 Frank Gore vs. Seattle 9/11/11Most Rushing Attempts 22 Frank Gore vs. Seattle 9/11/11Highest Rushing Avg. (Min. 10 att.) 2.7 Frank Gore vs. Seattle 9/11/11Most Pass Completions 20 Alex Smith at Cincinnati 9/25/11Most Pass Attempts 30 Alex Smith at Cincinnati 9/25/11Most Gross Passing Yards 201 Alex Smith at Cincinnati 9/25/11Highest Avg. Yards/Per Att. (Min. 10 att.) 6.2 Alex Smith vs. Seattle 9/11/11Most Interceptions Thrown 1 Alex Smith vs. Dallas 9/18/11Most Times Sacked 6 Alex Smith vs. Dallas 9/18/11Most Receptions 8 Vernon Davis at Cincinnati 9/25/11Most Receiving Yards 114 Vernon Davis at Cincinnati 9/25/11Most Punt Returns 5 Ted Ginn Jr. vs. Seattle 9/11/11Most Punt Return Yardage 92 Ted Ginn Jr. vs. Seattle 9/11/11Most Kickoff Returns 4 Ted Ginn Jr. vs. Seattle 9/11/11Most Kickoff Return Yardage 176 Ted Ginn Jr. vs. Seattle 9/11/11Most Interceptions 1 Five times, most recently Reggie Smith at Cincinnati 9/25/11Most Interception Return Yardage 18 Tramaine Brock vs. Dallas 9/18/11Most Tackles 14 Patrick Willis vs. Dallas 9/18/11Most Sacks 2.0 Parys Haralson & Justin Smith vs. Seattle 9/11/11

2011 49ERS INDIVIDUAL HIGHS

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Rushes of 10-yards or more; Pass completions of 20-yards or more; Returns of 30-yards or more

Run Pass Ret. Description 31 Ted Ginn Jr. punt return12 Frank Gore run 27 Alex Smith to Vernon Davis11 Alex Smith run 26 Alex Smith to Joshua Morgan16 Frank Gore run 102t Ted Ginn Jr. kickoff return 55t Ted Ginn Jr. punt return

SEAHAWKSRun Pass Ret. Description 12 Marshawn Lynch run13 Ben Obomanu run10 Frank Gore run 55t Tarvaris Jackson to Doug Baldwin

2011 SAN FRANCISCO 49ERS BIG PLAYS

9/11/11 VS. SEATTLE49ERS

Run Pass Ret. Description 21 Alex Smith to Braylon Edwards 43 Kendall Hunter kickoff return 29t Alex Smith to Delanie Walker12 Alex Smith run

COWBOYSRun Pass Ret. Description 25 Tony Romo to Jason Witten 53t Tony Romo to Miles Austin 33 Tony Romo to Kevin Ogletree 20 Tony Romo to Jason Witten 25 Tony Romo to Miles Austin 25t Tony Romo to Miles Austin 77 Tony Romo to Jesse Holley

9/18/11 VS. DALLAS49ERS

Run Pass Ret. Description 22 Alex Smith to Vernon Davis12 Frank Gore run 39 Alex Smith to Vernon Davis11 Kendall Hunter run 20 Alex Smith to Vernon Davis

BENGALSRun Pass Ret. Description 10 Cedric Benson run

49ERS

9/25/11 AT CINCINNATI

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Starting Point of ResultingDate Opponent Turnover L.O.S Turnover L.O.S. Qtr. Result (pts)9/11 Sea. W. Tukuafu FR (P. Haralson FF) SEA 27 SEA 21 SEA 9 2 Field Goal (3) T. Brock INT (T. Jackson) SEA 49 SF 6 SF 6 2 Halftime (0) P. Willis FR (P. Haralson FF) SF 38 SF 48 SEA 44 4 End of game (0)9/18 Dal. D. Whitner INT (J. Kitna) SF 28 Endzone SF 20 3 Interception (0) T. Brock INT (J. Kitna) DAL 34 DAL 47 DAL 29 3 Touchdown (7)9/25 at Cin. C. Rogers INT (A. Dalton) CIN 20 CIN 32 CIN 32 4 Field Goal (3)9/25 at Cin. R. Smith INT (A. Dalton) SF 36 SF 14 SF 25 4 Safety (0)9/25 at Cin. D. Walker FR (N. Clements) (ST) CIN 29 CIN 33 CIN 33 4 End of Game

Regular Season Totals: 8 takeaways resulted in 13 points

L.O.S. - Line of scrimmage* - Red zone playST - Special teams play(TB) - Touchback

2011 SAN FRANCISCO 49ERSTURNOVER BREAKDOWN

Starting Point of ResultingDate Opponent Turnover L.O.S Turnover L.O.S. Qtr. Result (pts)9/11 Sea. None 9/18 Dal. A. Smith INT (A. Ball) SF 22 SF 33 SF 18 3 Touchdown (7)9/25 at Cin. F. Gore Fumble (R. Maualuga) SF 10 SF 15 SF 16 4 Field Goal (3) Regular Season Totals: 2 giveaways resulted in 10 points

Date Opp Takeways Giveaways Game Total Season Total9/11 Sea 3 0 +3 +39/18 Dal 2 1 +1 +49/25 at Cin 3 1 +2 +610/2 at Phi 10/9 TB 10/16 at Det 10/30 Cle 11/6 at Was 11/13 NYG 11/20 Arz 11/24 at Bal 12/4 StL 12/11 at Arz 12/19 Pit 12/24 at Sea 1/1 at StL

TAKEAWAYS

GIVEAWAYS

GAME-BY-GAME TURNOVER DIFFERENTIAL

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Date Opp 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 10+ Totals9/11 Sea 0/1 0/1 1/2 0/2 0/0 0/1 0/1 0/0 0/1 0/1 0/2 1/129/18 Dal 2/2 0/1 0/0 1/1 2/2 1/1 0/0 0/2 0/0 2/2 0/5 8/169/25 at Cin 1/1 1/2 1/1 0/0 0/2 1/1 0/1 1/1 0/0 0/1 0/5 5/1510/2 at Phi10/9 TB10/16 at Det10/30 Cle11/6 at Was11/13 NYG11/20 Arz11/24 at Bal12/4 StL12/11 at Arz12/19 Pit12/24 at Sea1/1 at StLRegular Season Totals: 3/4 1/4 2/3 1/3 2/4 2/3 0/2 1/3 0/1 2/4 0/12 14/43 75.0 25.0 66.7 33.3 50.0 66.7 0.0 33.3 0.0 50.0 0.0 32.6

Date Opp 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 10+ Totals9/11 Sea 0/1 1/3 1/1 0/0 1/1 0/0 0/0 0/2 1/1 1/3 0/3 5/159/18 Dal 1/2 0/1 0/0 1/1 0/3 1/1 1/1 0/2 1/1 1/1 0/1 6/149/25 at Cin 0/0 0/0 1/2 0/1 0/2 0/0 0/0 0/0 0/0 0/1 0/4 1/1010/2 at Phi10/9 TB10/16 at Det10/30 Cle11/6 at Was11/13 NYG11/20 Arz11/24 at Bal12/4 StL12/11 at Arz12/19 Pit12/24 at Sea1/1 at StLRegular Season Totals: 1/3 1/4 2/3 1/2 1/6 1/1 1/1 0/4 2/2 2/5 0/8 12/39 33.3 25.0 66.7 50.0 16.7 100.0 100.0 0.0 100.0 20.0 0.0 30.8

2011 SAN FRANCISCO 49ERSTHIRD DOWN EFFICIENCY

49ERS THIRD-AND ...

OPPONENTS THIRD-AND ...

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DWNS/ SCORE PTS/Date Opp Poss TD PAT 2-Pt. FG MFG INT FUM Punt HF GM PTS TD% PCT. POSS9/11 Sea 5 1 1 0 4 0 0 0 0 0 0 19 20.0% 100.0% 3.89/18 Dal 2 2 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 14 100.0% 100.0% 7.0 9/25 at Cin 2 1 1 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 10 50.0% 100.0% 5.0 10/2 at Phi 10/9 TB 10/16 at Det 10/30 Cle 11/6 at Was 11/13 NYG 11/20 Arz 11/24 at Bal 12/4 StL 12/11 at Arz 12/19 Pit 12/24 at Sea 1/1 at StL Totals 9 4 4 0 5 0 0 0 0 0 0 43 44.4% 100.0% 4.8

DWNS/ SCORE PTS/Date Opp Poss TD PAT 2-Pt. FG MFG INT FUM Punt HF GM PTS TD% PCT. POSS9/11 Sea 2 1 1 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 10 50.0% 100.0% 5.09/18 Dal 3 1 1 0 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 10 33.3% 66.7% 3.3 9/25 at Cin 2 0 0 0 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 6 0.0% 100.0% 3.0 10/2 at Phi 10/9 TB 10/16 at Det 10/30 Cle 11/6 at Was 11/13 NYG 11/20 Arz 11/24 at Bal 12/4 StL 12/11 at Arz 12/19 Pit 12/24 at Sea 1/1 at StL Totals 7 2 2 0 4 1 0 0 0 0 0 26 28.6% 85.7% 3.7

2011 SAN FRANCISCO 49ERSRED ZONE PRODUCTION

SAN FRANCISCO 49ERS

OPPONENTS

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Won in OvertimeBy 49ers: 11/14/10 49ers win vs. St. Louis, 23-20By Opponent: 9/18/11 Cowboys win vs. Dallas, 27-24

Won by Scoring in the Last Two Minutes of RegulationBy 49ers: 12/28/08 49ers win vs. Washington, 27-24 (last score at 0:00)By Opponent: 10/24/10 Panthers win at Carolina, 23-20 (last score at 0:43)

Tied Game by Scoring in the Last Two Minutes of RegulationBy 49ers: 9/20/10 49ers loss vs. New Orleans, 22-25 (tied game at 1:19)By Opponent: 9/18/11 Cowboys win vs. Dallas, 27-24 (tied game at 0:00)

ShutoutBy 49ers: 10/4/09 49ers win vs. St. Louis, 35-0By Opponent: 11/21/10 Buccaneers win vs. Tampa Bay, 21-0

Won by 20-or-More PointsBy 49ers: 1/2/11 49ers win vs. Arizona, 38-7 By Opponent: 12/16/10 Chargers win at San Diego, 34-7

Won After Trailing by 20-or-More PointsBy 49ers: 10/20/96 49ers win vs. Cincinnati, 28-21 (Bengals ahead 21-0 in 2nd quarter)By Opponent: 11/6/88 Cardinals win at Arizona, 24-23 (49ers ahead 23-0 in 3rd quarter)

Held a 28-or-More Point LeadBy 49ers: 1/2/11 49ers win vs. Arizona, 38-7 (31)By Opponent: 12/16/10 Chargers win at San Diego, 34-0 (34)

Held a 21-or-More Point LeadBy 49ers: 1/2/11 49ers win vs. Arizona, 38-7 (31)By Opponent: 12/16/10 Chargers win at San Diego, 34-7 (27)

Scored 20-or-More Points in a QuarterBy 49ers: 1/2/11 49ers win vs. Arizona, 38-7 (21 points, 3rd Q)By Opponent: 10/11/09 Falcons win vs. Atlanta, 45-10 (21 points, 2nd Q)

Scored 20-or-More Points in a HalfBy 49ers: 1/2/11 49ers win vs. Arizona, 38-7 (28 points, 2nd half)By Opponent: 12/5/10 Packers win at Green Bay, 34-16 (20 points, 2nd half)

Held Opponent without a TouchdownBy 49ers: 9/25/11 49ers win at Cincinnati, 13-8 (2 FGs, Safety)By Opponent: 11/21/10 Buccaneers win vs. Tampa Bay, 21-0

Touchdowns Scored by Offense and DefenseBy 49ers: 1/2/11 49ers win vs. Arizona, 38-7 (4 offense, 1 defense)By Opponent: 10/10/10 Eagles win vs. Philadelphia, 27-24 (2 offense, 1 defense)

Touchdowns Scored by Offense, Defense and Special TeamsBy 49ers: 10/4/09 49ers win vs. St. Louis, 35-0 (2 offense, 2 defense, 1 special teams)By Opponent: 9/23/07 Steelers win at Pittsburgh, 37-16 (2 offense, 1 defense, 1 special teams)

Safety ScoredBy 49ers: 12/7/03 Marcel Shipp recovered fumble in end zone and was tackled by LB Jeff Ulbrich vs. ArizonaBy Opponent: 9/25/11 Andy Lee OB in end zone at Cincinnati

Successful Two Point ConversionBy 49ers: 9/20/10 Vernon Davis pass from Alex Smith vs. New OrleansBy Opponent: 12/4/05 Obafemi Ayanbadejo run vs. Arizona

Failed Two Point Conversion AttemptBy 49ers: 11/23/08 Pass failed from Shaun Hill to Isaac Bruce at DallasBy Opponent: 11/1/09 Pass failed from Peyton Manning to Pierre Garcon at Indianapolis

THE LAST TIME...

TEAM TOTALS

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500-or-More Total Net Yards of OffenseBy 49ers: 12/14/03 Bengals win at Cincinnati, 41-38 (502; 171 rushing, 331 passing)By Opponent: 11/25/07 49ers win at Arizona, 37-31 (552; 96 rushing, 456 passing)

400-or-More Total Net Yards of OffenseBy 49ers: 11/14/10 49ers win vs. St. Louis, 23-20 (OT) (421; 98 rushing, 323 passing)By Opponent: 9/18/11 Cowboys win vs. Dallas, 27-24 (472; 45 rushing, 427 passing)

300-or-More Net Yards Rushing by TeamBy 49ers: 12/14/98 49ers win vs. Detroit, 35-13 (328)By Opponent: 10/8/72 Rams win at Los Angeles, 31-7 (302)

200-or-More Net Yards Rushing by TeamBy 49ers: 11/29/10 49ers win at Arizona, 27-6 (261)By Opponent: 9/26/10 Chiefs win at Kansas City, 31-10 (207)

Individual 200-Yard Rushing GameBy 49ers: 9/20/09 Frank Gore (16-207-2 TDs) vs. SeattleBy Opponent: Never

Individual 150-Yard Rushing GameBy 49ers: 12/14/09 Frank Gore (25-167-1 TD) vs. ArizonaBy Opponent: 11/7/04 Shaun Alexander (26-160-2 TDs) at Seattle

Individual 100-Yard Rushing GameBy 49ers: 11/29/10 Brian Westbrook (23-136-1 TD) at ArizonaBy Opponent: 11/22/09 Ryan Grant (21-129-1 TD) at Green Bay

Two 100-Yard Rushers in the Same GameBy 49ers: 11/13/77 Wilbur Jackson (22-123) & Delvin Williams (25-110-1 TD) vs. New OrleansBy Opponent: 11/8/53 Skeets Quinlan (11-119) & Tank Younger (12-101-1 TD) at Los Angeles Rams

Consecutive 100-Yard Rushing GamesBy 49ers: 10/17/10-10/31/10 Frank Gore (25-149) vs. Oakland; Frank Gore (19-102) at Carolina; Frank Gore (29-118-1TD) vs. DenverBy Opponent: 9/7/08-9/14/08 Edgerrin James (26-100) at San Francisco; Julius Jones (26-127-1 TD) at Seattle

Combined 200-Yard Rushing by Two PlayersBy 49ers: 9/20/09 224 by Frank Gore (16-207-2 TDs) and Shaun Hill (1-17) vs. SeattleBy Opponent: 10/8/72 211 by Bob Thomas (19-142) and Larry Smith (2-69-1 TD) at Los Angeles

Individual with 30-or-More CarriesBy 49ers: 12/31/06 Frank Gore (31-153) at DenverBy Opponent: 12/21/08 Steven Jackson (32-108) at St. Louis

Individual with 25-or-More CarriesBy 49ers: 10/31/10 Frank Gore (29-118-1 TD) vs. DenverBy Opponent: 11/21/10 LaGarrette Blount (26-82) vs. Tampa Bay

Rushing Play of 80-or-More YardsBy 49ers: 9/20/09 80t by Frank Gore vs. SeattleBy Opponent: 12/9/07 84t by Chester Taylor vs. Minnesota

Rushing Play of 60-or-More YardsBy 49ers: 10/17/10 64 by Frank Gore vs. OaklandBy Opponent: 12/9/07 84t by Chester Taylor vs. Minnesota

Rushing Play of 40-or-More YardsBy 49ers: 10/17/10 64 by Frank Gore vs. OaklandBy Opponent: 10/17/10 43 by Louis Murphy vs. Oakland

Individual with Two-or-More Rushing TouchdownsBy 49ers: 1/2/11 Brian Westbrook (13-79-2 TDs) vs. ArizonaBy Opponent: 11/8/09 Chris Johnson (25-135-2 TDs) vs. Tennessee

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400 Net Yards Passing by TeamBy 49ers: 12/5/99 Bengals win vs. San Francisco, 44-30 (437)By Opponent: 9/18/11 Cowboys win vs. Dallas, 27-24 (427)

300 Net Yards Passing by TeamBy 49ers: 11/14/10 49ers win vs. St. Louis, 23-20 (323)By Opponent: 9/18/11 Cowboys win vs. Dallas, 27-24 (427)

Individual with 50-or-More Pass AttemptsBy 49ers: 10/10/04 Tim Rattay (57-38-417-0 INTs-2 TDs) at ArizonaBy Opponent: 11/12/09 Jay Cutler (52-29-307-5 INTs-0 TDs) vs. Chicago

Individual with 40-or-More Pass AttemptsBy 49ers: 9/26/10 Alex Smith (42-23-232-1 INT-1 TD) at Kansas CityBy Opponent: 12/12/10 Matt Hasselbeck (42-27-285-4 INTs-2 TDs) vs. Seattle

Individual with 30-or-More Pass CompletionsBy 49ers: 12/14/08 Shaun Hill (46-30-233-0 INTs-0 TDs) at MiamiBy Opponent: 11/14/10 Sam Bradford (42-30-251-0 INTs-1 TD) vs. St. Louis

Individual with 25-or-More Pass CompletionsBy 49ers: 10/10/10 Alex Smith (39-25-309-2 INTs-3 TDs) vs. PhiladelphiaBy Opponent: 12/26/10 Sam Bradford (37-28-292-0 INTs-1 TD) at St. Louis

No Sacks AllowedBy 49ers: 9/11/11 49ers win vs. Seattle, 33-17 (20 attemtps - Alex Smith)By Opponent: 9/26/10 Chiefs win at Kansas City, 31-10 (27 attempts - Matt Cassel)

Individual 300-Yard Passing GameBy 49ers: 11/14/10 Troy Smith (28-17-356-0 INTs-1 TD) vs. St. LouisBy Opponent: 9/18/11 Tony Romo (33-20-345-0 INTs-2 TDs) vs. Dallas

Consecutive 300-Yard Passing GamesBy 49ers: 12/10/00-12/17/00 Jeff Garcia (38-25-305-2 INTs-2 TDs) vs. New Orleans; Garcia (44-36-402-0 INTs-2 TDs) vs. Chicago By Opponent: 10/24/10-10/31/10 Matt Moore (41-28-308-1 INT-2 TDs) at Carolina; Kyle Orton (40-28-369-1 INT-1 TD) vs. Denver

Individual Four-or-More Touchdown PassesBy 49ers: 12/7/03 Jeff Garcia (28-19-252-0 INTs-4 TDs) vs. ArizonaBy Opponent: 10/28/07 Drew Brees (39-31-336-0 INTs-4 TDs) vs. New Orleans

Individual with Three-or-More Touchdown PassesBy 49ers: 12/12/10 Alex Smith (27-17-255-0 INTs-3 TDs) vs. SeattleBy Opponent: 12/16/10 Philip Rivers (25-19-273-0 INTs-3 TDs) at San Diego

Individual with 10-or-More ReceptionsBy 49ers: 11/8/09 Vernon Davis (10-102) vs. TennesseeBy Opponent: 1/2/11 Larry Fitzgerald (11-125-1 TD) vs. Arizona

Individual with 150-Yard Receiving GameBy 49ers: 9/14/08 Isaac Bruce (4-153) at SeattleBy Opponent: 10/31/09 Brandon Lloyd (7-169-1 TD) vs. Denver

Individual with 100-Yard Receiving GameBy 49ers: 9/25/11 Vernon Davis (8-114) at CincinnatiBy Opponent: 9/18/11 Miles Austin (9-143-3 TDs) vs. Dallas

Two 100-Yard Receivers in the Same GameBy 49ers: 10/10/10 Michael Crabtree (9-105-1 TD) & Vernon Davis (5-104-1 TD) vs. PhiladelphiaBy Opponent: 9/18/11 Miles Austin (9-143-3 TDs) & Jason Witten (7-102) vs. Dallas

Consecutive 100-Yard Receiving GamesBy 49ers: 12/16/10 & 12/26/10 Josh Morgan (7-106) at San Diego; Michael Crabtree (6-122-1 TD) at St. LouisBy Opponent: 10/24/10 & 10/31/10 David Gettis (8-125-2 TDa) at Carolina; Brandon Lloyd (7-169-1 TD) vs. Denver

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Pass Play of 80-or-More YardsBy 49ers: 9/25/05 89t, Tim Rattay to Brandon Lloyd vs. DallasBy Opponent: 10/11/09 90t, Matt Ryan to Roddy White vs. Atlanta

Pass Play of 60-or-More YardsBy 49ers: 12/26/10 60t, Troy Smith to Michael Crabtree at St. LouisBy Opponent: 9/18/11 77, Tony Romo to Jesse Holley vs. Dallas

Pass Play of 40-or-More YardsBy 49ers: 1/2/11 59t, Alex Smith to Vernon Davis vs. ArizonaBy Opponent: 9/18/11 77, Tony Romo to Jesse Holley vs. Dallas

Individual with Three-or-More Touchdown ReceptionsBy 49ers: 10/25/09 Vernon Davis (7-93-3 TDs) at HoustonBy Opponent: 9/18/11 Miles Austin (9-143-3 TDs) vs. Dallas

Individual with Two-or-More Touchdown ReceptionsBy 49ers: 11/8/09 Jason Hill (4-50-2 TDs) vs. TennesseeBy Opponent: 9/18/11 Miles Austin (9-143-3 TDs) vs. Dallas

Led Team in Both Rushing and Receiving Yards in the Same GameBy 49ers: 10/3/10 Frank Gore (21-77 rushing, 7-60 receiving) at AtlantaBy Opponent: 10/12/08 Correll Buckhalter (18-93-1 TD rushing, 7-85 receiving) vs. Philadelphia

100-Yard Rusher & Receiver in the Same GameBy 49ers: 9/17/06 Frank Gore (29-127-1 TD) & Antonio Bryant (4-131-1 TD) vs St. LouisBy Opponent: 11/22/09 Ryan Grant (21-129-1 TD) & Greg Jennings (5-126-1 TD) at Green Bay

100-Yard Rusher, 100-Yard Receiver & 300-Yard Passer in the Same GameBy 49ers: 10/8/00 Charlie Garner (24-109), Terrell Owens (12-176-2 TDs) & Jeff Garcia (41-28-336-0 INTs-4 TDs) vs. OaklandBy Opponent: 11/22/09 Ryan Grant (21-129-1 TD), Greg Jennings (5-126-1 TD) & Aaron Rodgers (45-32-344-0 INTs-2 TDs) at Green Bay

Individual with at Least One Rushing and One Receiving Touchdown in the Same GameBy 49ers: 9/20/10 Frank Gore (20-112-1 TD rushing, 7-56-1 TD receiving) vs. New OrleansBy Opponent: 10/25/09 Steve Slaton (18-67-1 TD rushing; 4-22-1 TD receiving) at Houston

Individual with at Least One Rushing Touchdown and One Touchdown Pass in the Same GameBy 49ers: 10/31/10 Troy Smith (19-12-196-0 INTs-1 TD passing, 4-2-1 TD rushing) vs. DenverBy Opponent: 9/12/10 Matt Hasselbeck (23-18-170-1 INT-2 TDs passing, 2-4-1 TD rushing) at Seattle

No TurnoversBy 49ers: 9/11/11 49ers win vs. Seattle, 33-17By Opponent: 12/16/10 Chargers win at San Diego, 34-7

Touchdown Scored on First DriveBy 49ers: 12/12/10 49ers win vs. Seattle, 40-21By Opponent: 12/26/10 Rams win at St. Louis, 25-17

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Held Opponent Under 200 Net Yards of Total OffenseBy 49ers: 10/17/10 49ers win vs. Oakland, 17-9 (179, 110 rushing, 69 passing)By Opponent: 12/16/10 Chargers win at San Diego, 34-7 (192, 61 rushing, 131 passing)

Held Opponent Under 300 Net Yards of Total OffenseBy 49ers: 9/25/11 49ers win at Cincinnati, 13-8 (228, 79 rushing, 149 passing)By Opponent: 9/25/11 49ers win at Cincinnati, 13-8 (226, 50 rushing, 176 passing)

Held Opponent Under 50 Yards RushingBy 49ers: 11/29/10 49ers win at Arizona, 27-6 (13)By Opponent: 9/18/11 Cowboys win vs. Dallas, 27-24 (45)

Held Opponent Under 75 Yards RushingBy 49ers: 9/18/11 Cowboys win vs. Dallas, 27-24 (74)By Opponent: 9/25/11 49ers win at Cincinnati, 13-8 (50)

Held Opponent Under 100 Yards RushingBy 49ers: 9/25/11 49ers win at Cincinnati, 13-8 (79)By Opponent: 9/25/11 49ers win at Cincinnati, 13-8 (50)

Held Opponent Under 100 Net Yards PassingBy 49ers: 10/17/10 49ers win vs. Oakland, 17-9, (69) By Opponent: 12/30/07 Browns win at Cleveland, 20-7, (73)

Held Opponent Under 150 Net Yards PassingBy 49ers: 11/21/10 49ers loss vs. Tampa Bay, 0-21 (137)By Opponent: 9/25/11 49ers win at Cincinnati, 13-8 (149)

Interception Return for a TouchdownBy 49ers: 1/2/11 Tarell Brown, 62 (QB Richard Bartel) vs. ArizonaBy Opponent: 9/12/10 Marcus Trufant, 32 (QB Alex Smith) at Seattle

Individual with Three-or-More InterceptionsBy 49ers: 10/8/06 Walt Harris (1-Andrew Walter, 2-Marcus Tuiasosopo) vs. OaklandBy Opponent: 11/20/77 Bill Simpson (1-Scott Bull, 2-Jim Plunkett) vs. Los Angeles Rams

Individual with Two-or-More InterceptionsBy 49ers: 11/25/07 Walt Harris (2-Kurt Warner) at ArizonaBy Opponent: 12/21/08 Ron Bartell (2-Shaun Hill) at St. Louis

Seven-or-More Sacks by TeamBy 49ers: 1/3/10 49ers win at St. Louis, 28-6 (8)By Opponent: 9/14/08 49ers win at Seattle, 33-30 (8)

Six-or-More Sacks by TeamBy 49ers: 1/2/11 49ers win vs. Arizona, 38-7 (6)By Opponent: 9/18/11 Cowboys win vs. Dallas, 27-24 (6)

Five-or-More Sacks by TeamBy 49ers: 9/11/11 49ers win vs. Seattle, 33-17 (5)By Opponent: 9/25/11 9/25/11 49ers win at Cincinnati, 13-8 (5)

Individual with Three-or-More SacksBy 49ers: 1/2/11 Justin Smith (3.0; 2.0 of John Skelton, 1.0 of Richard Bartel) vs. ArizonaBy Opponent: 9/26/10 Tamba Hali (3.0 of Alex Smith) at Kansas City

Individual with Two-or-More SacksBy 49ers: 9/11/11 Justin Smith (2.0 of Tarvaris Jackson) and Parys Haralson (2.0 of Tarvaris Jackson) vs. SeattleBy Opponent: 9/18/11 Demarcus Ware (2.0 of Alex Smith) and Jason Hatcher (2.0 of Alex Smith) vs. Dallas

Fumble Recovered for TouchdownBy 49ers: 10/4/09 Ray McDonald recovered a Kyle Boller fumble and returned it 11 yards vs. St. LouisBy Opponent: 10/10/10 Quintin Mikell recovered an Alex Smith fumble and returned it 52 yards vs. Philadelphia

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DEFENSIVE TOTALS

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Kickoff Return for a TouchdownBy 49ers: 9/11/11 Ted Ginn Jr., 102 yards vs. SeattleBy Opponent: 12/12/10 Leon Washington, 92 yards vs. Seattle

Kickoff Return for a Touchdown on the Opening KickoffBy 49ers: 11/10/08 Allen Rossum, 104 yards at ArizonaBy Opponent: (could not find an instance when it occurred)

Punt Return for a TouchdownBy 49ers: 9/11/11 Ted Ginn Jr., 55 yards vs. SeattleBy Opponent: 12/30/07 Joshua Cribbs, 76 yards at Cleveland

Blocked Punt Recovered for TouchdownBy 49ers: 10/3/10 Taylor Mays recovered Michael Koenen’s punt (blocked by D. Zeigler) in the end zone at Atlanta By Opponent: 10/14/90 Bobby Butler recovered Barry Helton’s punt (blocked by Thomas) returned 35 yards at Atlanta

Blocked PuntBy 49ers: 10/3/10 Dominique Zeigler blocked Michael Koenen’s punt at AtlantaBy Opponent: 11/23/08 Carlos Polk blocked Andy Lee’s punt at Dallas

Blocked PATBy 49ers: 12/14/09 Ray McDonald blocked a PAT attempt by Neil Rackers vs. ArizonaBy Opponent: 11/2/03 Tyoka Jackson blocked a PAT attempt by Todd Peterson vs. St. Louis

Missed (not blocked) PATBy 49ers: 10/12/03 Owen Pochman at SeattleBy Opponent: 10/31/10 Matt Prater vs. Denver

Blocked Field GoalBy 49ers: 9/27/09 Ray McDonald blocked a 44-yard attempt by Ryan Longwell at MinnesotaBy Opponent: 12/27/09 Grady Jackson blocked a 28-yard attempt by Ricky Schmitt vs. Detroit

Blocked Field Goal returned for a TDBy 49ers: 9/27/09 Nate Clements, 59-yard return after Ray McDonald blocked a 44-yd. att. by Ryan Longwell at MinnesotaBy Opponent: 11/15/87 Johnnie Poe, 61-yard after Reggie Sutton blocked a 39-yd. att. by Ray Wersching vs. New Orleans Individual with Five-or-More Field GoalsBy 49ers: 10/30/05 Joe Nedney (5-6) vs. Tampa BayBy Opponent: 10/2/05 Neil Rackers (6-6) at Arizona

Individual with Four-or-More Field GoalsBy 49ers: 9/11/11 David Akers (4-4) vs. SeattleBy Opponent: 11/1/09 Matt Stover (4-4) at Indianapolis

Individual with Three-or-More Field goalsBy 49ers: 9/11/11 David Akers (4-4) vs. SeattleBy Opponent: 12/26/10 Josh Brown (3-3) at St. Louis

Successful Onsides KickBy 49ers: 12/23/07 Joe Nedney kick recovered by 49ers Delanie Walker (3rd Q)By Opponent: 12/30/02 Jeff Wilkins kick recovered by Rams O.J. Brigance (4th Q)

Failed Onsides Kick AttemptBy 49ers: 11/8/09 Joe Nedney kick recovered by Gerald McRath vs. Tennessee (4th Q)By Opponent: 9/21/08 Jason Hanson kick recovered by Arnaz Battle vs. Detroit (3rd Q)

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SAN FRANCISCO 49ERS

PLAYER CAPSULES

A five-time Pro Bowler and one of the NFL’s most reliable kickers, David Akers joins the 49ers after spending the previous 12 seasons with the Philadel-phia Eagles. Akers is the Eagles all-time leader in reg-ular and postseason games played, points, field goals and PATs. The highest scoring player in the 2000s decade with 1,169 points, he was named to the NFL’s All-Decade squad. Akers is a true “rags to riches” story, having landed on the waiver wire three times before signing with Philadelphia in 1999. A former waiter and substitute teacher, Akers spent his first season with the Eagles as a long field goal and kick-off specialist behind veteran Norm Johnson before winning the full-time position in 2000.

// CAREER HIGHLIGHTS• A five-time Pro Bowler in 2001, 2002, 2004, 2009

and 2010, he is ranked third in NFL history among Pro Bowl nominated kickers behind Morten Andersen (7) and Jan Stenerud (6). Also earned Associated Press second-team All-Pro and ���� ����� � ���� first-team All-Pro honors in 2009.

• Was named to the NFL’s All-Decade team of the 2000s after leading the NFL in that time span (2000-09) with 1,169 points.

• Has recorded 298 field goals and 1,340 points since 2000, marking the most among NFL kickers during that span.

• His 31 FGs in the postseason rank 3rd in NFL history behind Adam Vinatieri (45) and Gary Anderson (32).

• Ranks third in NFL history with 134 career postseason points, trail-ing only Gary Anderson (153) and Adam Vinatieri (187).

• Is the Eagles all-time leader in regular season (188) and postseason games played (19), points (1,323), field goals (294), 50-plus yard FGs (15) and PATs (441).

• Holds Phildelphia’s franchise records for single-season points (144) and field goals (33), both set in 2008.

• Has notched three-or-more 40-plus-yard FGs in the same game five times in his career. No other kicker in team history has ever accom-plished that feat once.

• Holds the Eagles record for consecutive PATs made with 173 (2004-2009), surpassing his old record of 153 (set from 2001-04).

• Kicked four of the seven longest FGs in Eagles history: 57 yards vs. NE (9/14/03), 53 yards (twice, 9/30/07 at NYG & 10/24/99 at Mia.), & 52 yards (twice, 11/8/09 vs. Dal. & 10/5/03 vs. Was.). The 57 yarder is the longest FG ever in Philadelphia.

• Has made nine game-winning field goals with under 2:00 remaining in the fourth quarter or OT.

• Has a 93.5% (201-215) career success rate in field goal attempts in-side 40 yards.

• Posted five consecutive 100-point seasons on two separate occa-sions (2000-04, 2006-10).

• Booted the top four longest FGs in Eagles postseason history: 51 yards at Min. (1/4/09, NFC-WC), 48 yards vs. NYG (1/7/07, NFC-WC), 46 yards at StL. (1/27/02, NFC-C), & 46 yards at Chi. (1/19/02, NFC-D)

• In Eagles postseason history, ranks first in points (134), PATs (41) and FGs (31).

• Led Eagles in scoring in each of the last 11 seasons, which is the most by any player in team history. In those 11 seasons, has exceeded the 100-point mark on ten occasions, more than any Eagles player.

• In 19 career postseason games, has scored at least one point in ev-ery contest to tie George Blanda for the second-longest streak in NFL postseason history.

• Has posted the top eight consecutive field goal streaks in Eagles his-tory: 17 (10/26/09 - 12/6/09), 17 (10/22/01 - 12/30/01), 15 (10/12/08-12/7/08), 15 (10/17/04 - 12/5/04), 13 (11/10/03 - 12/15/03), 13 (1/2/00 - 10/22/00), 12 (10/17/10 - 11/21/10) and 12 (9/8/02 - 10/20/02, tied with two other players).

// 2011 HIGHLIGHTS• Recorded an ‘opening day’ career-high 15 pts., connecting on 4 of 4

FG atts. (27, 24, 31, 18) and all three PATs in his 49ers debut vs. Sea. (9/11). Akers’ 15 points were the 2nd most in the NFL in Week 1 (SD RB Mike Tolbert – 18 pts.).

• Connected on a 55-yd. FG vs. Dal. (9/18), marking the longest FG in Candlestick history (Bruce Gossett, 54 yds. vs. NO - 10/21/73) and the 3rd longest FG in franchise history (Joe Nedney, 56 yds. at StL - 12/24/05 and Mike Cofer, 56 yds. at Atl. - 10/14/90).

• Kicked his 300th career FG on a 23-yarder in the 3rd quarter, rank-ing him 6th among active players for career FGs made.

PLAYER CAPSULES

5-10 | 200 | LOUISVILLE | 13TH YEAR | BORN 12.9.74 | LEXINGTON, KY ACQUIRED FA IN ‘11 | TATES CREEK HS, LEXINGTON, KY

AKERS’ GAME-BY-GAME�������� �� � � ��� ������ ������ ������������������� ���� �� �� �� ���� ��� ��������������� ���� � �� �� ���� ���� � ������� �� �� ���� � � ������ � ������������ ��������� ���������� � ���!"#��� �����$!"#��� !%&!"#� � '()!"#� �� ������������ ���������� ���'()������� ������� �� ������*����� ������� � � � � ����������� �� ��� ��� � !"#$$

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SAN FRANCISCO 49ERS

PLAYER CAPSULES

// GOLDMINE• In November 2010, “David Akers Kicks for Kids” held a comedy and

magic show charity event at the Kimmel Center’s Pealman Theatre in Philadelphia. Former Eagles teammate Jon Dorenbos was the Mas-ter of Ceremonies, while America’s Got Talent star Michael Grasso and other comedians/magicians contributed to the memorable night. Proceeds from the event benefited The Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia.

• In 1997-98, Akers worked as a substitute teacher at Westport Mid-dle School in Louisville between stints with Carolina and Atlanta. After being released by Washington in 1998, he returned to Atlanta because his wife, Erika, had found a good job with Lucent Technolo-gies. David then picked up a part-time job as a waiter at Longhorn Steakhouse in Lawrenceville, GA, until signing with the Eagles on 1/11/99.

• Akers founded Kicks for Kids in 2001, to provide assistance to the patients and their families at The Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia. “David’s Locker” program directly assists families with unexpected emergency needs such as medical supplies, meals, clothing, utilities, mass transit and cab vouchers. In addition, KFK helps fund the staff-ing at the The Little Rock Resource Center at CHOP, which helps the blind and visually impaired. “I have been visiting CHOP once a week since my rookie season,” said Akers. “Over the years, I have seen so many families struggling to care for their sick children to help them in any way I can.” For more information, log on to DavidAkersKicks-ForKids.org.

AKERS’ CAREER NFL STATISTICS

AKERS’ CAREER FIELD GOAL STATISTICS

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AKERS’ CAREER HIGHS

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DAVID AKERS

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SAN FRANCISCO 49ERS

PLAYER CAPSULES

Dontavia Bogan joined the 49ers as an undrafted free agent out of the University of South Florida. A threat at both receiver and in the return game, Bogan finished his career at USF ranked 2nd in school history in career rec. yds. (1,534) and 3rd in career return yds. (1,598). He suffered a knee injury during training camp and was placed on Injured Reserve on 8/7.

// TRANSACTIONS Originally signed as an undrafted free agent by SF on 7/27/11...

Placed on Injured Reserve on 8/7/11 (knee).

// COLLEGE Saw action in 49 games (23 starts) for the Bulls and posted 107 re-

cepts. for 1,534 yds. and 12 TDs during his career, while adding 69 KORs for 1,598 yds. Played in 13 games (12 starts) as a senior, re-cording 47 catches for 685 yds. and a career-high 6 TDs. Appeared in 13 games (10 starts) as a junior and posted 22 catches for 306 yds. and 4 TDs, while also recording 770 yds. on 36 returns as the primary kick returner. In 2008, played in all 13 games (1 start) and tallied 26 recepts. for 354 yds. and 1 TD. As a true freshman, ap-peared in 11 games and registered 12 catches for 190 yds. and 1 TD.

// PERSONAL• Attended Thomas County Central (Thomasville, GA) HS, where he

starred at WR and FS.• Named Region I-AAAA Defensive Player of the Year.• Born Dontavia Raphel Bogan (10/6/88) in Thomasville, GA.• Majored in criminology.

// INJURY REPORT2011: Suffered a knee injury during training camp and was place on

Injured Reserve on 8/7.

PLAYER CAPSULES

6-1 | 188 | SOUTH FLORIDA | ROOKIE | BORN 10.6.88 | THOMASVILLE, GA ACQUIRED FA IN ‘11 | THOMAS COUNTY CENTRAL HS, THOMASVILLE, GA

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SAN FRANCISCO 49ERS

PLAYER CAPSULES

Alex Boone reached a significant milestone in his career when he took the field in the team’s season-finale against the Arizona Cardi-nals in 2010. The game marked his first regular season action as a pro, which was an achievement many would have felt far-fetched two years ago. Boone was originally signed as a rookie free agent by the 49ers in 2009 and spent his entire rookie season on the team’s practice squad. When Boone reported to mini-camp the following year, he had lost 40 pounds of fat and replaced it with 25 pounds of lean muscle. He competed at both right and left tackle, and eventu-ally proved his worth as he earned a spot on the 53-man roster.

// 2011 HIGHLIGHTS• Has entered each game in short-yardage situations, as well as con-

tributed on special teams.

// GOLDMINE• During the 2009 offseason, Alex returned home to Lakewood, OH,

where he began working out with former NFL O-lineman LeCharles Bentley. With Bentley’s help and guidance, Alex is now in the best shape of his life, dropping 40 pounds before putting 25 pounds of muscle back on. “LeCharles helped me realize what it takes to be suc-cessful in the NFL,” Alex said. “He has helped me with my footwork, my initial burst and my quickness. I know I’ll be ready for whatever the coaches throw at me this season.”

• Alex was featured in NFL.com’s “On The Fringe” series in 2010, which highlighted lesser-known players as they battled for roster spots.

PLAYER CAPSULES

6-7 | 328 | OHIO ST. | 2ND YEAR | BORN 5.4.87 | LAKEWOOD, OH ACQUIRED FA IN ‘09 | ST. EDWARD HS, CLEVELAND, OH

BOONE’S CAREER STATISTICS��%*� ���+���. �6� � �+�, -6� ���+, -

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SAN FRANCISCO 49ERS

PLAYER CAPSULES

Talent, hustle, toughness and determination are all attributes 49ers linebacker NaVorro Bowman displayed during his rookie sea-son with the 49ers. A third round draft pick by San Francisco in 2010, Bowman showcased his play-making abilities throughout the year, seeing action in 16 games with one start. He provided 49ers fans a glimpse of the future in his lone start as he led the team with 15 tackles in the season finale against Arizona. Bowman made his big-gest impact on special teams as a rookie, ranking third in the NFL with 20 special teams stops according to NFL game books. Growing up in a crime and drug-infested neighborhood, Bowman relied on sports and a strong support system to keep him pointed in the right direction.

// 2011 HIGHLIGHTS• Recorded 12 tackles vs. Dal. (9/18), including his 1st career PD.• Led the team in total tackles (13) at Cin. (9/25), including 3 special

teams stops.

// GOLDMINE• NaVorro was born and raised just outside of Washington D.C. in a

high crime area. It was a tough environment to avoid, but sports became his outlet and a means for not giving into the streets and drugs. “My parents had been with me since day one. Also, having a support system like my high school coach - he really let me know early on that I had something special and I shouldn’t mess it up.”

• NaVorro earned his degree in criminal law and justice, and one day would like to use that to help out his hometown. With all of the vio-lence and drugs in District Heights, MD, he believes being from that area will help others listen to him and understand that there are other ways to live life than what they currently know. “That’s one of the reasons I got in that field - to open doors and possibly be able to get into a young child’s head from my neighborhood.”

PLAYER CAPSULES

6-0 | 242 | PENN ST. | 2ND YEAR | BORN 5.28.88 | DISTRICT HEIGHTS, MD ACQUIRED D-3 IN ‘10 | SUITLAND HS, FORESTVILLE, MD

BOWMAN’S CAREER STATISTICS

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BOWMAN’S GAME-BY-GAME

• Two important and influential people in NaVorro’s life recently and abruptly passed away. His father passed away from a blood clot that reached his heart, while his high school coach died in a car accident before Penn State’s bowl game in 2009. “Dealing with as much ad-versity as I have in a short period of time has made me the man I am today. It’s made me stay on track and strive to do those things that will possibly help me be successful, not just on the football field, but off the field also.”

BOWMAN’S CAREER HIGHS

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SAN FRANCISCO 49ERS

PLAYER CAPSULES

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A quick and physical cornerback, Tramaine Brock became the first undrafted rookie free agent to make the 49ers opening day roster since WR Otis Amey in 2005. He went on to spend a total of 14 weeks on the 49ers active roster, seeing action primarily on special teams in 3 games. A converted strong safety out of Belhaven Uni-versity, Brock only played a dozen of snaps at cornerback during his collegiate career, which also included stops at Mississippi Gulf Coast Junior College and the University of Minnesota.

// 2011 HIGHLIGHTS• Registered his 1st career INT vs. Sea (9/11 - QB Tarvaris Jackson),

leaping into the air on a hail mary pass to end the 1st half.• With an INT vs. Dal. (9/18), Brock became the 1st 49er to register an

INT in consecutive games since CB Dre’ Bly (12/20/09 at Phi. and 12/27/09 vs. Det.).

// GOLDMINE• In February of 2011, Belhaven retired Brock’s jersey for his accom-

plishments on both the collegiate and professional levels. He is the only player in the history of the school’s program to have played in the NFL.

PLAYER CAPSULES

5-10 | 197 | BELHAVEN | 2ND YEAR | BORN 8.20.88 | GULFPORT, MS ACQUIRED FA IN ‘10 | LONG BEACH SR. HS, LONG BEACH, MS

BROCK’S CAREER STATISTICS

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BROCK’S CAREER HIGHS

BROCK’S GAME-BY-GAME

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SAN FRANCISCO 49ERS

PLAYER CAPSULES

A versatile and athletic linebacker, Ahmad Brooks has found a miche as a pass rush specialist for the 49ers. Brooks, who was origi-nally selected in the third round of the 2006 supplemental draft by the Cincinnati Bengals, joined the 49ers in 2008. After not suiting up in 2008, he had a breakthrough year in 2009, registering 6 sacks and 5 FFs, despite only playing in 14 games as a reserve. His 5 FFs also set a single-season team record among linebackers and ranked t-2nd among NFL linebackers that year. Brooks followed up his solid ‘09 campaign by posting 5 sacks after battling through a kidney in-jury early in the 2010 season. Brooks is no stranger to the NFL as his father, Perry, played in 92 games as a defensive tackle for the Washington Redskins from 1978-84.

// CAREER HIGHLIGHTS• Set a career high with 6.0 sacks in 2009.• Set the 49ers record for most FFs by a LB in a single-season with 5

in 2009. The 5 FFs ranked t-2nd among all NFL LB’s that year.• Ranked t-3rd on the team with 5.0 sacks in 2010.

// 2011 HIGHLIGHTS• Recorded a sack at Cin. (9/25) on QB Andy Dalton for an 8-yd. loss in

the 2nd qtr.

// GOLDMINE

• Ahmad is no stranger to the NFL. His father, Perry Brooks, played in 92 games at DT for the Washington Redskins from 1978-84.

• Ahmad’s father, Perry, ran a barber shop since Ahmad was a fresh-man in college that was left to his family after his father passed away.

// TRANSACTIONS

PLAYER CAPSULES

6-3 | 259 | VIRGINIA | 6TH YEAR | BORN 3.14.84 | FAIRFAX, VA ACQUIRED WAI. IN ‘08 - CIN. | C.D. HYLTON HS, WOODBRIDGE, VA

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BROOKS’ CAREER HIGHS

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SAN FRANCISCO 49ERS

PLAYER CAPSULES

Armed with great speed, quickness and physicality, Tarell Brown has served primarily as the 49ers nickel back since being drafted in the 5th round of the 2007 NFL Draft, while also standing out as one of the team’s leading tacklers on special teams. Brown saw extensive action on defense in a reserve role in 2010, posting 18 tackles and an interception returned for a touchdown. A year prior, he started a career-high 4 games and finished with 37 tackles, 2 INTs and 9 PDs. Brown is known for possessing a very strong work ethic, a trait that helped him overcome a significant amount of adversity throughout his young life. Following his rookie season, Brown was presented with the team’s coveted Thomas Herrion Award, which is given to a player who has taken advantage of every opportunity, turned it into a positive situation and made their dream turn into a reality. Brown signed a three-year contract extension on 10/28/09.

// 2011 HIGHLIGHTS• Posted 5 tackles and 1 PD in his 1st start since 2006.

// GOLDMINE• In 2007, Tarell was the recipient of the Thomas Herrion Award, hon-

oring the rookie or first-year player who has taken advantage of ev-ery opportunity, turned it into a postive and made their dream come true like Thomas Herrion. The award is voted on by the coaches.

• It’s not only Tarell’s work ethic that got him to where he is today, but also his ability to overcome a variety of challenges throughout his young life. At the age of 9, Tarell’s mother was killed as she was getting into her car to go to work early one morning. Following his mother’s death, Tarell moved in with his father, Robert, who not only saw football as an escape for his son, but also as an opportunity for him to earn a scholarship and a solid education. Just prior to the NFL Draft, his father died of a heart attack on Valentine’s Day. “A day doesn’t go by that I don’t think about my mother and father. Every-thing I do nowadays is dedicated to my parents. I know without them, I wouldn’t be where I’m now.”

• Tarell won the Punt, Pass & Kick Championship at Texas Stadium as a 9-year-old after advancing through the city and regional finals. He was then flown to San Diego for the National Championships, where he placed 3rd.

• When his NFL career is over, Tarell is looking forward to working with kids. “I want to open up a gym and train athletes, train kids. I like to be around kids and I still want to be surrounded by sports. Maybe have a little AAU basketball team and travel around different cities and states.”

• Tarell hosted his 3rd Annual Summer Sportsfest in Dallas in June of 2010. The highlights of the weekend included free football and cheerleading camps, in addition to a celebrity basketball game fea-turing a large group of NFL players. Proceeds raised through the raffle and celebrity basketball game benefitted Tarell’s ����� �������������. The foundation is dedicated to becoming the nation’s foremost full-service, ex-offender program. It provides an oppor-tunity for all ex-offenders who desire a significant change to make a positive transition into a new life. The foundation offers job coun-seling, educational and vocational training, and personal and family support to all who desire to not be defined by negativity in their past.

Visit tarellbrown.net for additional information. • In June 2010, Tarell was recognized for his contributions to his

hometown, receiving a proclamation from the city of Mesquite.

PLAYER CAPSULES

5-10 | 193 | TEXAS | 5TH YEAR | BORN 1.6.85 | NEW YORK CITY, NY ACQUIRED D-5 IN ‘07 | NORTH MESQUITE HS, MESQUITE, TX

BROWN’S GAME-BY-GAME�������� �� � � � � � � � &��� �� )'� :!� )'� �� �� �+)'�������� ���� �� �,�� � � � 0 � 0 � � � �� � � ������� ���� �� �,�� �� �� � 0 � 0 � � � �� � � ���� � ������� �� �,�� � � � 0 � 0 � � � �� � � ���� � ������������ ��������� ���������� � ���!"#��� �����$!"#���� !%&!"#� � '()!"#� �� ������������ ���������� ���'()������� ������� �� ������*����� ������� � � � � � � � � � � � ������ 1 1 �� - � �0� �0� � � 1 � � �

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SAN FRANCISCO 49ERS

PLAYER CAPSULES

� ��&����&��#�����&��+��, , �-� & #�����&��+��, , �-�������# ����&��+��, , �-

��������>�!��'#�#$0�'()0�+�, ,��-:!��8����� !�#��+���2�$-���$��#$0�'()0�+�, ,��-� !":!��8����� !+��78!#� ��#$0�'()0�+�, ,��-

BROWN’S CAREER STATISTICS

BROWN’S CAREER HIGHS

TARELL BROWN

��,��*� :5�*+,*��:5� �;%��*�)*�+ �*�% �� �� �� �� ��� ��,�� )�� :5� )�� �� �� �� �� �+ )��� �� �5� �� � � � � 0 � 0 � � � � � � �� ������ � �� �5� �� �� �� ��� �� 0 � 0 � � �� �� � � � � �� �5� ��� �� �� �� �� 0 � 0 � � � �� � �� � � � � �5� �� � ��� ��� � 0 � 0 � �� � � � �� �� �� � � ��� �5� � � ��� �� � 0 � 0 � � � � � � � � ����� $� � �� �� - �0� �0� $ ��$ /�� � �- � � �

�''��� !�&����������#������&���(�����&���$.# ��+�-�� ��+��-�� ��+��-�� � �+��-

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SAN FRANCISCO 49ERS

PLAYER CAPSULES

Nate Byham stepped into action immediately as a rookie, playing in 14 games with three starts after being selected in the 6th round of the 2010 NFL Draft. Byham is known primarily for his blocking abilities as both a tight end and fullback, but he’s also showcased his reliable hands as a receiver. He caught a pass in four consecutive games to start his rookie campaign. Raised under the watchful eye of his grandfather, Byham’s personal background can be described as one of perseverance and resiliency as he overcame a variety of obstacles on his path to the NFL.

// 2011• Suffered a season-ending knee injury during training camp and was

placed on Injured Reserve on 9/3.

// GOLDMINE• Nate’s grandfather obviously played a huge role in raising him and

he continues to be someone he looks up to, but Nate also credits his mother for making him the man he is today. “I saw a lot of things as a child that most grown men haven’t seen in their lives. I’ve seen a lot of eye opening things that made me mature at a young age.” By second and third grade, Nate was already taking care of himself and knew what he was going to have to do to get by. “That adversity molded me and helped me become a man.”

• Nate was raised by his grandfather, Ron, from the time he was born. Nate’s mom became pregnant with him when she was a junior in high school. Although she tried to raise Nate, her battle with drug and alcohol abuse was too difficult. Nate’s grandparents intervened and offered to raise him. Tragically, a short time after taking him in, his grandmother passed away, leaving Ron with a baby boy. Nate stayed with his grandfather up until high school when he was able to have his own car. At that point, Nate’s grandfather lived 15 minutes outside of Franklin, which was in another school district and they didn’t have a football team. “During high school I lived at friends’ houses. There were 2-3 families that kind of took me in. I had bed-rooms at all of their houses and I lived there and out of my car.”

• Nate had an amazing high school career at Franklin High School and they retired his jersey in 2005. “Coming from a small town like Franklin, I didn’t realize the numbers that I was putting up.” The only other player to have their jersey retired at Franklin is former NFL quarterback and head coach, Ted Marchibroda.

PLAYER CAPSULES

6-4 | 264 | PITTSBURGH | 2ND YEAR | BORN 6.27.88 | FRANKLIN, PA ACQUIRED D-6B IN ‘10 | FRANKLIN HS, FRANKLIN, PA

BYHAM’S CAREER STATISTICS +*,*:?:5� +;�=:5�)*�+ �*�% �� �� 5 )�� �?� �� �� ��� )�� �?� �� �� � � �5� ��� � � �� 0�� �� � � � 0 � � ��� �5� � � � �4!*=<1��<1�1<>1���:!11����� �. 1 $ �� $0. - � � � �0� � �

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+������ !�#��+���2�$����$��#$0���9�� ,��,� -+����@�!")�8'�#�����:��+�, �,� -� !"+������ !#�����:��+�, �,� -

BYHAM’S CAREER HIGHS

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SAN FRANCISCO 49ERS

PLAYER CAPSULES

A special teams standout, Blake Costanzo joined the 49ers after spending the previous two seasons with the Cleveland Browns. In 2009, he was selected to ���������All-Pro team as a special teamer. Costanzo is reunited with current 49ers assistant head coach/spe-cial teams coordinator Brad Seely, who coached the Browns special teams at the time.

// 2011 HIGHLIGHTS• Made 49ers debut vs. Sea. (9/11) and saw action on special teams,

totaling one special teams stop.

PLAYER CAPSULES

6-1 | 235 | LAFAYETTE | 5TH YEAR | BORN 4.14.84 | FRANKLIN LAKES, NJ ACQUIRED FA IN ‘11 | RAMAPO HS, FRANKLIN LAKES, NJ

COSTANZO’S CAREER STATISTICS

� 8��'�7(6&��#� ����:��+��, , �- �7(6&�+�� @�8���#��+����2�$-���$��������+�,� ,� -

COSTANZO’S CAREER HIGHS

COSTANZO’S GAME-BY-GAME�������� �� � � � � � � � &��� �� )'� :!� )'� �� �� �+)'�������� ���� �� �, � � � � 0 � 0 � � � � � � ������� ���� �� �, � � � � 0 � 0 � � � � � � ���� � ������� �� �, � � � � 0 � 0 � � � � � � ���� � ������������ ��������� ���������� � ���!"#��� �����$!"#���� !%&!"#� � '()!"#� �� ������������ ���������� ���'()������� ������� �� ������*����� ������� � � � � � � � � � � � ������ 1 � � � � �0� �0� � � � � � �

��,��*� :5�*+,*��:5� �;%��*�)*�+ �*�% �� �� �� �� ��� ��,�� )�� :5� )�� �� �� �� �� �+ )�� �� �=5� � � � � � 0 � 0 � � 0 � � � � � � �� �=5� ��� � � � � 0 � 0 � � 0 � � � � � � �� ��1� ��� � � � � 0 � 0 � � 0 � � � � � � � � ��1� � � � � � � 0 � 0 � � 0 � � � � � � ��� �5� � � � � � 0 � 0 � � 0 � � � � � � ����� .� � � � � �0� �0� � �0� � � � � � �

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������&���(�����&��#1

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SAN FRANCISCO 49ERS

PLAYER CAPSULES

As the 10th overall pick in the 2009 NFL Draft by San Francisco, Michael Crabtree has showcased his rare combination of size, hands and run-after-the-catch ability during his first two seasons with the 49ers. A reliable receiver, Crabtree has caught a pass in each of his 29 NFL games played, which includes recording at least three recep-tions in 23 of those contests. He put his natural football ability on display in his rookie season with the 49ers, leading all rookie receiv-ers with 56.8 receiving yards per game despite missing the first five games of the season and all of training camp due to a contract im-passe. Crabtree followed up his rookie campaign with career-highs in every receiving category, in 2010. Widely considered one of the most prolific receivers in college football history, Crabtree earned the coveted Biletnikoff Award - given to the nation’s best receiver - in each of his two seasons played at Texas Tech.

2011 HIGHLIGHTS• Started at Cin. (9/25) after missing the previous game vs. Dal. (9/18)

with a foot injury and had 3 recepts. for 24 yds.

// GOLDMINE• A nationally-ranked basketball player at Carter HS in Dallas, TX, Mi-

chael was rated among the top 50 prospects in Texas and received several scholarship offers from major colleges. As a senior, he aver-aged 20.8 points, 6.7 rebounds and 3.1 assists per game. Michael limited his college options to those that would allow him to play both basketball and football. He chose Texas Tech because both Bob Knight and Mike Leach both recruited him.

PLAYER CAPSULES

6-1 | 214 | TEXAS TECH | 3RD YEAR | BORN 9.14.87 | DALLAS, TX ACQUIRED D-1 IN ‘09 | CARTER HS, DALLAS, TX

+������ !�#��#$0����0�+� ,� ,� -+����@�!")�8'�#� ��������+� , �,� -

� !"+������ !#�� ���������+� , �,� -��+������ !�#��+����2�$-���$���������+� , �,� -

CRABTREE’S CAREER STATISTICS

CRABTREE’S CAREER HIGHS

�������� �� � � � � +�� )'� �@" �" ��������� ���� �� �, � �� �� �0 � �� ������� ���� �� ����������������4!'��4>1�+5""�-� � �� ����� � ������� �� �,�� � �� �0 � �� ���� � ������������ ��������� ���������� � ���!"#��� �����$!"#��� !%&!"#� � '()!"#� �� ������������ ���������� ���'()������� �����@� �� ������*����� ������� � � � � � � ����������� � � . �� �0� � �

CRABTREE’S GAME-BY-GAME

+*,*:?:5� +;�=:5�)*�+ �*�% �� �� 5 )�� �?� �� �� ��� )�� �?� �� �� �� �5� ��� ��� ��� � � �0 � � � � � 0 � � � � �5� ��� �� � ���� �0� � �� �� � � 0 � � � ��� �5� � �� �� �� �0 � �� � � � 0 � � ����� �- �� ��� �21-. �10� /�� � � � �0� � �

�''��� !�&����������#�7(6&��� ������#������� �

%�&��� !��#5����67�#���3"A0�+� , , �-6���8�����8�#���3"A0�+� , , �-6��8��+������ !#���3"A0�+� , , ������./0���$$�?("2�8�����A��3���-6���8����+������ !#���&��+��, , ������./0���$$�?("2�8��'��@��2���-6�����'0��(��# ����$���������+� , �,� ���� �./$0-6�+���9�'�2���8��0�'�0;�#$0����0�+� ,�,� ��� ��./0������$$�?("2�8���(".��2���-

• Considered a fashion connoisseur, Michael owns more than 1,000 pairs of shoes. On game days, he puts his style on display and wears his own customized Air Jordan cleats.

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SAN FRANCISCO 49ERS

PLAYER CAPSULES

With a nice combination of size and speed, Chris Culliver is a smooth, fluid defender that is comfortable and effective in a multi-tude of coverages. Beginning his collegiate career as a safety, Cul-liver made the transition to cornerback as a senior. He also brings a wealth of kickoff return experience, ranking third in SEC history in kickoff returns (106) and kickoff return yards (2,476).

PLAYER CAPSULES

6-0 | 199 | SOUTH CAROLINA | ROOKIE | BORN 8.17.88 | PHILADELPHIA, PA ACQUIRED D-3 IN ‘11 | GARNER MAGNET HS, GARNER, NC

CULLIVER’S CAREER STATISTICS ��,��*� :5�*+,*��:5� �;%��*�

)*�+ �*�% �� �� �� �� ��� ��,�� )�� :5� )�� �� �� �� �� �+ )��� ��� �5� � � � � � 0 � 0 � � � � � � � � ����� 1 � � � � �0� �0� � � � � � � � �

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%�&��� !��#5����67�##$0����0�+�,��,��-

CULLIVER’S GAME-BY-GAME�������� �� � � � � � � � &��� �� )'� :!� )'� �� �� �+)'�������� ���� �� �, � � � � 0 � 0 � � � � � � ������� ���� �� �, � � � � 0 � 0 � � � � � � ���� � ������� �� �, � � � � 0 � 0 � � � � � � ���� � ������������ ��������� ���������� � ���!"#��� �����$!"#���� !%&!"#� � '()!"#� �� ������������ ���������� ���'()������� ������� �� ������*����� ������� � � � � � � � � � � � ������ 1 � � � � �0� �0� � � � � � �

������&���(�����&��#�

// 2011 HIGHLIGHTS• Made NFL debut vs. Sea. (9/11) on special teams and had one special

teams tackle.

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SAN FRANCISCO 49ERS

PLAYER CAPSULES

Armed with tremendous size, strength, and athleticism, Anthony Davis made an immediate impact at right tackle as a rookie after being selected with the 11th overall pick in the 2010 NFL Draft. Davis, along with fellow rookie offensive lineman G Mike Iupati, were two of only 14 NFL rookies to start every game in 2010, and they became just the third set of rookies to start every game on the offensive line since the 16-game schedule was instituted in 1978. Davis diligently worked on his craft throughout his rookie season as he and Iupati spent countless hours watching films in the evenings. As one of the youngest players on the roster, Davis has already set his eyes on becoming the ulitmate pro. “I think what they’ve learned is that, to be a pro, you have to take the game home with you,” offensive line coahc Mike Solari said. “You have to become a student of the game - that’s what the great ones do.”

��%*� ���+����- �-A � �+��,��-6� ���+,-

%�&��� !��#5����67�##$0����0�+�,� ,� -6��8�����8�#�������0�+�,� , � -

PLAYER CAPSULES

6-5 | 323 | RUTGERS | 2ND YEAR | BORN 10.11.89 | PISCATAWAY, NJ ACQUIRED D-1A IN ‘10 | PISCATAWAY HS, PISCATAWAY, NJ

DAVIS’ CAREER STATISTICS

// GOLDMINE• Anthony saw first hand the struggles of life while growing up, but

that never discouraged him, or the person he leaned on most, his mom. “My mom made it happen, she never played the victim. She always taught me you’ve got to do what you’ve got to do.”

• Anthony got his first tattoo when he was 15 and has added many more to his arms. “The eye on my hand means wisdom and protec-tion.” His favorite tattoo is on the inside of his left forearm, “Wealth is of the heart and the mind, not the wallet.” The other ink on his arms range from the Rutgers Scarlet Knight, a dream catcher and a clown in a straight jacket, “I haven’t named him yet.”

// 2011 HIGHLIGHTS• Davis and the 49ers offensive line did not allow a sack on 20 pass

atts. by QB Alex Smith vs. Sea. (9/11). The last time the 49ers did not allow a sack was vs. Den. (10/31/10).

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SAN FRANCISCO 49ERS

PLAYER CAPSULES

Vernon Davis has solidified himself as one of the most productive and versatile tight ends to ever play the game. His explosive speed and quickness, combined with his tremendous strength and athleticism, pose significant challenges for opposing defenses. Davis, who was selected by the 49ers with the 6th overall pick in the 2006 NFL Draft, has led the team in both receiving yards and touchdowns in back-to-back seasons (2009-10). He experienced a breakout season in 2009, recording 965 receiving yards and 13 touchdowns, and was rewarded with a starting role in the Pro Bowl. Known for his hard work and dedication, Davis spends hours at a time in the weight room and is always one of the last to leave the practice field. For these qualities, he was named a team captain in both 2009 and 2010, and was given a five-year contract extension on 9/11/10. Off the field, Davis is just as active as he is on the field, pursuing everything from curling and painting to humanitarian trips overseas. One of Davis’ closest friends is his younger brother, Vontae, who is a starting cor-nerback for the Miami Dolphins.

// CAREER HIGHLIGHTS• Set single-season career highs

with 78 recepts., 965 rec. yds. and 13 TD recepts., in 2009. He was one of only two TEs to lead their team in all three catego-ries (Kellen Winlsow, TB). His rec. yds. and TD totals were both single-season records among 49ers tight ends all-time.

• In 2009, his 13 TD recepts. tied the NFL record for most in a season by a TE (Antonio Gates - 13 TDs in 2004). Davis’ TD recepts. also were tied for the most in the NFL with Patriots WR Randy Moss and Cardinals WR Larry Fitzgerald, making him the first tight end in the Super Bowl era to lead (or tie for the lead) league in TD recepts.

• Ranks 2nd in franchise history among tight ends in recepts., rec. yds. and TDs. He trails TE Brent Jones in all three categories.

• Has 6, 100-yd. rec. games, which ties a franchise-best among TEs (TE Monty Stickles - 6).

PLAYER CAPSULES

6-3 | 250 | MARYLAND | 6TH YEAR | BORN 1.31.84 | WASHINGTON D.C. ACQUIRED D-1A IN ‘06 | DUNBAR HS, WASHINGTON D.C.

MOST RECEIVING TDS IN THE NFL SINCE 2009

Player TDs 1. Calvin Johnston 23 2t. Miles Austin 22 Roddy White 22 4. Larry Fitzgerald 21

5t. Vernon Davis 20 Dwayne Bowe 20

h l d) l

MOST TDS IN A SEASON BY A TIGHT END IN NFL HISTORY

Player TDs1t. Vernon Davis, 2009 13 Antonio Gates, 2004 13

3t. Todd Christensen, 1983 12 Mike Ditka, 1961 12 Jerry Smith, 1967 12 Wesley Walls, 1999 12

�������� �� � � � � +�� )'� �@" �" ��������� ���� �� �,�� � ��� �0�� �� ������� ���� � �,�� � ��� �0 � � � ���� � ������� �� �,�� �� ���� ��0� �� ���� � ������������ ��������� ���������� � ���!"#��� �����$!"#��� !%&!"#� � '()!"#� �� ������������ ���������� ���'()������� �����@� �� ������*����� ������� � � � � � ������ 1 1 �$ ��- ��0- 1- �

DAVIS’ GAME-BY-GAME

// 2011 HIGHLIGHTS• Led the team with 5 recepts. for 47 yds. vs. Sea. (9/11) as he made his

60th consecutive start.• Recorded his 6th career 100-yd. game at Cin. on 9/25 (Last at GB -

12/5/10 - 126 yds.), finishing the day with 8 recepts. for 114 yds. His 114 rec. yds. are the most by a TE in 2011.

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SAN FRANCISCO 49ERS

PLAYER CAPSULES

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DAVIS’ CAREER STATISTICS

DAVIS’ CAREER HIGHS

// GOLDMINE• After a breakout season in 2009, Vernon was named the recipient of

the Len Eshmont Award. The 49ers most prestigious annual honor, the Len Eshmont Award honors the player who best exemplifies the “inspirational and courageous play” of Len Eshmont and is voted on by the players.

• Vernon is not one to sit back and relax during the offseason. This past March, he joined his younger brother, Vontae, and six other NFL players on a humanitarian trip to Uganda and Rwanda. The crew spent 10 days distributing 22,000 hearing aids throughout the African regions as part of the Pros for Africa organization. “It was amazing. It was breathtaking because you look at these kids who can’t hear anything and you plug these hearing aids in their ears and all of a sudden they’re responding. You can’t do anything but be thankful to be able to help them hear and respond. It brought a lot of emotion. I’m already an emotional guy.”

• During the 2010 offseason, Vernon and Vontae hosted a football and mentoring clinic at Howard University in their native Washington, D.C. “It means a lot to me, because I know how important it is to go out and give back and share some of the lessons and just the gifts that you always wanted as a kid,” Davis said. “Growing up in a low-income, poverty area in the inner city of Washington, D.C., I know what it’s like. When I think of the kids, it touches me in ways you can’t even imagine.”

• During the 2010 offseason, Vernon traveled also to Afghanistan with five fellow NFL players as part of the NFL-USO tour. They first stopped at Al Udeid Air Force Base 40 miles outside of Doha, Qatar, then traveled on to Bagram Air Force Base in Afghanistan. The trip gave Vernon perspective and knowledge of the efforts being put forth by our military in the Middle East. “It was a once-in-a-lifetime experience. I gained a lot of understanding throughout the trip and got a chance to really see what was going on inside and out.”

• Vernon was named an honorary captain of the USA Curling Team at the 2010 Winter Olympics in Vancouver, BC, Canada. He attended the games and served as an ambassador for the team in order to help gain support for the sport.

• Vernon has always had an affinity for art and is an avid admirer of Michelangelo and the Renaissance period. In 2010 and 2011, he got the opportunity to give back to his passion for art. Director of Cultural Affairs for the San Francisco Arts Commission Luis R. Can-cel, in conjunction with the Young at Art Festival, a project of the San Francisco Unified School District and the Fine Arts Museum of San Francisco, announced the launch of “Art Impact.” Vernon was the inaugural speaker for Art Impact, and the San Francisco Unified School District created a scholarship in Vernon’s name, called the Vernon Davis Visual Arts Scholarship, which will provide tuition sup-port to a San Francisco youth interested in pursuing a career in the visual arts. In May of 2011, he handed out his first scholarship to San Francisco high school student, Sheryl Quock, a promising fashion designer.

• When Vernon was a freshman in college he wanted to honor the per-son who raised him to be the person he is today, his grandmother, Adaline. He decided to get a tattoo on the inside of his left arm with her name. His grandmother’s reaction wasn’t a good one at first, but she understood why he did it because in Vernon’s words, he could look onto the inside of his left arm just to think of her. “She’s really influenced me and really pushed me, made me open my eyes and see that besides football, there’s are other things that I can get involved with if I don’t make it.” Adaline was the one who raised most of his siblings and gave Vernon direction in his life, teaching him to set goals and mold Vernon into the person he is today.

VERNON DAVIS

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SAN FRANCISCO 49ERS

PLAYER CAPSULES

A strong and athletic running back, Anthony Dixon brings tough-ness to the 49ers backfield. He is deceptively agile and quick for a back his size. A 6th round pick in 2010 by San Francisco, Dixon led all NFL players in carries (74), rushing yards (300) and touchdowns (4) during preseason action as a rookie. He went on to play in all 16 regular season games as a reserve, recording 237 rushing yards and two touchdowns, as well as 9 tackles on special teams. Dixon had to overcome a variety of obstacles growing up, which included be-ing homeless for quite some time. He and his three brothers proved resilient, however, and each has gone on to have successful athletic careers.

// GOLDMINE• Anthony was the co-recipient (with DT Will Tukuafu) of the 2010

Thomas Herrion Award. The award is presented annually to a rookie or first-year player who has taken advantage of every opportunity, turned it into a postive and made their dream come true like Thomas Herrion and is voted on by the coaches.

• Anthony was put in a unique situation when he was 10 years old. His parents had divorced the previous year and debts piled on to where the family became homeless. “As soon as we hit rock bottom, I knew what time it was. It was time for me to step up and become the man of the house. I’m just trying to provide for my family and provide for my momma so she doesn’t have to go through that again. I’m really just sacrificing my body for them.” Dixon had a lot of free time on his hands growing up while his mom worked three different jobs. It was his responsibility to watch his younger brothers and take care of them until his mom got home from work. “I had to grow up before it was my time, but it made me stronger today just seeing that and going through that.”

PLAYER CAPSULES

6-1 | 233 | MISSISSIPPI ST. | 2ND YEAR | BORN 9.24.87 | JACKSON, MS ACQUIRED D-6A IN ‘10 | TERRY HS, TERRY, MS

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DIXON’S CAREER HIGHS

• Anthony isn’t the only professional athlete in the Dixon family. His younger brother, Rashun (20), is a promising outfielder in the Oak-land A’s farm system. A 10th round draft pick in 2008, Rashun was named the best overall athlete in the A’s system in 2010 by ��������������� as a member of the Single-A Kane County Cougars in Ge-neva, IL. Anthony’s youngest brother, Deshun, just started his pro baseball career after being selected in the 10th round by the Tampa Bay Rays in 2010. Anthony’s second-oldest brother, Antwon, is a linebacker at Division II Midwestern State.

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SAN FRANCISCO 49ERS

PLAYER CAPSULES

Demarcus Dobbs signed with the 49ers as an undrafted free agent out of the University of Georgia on July 27. A tough, hard-nosed defender, Dobbs took advantage of every opportunity pre-sented to him throughout training camp to earn a spot on the 49ers 53-man roster. He finished the preseason ranked second on the team with 2 sacks, while adding 9 tackles, to lead all 49ers defensive linemen. Along with QB Scott Tolzien and NT Ian Williams, this marks the first time since 2001 that the 49ers had at least three undrafted free agents make the team (4 in 2001 - DT John Schlect, LB Quincy Stewart, LB Shane Elam and P Jason Baker).

PLAYER CAPSULES

6-6 | 275 | GEORGIA | ROOKIE | BORN 11.30.87 | SAVANNAH, GA ACQUIRED FA IN ‘11 | CALVARY BAPTIST HS, SAVANNAH, GA

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SAN FRANCISCO 49ERS

PLAYER CAPSULES AHMAD BROOKSPLAYER CAPSULES AHMAD BROOKS

6-3 | 214 | MICHIGAN | 7TH YEAR | BORN 2.21.83 | DETROIT, MI ACQUIRED FA IN ‘11 | BISHOP GALLAGHER HS, HARPER WOODS, MI

Braylon Edwards joins the 49ers after spending the previous two seasons with the NY Jets. He was orig-inally selected by Cleveland with the third overall pick in the 2005 NFL Draft. Selected to the Pro Bowl following the 2007 season, Edwards set the Browns single-season franchise record for receiving yards (1,289) and touchdown receptions (16). A standout at the University of Michigan, Edwards was the recipient of the Biletnikoff Award and Big 10 Player of the Year in 2004.

// CAREER HIGHLIGHTS• Ranks t-3rd among all active players with 4, two-point conversions.• Ranks 1st in NYJ postseason history, averaging 21.3 yds./recept. in 6

career postseason contests. • Also holds the NYJ postseason record for longest play from scrim-

mage, an 80-yd. TD recept. from QB Mark Sanchez.• In 2007, set Cle. single-season franchise record for rec. yds. (1,289)

and rec. TDs (16).

// 2011 HIGHLIGHTS• Made 49ers debut vs. Sea. (9/11) and caught 3 passes for 27 yds.• Caught a 21-yd. pass in 1st qtr. vs. Dal. (9/18) before leaving game

(knee).

// GOLDMINE• In 2007, Braylon donated $1 million to the Cleveland Municipal

School District to create Advance 100, a college scholarship oppor-tunity for 100 eighth-grade students who maintain a 2.5 GPA and participate in 15 hours of community service each month throughout high school. In the Spring of 2011, Edwards’ Advance 100 Progam awarded 100 students in Cleveland, OH, $10,000 towards their col-lege tuition. In addition to the required GPA and community service hours, Edwards also had students attend twice-a-month workshops, some of which involved learning basic social skills such as tying a necktie, shaking hands and giving speeches. Besides the scholar-ships, the students in the program earned seven college credits from Cuyahoga Community College in Cleveland for work achieved in the Advance 100 Program.

• In 2006, donated $500,000 to create a scholarship endowment at the University of Michigan for the football player who wears the number-one jersey, the largest donation pledged to the university by a professional athlete.

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SAN FRANCISCO 49ERS

PLAYER CAPSULES

EDWARDS’ CAREER NFL STATISTICS

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BRAYLON EDWARDS

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SAN FRANCISCO 49ERS

PLAYER CAPSULES

Blessed with incredible speed and elusiveness, Ted Ginn Jr. en-ters his second season in San Francisco after being acquired in a trade with the Miami Dolphins in April of 2010. In his first season in Red and Gold, Ginn set a career high and ranked 3rd in the NFL av-eraging 13.4 yds./PR. It marked the first time a 49ers player ranked in the top three in PR avg. in a season since 2002 (CB Jimmy Wil-liams – 16.8 avg. led the NFL). One of the biggest influences in Ginn’s life has been his high school football coach, his father, Ted Sr. The 9th overall selection in the 2007 NFL Draft, Ginn is one of only 10 players in NFL history to register 2 KORs for TDs in the same game [at NYJ (11/1/09)].

// CAREER HIGHLIGHTS• Ginn became the 12th player in NFL history – and the first on Kickoff

Weekend – to return a kickoff (102 yards) and a punt (55 yards) for a touchdown vs. Sea. (9/11/11).

// 2011 HIGHLIGHTS• Registered a kickoff return for a TD (102 yds.) and a punt return for

a TD (55 yds.) in the 4th qtr. vs. Sea. (9/11). It marked the 1st time in franchise history that the 49ers registered a kickoff and a punt re-turn for a TD in the same game. Ginn’s 268 total return yds. vs. Sea. (9/11) are the most in a single game in franchise history.

PLAYER CAPSULES

5-11 | 180 | OHIO ST. | 5TH YEAR | BORN 4.12.85 | CLEVELAND, OH ACQUIRED TRADE IN ‘10 - MIA. | GLENVILLE HS, CLEVELAND, OH

// GOLDMINE• Ted is looking at a fresh start with the 49ers and would like to get

back to his old self. By getting back to the “old Ted Ginn,” he’s confi-dent that will award him one of his goals, which is heading to the Pro Bowl. “My goal always is to go to the Pro Bowl, but this year, I want to go out and get back to Ted Ginn, Jr. Just go out and make my team better as well as myself. That’s the only goal I have. It’s not too big, it’s not too small. It’s right there in my hands. I just have to go out and have fun and be a team player.”

• Growing up in Cleveland, Ted had the benefit of having his father, Ted Sr., as his coach and mentor. His father has been the football coach at Glenville High School in Cleveland since 1997 and the track coach there since 2002. In 1999, Glenville became the first Cleveland Municipal School to reach the State Playoffs and made six subse-quent appearances from 2000 to 2005. Ted Jr. played for his father during his prep career and credits his father with preparing him for the future. “It helped a lot,” said Ted Jr. of having his father as a coach. “It prepared me well for all different sorts of situations. He never showed any favoritism towards me. In fact, he might have been harder on me to make me an example. It prepared me well for the next levels and now, because I played for him, I feel as though I can adjust to any type of coach.”

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SAN FRANCISCO 49ERS

PLAYER CAPSULES

GINN’S CAREER STATISTICS

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GINN’S CAREER HIGHS

TED GINN JR.

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SAN FRANCISCO 49ERS

PLAYER CAPSULES

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Dashon Goldson is a talented, young safety with great size, range and aggressiveness. Originally selected by the 49ers in the 4th round of the 2007 NFL Draft, Goldson became the starting FS in 2009. Goldson grew up in Southern California and started The Highest Point Foundation to provide motivational outlets for youth through sports programs, such as camps and clinics, in order to take them off the streets and onto the field, making more productive use of their time and physical abilities.

// 2011 HIGHLIGHTS• Recorded 11 tackles (6 solo) in 1st start after returning from a knee

injury at Cin. (9/25).

// GOLDMINE• The Highest Point Foundation was created in 2009 by Dashon to

provide motivational outlets for youth through sports programs, such as camps and clinics, in order to take them off the streets and onto the field, making more productive use of their time and physi-cal abilities. In many communities throughout Southern California, where Dashon grew up, young people are plagued with issues such as dropping out of school, drug use, tobacco use, underage drinking, gang violence, poverty, parental neglect and homelessness. Many of these issues have caused them to make the wrong choices in life, where they oftentimes end up in a far worse place – and possibly jail. Dashon has seen far too much happen to the communities around him and he wants to do his part to give back – utilizing the resources that he has acquired as a professional athlete to help make a dif-ference in people’s lives. Whether it’s assisting with preventative measures to ensure a child does not take the wrong path in life, or transitional measures to help someone who was previously incar-cerated adjust to life as a responsible adult, Dashon vows to en-courage individuals to reach “the highest point” in life through the lessons he has personally learned in the sport of football, as well as through various programs and initiatives under his Foundation.

PLAYER CAPSULES

6-2 | 200 | WASHINGTON | 5TH YEAR | BORN 9.18.84 | CARSON, CA ACQUIRED D-4B IN ‘07 | NARBONNE HS, HARBOR CITY, CA

GOLDSON’S GAME-BY-GAME

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SAN FRANCISCO 49ERS

PLAYER CAPSULES

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GOLDSON’S CAREER STATISTICS

GOLDSON’S CAREER HIGHS

DASHON GOLDSON

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SAN FRANCISCO 49ERS

PLAYER CAPSULES

Tavares Gooden joins the 49ers after spending the previous three seasons with the Baltimore Ravens. Originally selected by Baltimore in the third round (71st overall) of the 2008 NFL Draft, Gooden set career highs in tackles (52) and special team tackles (13) in 2009.

// 2011 HIGHLIGHTS• Made 49ers debut vs. Sea. (9/11) on special teams.

PLAYER CAPSULES

6-1 | 242 | MIAMI | 4TH YEAR | BORN 10.7.84 | FORT LAUDERDALE, FL ACQUIRED FA IN ‘11 | ST. THOMAS AQUINAS HS, FORT LAUDERDALE, FL

GOODEN’S CAREER STATISTICS

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GOODEN’S CAREER HIGHS

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SAN FRANCISCO 49ERS

PLAYER CAPSULES

Jonathan Goodwin joins the 49ers after spending the last five seasons with the New Orleans Saints. The 10-year veteran has started the last 48 regular sea-son games in which he has appeared and was re-sponsible for all the calls and adjustments on the offen-sive line. Goodwin was selected to the Pro Bowl following the 2009 season and was a member of the New Orleans Saints Super Bowl XLIV Championship Team.

PLAYER CAPSULES

6-3 | 318 | MICHIGAN | 10TH YEAR | BORN 12.2.78 | COLUMBIA, SC ACQUIRED FA IN ‘11 | LOWER RICHLAND HS, HOPKINS, SC

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GOODWIN’S CAREER STATISTICS

// 2011 HIGHLIGHTS• Goodwin and the 49ers offensive line did not allow a sack on 20 pass

atts. by QB Alex Smith vs. Sea. (9/11). The last time the 49ers did not allow a sack was vs. Den. (10/31/10).

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SAN FRANCISCO 49ERS

PLAYER CAPSULES

As the heart of the 49ers offense for the past five seasons, two-time Pro Bowl running back Frank Gore has established himself as one of the pre-mier running backs in the NFL. In 2010, despite a suffering a season-ending hip injury in Week 12, Gore joined LB Patrick Willis as the only two-time re-cipients of the Bill Walsh Award, which is voted on by the coaches, and given to the 49ers team MVP, honoring his outstanding individual performance. Known as a breakaway threat and tough inside runner, the former 3rd-round pick became the first 49er in team history to record four consecutive 1,000-yd. rushing seasons (2006-09).

// CAREER HIGHLIGHTS• Gore has the most 100-

yd. rus. games in fran-chise history (24). His five, 150-yd. perfor-mances are the most in 49ers history.

• Logged four consecutive 1,000-yd. rus. seasons (2006-09), becoming the only player in 49ers his-tory to record a total of four, 1,000-yd. seasons.

• Ranks 3rd in franchise history with 8,839 yds. from scrimmage, and ranks 3rd on the 49ers all-time rushing list with 6,562 rus. yds.

• Gore and TE Vernon Da-vis (13 rec. TDs) became just the 2nd set of 49er teammates to each have at least 13 TDs in a sea-son. In 1995, WR Jerry Rice had 17 TDs and RB Derek Loville registered 13.

• Since his rookie season in 2005, the 49ers are 22-5 when Gore has 20-or-more carries and 17-7 when he breaks the 100-yd. plateau.

MOST 100-YD. GAMES IN 49ERS HISTORY

Player Games 1. Frank Gore (2005-11) 24 2. J. Perry (1950-60, 63) 20 3. Garrison Hearst (1997-03) 16

ALL-TIME 49ERS RUSHING LEADERS Player Yds. 1. J. Perry (1950-60, 63) 7,344 2. Roger Craig (1983-90) 7,064 3. Frank Gore (2005-11) 6,562 4. Ken Willard (1965-73) 5,930 5. G. Hearst (1997-03) 5,535

ALL-TIME 49ERS RUSHING ATTEMPTS LEADERS

Player Atts. 1. Roger Craig (1983-90) 1,686 2. Ken Willard (1965-73) 1,582 3. Joe Perry (1950-60, 63) 1,475 4. Frank Gore (2005-11) 1,430 5. G. Hearst (1997-03) 1,189

• Earned Pro Bowl honors in 2006 after setting single-season fran-chise records with 312 carries, 1,695 rus. yds., 2,180 total yds. from scrimmage and nine, 100-yd. rus. games.

• Set a 49ers single-game rushing record with 212 yds. vs. Sea. (11/19/06).

• His 5,954 rus. yds. since 2006 rank as the 5th-most of any NFL RB during that time span.

• In 2006 and 2010, Frank was named the recipient of the 49ers Bill Walsh Award.

// 2011 HIGHLIGHTS• Recorded the 49ers opening TD vs. Dal. (9/18) on 1-yd. run.

PLAYER CAPSULES

5-9 | 217 | MIAMI | 7TH YEAR | BORN 5.14.83 | CORAL GABLES, FL ACQUIRED D-3A IN ‘05 | CORAL GABLES HS, CORAL GABLES, FL

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GORE’S GAME-BY-GAME

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SAN FRANCISCO 49ERS

PLAYER CAPSULES

GORE’S CAREER STATISTICS

FRANK GORE

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GORE’S CAREER HIGHS

// GOLDMINE• In 2006 and 2010, Frank was named the recipient of the 49ers Bill

Walsh Award. The Bill Walsh Award is voted on by the coaches and awarded to the 49ers team MVP. Frank is one of two players in fran-chise history to win the award twice (LB Patrick Willis).

• Frank was named 15th winner of the annual Garry Niver Award by reporters covering the team who represent the SF Chapter of the Pro Football Writer’s Association in December of 2007. The award is given in honor of the late Garry Niver, the San Mateo Times report-er, and goes to the player who shows “cooperation and professional style” in dealing with Pro Football writers on the job.

• Frank’s determination to run over defenders comes from his tough upbringing in Miami, FL. Some considered his football career over when he suffered two serious knee injuries at the University of Miami. He relied, however, on his mother Liz’s strength to help him through. “She had been on dialysis (awaiting a kidney transplant) since I was in the 11th grade and raised three kids as a single woman,” Frank said. Unfortunately, Liz lost her battle with kidney disease be-fore the 49ers second game of the 2007 season against the St. Louis Rams. Playing with a heavy heart, Frank responded by rushing for 81 yds. and 2 TDs, including a 43-yd. score on a 4th-and-1 carry, helping the 49ers to a 17-16 victory.

• During the 2010 offseason, Frank tried his hand at coaching for the first time as the defensive coordinator of the Little 49ers in a Miami youth league. Although his players were only 4 years old, Frank was still teaching them what’s important. “The most important part is that the kids enjoy it. You can see how excited they get when they do something right.”

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SAN FRANCISCO 49ERS

PLAYER CAPSULES

Larry Grant re-joined the 49ers after spending the previous three seasons with the St. Louis Rams. Orginially drafted in the sev-enth round (214th overall) by San Francisco in the 2008 NFL Draft, he spent time on the 49ers practice squad before being signed to the Rams active roster in November of 2008. A native of Santa Rosa, CA, Grant attended City College of San Francisco and was named the 2005 NJCAA Defensive Player of the Year.

// 2011 HIGHLIGHTS• Made 49ers debut vs. Sea. (9/11) on special teams.

PLAYER CAPSULES

6-1 | 251 | OHIO ST. | 3RD YEAR | BORN 2.16.85 | SANTA ROSA, CA ACQUIRED FA IN ‘11 | FOOTHILL HS, SACRAMENTO, CA

GRANT’S CAREER STATISTICS

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GRANT’S CAREER HIGHS

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SAN FRANCISCO 49ERS

PLAYER CAPSULES

A student of the game, Parys Haralson uses his unique combina-tion of speed and size to terrorize opposing quarterbacks. Haralson developed his meticulous work ethic at a young age, working in his gradfather’s junk yard. A fifth-round pick in 2006, Haralson entered the starting lineup in 2007 and has posted 21.5 career sacks, rank-ing 2nd among 49ers LBs since 1982.

// CAREER HIGHLIGHTS• Currently ranks t-2nd for the most sacks in franchise history by a

linebacker (21.5) with LB Julian Peterson.• Led the team with a career-high 8 sacks in 2008, a total that tied for

2nd-most among NFC linebackers and marked the most by a 49ers linebacker in a single season since Kevin Greene (10.5) in 1997.

// 2011 HIGHLIGHTS• Registered a FF on each of his 2 sacks vs. Sea. (9/11 - QB Tarvaris

Jackson) for a loss of 24 yds., marking the 1st two FFs of his career. Both of his FF’s resulted in takeaways.

// GOLDMINE• Parys’ diligent work ethic was instilled at the age of 14. While grow-

ing up in Flora, MS, his uncle and grandparents gave him an early introduction to life in the real world. He worked with his uncle at Sun Belt Bolts and Screws until he was 18 years old. After that, he labored in his grandfather’s junkyard. Parys says his family helped instill the blue-collar foundation he leans on now as an NFL player. “You had to have a strong work ethic because it was an 8-hour job in the hot Mississippi sun. Sometimes I didn’t want to go, but my grand-parents made me go because if I didn’t work for what I wanted, they weren’t going to give it to me.” Those lessons taught Parys that good things don’t come without hard work and perseverance.

PLAYER CAPSULES

6-0 | 255 | TENNESSEE | 6TH YEAR | BORN 1.24.84 | FLORA, MS ACQUIRED D-5 IN ‘06 | MADISON CENTRAL HS, MADISON, MS

• Thanks to his upbringing by this mom and grandparents, Parys will always remember where he came from – and now it’s his opportunity to give back. Parys aspires to start his own foundation to benefit the children in his hometown of Flora, MS. “There are a bunch of kids in my hometown. They are athletic, but they just run around and play football. No one really teaches them the techniques and the special-ized training for each position.” When he goes home, Parys spends time working out at his old high school and his middle school, taking time to show the students everything it takes to be successful. “You can see how excited the kids get when I walk in. I know that they look up to me and I take that responsibility seriously. I want to show them everything it takes to be successful and show each of them that they have the ability to be successful.” As part of his foundation, Parys is looking to run a football camp, teaching kids the importance of eat-ing healthy and staying in shape, while also teaching them proper football techniques.

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SAN FRANCISCO 49ERS

PLAYER CAPSULES

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HARALSON’S CAREER STATISTICS

HARALSON’S CAREER HIGHS

PARYS HARALSON

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SAN FRANCISCO 49ERS

PLAYER CAPSULES

With good movement and ball skills, Curtis Holcomb was re-garded as a shut down corner at Florida A&M. A third-team All-America selection in 2010, he posted 12 INTs in 37 career starts with the Rattlers. The oldest of 8 children, Holcomb was a natural leader at Florida A&M, being named a four-time team captain.

// TRANSACTIONSOriginally the third of three 7th-round (250th overall) draft choices by SF in 2011. Placed on Injured Reserve on 8/7/11 (leg).

// COLLEGEPlayed in 45 games (37 starts) and registered 161 tackles,12 INTs, 7 TFLs, FR (returned for a TD), 25 PDs and 3 blocked kicks. As a senior, was a third-team All-American selection and second-team All-MEAC honoree. Played in 11 games (8 starts) and notched 41 tackles, 3 INTs, 1.5 TFLs and 4 PDs. In 2009, started all 11 games and earned second-team All-MEAC honors. Recorded 35 tackles, 2 INTs, 1.5 TFLs and 3 PDs. As a sophomore, played in 12 games (10 starts), earning first-team All-MEAC honors and was an honorable mention All-American selection from The NFL Draft Report. Registered 40 tackles, 5 INTs, FR (returned for a TD) and 13 PDs. In 2007, played in all 11 games, recording 45 tackles, 2 INTs, 3.5 TFLs and 5 PDs.

// PERSONAL• Attended Miami Southridge (Miami, FL) HS, earning all-Dade County

honors.• As a senior, registered 45 tackles, 3 INTs, 3 TFLs and 5 PDs to go

along with 6 blocked kicks.• Earned all-Dade County honors in track.• Has seven siblings; Shada (20), Wendell (18), Michael (16), Casena (13),

Brandon (13) Natari (12) and Shakeyla (3).• Born Curtis Eugene Holcomb (9/3/88) in Miami, FL.• Majored in accounting.

PLAYER CAPSULES

5-10 | 190 | FLORIDA A&M | ROOKIE | BORN 9.3.88 | MIAMI, FL ACQUIRED D-7C IN ‘11 | MIAMI SOUTHRIDGE HS, MIAMI, FL

A SCOUT’S VIEW“He’s similar to Phillip Adams. He’s from a smaller school and a little unknown. But at his pro day, he had a real good workout. What we’re looking for is the quickness. It’s the same thing we saw last year in Phillip when we were (scouting) Phillip -- the quickness, the close. I don’t know that anybody in our building has ever heard of it, a guy who’s been a four-time captain at the college level. He’s all about football. He’s a very smart young man and competitive.” - 49ers Gen-eral Manager Trent Baalke

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SAN FRANCISCO 49ERS

PLAYER CAPSULES

Despite his compact stature, Kendall Hunter has cat-like slip-pery moves, great open field acceleration and the strong leg drive necessary to break tackles. The first-team All-American ranks fifth in Big 12 history with 4,181 career rushing yards and became just the fourth running back in Oklahoma State history to rush for over 1,500 in two seasons.

PLAYER CAPSULES

5-7 | 199 | OKLAHOMA ST | ROOKIE | BORN 9.16.88 | TYLER, TX ACQUIRED D-4 IN ‘11 | JOHN TYLER HS, TYLER, TX

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HUNTER’S GAME-BY-GAME

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// 2011 HIGHLIGHTS• Made NFL debut vs. Sea. (9/11), recording 2 carries for 4 yds.• Broke several tackles in his 1st career kickoff return for 43 yds. in

the 3rd qtr. vs. Dal. (9/18).• Notched his 1st career TD on a 7-yd. run late in the 4th qtr. to give

the 49ers a 10-6 lead. He finished the day with 9 carries for 26 yds. a 1 TD.

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SAN FRANCISCO 49ERS

PLAYER CAPSULES

Selected 17th overall in the 2010 NFL Draft, Mike Iupati show-cased his rare combination of size and athleticism as he was named the team’s starting left guard during training camp. He and fellow lineman, Anthony Davis, became two of just 14 rookies to start every game in 2010. A mild and polite native of American Samoa off the field, Iupati plays with a mean streak that is essential for offensive linemen. Following his rookie season, Iupati was named to ���������� ����� and �� /PFWA All- Rookie teams. He was the first 49er to be named to an All-Rookie team since LB Patrick Willis in 2007.

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PLAYER CAPSULES

6-5 | 331 | IDAHO | 2ND YEAR | BORN 5.12.87 | AMERICAN SAMOA ACQUIRED D-1B IN ‘10 | WESTERN HS, ANAHIEM, CA

IUPATI’S CAREER STATISTICS

// GOLDMINE• After being born and raised in American Samoa, Mike and his family

left all of their belongings and moved to California when he was 14 years old. The family moved in with Mike’s aunt and uncle, where they lived for a year before settling in Orange County. Mike only knew part of the English language and really had to work extra hard to learn the language in school. “It was hard. We spoke English in school, but when I got home we spoke Samoan. We didn’t have the comfort of speaking English for about 2-3 years.”

• Mike’s brother did all of the tattoos on his arm and leg. All of the art on his body is reflective of Samoan culture. “Some of them are Fala, the centipede, the waves, the ocean, fish. It goes back to what we normally use.” The lion on his leg was artwork that Mike liked and asked his brother to also put a Polynesian design around it.

• Although Mike has not lived in American Samoa for several years, his mother will never let him forget his culture. “My mom was tough on us, but it’s discipline. That’s why a lot of Polynesians are disci-plined when they come to the U.S. You have to always respect your elders. It’s our culture.”

// 2011 HIGHLIGHTS• Iupati and the 49ers offensive line did not allow a sack on 20 pass

atts. by QB Alex Smith vs. Sea. (9/11). The last time the 49ers did not allow a sack was vs. Den. (10/31/10).

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SAN FRANCISCO 49ERS

PLAYER CAPSULES

Ricky Jean Francois is a versatile defender who is able to lineup at all three of the 49ers defensive line positions. A seventh round draft choice in the 2009 NFL Draft, Jean Francois saw extensive ac-tion in the defensive line rotation in 2010, posting a career-high 23 tackles, 1.0 sack and 1 FF. Coming from Haitian decent, Jean Francois has worked to help rebuild Port-Au-Prince, Haiti, following the dev-astating earthquake in early 2010.

// GOLDMINE• With relatives in Haiti, Ricky felt obligated during the 2010 offseason

to help his family and fellow countrymen following the earthquake that left nearly one million people homeless. Unfortunately, Ricky lost some family to the earthquake, but that didn’t deter him from trying to make a difference in the wake of the disaster. “I want to ob-viously help because I have family there, but also if the shoe was on the other foot, I would want other people to help out the same way.” He first worked to obtain donations for Haiti, getting GMC to donate 50 brand new 2010 trucks. Ricky then met with former President Bill Clinton in Miami to discuss what he wanted to have built in the capital of Port-Au-Prince, namely a school similar to the ones close to his hometown in Dade County that can house up to 6,000 children.

• While Ricky enjoys the game of football, he also wants to use his position to help make his community a safer place. Growing up in Dade County, it wasn’t always easy for people to walk around in his neighborhood and feel safe. Ricky hopes that one day he will be able to help his community and the surrounding communities get to the point where that is no longer a problem. “If I can talk to 10 kids and get in the head of five, I’m good. I’m basically trying to change my community. I want to get to the point where people can walk outside and not be scared.”

• Ricky worked at Habitat for Humanity throughout college, helping in a variety of areas. “There were things that were ripped out of houses and walls. There was a point where we had to move some concrete and we were ghosts. I’m a dark guy and when I walked out I was white.”

PLAYER CAPSULES

6-3 | 295 | LOUISIANA ST. | 3RD YEAR | BORN 11.23.86 | MIAMI GARDENS, FL ACQUIRED D-7B IN ‘09 | CAROL CITY SENIOR HS, MIAMI GARDENS, FL

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JEAN FRANCOIS’ CAREER STATISTICS

JEAN FRANCOIS’ CAREER HIGHS

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SAN FRANCISCO 49ERS

PLAYER CAPSULES

One of the NFL’s elite long snappers, Brian Jen-nings has snapped to 9 different placekickers and 4 different punters throughout his professional ca-reer. Jennings has been the mark of consistency for the 49ers since being selected in the 7th round of the 2000 NFL Draft. Entering his 12th season, he is the longest-tenured player on the roster and ranks t-13th among active players for most games played with their current team. One of the most accurate and efficient long snappers in the NFL, Jennings has been charged with only one fumble in his career, in 2001, on a good snap that went right through the punter’s hands.

// CAREER HIGHLIGHTS• Ranks 3rd in franchise history for most consecutive games played,

trailing only T Len Rhode (208) and WR Jerry Rice (189). // GOLDMINE• Brian has touched the lives of numerous people as a member of the

49ers, taking part in dozens of speaking engagements and charity events throughout his career. He looks to continue inspiring people once his playing days are over as well. Over the past four years, Bri-an has been working on his own book. “I believe everyone can find their purpose and live an inspired life. I feel my life has been blessed in so many ways and I want to share it with people. No matter what troubles come your way, you can realize your potential. In my writ-ing, I combine examples throughout history with my own personal story, while using spiritual health and wellness as the vehicle.”

• Brian believes the sky is the limit when it comes to his knowledge base. “I really see the value of education and continual learning. Ev-ery offseason, I try to pursue some kind of intellectual academic project that is measurable. I want to be powerful intellectually.” Still undecided on whether to pursue an MBA degree or become a chiropractor once his playing days are over, Brian has been taking classes in both areas at Arizona State and Scottsdale Community College over the past several offseasons. He’s also taken part in the NFL’s Business Management and Entrepreneurial Program at Har-vard and Stanford, and has plans to attend the NFL’s Broadcast Boot Camp in the near future. “I’m like a sponge when it comes to educat-ing myself. I’m constantly reading the ��������!����� and various financial magazines, which has sparked a better understanding of how politics effects the economy and business world.”

• Brian doesn’t spend much time relaxing during the offseason. He earned his certification as a yoga instructor in 2008 after taking part in a 200-hour program that lasted five months. With a modern approach, Brian cranks up lively music in the classes he teaches in Scottsdale, AZ. He has plans to open his own yoga studio in the near future.

• An avid golfer during his childhood, Brian picked the sport back up a year ago and has a whole different approach to his game nowadays. “I’ve been developing my golf game systematically and working to get my handicap down. It starts with the basics – understanding the structure of a golf swing, the different types of shots available, scor-ing around the green and the keys to managing a successful round.” Despite being a 10 handicap during college, Brian has taken lessons recently in hopes of becoming a scratch golfer. He also reads vari-ous golf books to help improve his game. One of his favorites is ����"����������by David Pelz. Brian believes there is a strong correlation between golfing and his role on the football field. “I would say long snapping and golfing are mentally similar. It’s all about practice and having a routine.”

PLAYER CAPSULES

6-5 | 242 | ARIZONA ST. | 12TH YEAR | BORN 10.14.76 | MESA, AZ ACQUIRED D-7B IN ‘00 | RED MOUNTAIN HS, MESA, AZ

��%*� ���+������ �6� �+��, -�� ��+��, -�� �+��, -�� �+��, -�� ��+��, -�� �+��, -�� ��+��, -�� ��+��, -�� ��+��, -�� ��+��, -�� � �+��, -�� ���+, -����*��5��%*� ���+���1 �6� ��+�, -�� �+ , -

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%�&��� !��#5����67�#���'��0�+�,, -6��8����#������0�+��,�, ����<��"CC.���/�-6��8���+#������0�+��,�, ����<��"CC.���/�-

JENNINGS’ CAREER STATISTICS

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SAN FRANCISCO 49ERS

PLAYER CAPSULES

Colin Kaepernick has the perfect blend of athleticism, moxie, field vision, intelligence and arm strength for the NFL. The only player in the NCAA history to throw for over 10,000 yards and rush for over 4,000 yards, Kaepernick has an excellent work ethic that will help him make the transition from the pistol offense he ran in college to the 49ers West Coast Offense.

// GOLDMINE• Colin was born in Milwaukee, WI, and his mother was a 19-year old

who worked in retail sales. She was in a tough situation and thought that adoption would be the best way to give her young son a good life. She had three requirement for the adoptive family - siblings, fi-nancial stability and a sports background. She decided that the best fit Colin would be with Rick and Teresa Kaepernick and their two children, Kyle and Devon.

PLAYER CAPSULES

6-4 | 230 | NEVADA | ROOKIE | BORN 11.3.87 | MILWAUKEE, WI ACQUIRED D-2 IN ‘11 | PITTMAN HS, TURLOCK, CA

• Even as a 4th grade student at Dutcher Elementary School in Tur-lock, CA, Colin knew he was going to play for the 49ers. In a letter that students had to write to their future selves, that despite his small stature at the time, Colin saw something special in himself. He wrote, “I’m 5-2, 91 lbs and a good athelte. I think in 7 seven years i will be between 6 ft. to 6-4, 140 lbs. I hope I go to a good college in football, then go to the pros and play on the Niners or the Packers, even if they aren’t good in seven years.”

• In the summer of 2010, Colin - who was drafted by the Chicago Cubs in the 2009 MLB Draft - was offered $30,000 to go to Arizona for a month and throw a few bullpen sessions. Looking ahead to his senior season as Nevada’s quarterback, he declined the offer saying, “What would that say about me as a leader of the team?”

KAEPERNICK’S GAME-BY-GAME���� � ��& ���0���� �� � � � � ��� ,(� ��� )'� �� :!� �" �� )'� +�" +�9 )'� �� 5��)'�0 >>�!��������� ���� �� �� �� �� �� �� �� ��������4��!�����'%� �� �� �� �� �� �� �������� ���� �� �� �� �� �� �� �� ��������4��!�����'%� �� �� �� �� �� �� ����� �� ������� �� �� �� �� �� �� �� ��������4��!�����'%� �� �� �� �� �� �� ����� � ������������ ��������� ���������� � ���!"#��� �����$!"#��� !%&!"#� � '()!"#� �� ������������ ���������� ���'()������� ������� �� ������*����� ������� � � � � � � � � � � � � � � ������ � � � � �0� � � � � � � �0� � � � � �0�

KAEPERNICK’S CAREER NFL STATISTICS ����:5� +;�=:5�

)*�+ �*�% �� �� ��� ,%� �,� )�� �� :5� �� �� ��� +�� ��� )�� �?� �� �� ��� �5� � � � � 0 � � � � � � � 0 � � � 0 � � ����� � � � � �0� � � � � � � �0� � � �0� � �

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SAN FRANCISCO 49ERS

PLAYER CAPSULES

Daniel Kilgore possesses the fierce mentality and impressive hand and lower-body power necessary for an offensive lineman. With experience at both guard and tackle positions at Appalachian State, Kilgore is a mauler that blocks through the whistle and can block more than one defender on one play.

PLAYER CAPSULES

6-3 | 308 | APPALACHIAN ST. | ROOKIE | BORN 12.18.87 | KINGSPORT, TN ACQUIRED D-5 IN ‘11 | DOBYNS-BENNETT HS, KINGSPORT, TN

// GOLDMINE• As Daniel was preparing for the NFL Draft in spring 2011, he was also

a student-teacher at Harden Park Elementary School working with special-education students in adaptive physical education classes. The day following his graduation from Appalachian State, Daniel hosted a field trip for this special-education students at ASU. The field trip included a tour of the school’s athletic facilities, activities in the Sofield Family Indoor Practice Facility, lunch on the club level of the Appalachian Athletics Center and taking in a few innings of the Appalachian State-Western Carolina baseball game. While football is Daniel’s next chapter in life, he aspires to be a coach and special-education teacher following his NFL career. “I’m very happy that I was drafted, but I absolutely love working with these kids,” said Dan-iel. “I have had a great student-teaching experience and I know when my NFL career is over, I will get to work in another field that I love and that is working with special-education students and coaching.”

KILGORE’S CAREER STATISTICS��%*� ���+���� �A ���+ , -

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SAN FRANCISCO 49ERS

PLAYER CAPSULES

Andy Lee has established himself as one of the most productive punters in the NFL since being drafted in the 6th round of the 2004 NFL Draft, by earning Pro Bowl honors in two out of the past four seasons (‘07, ‘09). Lee’s name is consistently at the top of numerous NFL punting statistics year-in and year-out. His ath-letic abilities have catapulted his name in the Niners record books, ranking 1st in 8-of-10 career-punting categories and being t-2nd in the other two catego-ries. Honored with “Andy Lee Day” in his hometown of Westminster, SC, Lee has been successful at every stop in his play-ing career. Lee left the University of Pittsburgh as the school all-time leader in punts (44) and yds. (10,353), and was the only player to ever win Big East Conference Special Teams POY honors twice in a career.

// CAREER HIGHLIGHTS

net avg. ranks 3rd in the NFL, while his 123 punts downed inside the 20 rank 2nd over the last four years.

ranked 2nd in the league with a 47.3 gross average and 41.0 net average. His 41.0-yd. net average ranks 7th all-time for a single sea-son in NFL history.

avg. (45.3), punts inside the 20 (185) and net avg. (38.5).

the longest punt (81 yds.) of the year, in 2004.

// 2011 HIGHLIGHTS

(54.2) vs. Sea. (9/11), both single-game franchise records. His 59.6 gross avg. ranks 3rd in NFL history all-time (min. 4 punts), trailing

who were members of the AAFC at the time. His 54.2 net avg. ranks

(9/18), punting 6 times for 332 yds.

// GOLDMINE

and a declaration commemorating “Andy Lee Day” on July 12, 2008.

Even when he went on to become a standout punter on the colle-giate level at the University of Pittsburgh, he was still a stranger to

a player with the 49ers in 2004. In fact, Andy didn’t even set out to play football at all. “I was more of a baseball guy growing up. I actu-

-back in 8th grade, and the coach asked, ‘Who wants to try out for the punting position?’ I didn’t know you were supposed to spiral a punt, or turn it over, or any of that.”

PLAYER CAPSULES

2011Date Opp W/L P/S No Yds Avg Net TB In20 Lg BlkSep 11 Sea W 1/0 5 298 59.6 54.2 0 1 64 0Sep 18 Dal L 1/0 6 332 55.3 45.7 1 1 64 0Sep 25 at Cin W 1/0 7 320 45.7 41.3 0 2 60 0Oct 2 at PhiOct 9 TBOct 16 at DetOct 30 CleNov 6 at WasNov 13 NYGNov 20 ArzNov 24 at BalDec 4 StLDec 11 at ArzDec 19 PitDec 24 at SeaJan 1 at StL TOTALS 3/0 18 950 52.8 46.3 1 4 64 0

LEE’S GAME-BY-GAME

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SAN FRANCISCO 49ERS

PLAYER CAPSULES

Punts: 10 vs. Sea. (9/30/07)Gross Average: 59.6 vs. Sea. (9/11/11)Net Average: 54.2 vs. Sea. (9/11/11)

Long Punt: 82 vs. NE (10/5/08)Inside-20: 5 vs. StL. (10/4/09)

LEE’S CAREER STATISTICS

LEE’S CAREER HIGHS

ANDY LEE

YEAR TEAM G NO YDS AVG RET YDS NET TB IN 20 LG BLK 2004 SF 16 96 3,990 41.6 51 445 35.3 8 25 81 02005 SF 16 107 4,447 41.6 62 471 36.3 3 15 58 12006 SF 16 81 3,625 44.8 35 462 36.8 9 22 66 02007 SF 16 105 4,968 47.3 53 402 41.0 13 42 74 02008 SF 16 66 3,155 47.8 39 364 39.0 9 13 82 12009 SF 16 99 4,711 47.6 57 495 41.0 8 30 64 02010 SF 16 91 4,203 46.2 54 483 38.2 12 34 64 02011 SF 3 18 950 52.8 10 96 46.3 1 4 64 0 TOTALS 115 663 30,049 45.3 361 3,218 38.5 63 185 82 2

Additional Statistics:Special Teams Tackles – 6: 2004 (1), 2005 (1), 2006 (2), 2009 (1), 2010 (1)

Milestones: NFL Debut: vs. Atl. (9/12/04); First punt inside-20: vs. Atl. (9/12/04); 100th punt inside-20: vs. TB (12/23/07); 100th Career game: at Atl. (10/3/10); 600th Career punt: vs. Den. (10/31/10).

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SAN FRANCISCO 49ERS

PLAYER CAPSULES

A -

most tireless workers in the trenches. A big playmaker on defense, he has a knack for being in the right place at the right time. Over the past two seasons, he is one of only 3 NFL defensive linemen to score

// CAREER HIGHLIGHTS

(10/24/10).

// 2011 HIGHLIGHTS

6th career sack (QB Tarvaris Jackson) for a 2-yd. loss.

9/20/09 vs. Sea.

// GOLDMINE

the cover of Sports Illustrated (Nov. 11, 1985) after catching both scores -

ning back at Bethune Cookman and his uncle was a cornerback at -

sionally until later in high school, when his father began to prepare him for the pro game. “He didn’t really push me into playing football when I was growing up, but I told him I really wanted to take off with football. So he dedicated his whole year to me working out. He bought me some strength shoes, he trained me every day. That was my starting point.”

in high school, he won a state championship four straight years, and then a national title at Florida, but still strives to achieve the ulti-

all comes down to winning. I come from a winning tradition. All I’m missing out on is an NFL Championship.”

himself as a pass rusher. He has been boxing with the 49ers training staff in order to add more moves to his pass rushing repertoire. “It’s something that I can add to my tray with hand-eye coordination. It helps with my endurance and my hand placement and I have enough force to knock someone off balance.”

PLAYER CAPSULES

McDONALD’S GAME-BY-GAME2011Date Opp W/L P/S Tot Sol Ast Sk Yds Int Yds PD FF FR YdsSep 11 Sea W 1/1 8 6 2 1.0 2.0 0 0 0 0 0 0Sep 18 Dal L 1/1 6 2 4 1.0 5.0 0 0 0 0 0 0Sep 25 at Cin W 1/1 6 3 3 0.0 0.0 0 0 0 0 0 0Oct 2 at PhiOct 9 TBOct 16 at DetOct 30 CleNov 6 at WasNov 13 NYGNov 20 ArzNov 24 at BalDec 4 StLDec 11 at ArzDec 19 PitDec 24 at SeaJan 1 at StL TOTALS 3/3 20 11 9 2.0 7.0 0 0 0 0 0 0

QB Hits: 8QB Pressures: 6

TFL: 3.5

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SAN FRANCISCO 49ERS

PLAYER CAPSULES RAY McDONALD

Total Tackles: 8 vs. Sea. (9/11/11)Solo: 6 vs. Sea. (9/11/11)Assists: 4 (2 times) Last vs. Phi. (10/12/08)

Sacks: 1.0 (6 times) Last vs. Sea. (9/11/11)Passes Defensed: 1 (7 times) Last vs. Arz. (1/2/11)Fumble Recoveries: 1 (2 times) Last vs. Jax. (11/29/09)

McDONALD’S CAREER STATISTICS

McDONALD’S CAREER HIGHS

TACKLES INTERCEPTIONS FUMBLESYEAR TEAM GP GS TOT SOL AST SACKS YDS INT YDS LG TD PD FF FR YDS 2007 SF 9 0 11 4 7 1.0 6.0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 02008 SF 15 9 58 28 30 1.0 5.0 0 0 0 0 5 0 0 02009 SF 16 0 29 12 17 3.0 19.0 0 0 0 0 0 0 2 11t2010 SF 16 0 57 23 34 0.0 0.0 1 31 31t 1 2 0 0 0 2011 SF 3 3 20 11 9 2.0 7.0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0TOTALS 59 12 175 78 97 7.0 37.0 1 31 31t 1 7 0 2 11t

Additional Statistics:Blocked Field Goals – 2: 2008 (1 vs. Phi., 10/12/08), 2009 (1 at Min. 9/27/09)Blocked Extra Points - 1: 2009 (1 vs. Arz., 12/14/09)TDs - 2: 2009 [11-yd. fumble return vs. STL (10/4/09)], 2010 [31-yd. INT return at Car. (10/24/10)]

Milestones: NFL Debut: vs. Bal. (10/7/07); First Start: vs. Arz. (9/7/08); Sack: vs. TB (12/23/07 - QB Jeff Garcia); First FR: vs. StL (10/4/09 - QB Kyle Boller); First Blocked FG: vs. Phi. (10/12/08 - 54-yd. att. by K David Akers); First Blocked PAT: vs. Arz. (12/14/09 - K Neil Rackers)

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SAN FRANCISCO 49ERS

PLAYER CAPSULES

AUSA Defensive Player of the Year’s blue-collar work ethic made the

the ball.

// 2011 HIGHLIGHTS

hauled in an 11-yd. recept, also the 1st of his career.

// GOLDMINE

fact, saying he was under the radar was an overstatement; Bruce wasn’t even on the radar. UCF defensive coordinator Dave Huxtable,

catching balls and making players miss. He was on the kickoff cover

plays. Then I got to watch him play basketball. He’s a 6-2 center,

two-time Conference USA Defensive Player of the Year. “He played a huge roll for me,” said Bruce. “I always looked at him for motivation and help. I went to Coach Hux because of the bond we made during recruiting and then playing for him at linebacker. Coach Hux, the

-able.”

-

-

to shoot him to stop him. If he’s going to be blocking, some lineback-er is going to have a long day.” The 49ers saw the same toughness in Bruce and are looking to have him transition from defensive end to fullback. “They said they wanted to bring somebody in who was

that description pretty well.”

PLAYER CAPSULES

2011Date Opp W/L P/S Rsh Yds Avg Lg TD Rec Yds TDSep 11 Sea W 1/0 0 0.0 0.0 0 0 0 0 0Sep 18 Dal L 1/0 0 0.0 0.0 0 0 0 0 0Sep 25 at Cin W 1/1 1 2.0 2.0 2 0 4 25 0Oct 2 at PhiOct 9 TBOct 16 at DetOct 30 CleNov 6 at WasNov 13 NYGNov 20 ArzNov 24 at BalDec 4 StLDec 11 at ArzDec 19 PitDec 24 at SeaJan 1 at StL TOTALS 3/1 1 2.0 2.0 2 0 4 25 0

MILLER’S GAME-BY-GAME

RUSHING RECEIVINGYEAR TEAM GP GS ATT YDS AVG LG TD NO YDS AVG LG TD2011 SF 3 1 1 2.0 2.0 2 0 4 25 6.3 11 0 TOTALS 3 1 1 2.0 2.0 2 0 4 25 6.3 11 0

Additional Statistics:Special Teams Statistics - 1: 2011 (1)Fumble - Lost - 1-0: 1-0 in 2011

Milestones:NFL Debut: vs. Sea. (9/11/11); First Start: at Cin. (9/25/11)

MILLER’S CAREER STATISTICS

Special Teams Tackles: 1

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SAN FRANCISCO 49ERS

PLAYER CAPSULES

Jthroughout the 2010 season, ranking 3rd on the team with a ca-

at the line of scrimmage and a great sense of football awareness has served him well as he’s developed into a strong wide receiver. Drafted in the 6th round of the 2008 NFL Draft, he is one of only two wide receivers taken in the 6th round to be on a current NFL roster.

past experiences in life to draw parallels to football. He one day

community outreach, having logged countless hours helping people throughout the Bay Area.

// GOLDMINE

Washington D.C. was to not leave his house much. “I would get tired of hearing the gunshots and police sirens. That’s why I started writ-ing stories and poetry. I write about how I grew up, situations that I’ve been through, people I’ve known in my life.” His writing courses

wants to write books, including a book of poetry and his autobiogra-phy.

-gest influence on him growing up. “I met them when I was 16 and

now without them. They showed me the better aspects of life, includ-ing spirituality.” In October 2009, Joshua was crushed by the news

has a tattoo of a breast cancer ribbon with angels’ wings. On the

is looking forward to completing the tattoo with an inscription of

participated in an internship with Comcast SportsNet Bay Area. The

a two-month period, had a different role each time. “It was a great learning experience because they showed us all the different parts of their operation. We would work with a producer one day, then the next week we would serve as stage managers. We also got an opportunity to break down highlights and edit, as well as do some

the line.”

-

-val Dunbar High School. The two kept the rivalry alive in college as

grew up right down the street from me and I got to know him pretty well. There has been a friendly competition between he and I for a long time. I like to claim that I’ve been beating him my whole life. We

went on a campus shooting spree in April 2007. Joshua was in the

safety in his apartment across the street. “It was a real devastating time,” he said. “It was kind of surreal. You didn’t really expect any-thing like that to happen.”

moving to the arts - particularly writing and acting. “I want to write books, do a little acting. I used to act in high school and took an act-ing class in college.”

PLAYER CAPSULES

2011Date Opp W/L P/S Rec Yds Avg Lg TDSep 11 Sea W 1/1 2 28 14.0 26 0Sep 18 Dal L 1/1 3 35 11.7 13 0Sep 25 at Cin W 1/1 2 17 8.5 12 0Oct 2 at PhiOct 9 TBOct 16 at DetOct 30 CleNov 6 at WasNov 13 NYGNov 20 ArzNov 24 at BalDec 4 StLDec 11 at ArzDec 19 PitDex 24 at SeaJan 1 at StL TOTALS 3/3 7 80 11.4 26 0

MORGAN’S GAME-BY-GAME

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SAN FRANCISCO 49ERS

PLAYER CAPSULES JOSHUA MORGAN

Receptions: 7 (2 times) Last at SD (12/16/10)Receiving Yards: 106 at SD (12/16/10)Long Reception: 65 vs. StL (11/14/10)

Touchdowns: 1 (8 times) Last vs. Sea. (12/12/10)Rushes: 1 (7 times) Last at Arz. (11/29/10)Long Rush: 20 at Sea. (12/6/09)

MORGAN’S CAREER STATISTICS

MORGAN’S CAREER HIGHS

RECEIVING RUSHINGYEAR TEAM GP GS NO YDS AVG LG TD ATT YDS AVG LG TD2008 SF 12 1 20 319 16.0 48t 3 0 0 0.0 0 02009 SF 16 15 52 527 10.1 61 3 5 61 12.2 20 02010 SF 16 11 44 698 15.9 65 2 2 17 8.5 13 02011 SF 3 3 7 80 11.4 26 0 0 0 0.0 0 0TOTALS 47 30 123 1,624 13.2 65 8 7 78 11.1 20 0

Additional Statistics:Kickoff Returns - 15: 2009 (13); 2010 (2)Kickoff Return Yards - 386: 2009 (367); 2010 (19)Special Teams Tackles – 8: 2008 (5), 2009 (3)Fumble Recoveries - 1: 2009 (1)Fumbles - 1: 2010 (1)

Milestones: NFL Debut: vs. Arz. (9/7/08); First Start: vs. Sea. (10/26/08); First Reception: at Sea. (9/14/08 - 8-yd. pass from QB J.T. O’Sullivan); First 100-yd. game: at SD (12/16/10); First TD: at NYG (10/19/08 - 30-yd. pass from QB J.T. O’Sullivan); 100th Career Reception: at Arz. (11/29/10 - 6-yd. pass from QB Troy Smith)

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SAN FRANCISCO 49ERS

PLAYER CAPSULES

A -er, receiver and “once-in-a-blue-moon” ball carrier. Norris returned to the 49ers in 2009 after serving as San Francisco’s starting full-

landed in the Pro Bowl with an NFC-leading and team-record 1,695 rushing yds., in 2006. A dual-degree graduate of the University of

-ed the theme, “Pay Now” and “Play Later,” helping youth succeed through education and character. His goal is to motivate and inspire each youth that he encounters and show them that success is within their reach.

// GOLDMINE

become champions in athletics, character and education. In San Fran-

-

skills, education, goal setting, hard work and good character. “When -

ed to the kids, and I still remember that day. I felt if I ever had a chance to go back like that, I would do the same thing.”

children in the Houston Public School District for making strides in the classroom. “Too many programs focus on the “A” students. I

strides on a consistent basis.”

chubby little kid. That all changed during his freshman year in high

shift gym for him, his brother and and their neighbors. That’s where

afraid of hard work. Through the years, he worked at Six Flags

trick to get tips was once I had packed the bags, to start walking outside with them to the people’s cars. Once I started they’d feel bad stopping me. I got some good tips.”

PLAYER CAPSULES

2011Date Opp W/L P/S Rsh Yds Avg Lg TD Rec Yds TDSep 11 Sea W 1/0 0 0.0 0.0 0 0 0 0.0 0Sep 18 Dal L 1/1 0 0.0 0.0 0 0 0 0.0 0Sep 25 at Cin - - INACTIVE (Fibula) - - - Oct 2 at PhiOct 9 TBOct 16 at DetOct 30 CleNov 6 at WasNov 13 NYGNov 20 ArzNov 24 at BalDec 4 StLDec 11 at ArzDec 19 PitDec 24 at SeaJan 1 at StL TOTALS 2/1 0 0.0 0.0 0 0 0 0.0 0

NORRIS’ GAME-BY-GAME

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SAN FRANCISCO 49ERS

PLAYER CAPSULES MORAN NORRIS

NORRIS’ CAREER STATISTICS RUSHING RECEIVINGYEAR TEAM GP GS ATT YDS AVG LG TD NO YDS AVG LG TD2001 NO 5 0 0 0 0.0 0 0 0 0 0.0 0 02002 HOU 13 0 0 0 0.0 0 0 0 0 0.0 0 02003 HOU 16 9 0 0 0.0 0 0 7 40 5.7 11 02004 HOU 12 4 1 0 0.0 0 0 4 13 3.3 7 02005 HOU 16 5 0 0 0.0 0 0 1 4 4.0 4t 12006 SF 14 7 2 8 4.0 4 0 5 36 7.2 32t 22007 SF 16 5 7 17 2.4 6 0 6 38 6.3 13 02008 DET 11 8 1 1 1.0 1 0 4 16 4.0 6 02009 SF 16 7 14 41 2.9 15 1 7 31 4.4 11 02010 SF 16 11 3 0 0.0 1 0 4 20 5.0 8 0 2011 SF 2 1 0 0 0.0 0 0 0 0 0.0 0 0 TOTALS 137 57 28 67 2.4 15 1 38 198 5.2 32t 3

Additional Statistics: Kickoff Returns – 13-122: 2002 (2-11), 2003 (5-71), 2004 (2-25), 2005 (1-2), 2006 (1-1), 2009 (1-0), 2010 (1-12)Special Teams Tackles – 45: 2001 (2), 2002 (6), 2003 (8), 2004 (7), 2005 (12), 2006 (3), 2007 (3), 2008 (2), 2009 (2)Special Teams Forced Fumbles – 1: 2005 (1)Special Teams Fumble Recoveries – 1: 2007 (1)Blocked Punts – 1: 2007 (1 for safety at NYG, 10/21/07)Fumbles – Lost – 1–0: 2009 (1-0)Fumble Recoveries – 2: 2007 (1), 2009 (1)

Milestones: NFL Debut: at SF (11/11/01); First Start: at NO (9/14/03); First Rushing TD: at StL (1/3/09 - 1-yd. run); First Receiving TD: at Cin. (10/2/05 - 4-yd. pass from QB David Carr)

Rushes: 3 (2 times) Last at StL (1/3/10)Rushing Yards: 16 at Sea. (9/20/09)Rushing Touchdowns: 1 at StL (1/3/10)Receptions: 3 (2 times) Last vs. Sea. (9/20/09)

Receiving Yards: 32 at Den. (12/31/06)Long Reception: 32t at Den. (12/31/06)Touchdown Receptions: 1 (3 times) Last at Den. (12/31/06)

NORRIS’ CAREER HIGHS

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SAN FRANCISCO 49ERS

PLAYER CAPSULES

A veteran, athletic tight end with good hands, Peelle has shown solid contributions, both as a run-blocking TE and a special teams

NFL games (66 starts), with 122 receptions for 984 yards and 12 TDs.

// 2011 HIGHLIGHTS

PLAYER CAPSULES

2011Date Opp W/L P/S Rec Yds Avg Lg TD SIGNED BY SF ON 9/13Sep 18 Dal L - DID NOT PLAY - -Sep 25 at Cin W 1/0 0 0 0.0 0 0Oct 2 at PhiOct 9 TBOct 16 at DetOct 30 CleNov 6 at WasNov 13 NYGNov 20 ArzNov 24 at BalDec 4 StLDec 11 at ArzDec 19 PitDex 24 at SeaJan 1 at StL TOTALS 1/0 0 0 0.0 0 0

PEELE’S GAME-BY-GAME

Receptions: 4 vs. Bal. (9/21/03)Receiving Yards: 45 vs. Oak. (9/30/07)

Long Reception: 35 vs. Oak. (9/30/07)TD Receptions: 1 (12 times) Last vs. StL (11/21/10)

PEELLE’ S CAREER STATISTICS

PELLE’S CAREER HIGHS

RECEIVING RUSHINGYEAR TEAM GP GS NO YDS AVG LG TD ATT YDS AVG LG TD2002 SD 15 2 3 15 5.0 10 0 0 0 0.0 0 0 2003 SD 15 9 16 133 8.3 24 1 0 0 0.0 0 02004 SD 16 4 10 84 8.4 17t 2 0 0 0.0 0 02005 SD 16 4 11 38 3.5 11 1 0 0 0.0 0 02006 MIA 15 10 16 116 7.3 25 1 0 0 0.0 0 0 2007 MIA 16 10 29 228 7.9 35 2 0 0 0.0 0 02008 ATL 16 11 15 159 10.6 18t 2 0 0 0.0 0 02009 ATL 15 8 12 115 9.6 32 2 0 0 0.0 0 02010 ATL 13 8 10 96 11.0 15 1 0 0 0.0 0 02011 SF 1 0 0 0 0.0 0 0 0 0 0.0 0 0TOTALS 138 66 122 984 8.1 35 12 0 0 0.0 0 0

Additional Statistics:Fumbles-Lost – 1-1: 1-0 in 2004, 0-1 in 2009

Milestones: NFL Debut: at Cin. (9/8/02); First Start: at Oak. (10/20/02); First Reception: vs. SF (11/17/02 - 2-yd. pass from QB Drew Brees); 100th Reception: at Min. (12/21/08 - 8-yd. pass from QB Matt Ryan); First TD Reception: vs. Ten. (10/3/04 - 10-yd. pass from QB Drew Brees)

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SAN FRANCISCO 49ERS

PLAYER CAPSULES

ike Person is a versatile athlete who can play several posi-

the offensive line and did not allow a sack as senior, earning First-Team All-Big Sky honors.

// GOLDMINE

selected in the NFL draft since Joey Thomas in 2004. That night, the

Award, presented to the state’s top amateur athlete.

PLAYER CAPSULES

GAMES/STARTS - 0/0; 2011 (0/0)

PERSON’S CAREER STATISTICS

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SAN FRANCISCO 49ERS

PLAYER CAPSULES

GAMES/STARTS - 42/38; 2008 (8/6), 2009 (16/15), 2010 (15/14), 2011 (3/3)

Milestones: NFL Debut: at Arz. (11/10/08); First Start: at Dal. (11/23/08)

Cat right guard, starting all but three games since 2009. A 2nd round

starting lineup midway through his rookie season, and since then,

Draft earlier than planned due to his mother and father’s health is--

bine in 2008, “I have no choice. I have to do something for my fam-

were killed when he was young. He used their life experiences as motivation, a wise choice that led him to the NFL.

PLAYER CAPSULES

RACHAL’S CAREER STATISTICS

// GOLDMINE

discovered in his mother’s stomach prompted him to enter early so he could help with her medical costs.

All-Pro guard.

// 2011 HIGHLIGHTS

atts. by QB Alex Smith vs. Sea. (9/11). The last time the 49ers did not allow a sack was vs. Den. (10/31/10).

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SAN FRANCISCO 49ERS

PLAYER CAPSULES

A --

opposing teams’ top wide receivers during his time in Washington,

now have three of the top 10 picks from the 2005 NFL Draft.

// 2011 HIGHLIGHTS

Picked off QB Andy Dalton at Cin. (9/25), marking his 1st INT as a 49er and 1st since 12/26/10 at Jax.

PLAYER CAPSULES

ROGERS’ GAME-BY-GAME2011Date Opp W/L P/S Tot Sol Ast Sk Yds Int Yds PD FF FR YdsSep 11 Sea W 1/1 6 6 0 0.0 0.0 0 0 1 0 0 0Sep 18 Dal L 1/1 3 3 0 0.0 0.0 0 0 2 0 0 0Sep 25 at Cin W 1/1 5 4 1 0.0 0.0 1 0 2 0 0 0Oct 2 at PhiOct 9 TBOct 16 at DetOct 30 CleNov 6 at WasNov 13 NYGNov 20 ArzNov 24 at BalDec 4 StLDec 11 at ArzDec 19 PitDec 24 at SeaJan 1 at StL TOTALS 3/3 14 13 1 0.0 0.0 1 0 5 0 0 0

QB Hits: 1

ROGERS’ CAREER STATISTICS

Total Tackles: 12 at Phi. (9/17/07)Solo: 8 (2 times) Last at Phi. (9/17/07)Assists: 5 at Dal. (12/19/10)Passes Defensed: 6 at Phi. (11/12/06)Interceptions: 1 (8 times) Last at Jac. (12/26/10)

Interception Yards: 61 vs. Det. (10/7/07)Long Interception Return: 61t vs. Det. (10/7/07)Interception Returns for TDs: 1 vs. Det. (10/7/07)Forced Fumbles: 1 (4 times) Last at Phi. (10/3/10)Fumble Recoveries: 1 (3 times) Last at SD (1/3/10)

ROGERS’ CAREER HIGHS

TACKLES INTERCEPTIONS FUMBLESYEAR TEAM GP GS TOT SOL AST SACKS YDS INT YDS LG TD PD FF FR YDS 2005 WAS 12 5 40 34 6 0.0 0.0 2 14 14 0 4 2 0 02006 WAS 15 15 88 71 17 0.0 0.0 1 0 0 0 17 1 0 02007 WAS 7 7 30 23 7 0.0 0.0 1 61 61t 1 7 0 0 02008 WAS 16 14 53 45 8 0.0 0.0 2 73 42 0 24 0 1 02009 WAS 16 15 46 34 12 0.0 0.0 0 0 - 0 12 0 2 02010 WAS 12 12 61 39 22 0.0 0.0 2 43 38 0 12 1 0 02011 SF 3 3 14 13 1 0.0 0.0 1 0 0 0 5 0 0 0TOTALS 81 71 332 262 73 0.0 0.0 9 191 61t 1 81 4 3 0

Additional Statistics:Special Teams Tackles – 16: 2005 (10); 2006 (1); 2007 (5)

Milestones: NFL Debut: vs. Chi. (9/11/05); First Start: vs. Sea. (10/2/05); 50th Start: vs. Den. (11/15/09); First INT: vs. SD (11/27/05 - QB Drew Brees); First INT Return for a TD: vs. Det. (10/7/07 - QB Jon Kitna); First FF: vs. Sea. (10/2/05 - RB Shaun Alexander); First FR: vs. Arz. (9/21/08 - LB Rocky McIntosh)

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SAN FRANCISCO 49ERS

PLAYER CAPSULES

With great size and speed, Aldon Smith has the ability to line up at a variety of positions, whether its standing up or with his hand in the dirt. He is a tenacious pass rusher with great initial quickness. Smith holds the Missouri single-season sack record (11.5 in ‘09), which was previously held by fellow 49er Justin Smith (11.0 in ‘00).

// 2011 HIGHLIGHTS

// GOLDMINE

with his mother, Kimberly, in Iowa as his father moved to Kansas City, but five years later, when his mother moved to Atlanta, he moved in with his father, Thurston. Until that point, Aldon had never played an organized sport, but that all changed in Kansas City. He joined the football and basketball teams at Raytown HS, but only under strict conditions enforced by his father. “He had to make good

-

As a junior, Aldon resisted his father’s mandate, but everything be-gan to click for him as senior. “I wasn’t going to bend the rules, and

sides of the ball, garnering interested from several big time college programs.

PLAYER CAPSULES

6-4 | 258 | MISSOURI | ROOKIE | BORN 9.25.89 | KANSAS CITY, MO

training, both of which he said are helpful with this pass-rush tech-nique and mental endurance. “Imagine someone trying to get their

SMITH’S GAME-BY-GAME2011Date Opp W/L P/S Tot Sol Ast Sk Yds Int Yds PD FF FR YdsSep 11 Sea W 1/0 1 0 1 0.0 0.0 0 0 1 0 0 0Sep 18 Dal L 1/0 0 0 0 0.0 0.0 0 0 1 0 0 0Sep 25 at Cin W 1/0 0 0 0 0.0 0.0 0 0 0 0 0 0Oct 2 at PhiOct 9 TBOct 16 at DetOct 30 CleNov 6 at WasNov 13 NYGNov 20 ArzNov 24 at BalDec 4 StLDec 11 at ArzDec 19 PitDec 24 at SeaJan 1 at StL TOTALS 3/0 1 0 1 0.0 0.0 0 0 2 0 0 0

SMITH’S CAREER STATISTICS

QB Hits: 5QB Pressures: 6

TACKLES INTERCEPTIONS FUMBLESYEAR TEAM GP GS TOT SOL AST SACKS YDS INT YDS LG TD PD FF FR YDS 2011 SF 3 0 1 0 1 0.0 0.0 0 0 0 0 2 0 0 0TOTALS 3 0 1 0 1 0.0 0.0 0 0 0 0 2 0 0 0

Milestones: NFL Debut: vs. Sea. (9/11/11); First PD: vs. Sea (9/11/11)

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SAN FRANCISCO 49ERS

PLAYER CAPSULES

A -opment at quarterback after having battled through injuries and

-tract with the 49ers during the 2011 offseason, Smith was one of the key orchestrators of the players’ organized workouts and camps at San Jose St. That leadership is one of the special qualities Jim Harbaugh was attracted to. After rebounding from a shoulder injury

2009. Last season, he set a career high with a quarterback rating of -

vides foster teens with the tools and resources needed to transition to successful adulthood.

// CAREER HIGHLIGHTS

center over the course of a season, in 2006.-

centage (60.5) in 2009.

// 2011 HIGHLIGHTS

yds. with a 90.4 passer rating.

// GOLDMINE

economics and scored one of the highest scores (40) on the Won-

athletic department. The generous donation was the lead gift for -

pansion of Utah’s varsity athletics weight room. The money kicked

the strength and conditioning room, as well as the football coaching offices, meeting, training and equipment rooms. The facility covers

-rent size, and features new lifting stations and cardiovascular con-ditioning space.

winter sports. “I’ve skied since I was one-and-a-half. My dad was a ski instructor at one time and my parents have a condo in Montana.

point in life. With that in mind, he chose to pursue a degree in eco-nomics. When he arrived at the University of Utah, his high school workload made him eligible to start his studies as a junior and start his major studies. “I am not going to be able to help you plan for your retirement, but I enjoyed the part of my classes that allowed me to better understand the philosophy of economics and how different

-smithfoundation.org), which provides foster teens with the tools and resources needed to transition to successful adulthood.

PLAYER CAPSULES

6-4 | 217 | UTAH | 7TH YEAR | BORN 5.7.84 | SEATTLE, WA

SMITH’S GAME-BY-GAME2011 Total Pct.Date Opp W/L P/S Att Cmp Pct Yds TD Int Lg Sk/Yds Rtg Rsh Yds TD Net Yds. OffenseSep 11 Sea W 1/1 20 15 75.0 124 0 0 27 0/0 90.4 7 22 1 146 70.0 Sep 18 Dal L 1/1 24 16 66.7 179 2 1 29t 6/47 99.1 3 21 0 153 74.0Sep 25 at Cin W 1/1 30 20 66.7 201 0 0 39 5/25 85.6 0 0 0 0 0.0Oct 2 at PhiOct 9 TBOct 16 at DetOct 30 CleNov 6 at WasNov 13 NYGNov 20 ArzNov 24 at BalDec 4 StLDec 11 at ArzDec 19 PitDec 24 at SeaJan 1 at StL TOTALS 3/3 74 51 68.9 504 2 1 39 11/72 91.3 10 43 1 299 72.0

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SAN FRANCISCO 49ERS

PLAYER CAPSULES

Passes Attempted: 46 vs. Phi. (9/24/06)Completions: 29 vs. Ten. (11/8/09)Passing Yards: 310 at Sea. (12/6/09)Long Pass: 75 vs. Phi. (9/24/06)QB Rating: 130.9 vs. Sea. (12/12/10)

Touchdowns: 3 (5 times) Last vs. Sea. (12/12/10)Rushes: 8 at Det. (11/12/06)Rushing Yards: 39 vs. Phi. (9/24/06)Long Rush: 25 (2 times) Last at Pit. (9/23/07)

SMITH’S CAREER STATISTICS

SMITH’S CAREER HIGHS

ALEX SMITH

PASSING RUSHINGYEAR TEAM GP GS ATT CMP PCT YDS TD INT LG SK LST RTG ATT YDS AVG LG TD2005 SF 9 7 165 84 50.9 875 1 11 47 29 185 40.8 30 103 3.4 19 02006 SF 16 16 442 257 58.1 2,890 16 16 75 35 202 74.8 44 147 3.3 22 22007 SF 7 7 193 94 48.7 914 2 4 45 17 121 57.2 13 89 6.8 25 02008 SF - - - - INJURED RESERVE (Shoulder) - - - - - - - - -2009 SF 11 10 372 225 60.5 2,350 18 12 73t 22 134 81.5 24 51 2.1 11 02010 SF 11 10 342 204 59.6 2,370 14 10 62t 25 140 82.1 18 60 3.3 12 02011 SF 3 3 74 51 68.9 504 2 1 39 11 72 91.3 10 43 4.3 12 1TOTALS 57 53 1,588 915 57.6 9,903 53 54 75 139 854 73.0 146 493 3.5 25 3

Additional Statistics:Fumbles-Lost – 34-16: 11-3 in 2005, 10-5 in 2006, 6-5 in 2007, 3-1 in 2009, 4-2 in 2010, 1-0 in 2011

Milestones: NFL Debut: at Phi. (9/18/05); First Career Start: vs. Ind. (10/9/05); First Passing TD: vs. Hou. (1/1/06 - 14-yd. pass to WR Brandon Lloyd); 25th Passing TD: vs. Ten. (11/8/09 - 3-yd. pass to WR Jason Hill); 300-yd. Passing Games: 2, Last vs. Phi. (10/10/10 - 309 yds.); First Rushing TD: vs. Sea. (11/19/06 - 1-yd. run).

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SAN FRANCISCO 49ERS

PLAYER CAPSULES

Amissed a game to injury, Justin Smith anchors the

blue-collar, Midwestern approach to his job and life in general, Smith was a key leader in the 49ers player-

Bowl selection, he enters the 2011 season with an ac-tive streak of 157 consecutive starts, by far the longest

Kevin Williams is 2nd with 126), and the 5th-longest of any active NFL player. Since joining the 49ers in 2008, Smith leads the team with 23.5 sacks and ranks first in the NFL among defensive tackles over that span. His 23.5 sacks rank

sacks by a defensive tackle. In 2010, Smith tied his career high with 8.5 sacks, matching the total from his rookie year in 2001 with the Cincinnati Bengals.

// CAREER HIGHLIGHTS

all active NFL players, 3rd among all defensive players and 1st among defensive linemen.

up for 97.9 percent of plays on defense as the Bengals franchise player.

only missed 1 game in his career due to contract negotiations as a rookie.

// 2011 HIGHLIGHTS

Tarvaris Jackson), notching a sack in three of the past four years on opening day.

// GOLDMINE

Award. The Bill Walsh Award is voted on by the coaches and awarded

the 2008 offseason. When the 49ers brought him in for a visit, they knew they had to sell the Midwesterner on the California lifestyle. Justin, who often wears cowboy boots and grew up on his father’s cattle ranch in Missouri, discussed the 49ers defensive philosophy in depth with the team’s coaches and was also taken on a helicopter tour of the city. It didn’t take long for him to make his decision as he cancelled his future visits with prospective teams and signed with San Francisco. Although Justin wants to play in San Francisco for several years to come, he looks to eventually return to his roots.

PLAYER CAPSULES

6-4 | 285 | MISSOURI | 11TH YEAR | BORN 9.30.79 | HOLTS SUMMIT, MO

SMITH’S GAME-BY-GAME2011Date Opp W/L P/S Tot Sol Ast Sk Yds Int Yds PD FF FR YdsSep 11 Sea W 1/1 8 5 3 2.0 16.0 0 0 0 0 0 0Sep 18 Dal L 1/1 7 6 1 0.0 0.0 0 0 0 1 0 0Sep 25 at Cin L 1/1 4 2 2 0.0 0.0 0 0 0 0 0 0Oct 2 at PhiOct 9 TBOct 16 at DetOct 30 CleNov 6 at WasNov 13 NYGNov 20 ArzNov 24 at BalDec 4 StLDec 11 at ArzDec 19 PitDec 24 at SeaJan 1 at StL TOTALS 3/3 19 13 6 2.0 16.0 0 0 0 1 0 0

QB Hits: 8QB Pressures: 16TFL: 2

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SAN FRANCISCO 49ERS

PLAYER CAPSULES

SMITH’S GAME-BY-GAME

JUSTIN SMITH

Total Tackles: 13 (2 times) Last vs. Atl. (10/29/06)Sacks: 3.5 at StL (1/3/10)INTs: 1 (3 times) Last vs. Det. (9/21/08)

Forced Fumbles: 1 (11 times) Last vs. Dal. (9/18/11)Fumble Recoveries: 1 (7 times) Last vs. Arz. (12/14/09)

SMITH’S CAREER HIGHS

TACKLES INTERCEPTIONS FUMBLESYEAR TEAM GP GS TOT SOL AST SACKS YDS INT YDS LG TD PD FF FR YDS 2001 CIN 15 11 67 60 7 8.5 76.0 2 28 21 0 5 0 0 02002 CIN 16 16 67 53 14 6.5 56.0 0 0 0 0 3 2 0 02003 CIN 16 16 91 55 36 5.0 16.5 0 0 0 0 3 0 0 02004 CIN 16 16 97 57 40 8.0 70.5 0 0 0 0 2 2 2 02005 CIN 16 16 92 59 33 6.0 24.0 0 0 0 0 2 1 1 02006 CIN 16 16 110 59 51 7.5 50.5 0 0 0 0 3 1 2 02007 CIN 16 16 103 61 42 2.0 6.0 0 0 0 0 3 0 0 02008 SF 16 16 104 62 42 7.0 51.0 1 0 0 0 3 1 0 02009 SF 16 16 90 48 42 6.0 65.0 0 0 0 0 1 2 2 02010 SF 16 16 107 76 31 8.5 51.5 0 0 0 0 1 1 0 02011 SF 3 3 19 13 6 2.0 16.0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0TOTALS 161 157 947 603 344 67.0 483.0 3 28 21 0 26 11 7 0

Milestones: NFL Debut: vs. Bal. (9/23/01); First Start: vs. Chi. (10/21/01); First Sack: at SD (9/30/01 - QB Doug Flutie); 50th Sack: vs. Was. (12/28/08 - QB Jason Campbell); First INT: at Det. (10/28/01 - QB Charlie Batch); First FF: vs. NO (12/22/02 - QB Aaron Brooks); First FR: vs. Pit. (11/21/04 - QB Ben Roethlisberger)

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SAN FRANCISCO 49ERS

PLAYER CAPSULES

Reggie Smith made significant strides in 2010 for the 49ers. Smith, who transitioned to the safety position in 2009 after lin-ing up at cornerback during his rookie season, started the final 7 games of 2010 at strong safety. He set career-highs in tackles (37) and INTs (1), while adding a career-high 14 tackles on special teams. Smith started The Reggie Smith II Foundation, which is dedicated to serving the community by supporting under privileged children and families that have been associated with tragic life situations and economic hardship.

// GOLDMINEReggie’s big game mentality on the field goes with his big heart off of it. Reggie participates year round in his own foundation, The Reg-gie Smith II Foundation, which aims at giving back to the inner-city youth of Oklahoma City and its surrounding areas. The foundation provides funding for children and families by giving out scholarships to attend school and provide necessities that wouldn’t otherwise be available. This includes their yearly backpack drive as well as hosting an annual Thanksgiving dinner, where they provide baskets filled with food and necessary goods. Reggie also sponsors his an-nual Rookie 31 Football Camp at Edmon Santa Fe High School. Along with his foundation, Reggie participates in a variety of other chari-table events throughout the year. Reggie always has time when it comes to giving back. He is a regular participant with the 49ers Com-munity Relations department which involves going out into the bay area community every Tuesday.

PLAYER CAPSULES

SMITH’S GAME-BY-GAME2011Date Opp W/L P/S Tot Sol Ast Sk Yds Int Yds PD FF FR YdsSep 11 Sea W 1/0 2 2 0 0.0 0.0 0 0 0 0 0 0Sep 18 Dal L 1/0 3 3 0 0.0 0.0 0 0 0 0 0 0Sep 25 at Cin W 1/0 1 0 1 0.0 0.0 1 11 1 0 0 0Oct 2 at PhiOct 9 TBOct 16 at DetOct 30 CleNov 6 at WasNov 13 NYGNov 20 ArzNov 24 at BalDec 4 StLDec 11 at ArzDec 19 PitDec 24 at SeaJan 1 at StL TOTALS 3/0 6 5 1 0.0 0.0 1 11 1 0 0 0

Total Tackles: 7 at StL (12/26/10)Solo Tackles: 6 Last vs. StL (11/14/10)

Passes Defensed: 2 vs. NO (9/20/10)Interceptions: 1 vs. Sea. (12/12/10)

SMITH’S CAREER STATISTICS

SMITH’S CAREER HIGHS

Special Teams Tackles: 1TFL: 2

TACKLES INTERCEPTIONS FUMBLESYEAR TEAM GP GS TOT SOL AST SACKS YDS INT YDS LG TD PD FF FR YDS 2008 SF 3 0 1 1 0 0.0 0.0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 02009 SF 10 0 0 0 0 0.0 0.0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 02010 SF 16 7 37 29 8 0.0 0.0 1 20 20 0 4 0 0 02011 SF 3 0 6 6 1 0.0 0.0 1 11 0 0 1 0 0 0TOTALS 32 7 44 36 9 0.0 0.0 2 31 20 0 5 0 0 0

Additional Statistics: Special Teams Tackles – 24: 2008 (3), 2009 (6), 2010 (14), 2011 (1)Special Team Fumble Recoveries - 2: 2008 (1); 2009 (1)Special Teams Fumbles - 1: 2009 (1)

Milestones: NFL Debut: at Sea. (9/14/08); First Start: vs. TB (11/21/10); First INT: vs. Sea. (12/12/10 - QB Matt Hasselbeck)

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SAN FRANCISCO 49ERS

PLAYER CAPSULES

Adam Snyder has been a valuable asset to the 49ers since be-

veteran has the ability to play both guard and tackle and has made starts at each of the four positions. In each of the last two offsea-sons, Snyder has also worked at center. His versatility and knowl-edge of the game provide the 49ers with a valuable resource on the offensive line. Growing up in Southern California, Snyder was an avid surfer as a child and continues to ride the waves off the Santa Cruz shoreline.

// GOLDMINE

coast. He and his friends would often make the short drive to the beach, where they’d spend some time soaking in the rays and surf-

but he picked the sport back up when he was drafted by the 49ers in 2005. “On one of my first trips to Santa Cruz, I met a local shaper

there. I surfed quite a bit my first couple years in the league and try

of five surfboards – three 10-footers, a nine-footer and a seven-foot fish – that he rides at the local breaks. His wife, Erika, learned how to surf in Hawaii and enjoys going out in the water with Adam.

-coming a police officer. “It’s been a line of work that has interested me for a long time. I imagine the camaraderie you build between your fellow officers is similar to the solidarity that’s created among

Adam has any questions about the joining the force, he doesn’t need -

to go on a few ride-a-longs in the near future to get an up-and-close understanding of what being a police officer entails.

-nual camping trips into the middle of the desert with his family and friends. “We’ve been setting up camp at the same place near Chiriaco Summit for years. It’s basically in the middle of nowhere and we just

before working a seasonal job at Honey Baked Hams, where he un--

like milk and eggs. It was actually like a grocery store, it had every-thing. The coolest part was that it was a drive-thru. You’d just drive up, place your order and I’d go pick out the items from the back. I think it’s weird that I haven’t seen a similar type of place anywhere

PLAYER CAPSULES

6-6 | 325 | OREGON | 7TH YEAR | BORN 1.30.82 | FULLERTON, CA

GAMES/STARTS - 93/56; 2005 (16/8), 2006 (14/6), 2007 (16/11), 2008 (14/13), 2009 (16/16), 2010 (15/2), 2011 (3/0)

Milestones: NFL Debut: vs. StL. (9/11/05); First Start: at Chi. (11/13/05); 50th Career Start: at Sea. (12/6/09).

SNYDER’S CAREER STATISTICS

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SAN FRANCISCO 49ERS

PLAYER CAPSULES

Isaac Sopoaga has been a key component of the 49ers defensive line rotation since being drafted in the 4th-round of the 2004 NFL

the 49ers 3-4 scheme, as he can play both defensive tackle as well as nose tackle. In 2010, he set a career high with 75 tackles and tied his career high with 1.5 sacks. One of the unsung stars of the 49ers defense, Sopoaga was recognized for his play by being named to the USA Today 2010 All-Joe Team. A native of American Samoa, Sopoaga brings his island flair to the 49ers locker room, from his traditional tribal face paint to his unique pregame rituals.

// GOLDMINE

his conditioning routine was to strengthen his arms by lifting bags filled with coconuts and logs from harvested trees. His leg workout was also geographically oriented. Said Isaac, “Have you ever seen a

-hood, but he credits his brothers for shaping him into the man he is today. “I really thank my brothers for staying on me when we were growing up. Since I was the youngest, I was responsible for all of the chores. It was definitely hard, but my brothers really taught me the

still takes pride in handling a bulk of the chores at home with his wife and four children.

PLAYER CAPSULES

6-2 | 330 | HAWAII | 8TH YEAR | BORN 9.4.81 | FAGASA, AMERICAN SAMOA

Total Tackles: 8 vs. Arz. (12/24/06)Solo: 5 (4 times) Last vs. Arz. (12/24/06)Assists: 5 at SD (12/16/10)

Sacks: 1 (5 times) Last at SD (12/16/10)Passes Defensed: 1 (7 times) Last vs. Den. (10/31/10)

SOPOAGA’S CAREER STATISTICS

SOPOAGA’S CAREER HIGHS

SOPOAGA’S GAME-BY-GAME2011Date Opp W/L P/S Tot Sol Ast Sk Yds Int Yds PD FF FR YdsSep 11 Sea W 1/1 4 2 2 0.0 0.0 0 0 0 0 0 0Sep 18 Dal L 1/1 6 2 4 0.0 0.0 0 0 0 0 0 0Sep 25 at Cin W 1/1 6 4 2 0.0 0.0 0 0 0 0 0 0Oct 2 at PhiOct 9 TBOct 16 at DetOct 30 CleNov 6 at WasNov 13 NYGNov 20 ArzNov 24 at BalDec 4 StLDec 11 at ArzDec 19 PitDec 24 at SeaJan 1 at StL TOTALS 3/3 16 8 8 0.0 0.0 0 0 0 0 0 0 QB Hits: 1QB Pressures: 1

TACKLES INTERCEPTIONS FUMBLESYEAR TEAM GP GS TOT SOL AST SACKS YDS INT YDS LG TD PD FF FR YDS2004 SF - - - - INJURED RESERVE (Back) - - - - - - - -2005 SF 16 1 28 18 10 0.0 0.0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 02006 SF 15 2 28 18 10 1.5 7.5 0 0 0 0 3 1 1 02007 SF 16 5 58 27 31 1.5 10.0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 02008 SF 16 15 66 40 26 1.0 7.0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 02009 SF 16 16 69 33 36 1.0 8.0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 02010 SF 16 16 75 40 35 1.5 9.5 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 02011 SF 3 3 16 8 8 0.0 0.0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0TOTALS 98 58 340 184 156 6.5 42.0 0 0 0 0 8 1 1 0

Milestones: NFL Debut: vs. STL (9/11/05); First Start: at Ten. (11/27/05); First Sack: vs. Phi. (9/24/06 - QB Donovan McNabb); First FF: vs. SD (10/15/06 - RB LaDainian Tomlinson); First FR: vs. STL (9/17/06 - QB Marc Bulger)

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SAN FRANCISCO 49ERS

PLAYER CAPSULES

A physical and cagey cornerback, Shawntae Spencer provides the 49ers with a smooth and steady playmaker in the defensive backfield. After suffering a season-ending knee injury in 2008, Spencer rebounded in 2009 to claim the starting left corner role and later earn the Ed Block Courage Award. The savvy veteran was one of only 12 NFL cornerbacks to start all 32 games over the past

the attitude and toughness of his hometown to help him overcome adversity on and off the field.

// GOLDMINE-

declined, as did the options for the kids. To help solve this problem,

want it to be a safe-haven, a hub for kids where they can go after school, where they can go whether they’re playing sports or not. We will provide kids with tutoring assistance, a mentoring program and give them someone they can talk with. We will also work with youth sports. I want to make the sports in the community free for the kids. A lot of times, kids can’t play because their parents can’t afford it. I just want them to be able to show up and participate in whatever ac-

-tae is also looking at building a YMCA in the Bay Area, his home since being drafted by the 49ers in 2004. “Once I get this YMCA

poverty stricken area – some place where the kids don’t have many options of things to do when they get out of school. I want to try to keep the kids off the street corners and give them some options as

PLAYER CAPSULES

SPENCER’S GAME-BY-GAME2011Date Opp W/L P/S Tot Sol Ast Sk Yds Int Yds PD FF FR YdsSep 11 Sea W 1/0 0 0 0 0.0 0.0 0 0 0 0 0 0Sep 18 Dal L 1/0 0 0 0 0.0 0.0 0 0 0 0 0 0Sep 25 at Cin W 1/0 1 1 0 0.0 0.0 0 0 1 0 0 0Oct 2 at PhiOct 9 TBOct 16 at DetOct 30 CleNov 6 at WasNov 13 NYGNov 20 ArzNov 24 at BalDec 4 StLDec 11 at ArzDec 19 PitDec 24 at SeaJan 1 at StL TOTALS 3/0 1 1 0 0.0 0.0 0 0 1 0 0 0

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SAN FRANCISCO 49ERS

PLAYER CAPSULES

Total Tackles: 10 at Arz. (12/12/04)Passes Defensed: 5 at Ten. (11/27/05)INTs: 1 (11 times) Last at Den. (10/31/10)

INT Long: 61 at Ten. (11/27/05)TDs: 1 at Ten. (11/27/05)Sacks: 1 (2 times) Last at Den. (12/31/06)

SPENCER’S CAREER STATISTICS

SPENCER’S CAREER HIGHS

SHAWNTAE SPENCER

TACKLES INTERCEPTIONS FUMBLESYEAR TEAM GP GS TOT SOL AST SACKS YDS INT YDS LG TD PD FF FR YDS 2004 SF 16 12 66 57 9 0.0 0.0 0 0 0 0 7 1 0 02005 SF 15 14 76 69 7 0.0 0.0 4 85 61t 1 19 0 0 02006 SF 13 13 74 62 12 2.0 11.0 1 0 0 0 9 1 2 112007 SF 11 1 31 27 4 0.0 0.0 1 0 0 0 3 0 0 02008 SF 2 0 3 3 0 0.0 0.0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 02009 SF 16 16 62 53 9 0.0 0.0 2 2 2 0 10 0 0 02010 SF 16 16 57 42 15 0.5 6.0 3 0 0 0 9 1 1 02011 SF 3 0 1 1 0 0.0 0.0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0TOTALS 92 72 370 314 56 2.5 17.0 11 87 61t 1 58 3 3 11

Additional Statistics:Special Teams Tackles – 9: 2004 (2), 2005 (1), 2007 (4), 2008 (2)

Milestones: NFL Debut: vs. Atl. (9/12/04); First Start: at Sea. (9/26/04); 50th Start: at GB (11/22/09); First INT: at Ten. (11/27/05 - QB Steve McNair); First INT Returned for a TD: at Ten. (11/27/05 - 61-yd. return off QB Steve McNair); First FF: vs. Buf. (12/26/04 - RB Willis McGahee); First FR: vs. Phi (9/24/06 - WR Greg Lewis)

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SAN FRANCISCO 49ERS

PLAYER CAPSULES

C.J. Spillman is an athletic safety with a nose for the ball. The 49ers claimed him off waivers in October 2010, and he immediately made his presence felt on special teams. Spillman finished the year ranked t-4th in the NFL with 19 special teams tackles according to NFL game books.

// GOLDMINESpillman prides himself as being a family man and credits his fa-ther, Claude, Sr., as having instilled the values and work ethic of his game. His father played football collegiately at Western Kentucky

He says that his favorite thing to do when he is not playing football is hanging out with his two children, Trey and Amaya.

PLAYER CAPSULES

SPILLMAN’S GAME-BY-GAME2011Date Opp W/L P/S Tot Sol Ast Sk Yds Int Yds PD FF FR YdsSep 11 Sea W 1/0 0 0 0 0.0 0.0 0 0 0 0 0 0Sep 18 Dal L 1/0 0 0 0 0.0 0.0 0 0 0 0 0 0Sep 25 at Cin W 1/0 1 0 1 0.0 0.0 0 0 0 0 0 0Oct 2 at PhiOct 9 TBOct 16 at DetOct 30 CleNov 6 at WasNov 13 NYGNov 20 ArzNov 24 at BalDec 4 StLDec 11 at ArzDec 19 PitDec 24 at SeaJan 1 at StL TOTALS 3/0 1 0 1 0.0 0.0 0 0 0 0 0 0

SPILLMAN’S CAREER STATISTICS

SPILLMAN’S CAREER HIGHSTotal Tackles: 4 at Cle. (12/6/09)Solo: 3 at Cle. (12/6/09)

Assists: 1 (3 times) Last vs. Sea. (12/12/10)

Special Teams Tackles: 3

TACKLES INTERCEPTIONS FUMBLESYEAR TEAM GP GS TOT SOL AST SACKS YDS INT YDS LG TD PD FF FR YDS2009 SD 5 1 8 6 2 0.0 0.0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 2010 SD/SF 16 0 1 0 1 0.0 0.0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 02011 SF 3 0 1 0 1 0.0 0.0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 TOTALS 24 1 10 0 4 0.0 0.0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0

Additional Statistics:Special Teams Tackles - 35: 2009 (5), 2010: (27; SD - 6; SF - 21), 2011 (3)

Milestones: NFL Debut: at NYG (11/8/09); First Career Start: at Dal. (12/13/09)

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SAN FRANCISCO 49ERS

PLAYER CAPSULES

Joe Staley has showcased his abilities on the 49ers offensive line since being chosen as the second of San Francisco’s two 1st round

role as a leader in helping to orchestrate the player-organized workouts and camps. As a rookie, he started all 16 contests at right tackle before switching to left tackle in his second year. A product of Central Michigan, Staley became the first player in school history to

a mean streak on the field, off the field, the charismatic Staley keeps his teammates and the fans entertained as the host of The Joe Show, on 49ers.com.

// CAREER HIGHLIGHTS

a season since Cas Banaszek (1968-77), who started all 14 contests in 1968.

Joe Thomas) to line up for every single snap in 2007, and was 1 of 35 NFL players overall to accomplish the feat out of 1,898 total players.

-

// 2011 HIGHLIGHTS

// GOLDMINE

company looking to create a bobblehead in his likeness for a home-town baseball promotion. The former Rockford High School and Cen-

“It’s kind of crazy to have something that has your likeness on it. It

1,000 fans at Fifth Third Ballpark when the West Michigan Whitecaps faced the Lansing Lugnuts. On the bobblehead, Joe is holding a hel-met and is decked out in his high school uniform including his No. 84 jersey. “I think they were going for my retro-Rockford days. In the

Joe, who was a relay runner and tight end in high school.

PLAYER CAPSULES

GAMES/STARTS - 53/53; 2007 (16/16), 2008 (16/16), 2009 (9/9), 2010 (9/9), 2011 (3/3)

Additional Statistics:Touchdowns – 1: 2008 [FR in endzone vs. NYJ (12/7/08)]

Milestones: NFL Debut: vs. Arz. (9/10/07); First Start: vs. Arz. (9/10/07); First FR: vs. NYJ (12/7/08 - WR Jason Hill); First FR Returned for a TD: vs. NYJ (12/7/08 - recovered WR Jason Hill fumble in the endzone)

STALEY’S CAREER STATISTICS

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SAN FRANCISCO 49ERS

PLAYER CAPSULES

Scott Tolzien was claimed off waivers by the 49ers after having

him as an undrafted free agent in July. He completed 25 of 40

Chryst, the brother of 49ers quarterbacks coach Geep Chryst.

PLAYER CAPSULES

TOLZIEN’S GAME-BY-GAME2011 Total Pct.Date Opp W/L P/S Att Cmp Pct Yds TD Int Lg Sk/Yds Rtg Rsh Yds TD Net Yds. OffenseSep 11 Sea W - - - - - - - INACTIVE - - - - - - -Sep 18 Dal L - - - - - - - INACTIVE - - - - - - -Sep 25 at Cin W - - - - - - - INACTIVE - - - - - - -Oct 2 at PhiOct 9 TBOct 16 at DetOct 30 CleNov 6 at WasNov 13 NYGNov 20 ArzNov 24 at BalDec 4 StLDec 11 at ArzDec 19 PitDec 24 at SeaJan 1 at StL TOTALS 0/0 0 0 0.0 0 0 0 0 0/0 0.0 0 0 0 0 0.0

TOLZIEN’S CAREER NFL STATISTICS PASSING RUSHING

YEAR TEAM GP GS ATT CMP PCT YDS TD INT LG SK LST RTG ATT YDS AVG LG TD2011 SF 0 0 0 0 0.0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0.0 0 0 0.0 0 0TOTALS 0 0 0 0 0.0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0.0 0 0 0.0 0 0

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SAN FRANCISCO 49ERS

PLAYER CAPSULES

A young, physical player, Will Tukuafu signed with the 49ers in August 2010 and spent a majority of his rookie campaign on the 49ers practice squad before being promoted to the active roster on

Memorial Award last year, which is presented to a rookie or first-year player who best represents the dream of Thomas Herrion, to make the most of your opportunities.

// 2011 HIGHLIGHTS

FG in the 2nd qtr.

// GOLDMINE-

as Herrion Award. The award is presented annually to a rookie or first-year player who has taken advantage of every opportunity, turned it into a postive and made their dream come true like Thomas Herrion and is voted on by the coaches.Will takes great pride in his family and says if it wasn’t for them, he wouldn’t be where he is today. “My parents came here from Tonga in 1979 and worked as janitors to support our family. It’s seeing the sacrifices that they made for us that motivates me to work hard and

Will definitely gives his best on and off the football field. He loves learning and has a passion for working in construction. He has been active in the commercial construction industry since college and says that once his playing days are over, he would like to have a more active role in it. He has completed several internships for a construction company and worked closely with an engineer and project manager to learn the inner workings of the business. He continues to stay in contact with them and plans to work with them during the offseasons. He says one of the reasons that he enjoys construction so much is that he likes to see things built from the beginning to the end, and then being able to have a finished project to show for it.

PLAYER CAPSULES

6-4 | 293 | OREGON | 1ST YEAR | BORN 1.3.84 | SALT LAKE CITY, UT

TUKUAFU’S CAREER STATISTICS

TUKUAFU’S GAME-BY-GAME2011Date Opp W/L P/S Tot Sol Ast Sk Yds Int Yds PD FF FR YdsSep 11 Sea W 1/0 2 0 2 0.0 0.0 0 0 0 0 1 12Sep 18 Dal L 1/0 0 0 0 0.0 0.0 0 0 0 0 0 0Sep 25 at Cin W 1/0 0 0 0 0.0 0.0 0 0 0 0 0 0Oct 2 at PhiOct 9 TBOct 16 at DetOct 30 CleNov 6 at WasNov 13 NYGNov 20 ArzNov 24 at BalDec 4 StLDec 11 at ArzDec 19 PitDec 24 at SeaJan 1 at StL TOTALS 3/0 2 0 2 0.0 0.0 0 0 0 0 1 12

TACKLES INTERCEPTIONS FUMBLESYEAR TEAM GP GS TOT SOL AST SACKS YDS INT YDS LG TD PD FF FR YDS 2010 SF 0 0 0 0 0 0.0 0.0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 02011 SF 3 0 2 0 2 0.0 0.0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 12TOTALS 3 0 2 0 2 0.0 0.0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 12

Milestones: NFL Debut: vs. Sea. (9/11/11); First FR: vs. Sea. (9/11/11 - QB Tarvaris Jackson)

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SAN FRANCISCO 49ERS

PLAYER CAPSULES

threat at the tight end position, posing several match-up problems for opposing defenses. Walker has seen his receiving total rise in each of the last three seasons, including setting career highs in re-cepts. (29) and rec. yds. (331) in 2010. Originally a 6th-round selec-tion by San Francisco in 2006, Walker has put his deceptive speed on display not only on offense, but also on special teams, totaling 55 special teams tackles over the past four years (2008-11). Walker is one of only three players to be drafted out of Central Missouri since

Roderick Green - 5th round by Bal. in 2003).

// 2011 HIGHLIGHTS-

ing action on offense.

// GOLDMINE

from classics to newer models. Among his collection has been a 1964 Chevy Impala, 1972 Buick Skylark, 1989 Camaro IROC-Z28, 2008

for cars can be traced back to his childhood, where he would spend countless hours refurbishing old autos with the help of his friend’s father, who was a mechanic. “Growing up we didn’t have much money,

all day taking off parts and replacing them, just like new. The most important lesson I learned was ‘the way you take it off is the way

-come more advanced and that he is only comfortable working on models that are pre-1990. After his playing days are over, he envi-sions owning a car restoration shop.

how difficult it is to overcome obstacles in order to achieve one’s

delinquent youths across the Bay Area, making it a point to share his story and give positive reinforcement to those who can relate to him. “It’s very important that people know about what I’ve been through. You can grow up in the worst neighborhood and still make it to the NFL. That’s why I want kids, especially in the Bay Area, to

His speed on the field can be linked to his success on the track as a

-

set on making the Olympic team one day.

PLAYER CAPSULES

2011Date Opp W/L P/S Rec Yds Avg Lg TDSep 11 Sea W 1/1 1 -1 -1.0 -1 0Sep 18 Dal L 1/0 2 38 19.0 29t 1Sep 25 at Cin W 1/0 1 9 9.0 9 0Oct 2 at PhiOct 9 TBOct 16 at DetOct 30 CleNov 6 at WasNov 13 NYGNov 20 ArzNov 24 at BalDec 4 StLDec 11 at ArzDec 19 PitDex 24 at SeaJan 1 at StL TOTALS 3/1 4 46 11.5 29t 1

Special Teams Tackles: 4

WALKER’S GAME-BY-GAME

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SAN FRANCISCO 49ERS

PLAYER CAPSULES

Receptions: 6 vs. Min. (12/9/07)Receiving Yards: 85 vs. Den. (10/31/10)Long Reception: 53 vs. Sea. (10/26/08)Long Rush: 16 vs. StL (10/4/09)

Kickoff Returns: 5 at Dal. (11/23/08)Kickoff Return Yards: 112 at Dal. (11/23/08)Kickoff Return Long: 35 at Dal. (11/23/08)

WALKER’S CAREER STATISTICS

WALKER’S CAREER HIGHS

DELANIE WALKER

RECEIVING RUSHINGYEAR TEAM GP GS NO YDS AVG LG TD ATT YDS AVG LG TD2006 SF 7 1 2 30 15.0 29 0 0 0 0.0 0 02007 SF 16 10 21 174 8.3 26 1 0 0 0.0 0 02008 SF 15 2 10 155 15.5 53 1 2 -13 -6.5 -3 0 2009 SF 16 8 21 233 11.1 39 0 3 34 11.3 16 02010 SF 14 8 29 331 11.4 38 0 3 18 6.0 10 02011 SF 3 1 4 46 11.5 29t 1 0 0 0.0 0 0TOTALS 71 30 87 969 11.1 53 3 8 39 4.9 16 0 KICKOFF RETURNS PUNT RETURNSYEAR TEAM NO YDS AVG LG TD NO FC YDS AVG LG TD2006 SF 1 25 25.0 25 0 0 0 0 0.0 0 02007 SF 3 63 21.0 30 0 0 0 0 0.0 0 02008 SF 13 257 19.8 35 0 0 0 0 0.0 0 02009 SF 5 85 17.0 25 0 0 0 0 0,0 0 02010 SF 5 70 14.0 20 0 0 0 0 0.0 0 02011 SF 0 0 0.0 0 0 0 0 0 0.0 0 0TOTALS 27 500 18.5 35 0 0 0 0 0.0 0 0

Additional Statistics:Special Teams Tackles – 54: 2007 (2), 2008 (15), 2009 (20), 2010 (13), 2011 (4)Fumbles-Lost – 5-3: 2-0 in 2008, 2-2 in 2009, 1-1 in 2010Onside Kick Recoveries – 2: 2007 (2)

Milestones: NFL Debut: vs. Oak. (10/8/06); First Start: vs. NO (12/3/06); First Reception: vs. GB (12/10/06 - 29-yd. pass from QB Alex Smith); First Receiving TD: at Car. (12/2/07 - 21-yd. pass from QB Trent Dilfer)

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SAN FRANCISCO 49ERS

PLAYER CAPSULES

Aspent his first five NFL seasons as the Buffalo Bills starting strong safety before joining the 49ers in 2011. Whitner was originally se-

help the Bills finish in the top 10 in pass defense in three of his five years (7th in ‘06, 2nd in ‘09, 3rd in ‘10) with the team.

// 2011 HIGHLIGHTS

INT.

// GOLDMINE

-tended Glenville High School in Cleveland, playing for Ginn’s father,

49ers QB Troy Smith, while Ted Jr. followed close behind a year later.

had left for the NFL following his junior year in college, only after graduating several months early from high school to attend Ohio St.

PLAYER CAPSULES

WHITNER’S GAME-BY-GAME2011Date Opp W/L P/S Tot Sol Ast Sk Yds Int Yds PD FF FR YdsSep 11 Sea W 1/1 8 6 2 0.0 0.0 0 0 1 0 0 0Sep 18 Dal L 1/1 7 4 3 0.0 0.0 1 0 3 0 0 0Sep 25 at Cin W 1/1 2 2 0 0.0 0.0 0 0 1 0 0 0Oct 2 at PhiOct 9 TBOct 16 at DetOct 30 CleNov 6 at WasNov 13 NYGNov 20 ArzNov 24 at BalDec 4 StLDec 11 at ArzDec 19 PitDec 24 at SeaJan 1 at StL TOTALS 3/3 17 12 5 0.0 0.0 1 0 5 0 0 0

it hard to believe there were doubts on whether he would be able to walk again after suffering a near fatal accident as a youth. At the

since proved the doctors wrong.

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SAN FRANCISCO 49ERS

PLAYER CAPSULES

WHITNER’S CAREER STATISTICS

Total Tackles: 18 vs. Pit. (11/28/10)Solo: 12 vs. Ten. (12/24/06)Assists: 10 vs. Pit. (11/28/10) Sacks: 1.0 at StL (9/28/08)Interceptions: 1 (6 times) Last vs. Dal. (9/18/11)

Interception Yards: 76 vs. TB (9/20/09)Passes Defensed: 3 vs. Det. (11/14/10)Forced Fumbles: 1 (3 times) Last vs. Cle. (12/12/10)Fumble Recoveries: 1 vs. Jax. (10/10/10)

WHITNER’S CAREER HIGHS

DONTE WHITNER

TACKLES INTERCEPTIONS FUMBLESYEAR TEAM GP GS TOT SOL AST SACKS YDS INT YDS LG TD PD FF FR YDS 2006 BUF 15 14 107 85 22 0.0 0.0 1 10 10 0 5 0 0 02007 BUF 15 15 102 72 30 0.0 0.0 1 29 29 0 1 1 0 02008 BUF 13 13 63 51 12 1.0 13.0 0 0 0 0 1 1 0 02009 BUF 10 8 57 42 15 0.0 0.0 2 104 76t 1 5 0 0 02010 BUF 16 16 140 96 44 0.5 2.0 1 37 37 0 7 1 1 02011 SF 3 3 17 12 5 0.0 0.0 1 0 0 0 5 0 0 0TOTALS 72 69 486 358 128 1.5 15.0 6 180 76t 1 24 3 1 0 Additional Statistics:Special Teams Tackles – 1: 2010 (1)

Milestones: NFL Debut: at NE (9/10/06); First Start: at Mia. (9/17/06); 50th Start: at Atl. (12/27/09); First Sack: at StL. (9/28/08 - QB Trent Green); First INT: at NE (9/10/06 - QB Tom Brady); First FF: vs. NE (11/18/07 - RB Kevin Faulk); First FR: vs. Jax. (10/10/10) - QB David Garrard)

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SAN FRANCISCO 49ERS

PLAYER CAPSULES

Ian Williams joined the 49ers as an undrafted free agent out of

training camp, helped earn him a spot on the 49ers 53-man roster.

that the 49ers had at least two undrafted free agents make the team

Jason Baker).

PLAYER CAPSULES

WILLIAMS’ GAME-BY-GAME2011Date Opp W/L P/S Tot Sol Ast Sk Yds Int Yds PD FF FR YdsSep 11 Sea W - - INACTIVE - - - - - - -Sep 18 Dal L - - INACTIVE - - - - - - -Sep 25 at Cin W - - INACTIVE - - - - - - -Oct 2 at PhiOct 9 TBOct 16 at DetOct 30 CleNov 6 at WasNov 13 NYGNov 20 ArzNov 24 at BalDec 4 StLDec 11 at ArzDec 19 PitDec 24 at SeaJan 1 at StL TOTALS 0/0 0 0 0 0.0 0.0 0 0 0 0 0 0

WILLIAMS’ CAREER STATISTICS TACKLES INTERCEPTIONS FUMBLES

YEAR TEAM GP GS TOT SOL AST SACKS YDS INT YDS LG TD PD FF FR YDS 2011 SF 0 0 0 0 0 0.0 0.0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0TOTALS 0 0 0 0 0 0.0 0.0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0

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SAN FRANCISCO 49ERS

PLAYER CAPSULES

A-

paign got off to a slow start following a toe sprain in the preseason opener and a finger injury later suffered in practice. Williams pro-vides the 49ers with speed and depth at both receiver and in the return game. Williams is no stranger to professional sports as his

// 2011 HIGHLIGHTS-

// GOLDMINE-

for 10 years. “It’s been a great opportunity and an advantage to be

was an opportunity Kyle learned that very few other children get the chance to see. He saw firsthand what it took to be a professional

-reer.

-ple telling me that I wouldn’t make it fueled me. That’s been the big-

PLAYER CAPSULES

2011Date Opp W/L P/S Rec Yds Avg Lg TDSep 11 Sea W - INACTIVE - - - -Sep 18 Dal L 1/0 1 12 12.0 12t 1Sep 25 at Cin W - DID NOT PLAY - - -Oct 2 at PhiOct 9 TBOct 16 at DetOct 30 CleNov 6 at WasNov 13 NYGNov 20 ArzNov 24 at BalDec 4 StLDec 11 at ArzDec 19 PitDex 24 at SeaJan 1 at StL TOTALS 1/0 1 12 12.0 12t 1

2011Date Opp KR Yds Avg Lg TD PR FC Yds Avg Lg TDSep 11 Sea - - - - INACTIVE - - - - -Sep 18 Dal 0 0 0.0 0 0 0 0 0 0.0 0 0Sep 25 at Cin - - - DID NOT PLAY - - - -Oct 2 at PhiOct 9 TBOct 16 at DetOct 30 CleNov 6 at WasNov 13 NYGNov 20 ArzNov 24 BalDec 4 StLDec 11 at ArzDec 19 PitDec 24 at SeaJan 1 at StL TOTALS 0 0 0.0 0 0 0 0 0 0.0 0 0

GINN’S GAME-BY-GAME

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SAN FRANCISCO 49ERS

PLAYER CAPSULES

Receptions: 1 vs. TB (11/21/10)Receiving Yards: 8 vs. TB (11/21/10)

TD Receptions: 1 vs. Dal. (9/18/11)

WILLIAMS’ CAREER STATISTICS

WILLIAMS’ CAREER HIGHS

KYLE WILLIAMS

RECEIVING RUSHINGYEAR TEAM GP GS NO YDS AVG LG TD ATT YDS AVG LG TD2010 SF 5 0 1 8 8.0 8 0 0 0 0.0 0 02011 SF 1 0 1 12 12.0 12t 1 0 0 0.0 0 0TOTALS 6 0 2 20 10.0 12t 1 0 0 0.0 0 0

KICKOFF RETURNS PUNT RETURNSYEAR TEAM NO YDS AVG LG TD NO FC YDS AVG LG TD2010 SF 4 82 20.5 30 0 3 6 16 5.3 9 02011 SF 0 0 0.0 0 0 0 0 0 0.0 0 0TOTALS 4 82 20.5 30 0 3 6 16 5.3 9 0

Milestones: NFL Debut: at KC (9/26/10); First Reception: vs. TB (11/21/10 - 8-yd. pass from QB Troy Smith); First TD Reception: vs. Dal. (9/18/11 - 12-yd. pass from QB Alex Smith)

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SAN FRANCISCO 49ERS

PLAYER CAPSULES

Known for his impact both on and off the field, Madieu Williams

joining San Francisco in 2011. Originally a second-round draft pick by Cincinnati in 2004, Williams spent his first four NFL seasons in with the Bengals before playing three seasons as a member of the Min-

starting games at CB, FS and SS during his rookie campaign. Known for his efforts in the community, both national and international, the

Year award in 2010.

// 2011 HIGHLIGHTS

// GOLDMINE

-munity, both in the U.S. and overseas. Among his efforts included

-liams Foundation works with kids to encourage a healthy lifestyle

Madieu honored his commitment to build a playground in Cincinnati during spring of 2008, partnering with the non-profit Kaboom! on the project. He has a website associated with his foundation- www.madieuwilliams.org.

the Madieu Williams Center for Global Health Initiatives. Its purpose is to research and implement new ways to improve education and health care in impoverished nations such as Sierra Leone.

-tied States at the age of 9 and settling with family in Maryland. While in his native country, his mother, a nurse, would take him on her rounds through hospital wards. It was there where he learned the importance of giving. The Williams were poor, themselves, living in a ramshackle, two-story building that seemed forever in danger of collapse, but Madieu’s mother gave to others whatever she could. He has since donated money to open a school outside of Sierra Leone’s capital city of Freetown, in a district where there had been none, and he still returns annually to Sierra Leone to monitor the progress of his programs.

PLAYER CAPSULES

WILLIAMS’ GAME-BY-GAME2011Date Opp W/L P/S Tot Sol Ast Sk Yds Int Yds PD FF FR YdsSep 11 Sea W 1/1 3 1 2 0.0 0.0 0 0 0 0 0 0Sep 18 Dal L 1/1 1 0 1 0.0 0.0 0 0 0 0 0 0Sep 25 at Cin W 1/1 8 2 6 0.0 0.0 0 0 0 0 0 0Oct 2 at PhiOct 9 TBOct 16 at DetOct 30 CleNov 6 at WasNov 13 NYGNov 20 ArzNov 24 at BalDec 4 StLDec 11 at ArzDec 19 PitDec 24 at SeaJan 1 at StL TOTALS 3/3 12 3 9 0.0 0.0 0 0 0 0 0 0

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SAN FRANCISCO 49ERS

PLAYER CAPSULES

WILLIAM’S CAREER STATISTICS

Total Tackles: 11 (2 times) Last at NYJ (10/11/10)Solo: 9 at NYJ (10/11/10)Assists: 5 (2 times) Last vs. Chi. (11/29/09)Passes Defensed: 3 at NO (11/19/06)Interceptions: 1 (12 times) Last at GB (10/24/10)

Interception Yards: 51 at Ten. (10/31/04)Long Interception Return: 51 at Ten. (10/31/04)Interception Returns for TDs: 1 at Ten. (10/31/04)Forced Fumbles: 1 (4 times) Last at NYJ (10/11/10)Fumble Recoveries: 1 (4 times) Last at Pit. (10/25/09)

WILLIAMS’ CAREER HIGHS

MADIEU WILLIAMS

TACKLES INTERCEPTIONS FUMBLESYEAR TEAM GP GS TOT SOL AST SACKS YDS INT YDS LG TD PD FF FR YDS 2004 CIN 16 13 95 71 24 2.0 19.0 3 51 51t 1 11 0 2 -3 2005 CIN 4 3 23 18 5 0.0 0.0 1 2 2 0 3 0 0 02006 CIN 16 16 77 60 17 0.0 0.0 3 33 25 0 13 2 0 02007 CIN 13 13 73 54 19 2.0 4.0 2 40 35 0 7 1 1 2 2008 MIN 9 9 45 34 11 0.0 0.0 2 -1 0 0 3 0 0 02009 MIN 16 16 76 56 20 0.0 0.0 0 0 0 0 4 0 1 02010 MIN 14 13 94 59 35 0.5 4.5 1 0 0 0 2 1 0 02011 SF 3 3 12 3 9 0.0 0.0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0TOTALS 90 85 495 355 140 4.5 27.5 12 125 51t 1 43 4 4 -1

Additional Statistics:Special Teams Tackles – 39: 2004 (13); 2005 (3); 2006 (9); 2007 (5); 2009 (8); 2010 (1)

Milestones: NFL Debut: at NYJ (9/12/04); First Start: at NYJ (9/12/04); 50th Start: vs. Hou. (11/2/08); First INT: at Ten. (10/25/04 - QB Carson Palmer); First INT Return for a TD: at Ten. (10/31/04) - returned 51 yards off QB Carson Palmer); First FF: at NO (11/19/06) - WR Michael Lewis); First FR: at Pit. (10/3/04) - RB Duce Staley)

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SAN FRANCISCO 49ERS

PLAYER CAPSULES

I -lished himself as a household name and an annual

honors with superman-like performances week-in and week-out, having led the NFL in tackles in two of his first four NFL seasons. As the 11th-overall selec-

-tion in 2008, 2009 and 2010. Willis joined S Ronnie Lott

in each of their first four seasons. The leader of the 49ers defense was rewarded with a lucrative five-

Area through 2016.

// CAREER HIGHLIGHTS

-

Rookie of the Year. He became first 49ers defensive rookie to make

of the Year award.

20-or-more stops in 4 contests.

Thomas) in 2007 to line up for every single snap.

tackles in 2007 led the NFL by more than 30 tackles, his 141 stops in

his 152 tackles in 2009 ranked 1st. Finished with 128 tackles in 2010, ranking 9th in the NFL.

Bowl in each of his first four seasons.

// 2011 HIGHLIGHTS

PLAYER CAPSULES

WILLIS’ GAME-BY-GAME2011Date Opp W/L P/S Tot Sol Ast Sk Yds Int Yds PD FF FR YdsSep 11 Sea W 1/1 10 4 6 0.0 0.0 0 0 1 0 1 0Sep 18 Dal L 1/1 14 6 8 0.0 0.0 0 0 0 1 0 0Sep 25 at Cin W 1/1 9 3 6 0.0 0.0 0 0 1 0 0 0Oct 2 at PhiOct 9 TBOct 16 at DetOct 30 CleNov 6 at WasNov 13 NYGNov 20 ArzNov 24 at BalDec 4 StLDec 11 at ArzDec 19 PitDec 24 at SeaJan 1 at StL TOTALS 3/3 33 13 20 0.0 0.0 0 0 2 1 1 0

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SAN FRANCISCO 49ERS

PLAYER CAPSULES

// GOLDMINE

Bill Walsh Award. The Bill Walsh Award is voted on by the coaches

franchise history to win the award twice (RB Frank Gore).

-

tattooed on his chest. “We both loved Superman growing up. We

-

meaning. One of his most inspirational tattoos is the word ‘Believe’ on his forearm. “When a person says ‘I think,’ I feel that leaves room for doubt. If I want to do something, I want to ‘believe’ I can do it, not

significant people that have passed away in his life – his grandfa-ther, uncle and brother.

uncle because he was able to make a name for himself as a success-

1990, and Toney later went on to beat former heavyweight champion Evander Holyfield in 2003.

when he was 16. He moved in with his guardians, the Finleys, who -

in high school. Julie Finley taught 5th grade. He refers to Chris and Julie as mom and dad.

provide much of a fan spotlight for young athletes. However, this

“Growing up in such a small town, sports would turn into these big events, whether it was football, baseball or basketball. Everybody

to compete, no matter what sport it is. Basketball, baseball, foot-ball, golf, bowling, fishing, whatever. Basketball was my first love…I played everything, guard, forward, center. In baseball, I played ev-

home runs in Little League. He started playing golf with his dad, Chris Finley, when he was 16. “Even though I’m not too good, I love to

where he averaged close to 20 points and 10 rebounds per game throughout his career. An all-district, all-region and All-West Ten-

-top where he crafted his game, but rather on the dirt in front of his

same hoop. “That’s what kept me busy. We didn’t have sport clubs,

him into the hard-working person he is today. At the ripe age of 10, -

-ing of structures. He then worked alongside his father, who was a logger. “I would use a chainsaw and cut the limbs off. It was a pretty

and junior in high school, he would perform general maintenance -

erty.

law enforcement. “Whether it be a detective or a member of the se-

-

PATRICK WILLIS

Total Tackles: 22 at NE (10/5/08)Solo: 15 at Arz. (11/25/07)Assists: 8 (2 times) Last at NE (10/5/08)Sacks: 2.5 vs. StL (10/4/09) Passes Defensed: 3 at NYG (10/19/08)

Interceptions: 1 (4 times) Last vs. Det. (12/27/09)Interception Yards: 86 at Sea. (9/14/08)Interception Return Long: 86t at Sea. (9/14/08)Forced Fumbles: 2 vs. Atl. (10/11/09)Fumble Recoveries: 1 (3 times) Last vs. Sea. (9/11/11)

WILLIS’ CAREER STATISTICS

WILLIS’ CAREER HIGHS

TACKLES INTERCEPTIONS FUMBLESYEAR TEAM GP GS TOT SOL AST SACKS YDS INT YDS LG TD PD FF FR YDS 2007 SF 16 16 226 143 83 4.0 9.0 0 0 0 0 5 2 1 02008 SF 16 16 185 126 59 1.0 5.0 1 86 86t 1 10 1 1 02009 SF 16 16 173 121 52 4.0 22.0 3 33 23t 1 8 3 0 02010 SF 15 15 153 104 49 6.0 46.0 0 0 0 0 5 2 0 02011 SF 3 3 33 13 20 0.0 0.0 0 0 0 0 2 1 1 0TOTALS 66 66 770 507 263 15.0 82.0 4 119 86t 2 30 9 3 0

Milestones: NFL Debut: vs. Arz. (9/10/07); First Start: vs. Arz. (9/10/07); First Sack: at Atl. (11/4/07 - QB Matt Ryan); First INT: at Sea. (9/14/08 - QB Matt Hasselbeck); First INT Returned for a TD: at Sea. (9/14/08 - 86-yd. off QB Matt Hasselbeck); First FF: vs. Arz. (9/10/07 - RB Edgerrin James); First FR: vs. Min. (12/9/07 - WR Aundrae Allison)

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1st 2nd 3rd 4th PtsSeattle 0 0 7 10 17San Francisco 0 16 0 17 33

SF - D. Akers, 27 FG (5-18, 2:12)SF - D. Akers, 24 FG (4-3, 0:57)SF - D. Akers, 31 FG (9-50, 6:38)SF - A. Smith, 1 run (D. Akers) (6-49, 1:32)SEA - G. Tate, 8 pass from T. Jackson (S. Hauschka) (9-56, 3:06)SEA - S. Hauschka, 39 FG (11-64, 4:52)SF - D. Akers, 18 FG (15-72, 9:01)SEA - D. Baldwin, 55 pass from T. Jackson (S. Hauschka) (6-80, 1:58)SF - T. Ginn Jr., 102 kickoff return (D. Akers)SF - T. Ginn Jr., 55 punt return (D. Akers)

TEAM STATISTICS SEA SFFirst Downs 18 12 Net Yards Gained 219 209 Rushes/Yards 22/64 32/85 Net Yards Passing 155 124 Att/Comp/INT 37/21/1 20/15/0 Sacked/Yards Lost 5/42 0/0 Punts/Average 7/48.9 5/59.6 Fumbles/Lost 3/2 1/0 Penalties/Yards 11/72 9/102 Time of Possession 28:53 31:07 3rd Down Efficiency 5/15 (33%) 1/12 (8%)

RUSHING: 49ERS - F. Gore 22-59, A. Smith 7-22-1 TD, K. Hunter 2-4, T. Ginn Jr. 1-0... SEAHAWKS - M. Lynch 13-33, T. Jackson 4-13, B. Obo-manu 1-13, J. Forsett 3-3, M. Robinson 1-2.

RECEIVING: 49ERS - V. Davis 5-47, B. Edwards 3-27, F. Gore 3-19, J. Morgan 2-28, M. Crabtree 1-4, D. Walker 1-(-1)... SEAHAWKS - D. Bald-win 4-83-1 TD, M. Williams 4-34, J. Forsett 3-8, Z. Miller 2-19, M. Lynch 2-14, B. Obomanu 2-12, A. McCoy 2-12, G. Tate 1-8-1 TD, L. Washington 1-7.

PASSING: 49ERS - A. Smith 20-15-124-0-0 TDs... SEAHAWKS - T. Jackson 37-21-197-1-2 TDs.

INTs: 49ERS - T. Brock 1-0... SEAHAWKS - None

SACKS: 49ERS - P. Haralson 2.0, J. Smith 2.0, R. McDonald 1.0... SE-AHAWKS - None

49ERS TURNOVER RATIO: +3 (0 fumbles, 0 INTs/2 fumbles, 1 INT).

Weather: CloudyTemperature: 68 degreesWind: Southerly 15 mphPlaying Surface: Natural GrassTime: 3:20Attendance: 69,732

The 49ers opened up the 2011 season with a 33-17 victory over the de-fending NFC West Division champion Seattle Seahawks, on the 10th an-niversary of 9/11. After a scoreless 1st qtr., the 49ers got on the board with a 27-yd. FG by K David Akers, his first of four FGs on the afternoon. On the ensuing Sea. possession, LB Parys Haralson sacked and stripped Seahawks QB Tarvaris Jackon. The ball landed in the hands of DT Will Tukuafu, who registered his first-career FR on his first-career play from scrimmage. Four plays later, Akers tacked on his 2nd FG, giving the 49ers a 6-0 lead. After a 3-n-out stop by the 49ers defense, one of six on the day, QB Alex Smith drove the 49ers into the red zone, only to come away with Akers’ 3rd FG. After a Seahawks punt, Smith and the offense took over from the Sea. 49 yd. line with 1:44 remaining in the half. The calm and steady Smith completed 4 of 4 pass atts. in the 2-minute drive and capped it off with a 1-yd. TD run, his first since 2006, to give SF a 16-0 halftime lead. The Seahawks responded on their first possession of the third qtr., marching down the field on a 9 play, 56 yd. drive and a 8-yd. TD pass from Jackson to WR Golden Tate, cutting the 49ers lead to 16-7. Sea. added a 39-yd. FG by K Steven Hauschka on the first play of the 4th qtr., making the score 16-10. The 49ers answered with a 15-play, 72 yd. drive that took over 9 minutes off the clock before Akers nailed his 4th FG, making the score 19-10. On the Seahawks next drive, Jackson found rookie WR Doug Baldwin for a 55-yd. TD recept., making it a one score game with just under 4 minutes to play. On the ensu-ing kickoff, WR Ted Ginn Jr. saw a hole and raced down the sideline for a 102-yd. kickoff return for a TD, the 49ers first KOR for a TD since 2008. The 49ers defense forced another Seahawks punt 59 seconds later and Ginn fielded the punt on his own 45 yd. line, found a crease, and darted for the end zone, sealing the game. Ginn became the 12 player in NFL history and the first in 49ers history to return a kickoff and a punt for a TD in same game.

NOTES: Head Coach Jim Harbaugh became the 6th 49ers head coach to win the season opener in his first year as head coach. He is just the 4th coach to do so at home. Harbaugh is also the 7th head coach in team history to win his first game (Jim Tomsula won his first game as interim head coach)... Harbaugh became the 8th 49ers head coach to win his first home game... Harbaugh became the first person in NFL history to pass for 25,000+ yards and win a game as a head coach. He passed for 26,288 yards & 129 TDs in his career... WR Ted Ginn Jr. posted the second longest kickoff return at home in franchise history after returning the kick 102 yards for the TD. It also marked the fourth longest in team history and the longest kick return since Allen Rossum registered a kickoff return of 104 yards at Ari. on 11/11/08... Ginn became the first player in franchise history to return a kickoff and punt for a TD in the same game...Ginn’s returns marked the first time in franchise history that the 49ers have registered a kickoff return for a TD and a punt return for a TD in the same game...Ginn became the first player in NFL history to have a kickoff return for a TD and punt return for a TD in the same game on Kickoff Weekend...Ginn became the 12th player in NFL history to register a kickoff return for a TD and a punt return for a TD in the same game. The last player to do it was Bears WR Devin Hester vs. Den. (11/25/07)...Ginn’s 268 total return yds. are the most in a single game in franchise history and ranks 15th in the NFL since 1950...Ginn’s kickoff return for a TD marked the first time the 49ers have had a special teams TD on opening day since WR Otis Amey returned a punt 75-yds vs. St. Louis (9/11/05)... P Andy Lee set a new career-high in both gross avg. (59.6) and net avg. (54.2). His previous career-high was 57.2 gross avg. at Pit. (9/23/07) and 53.5 net avg. vs. Ten. (11/8/09)...Lee’s 59.6 gross avg. is the highest single-game average in franchise history. The previous record was 57.2 set by Lee at Pit. (9/23/07)...Lee’s 54.2 net avg. is the highest single-game net average for the 49ers since 1976.

SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 11SEATTLE 17, SAN FRANCISCO 33

CANDLESTICK PARK

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1st 2nd 3rd 4th OT PtsDallas 0 7 7 10 3 27San Francisco 0 14 7 3 0 24

SF - F. Gore, 1 run (D. Akers) (11-68, 6:40)SF - K. Williams 12 pass from A. Smith (D. Akers) (9-48, 4:23)DAL - M. Austin 53 pass rom T. Romo (D. Bailey) (4-71, 1:17)DAL - M. Austin 5 pass from T. Romo (D. Bailey) (5-18, 2:09)SF - D. Walker 29 pass from A. Smith (D. Akers) (1-29, 0:05)SF - D. Akers 55 FG (4-9, 3:15)DAL - M. Austin 25 pass from T. Romo (D. Bailey) (9-80, 4:17)DAL - D. Bailey 48 FG (10-44, 4:03)DAL - D. Bailey 19 FG (2-77, 0:50)

TEAM STATISTICS DAL SFFirst Downs 20 14 Net Yards Gained 472 206 Rushes/Yards 22/45 24/74 Net Yards Passing 427 206 Att/Comp/INT 43/26/2 24/16/1 Sacked/Yards Lost 1/5 6/47 Punts/Average 4/48.5 6/55.3 Fumbles/Lost 3/0 0/0 Penalties/Yards 8/83 5/25 Time of Possession 32:10 30:43 3rd Down Efficiency 6/14 (43%) 8/16 (50%)

RUSHING: 49ERS - F. Gore 20-47-1 TD, A. Smith 3-21, A. Dixon 1-6... COWBOYS - F. Jones 9-25, D. Murray 6-21, T. Choice 5-5, M. Austin 1-(-2), K. Ogletree 1-(-4).

RECEIVING: 49ERS - T. Ginn 4-38, J. Morgan 3-35, F. Gore 3-17, D. Walker 2-38-1 TD, V. Davis 2-18, B. Edwards 1-21, K. Williams 1-12-1 TD ... COWBOYS - M. Austin 9-143-3 TDs, J. Witten 7-102, J. Holley 3-96, K. Ogletree 2-50, T. Choice 2-24, J. Phillips 1-8, F. Jones 1-5, D. Murray 1-4.

PASSING: 49ERS - A. Smith 24-16-179-1-2 TDs... COWBOYS - T. Romo 33-20-345-0-2 TDs, J. Kitna 10-6-87-2-1 TD.

INTs: 49ERS - T. Brock 1-18, D. Whitner 1-0 ... COWBOYS - A. Ball 1-15

SACKS: 49ERS - R. McDonald 1.0 ... COWBOYS - J. Hatcher 2.0, J. Ratliff 1.0, D. Ware 2.0, A Spencer 1.0

49ERS TURNOVER RATIO: +1 (0 fumbles, 1 INT/0 fumbles, 2 INTs).

Weather: SunnyTemperature: 70 degreesWind: Northeast 3 mphPlaying Surface: Natural GrassTime: 3:26Attendance: 69,732

San Francisco’s regime led by Jim Harbaugh and his new but experienced staff, entered the historic rivalry match against the Dallas Cowboys with something to prove at Candlestick Park. The 49ers started off as they had hoped, scoring 2 first-half TDs and blanking America’s Team, but big pass plays late in the game would ultimately cause the Niners to fall short as they were edged 27-24 in overtime. Dallas opened the 1st qtr. march-ing down the field, but came up short after a failed 21-yd. FG attempt by K Dan Bailey. After exchanging the next couple of possessions, QB Alex Smith led the Niners on a 68-yd. drive, capped off by a 1-yd. TD by RB Frank Gore in the 2nd qtr. The 49ers front seven played strong, swarming and stopping the run, allowing Smith and the Niners to regain possession to take a 14-0 lead. The 12-yd. throw from Smith marked the first TD of WR Kyle Williams’ career and the team’s first passing TD of 2011. QB Tony Romo and the Cowboys answered before the half on a 71-yd. drive, capped off by a 53-yd. TD slant to WR Miles Austin, making it a one score game heading into the half. Dallas lost its starting QB for a brief stretch in the 3rd qtr., when it appeared Romo’s rib injury – occurring on the 3rd play of the game – had become too much of a hindrance. Backup QB Jon Kitna started the 3rd qtr. and threw a tying TD pass and 2 INTs in relief. Displaying good ball skills and awareness, CB Tramaine Brock came up with his 2nd INT of the season in as many weeks, reacting to a Kitna tipped pass and coming up with the turnover. Smith and the 49ers took advantage of the Cowboys turnover with a deep pass down the right sideline to TE Delanie Walker for 29 yds. and the go-ahead TD entering the 4th qtr. K David Ak-ers connected on a 55-yd. FG, marking the longest FG in Candlestick Park history, and the Niners built up a 10-pt. cushion. The Cowboys charged back from the 24-14 deficit when Romo hit Austin for a leaping 25-yd. TD, and then directed a 10-play, 44-yd. drive in the final 4 minutes that ended with an overtime-forcing, 48-yd. field goal. After the Cowboys’ defense forced a punt on the 49ers first OT drive, Romo found backup WR Jesse Holley in stride for a 77-yd. gain that set up 19-yd. game-winning FG.

NOTES: The 49ers defense held the Cowboys to 7 yds. rushing (9 atts.) in the 1st half. The 7 yds. allowed tie for the fewest rush. yds. yielded in the 1st half by the 49ers since 12/18/95 vs. Min. (7 yds. on 8 atts.)...WR Kyle Williams hauled in an 12-yd. TD recept. from QB Alex Smith. The TD recept. for Williams was his 1st career NFL TD on just his 2nd career recept....With a 75% completion percentage in Week 1 vs. Sea. (9/11/11) and a 66.7 % total in Week 2 vs. Dal. (9/18/11), it marks the 1st time since 11/12/06 at Det. (70.0%) and 11/19/06 vs. Sea. (76.0%) that Alex Smith has posted consecutive weeks with completion percentages of 66.7%-or-higher...S Donte Whitner notched his 1st INT as a Niner and 6th career INT. It marked his 1st INT since 12/5/10 at Min. as a member of the Buffalo Bills...CB Tramaine Brock recorded his 2nd career INT after CB Carlos Rogers batted it in the air. Brock notched his second INT in as many weeks...With INTs in back-to-back weeks, Brock became the 1st 49er to register an INT in consecutive games since CB Dre’ Bly (12/20/09 at Phi. and 12/27/09 vs. Det.)...TE Delanie Walker caught a 29-yd. TD pass to record his 3rd career TD and 1st since 12/2/07 at Car...K David Akers connected on a 55-yd. FG, marking the 3rd longest FG in franchise history (Joe Nedney, 56 yds. at StL - 12/24/05 and Mike Cofer, 56 yds. at Atl. - 10/14/90). The 55-yarder is the 2nd longest of his career (57 yds. vs. NE – 9/14/03)...DT Ray McDon-ald registered his 7th career sack, marking the 1st time he has recorded sacks in multiple weeks since 9/13/09 at Arz. and 9/20/09 vs. Sea...The 49ers run defense has not allowed a 100-yd. rusher in the last 24 games, which marks the longest active streak in the NFL. The next closest team to not allow a 100-yd. rusher is Chicago (11)...The 49ers offense converted 8-16 third down atts. (50%), marking the 1st time the team has recorded at least 50% or better on third down since 11/29/10 at Arz. (7-13 – 53.8%)...The 49ers special teams unit ranks 1st in the NFL, averaging 43.8 yds. per kickoff return and t-1st with 1 TD.

SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 18DALLAS 27, SAN FRANCISCO 24 (OT)

CANDLESTICK PARK

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1st 2nd 3rd 4th PtsSan Francisco 0 0 3 10 13Cincinnati 3 0 0 5 8

CIN - M. Nugent 22 FG (12-76, 6:16)SF - D. Akers 23 FG (8-48, 4:21)CIN - M. Nugent 23 FG (5-11, 1:25)SF - K. Hunter 7 run (D. Akers) (10-72, 5:05)SF - D. Akers 53 FG (4- -3, 1:38)SF - D. Akers 55 FG (4-9, 3:15)DAL - A. Lee OB in end zone for Safety

TEAM STATISTICS SF CINFirst Downs 16 14 Net Yards Gained 226 228 Rushes/Yards 29/50 20/79 Net Yards Passing 176 149 Att/Comp/INT 30/20/0 32/17/2 Sacked/Yards Lost 5/25 1/8 Punts/Average 7/45.7 7/45.3 Fumbles/Lost 3/1 1/1 Penalties/Yards 12/70 6/40 Time of Possession 35:20 24:40 3rd Down Efficiency 5/15 (33%) 1/10 (10%)

RUSHING: 49ERS - F. Gore 17-42, K. Hunter 9-26-1 TD, B. Miller 1-2, V. Davis 1- (-2), A. Lee 1- (-18) ... BENGALS - C. Benson 17-64, B. Scott 2-10, A. Dalton 1-5).

RECEIVING: 49ERS - V. Davis 8-114, B. Miller 4-25, M. Crabtree 3-24, J. Morgan 2-17, K. Hunter 2-12, D. Walker 1-9 ... BENGALS - A. Caldwell 6-53, J. Gresham 4-51, A. Green 4-29, D. Lee 1-11, B. Leonard 1-7, J. Simpson 1-6.

PASSING: 49ERS - A. Smith 30-20-201-0-0 TD ... BENGALS - A. Dalton 32-17-157-2-0 TD.

INTs: 49ERS - R. Smith 1-11, C. Rogers 1-0 ... BENGALS - none

SACKS: 49ERS - A. Brooks 1.0 ... BENGALS - J. Fanene 2.0, F. Rucker 1.0, G. Atkins 1.0, D. Skuta 0.5, C. Crocker 0.5.

49ERS TURNOVER RATIO: +2 (1 fumble/1 fumbles, 2 INTs).

Weather: CloudyTemperature: 71 degreesWind: East 2 mphPlaying Surface: FieldTurfTime: 3:07Attendance: 43,363

The 49ers traveled to the Eastern time zone for a10-day, two-game trip, opening up against the Cincinnati Bengals. With the chance to bounce back from a heartbreaking 27-24 OT loss against the Dallas Cowboys in Week 2, San Francisco did just that and survived a 13-8 opening road victory. The NFL’s top-ranked rush defense limited Bengals RB Cedric Benson to just 64 yds. on 17 carries. It was the 25th straight game the 49ers haven’t allowed a 100-yd. rusher, marking the longest active streak in the NFL. Passing right out of the gate, the Bengals and QB Andy Dalton completed 5 passes on the opening drive to get down to the Niners 2-yd. line. He couldn’t, however connect with WR Jerome Simpson on 3rd and goal and the Ben-gals settled for a 22-yd. FG to start the game. The teams then traded punts throughout the 1st half and San Francisco went into the locker room down 3-0 as QB Alex Smith was 9 for 17 passing for 74 yds.. The 49ers held the ball for 5 minutes on the opening possession of the 2nd half, but could not advance past midfield. San Francisco did flip the field however after the Bengals were forced to punt on the next possession to finally give the Niners field position beyond their own 20-yd. line. The 49ers quickly took advantage when Smith hit TE Vernon Davis on a streak down the right side-line that took the ball all the way down to the Bengals 6-yd. line. A potential TD catch by WR Michael Crabtree was nullified after the officials ruled that he went out of bounds before returning to make a high-flying grab in the end zone. A Bengals personal foul, then set up a 1st and goal at the 5-yd. line, but the 49ers were stopped and settled for a K David Akers 23-yd. FG that tied the game 3-3. After a RB Frank Gore fumble deep in San Francisco territory, the Niners defense held Cincinnati to just a 23-yd. FG with 9:08 remaining in the 4th qtr. The 49ers answered with a 10-play, 72-yd. drive, capped off by a 7-yd. TD run by RB Kendall Hunter, putting the Niners in the lead 10-6. After Hunter’s 1st career TD run, Dalton threw an INT that landed in the hands of LB Carlos Rogers and led to an eventual Akers’ 53-yard field goal for a 13-6 lead. The crowd headed for the exits when S Reggie Smith intercepted Dalton once again with 1:45 left. The 49ers took a safety in running out the clock to collect their first road win at Cincinnati since 12/9/90 and improved their overall series record vs. Cincinnati to 11-3.

NOTES: The Niners improved their overall series record vs. Cincinnati to 11-3, including a record of 4-2 on the road...The 49ers beat a team from the AFC North division for the 1st time since beating the Bengals 20-13 at Candlestick Park (12/15/07)...The 49ers won for the 1st time at Cincinnati since 12/9/90, when they defeated the Bengals 20-17 in overtime...K David Akers made his 300th career field goal on a 23-yarder in the 3rd quar-ter, ranking him 6th among active players for career field goals made... TE Vernon Davis recorded his 6th career 100-yd game (last at GB - 12/5/10 - 126 yds.), finishing the day with 8 recepts. for 114 yds...Davis’ 114 rec. yds. are the most by a TE in 2011... CB Carlos Rogers picked off Bengals QB Andy Dalton, marking his 1st INT as a 49er and 1st since 12/26/10 at Jax...S Reggie Smith sealed the victory for the 49ers after intercepting Dalton with 1:45 left on the game clock. The pick for Smith was his 1st since 12/12/10 vs. Sea...RB Kendall Hunter notched his first career TD on a 7-yd. run late in the 4th qtr. to give the 49ers a 10-6 lead. He finished the day with 9 car-ries for 26 yds. a 1 TD...Hunter also recorded the 1st recept. of his career, finishing the day with 2 recepts. for 12 yds...FB Bruce Miller made his 1st career start...On the 1st play from scrimmage for Miller, he hauled in an 11-yd. recept, also the 1st of his career...The 49ers defense held the Bengals offense to just one 3rd down conversion on the day (1-10, 10%), marking the lowest 3rd down conversion percentage allowed since 12/7/08 vs. NYJ (1-10, 10%)...According to Statspass, the one 3rd down conversion allowed ties for the fewest 3rd down conversions allowed by the team since 1991 (11 times, last 12/14/08 at Mia. – 1 for 7).

SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 25CINCINNATI 8, SAN FRANCISCO 13

CANDLESTICK PARK

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San Francisco 49ers at Cincinnati Bengals Start Time: 1:02 PM EDTat Paul Brown Stadium, Cincinnati, Ohio

Played Outdoor on Turf: FieldTurfGame Weather: Partly CLoudy Temp: 71° F (21.7° C) Humidity: 61%, Wind: E 2 mph

Officials

Referee:Line Judge:

Head Linesman:Field Judge:

Umpire:Side Judge:

Back Judge:

Boger, Jerome (23)Stephan, Tom (68)

Bergman, Jerry (91)Rosenbaum, Doug (67)

Paganelli, Carl (124)Larrew, Joe (73)

Steratore, Tony (112)

Lineups

VISITOR: San Francisco 49ers 0 0 3 10 0 13

HOME: Cincinnati Bengals 3 0 0 5 0 8

1 2 3 4 OT Total

Team Qtr Time Play Description (Extra Point) (Drive Info) Visitor Home

Replay Official: Coukart, Ed

Game Day Weather

Field Goals (made ( ) & missed)

Scoring Plays

Paid Attendance: 43,363 Time: 3:07

Date: Sunday, 9/25/2011

San Francisco 49ers Cincinnati Bengals

Offense DefenseOffense DefenseWR 15 M.Crabtree LDT 91 R.McDonald WR 87 A.Caldwell LDE 68 J.FaneneLT 74 J.Staley NT 90 I.Sopoaga LT 77 A.Whitworth NT 94 D.PekoLG 77 M.Iupati RDT 94 J.Smith LG 62 N.Livings DT 97 G.AtkinsC 59 J.Goodwin OLB 55 A.Brooks C 64 K.Cook RDE 93 M.Johnson

RG 62 C.Rachal ILB 53 N.Bowman RG 65 C.Boling SLB 99 M.LawsonRT 76 A.Davis ILB 52 P.Willis RT 71 A.Smith MLB 58 R.MaualugaTE 85 V.Davis OLB 98 P.Haralson TE 84 J.Gresham WLB 53 T.Howard

WR 84 J.Morgan LCB 22 C.Rogers WR 18 A.Green LCB 22 N.ClementsFB 49 B.Miller RCB 25 T.Brown QB 14 A.Dalton RCB 29 L.HallRB 21 F.Gore FS 38 D.Goldson HB 32 C.Benson SS 42 C.CrockerQB 11 Alex Smith SS 31 D.Whitner FB 36 C.Pressley FS 20 R.Nelson

Substitutions Substitutions

K 2 D.Akers, P 4 A.Lee, WR 19 T.Ginn, S 20 M.Williams, RB 24A.Dixon, CB 26 T.Brock, S 27 C.Spillman, CB 29 C.Culliver, S 30R.Smith, RB 32 K.Hunter, CB 36 S.Spencer, TE 46 D.Walker, LB 51B.Costanzo, LB 54 L.Grant, LB 56 T.Gooden, C/G 68 A.Snyder, T 75A.Boone, TE 81 J.Peelle, TE/LS 86 B.Jennings, DT 92 W.Tukuafu, DT95 R.Jean Francois, LB 99 Ald.Smith

K 2 M.Nugent, P 10 K.Huber, WR 19 B.Tate, CB 23 K.Jennings, CB 25M.Trent, S 27 G.Wilson, HB 28 B.Scott, HB 30 C.Peerman, HB 40B.Leonard, S 45 J.Miles, LS 46 C.Harris, LB 51 D.Skuta, LB 57 V.Rey,LB 59 B.Johnson, C/G 66 M.McGlynn, OT 74 D.Roland, TE 86 D.Lee,WR 88 R.Whalen, WR 89 J.Simpson, DT 90 P.Sims, DE 92 F.Rucker,DE 96 C.Dunlap

Did Not Play Did Not Play

QB 7 C.Kaepernick, WR 10 K.Williams QB 7 B.Gradkowski, OT 73 A.Collins

Not Active Not Active

QB 3 S.Tolzien, WR 17 B.Edwards, FB 44 M.Norris, G 67 D.Kilgore, G78 M.Person, DT 93 I.Williams, DT 96 D.Dobbs

WR 16 A.Hawkins, S 26 T.Mays, S 31 R.Sands, LB 52 D.Moch, G 60O.Hudson, TE 81 C.Cochart, DE 91 R.Geathers

D.Akers (23) (53) M.Nugent (22) (23)

Bengals M.Nugent 22 yd. Field Goal (12-76, 6:16) 0 31 8:4449ers D.Akers 23 yd. Field Goal (8-48, 4:21) 3 33 3:29Bengals M.Nugent 23 yd. Field Goal (5-11, 1:25) 3 64 9:0449ers K.Hunter 7 yd. run (D.Akers kick) (10-72, 5:05) 10 64 3:5949ers D.Akers 53 yd. Field Goal (4--3, 1:38) 13 64 2:16Bengals A.Lee OB in end zone for a Safety 13 84 0:02

National Football League Game SummaryNFL Copyright © 2011 by The National Football League. All rights reserved. This summary and play-by-play is for the express purpose of assisting media in theircoverage of the game; any other use of this material is prohibited without the written permission of the National Football League. Updated: 9/25/2011

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San Francisco 49ers Cincinnati BengalsRUSHING ATT YDS LG TDAVG RUSHING ATT YDS LG TDAVGF.Gore 42 2.5 017 12 C.Benson 64 3.8 017 10K.Hunter 26 2.9 19 11 B.Scott 10 5.0 02 8B.Miller 2 2.0 01 2 A.Dalton 5 5.0 01 5V.Davis -2 -2.0 01 -2A.Lee -18 -18.0 01 -18

29 50 1.7 12 1Total 20 79 4.0 10 0Total

PASSING LGTD IN RT PASSING ATT LGTD IN RTATT CMP SK/YDSK/YD YDSCMPYDS

Alex Smith 201 030 20 5/25 0 85.6 A.Dalton 157 032 17 1/8 2 40.8223932 157 017 1/8 2 40.820 201 030 5/25 0 85.6Total Total 2239

PASS RECEIVING REC YDS LG TDAVGTAR PASS RECEIVING REC YDS LG TDAVGTARV.Davis 114 14.3 089 A.Caldwell 53 8.8 061239 14B.Miller 25 6.3 045 J.Gresham 51 12.8 04811 22M.Crabtree 24 8.0 036 A.Green 29 7.3 0458 18J.Morgan 17 8.5 024 D.Lee 11 11.0 01112 11K.Hunter 12 6.0 022 B.Leonard 7 7.0 01110 7D.Walker 9 9.0 012 J.Simpson 6 6.0 0149 6F.Gore 0 0.0 002 C.Benson 0 0.0 0010 0

20 201 10.1 39 0Total 30 17 157 9.2 22 0Total 32

INTERCEPTIONS NO YDS LG TDAVG INTERCEPTIONS NO YDS LG TDAVGR.Smith 11 11.0 01 11C.Rogers 0 0.0 01 0Total 11 5.5 11 02 Total 0 0 0 00

PUNTING YDS LGNO AVG TB IN20NETPUNTING YDS LGNO AVG TB IN20NET

7 341.3320 5960 3172 45.3K.Huber 145.7 0 7 39.7A.LeeTotal 320 607 45.7 0 241.3 Total 317 597 45.3 1 339.7

PUNT RETURNS NO YDS LG TDAVG PUNT RETURNS NO YDS LG TDAVGFC FCT.Ginn 19 6.3 03 B.Tate 31 10.3 03 32 9 14[DOWNED] 0 0.0 01 [DOWNED] 0 0.0 01 00 0 0[TOUCHBACK] 0 0.0 01 0 0Total 19 6.3 9 03 Total 31 10.3 14 03 32

KICKOFF RETURNS NO YDS LG TDAVG KICKOFF RETURNS NO YDS LG TDAVGFC FCT.Ginn 59 29.5 02 B.Tate 50 25.0 02 00 32 25

[TOUCHBACK] 0 0.0 01 N.Clements 4 4.0 01 00 0 4

[TOUCHBACK] 0 0.0 02 0 0

Total 59 29.5 32 02 Total 54 18.0 25 03 00

FUMBLES FUM YDS FORCEDTD OPP-REC YD TD OUT-BDSSan Francisco 49ers

LOST OWN-RECV.Davis 0 101 0 00 0 00F.Gore 0 001 0 00 0 01B.Miller 0 001 0 00 0 00D.Walker 0 000 0 01 0 10Total 0 103 0 01 0 11

FUMBLES FUM YDS FORCEDTD OPP-REC YD TD OUT-BDSCincinnati Bengals

LOST OWN-RECN.Clements 0 001 0 00 0 01R.Maualuga 0 000 0 00 1 00D.Peko 0 000 0 00 1 00D.Skuta 0 000 0 00 1 00J.Fanene 0 000 0 00 0 10Total 0 001 0 00 3 11

San Francisco 49ers vs Cincinnati Bengals

9/25/2011 at Paul Brown Stadium

Final Individual Statistics

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San Francisco 49ers vs Cincinnati Bengals9/25/2011 at Paul Brown Stadium

Final Team StatisticsHomeVisitor

49ers Bengals

16 14TOTAL FIRST DOWNS6 5By Rushing9 9By Passing1 0By Penalty

5-15-33% 1-10-10%THIRD DOWN EFFICIENCY0-1-0% 0-0-0%FOURTH DOWN EFFICIENCY

226 228TOTAL NET YARDS64 53Total Offensive Plays (inc. times thrown passing)3.5 4.3Average gain per offensive play50 79NET YARDS RUSHING29 20Total Rushing Plays1.7 4.0Average gain per rushing play6-9 1-2Tackles for a loss-number and yards176 149NET YARDS PASSING

5-25 1-8Times thrown - yards lost attempting to pass201 157Gross yards passing

30-20-0 32-17-2PASS ATTEMPTS-COMPLETIONS-HAD INTERCEPTED5.0 4.5Avg gain per pass play (inc.# thrown passing)

5-4-2 3-3-1KICKOFFS Number-In End Zone-Touchbacks7-45.7 7-45.3PUNTS Number and Average

0 0Had Blocked0-0 0-0FGs - PATs Had Blocked

41.3 39.7Net Punting Average30 31TOTAL RETURN YARDAGE (Not Including Kickoffs)

3-19 3-31No. and Yards Punt Returns2-59 3-54No. and Yards Kickoff Returns2-11 0-0No. and Yards Interception Returns

12-70 6-40PENALTIES Number and Yards3-1 1-1FUMBLES Number and Lost

1 0TOUCHDOWNS1 0Rushing0 0Passing

1-1 0-0EXTRA POINTS Made-Attempts1-1 0-0Kicking Made-Attempts2-2 2-2FIELD GOALS Made-Attempts

1-2-50% 0-2-0%RED ZONE EFFICIENCY1-2-50% 0-2-0%GOAL TO GO EFFICIENCY

0 1SAFETIES13 8FINAL SCORE

35:20 24:40TIME OF POSSESSION

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* inside opponent's 20

Time of Possession by Quarter

Home

Visitor

Kickoff Drive No.-Start Average

1st 2nd 3rd 4th OT Total

5:26

9:34

9:46 10:42 9:26 35:20

5:14 4:18 5:34 24:40

49ers: 3 - SF 22 Bengals: 4 - CIN 20

(290) Average SF 24

(354) Average CIN 30

San Francisco 49ers

Cincinnati Bengals

TimeRecd

TimeLost

TimePoss

How BallObtained

DriveBegan

#Play

YdsPen

NetYds

YdsGain

1stDown

LastScrm

HowGiven Up

#

San Francisco 49ers

1 8:44 1:307:14 Kickoff SF 19 4 6 0 6 1 SF 25 Punt2 4:55 3:560:59 Punt SF 11 6 37 -5 32 2 SF 43 Punt

3 14:12 1:0413:08 Punt SF 12 3 5 0 5 0 SF 17 Punt4 10:55 3:527:03 Punt SF 13 6 10 -10 0 1 SF 13 Punt5 5:50 4:501:00 Punt SF 17 9 34 -5 29 2 SF 46 Punt

6 15:00 5:089:52 Kickoff SF 20 8 21 5 26 2 SF 46 Punt7 7:50 4:213:29 Punt SF 47 8 53 -5 48 2 CIN 5* Field Goal

8 1:13 2:0314:10 Punt SF 20 3 1 0 1 0 SF 21 Punt9 10:39 0:1010:29 Punt SF 10 1 5 0 5 0 SF 10 Fumble

10 9:04 5:053:59 Kickoff SF 28 10 72 0 72 6 CIN 7* Touchdown11 3:54 1:382:16 Interception CIN 32 4 -3 0 -3 0 CIN 35 Field Goal12 1:45 1:430:02 Interception SF 25 4 -15 -10 -25 0 SF 18 Safety

TimeRecd

TimeLost

TimePoss

How BallObtained

DriveBegan

#Play

YdsPen

NetYds

YdsGain

1stDown

LastScrm

HowGiven Up

#

Cincinnati Bengals

1 15:00 6:168:44 Kickoff CIN 20 12 76 0 76 5 SF 4* Field Goal2 7:14 2:194:55 Punt CIN 29 5 11 0 11 1 CIN 40 Punt

3 0:59 1:4714:12 Punt CIN 43 3 8 -5 3 0 CIN 46 Punt4 13:08 2:1310:55 Punt CIN 37 4 12 5 17 1 SF 46 Punt5 7:03 1:135:50 Punt CIN 35 3 1 0 1 0 CIN 36 Punt6 1:00 1:000:00 Punt CIN 15 2 10 0 10 1 CIN 17 End of Half

7 9:52 2:027:50 Punt CIN 6 5 20 -5 15 1 CIN 21 Punt8 3:29 2:161:13 Kickoff CIN 23 4 13 5 18 1 CIN 41 Punt

9 14:10 3:3110:39 Punt CIN 25 7 19 -10 9 1 CIN 34 Punt10 10:29 1:259:04 Fumble SF 16 5 11 0 11 1 SF 5* Field Goal11 3:59 0:053:54 Kickoff CIN 20 1 0 0 0 0 CIN 20 Interception12 2:16 0:311:45 Kickoff CIN 17 4 47 0 47 2 SF 36 Interception13 0:02 0:020:00 Kickoff 0 0 0 0 0 Fumble

Ball Possession And Drive Chart

San Francisco 49ers vs Cincinnati Bengals

9/25/2011 at Paul Brown Stadium

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TKL /TK=Tackle AST /AS=Assist COMB=Combined TFL=Tackles for a LossQH=Quarterback Hit

IN=Interception PD=Pass Defense FF =Forced Fumble FR=Fumble Recovery

Regular Defensive Plays Special Teams MiscSan Francisco 49ers

TKL AST COMB SK /YDS IN PD FF FR TKL AST FF FR BL TKL AST FF FRQHTFL

107 4 11 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0N.Bowman005 3 8 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0D.Goldson003 5 8 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0P.Willis003 1 4 0 0 1 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0C.Rogers111 3 4 1 8 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0A.Brooks000 4 4 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0I.Sopoaga002 1 3 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0M.Williams001 1 2 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0T.Brown001 1 2 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0D.Whitner000 2 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0J.Smith000 1 1 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0S.Spencer000 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0B.Costanzo000 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0P.Haralson000 0 0 0 0 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0R.Smith000 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0L.Grant000 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0T.Gooden000 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0C.Spillman000 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 1D.Walker000 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0A.Snyder

Total 23 28 51 1 8 2 7 0 0 4 2 0 1 0 1 0 0 121

IN PD FF FR TKL AST FF FR BL TKL AST FF FRQHTKL AST COMB SK / YDS TFL

Special Teams MiscCincinnati Bengals Regular Defensive Plays

0 07 2 9 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0R.Nelson0 04 4 8 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0R.Maualuga1 04 4 8 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0D.Peko1 05 0 5 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0N.Clements0 13 2 5 0.5 4 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0C.Crocker1 01 4 5 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0T.Howard2 13 1 4 1 4 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0F.Rucker0 03 1 4 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0L.Hall0 11 3 4 0.5 4 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0D.Skuta0 01 3 4 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0M.Lawson2 22 1 3 2 13 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0J.Fanene0 12 1 3 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0G.Atkins0 12 1 3 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0M.Johnson1 02 0 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0P.Sims0 10 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0C.Dunlap0 00 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0K.Jennings0 00 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0J.Miles0 00 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0G.Wilson0 00 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0C.Peerman0 00 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0M.Trent0 00 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0B.Leonard0 00 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0A.Caldwell0 00 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0N.Livings

40 29 69 5 25 0 1 3 1 4 2 0 0 0 2 0 0 0Total 88

Final Defensive Statistics

San Francisco 49ers vs Cincinnati Bengals9/25/2011 at Paul Brown Stadium

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Scoring Plays

Regular Defensive Plays Special Teams MiscSan Francisco 49ers

San Francisco 49ers Cincinnati Bengals

San Francisco 49ers Cincinnati Bengals

TIME OF POSSESSIONPERIOD SCORES0 0 = 0

3 0 = 3

15:12

14:4849ersBengals

49ers

Bengals

Play Description (Extra Point) (Drive Info)Team Qtr Time Visitor Home

Bengals M.Nugent 22 yd. Field Goal (12-76, 6:16) 0 31 8:44

6 8TOTAL FIRST DOWNS0 - 6 - 0 2 - 6 - 0First Downs Rushing-Passing-by Penalty

3-8-38% 0-5-0%THIRD DOWN EFFICIENCY92 118TOTAL NET YARDS28 28Total Offensive Plays31 36NET YARDS RUSHING61 82NET YARDS PASSING74 90Gross Yards Passing

2-13 1-8Times thrown-yards lost attempting to pass17 - 9 - 0 16 - 10 - 0Pass Attempts-Completions-Had Intercepted

5 - 43.2 4 - 42.5Punts-Number and Average6 - 35 1 - 5Penalties-Number and Yards

0 - 0 0 - 0Fumbles-Number and Lost0-0-0% 0-1-0%Red Zone EfficiencySF 14 CIN 30Average Drive Start

RUSHING ATT YDS LG TDAVG RUSHING ATT YDS LG TDAVG

F.Gore 31 3.4 09 12 C.Benson 26 2.9 09 6B.Scott 10 5.0 02 8

9 31 3.4 12 0Total 11 36 3.3 8 0Total

PASSING ATT YDS LGTDSK/YDCMP IN RT PASSING ATT YDS LGTDSK/YDCMP IN RT

Alex Smith 74 017 9 2/13 0 64.3 A.Dalton 90 016 10 1/8 0 77.6182216 90 010 1/8 0 77.69 74 017 2/13 0 64.3Total Total 1822

PASS RECEIVING REC YDS LG TDAVGTAR PASS RECEIVING REC YDS LG TDAVGTAR

V.Davis 30 10.0 034 A.Caldwell 45 9.0 057 1422M.Crabtree 16 8.0 024 A.Green 19 9.5 023 188K.Hunter 12 6.0 022 D.Lee 11 11.0 011 1110B.Miller 11 11.0 012 J.Gresham 9 9.0 011 911J.Morgan 5 5.0 013 J.Simpson 6 6.0 013 65F.Gore 0 0.0 001 C.Benson 0 0.0 001 00D.Walker 0 0.0 001 0

9 74 8.2 22 0Total 17 10 90 9.0 18 0Total 16

IN PD FF FR TKL AST FF FR BL TKL AST FF FRQTKL AST COMB SK / YDS TFL3 3 6 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0N.Bowman 00

3 1 4 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0D.Goldson 00

2 1 3 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0P.Willis 00

1 2 3 1 8 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0A.Brooks 11

Totals: 9 7 16 1 8 0 0 0 0 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 011

TKL AST COMB SK / YDS IN PD FF FR TKL AST FF FR BL TKL AST FF FRQHTFL

Special Teams MiscCincinnati Bengals Regular Defensive Plays

3 1 4 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0C.Crocker 00

1 3 4 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0R.Maualuga 00

2 1 3 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0R.Nelson 00

0 3 3 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0T.Howard 00

Totals: 6 8 14 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 000

First Half Summary

San Francisco 49ers vs Cincinnati Bengals9/25/2011 at Paul Brown Stadium

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First QuarterPlay By Play 9/25/2011SF wins the coin toss and elects to defer. CIN elects to Receive, and SF elects to defend the south goal.D.Akers kicks 65 yards from SF 35 to end zone, Touchback.Cincinnati Bengals at 15:00

(15:00) A.Dalton pass short left to A.Caldwell ran ob at CIN 30 for 10 yards (T.Brown).1-10-CIN 20 P1(14:39) C.Benson right guard to CIN 35 for 5 yards (J.Smith; P.Willis).1-10-CIN 30(14:02) A.Dalton pass short middle to A.Caldwell to CIN 43 for 8 yards (P.Willis).2-5-CIN 35 P2(13:30) C.Benson right tackle to CIN 45 for 2 yards (D.Whitner).1-10-CIN 43(12:53) A.Dalton pass short middle to A.Caldwell to SF 41 for 14 yards (D.Goldson).2-8-CIN 45 P3(12:11) A.Dalton pass deep middle to A.Green to SF 23 for 18 yards (D.Goldson).1-10-SF 41 P4(11:37) C.Benson right guard to SF 17 for 6 yards (B.Costanzo; I.Sopoaga).1-10-SF 23(10:58) A.Dalton pass short middle to D.Lee to SF 6 for 11 yards (D.Goldson).2-4-SF 17 P5(10:19) C.Benson right guard to SF 2 for 4 yards (D.Whitner; A.Brooks).1-6-SF 6(9:38) C.Benson right tackle to SF 4 for -2 yards (N.Bowman; A.Brooks).2-2-SF 2(8:56) (Shotgun) A.Dalton pass incomplete short left to J.Simpson (S.Spencer, D.Whitner).3-4-SF 4(8:47) M.Nugent 22 yard field goal is GOOD, Center-C.Harris, Holder-K.Huber.4-4-SF 4

SF 0 CIN 3, 12 plays, 76 yards, 6:16 drive, 6:16 elapsedM.Nugent kicks 73 yards from CIN 35 to SF -8. T.Ginn to SF 19 for 27 yards (J.Miles).San Francisco 49ers at 8:44, (1st play from scrimmage 8:40)

(8:40) Alex Smith pass short left to B.Miller to SF 30 for 11 yards (L.Hall).1-10-SF 19 P1(8:03) Alex Smith sacked at SF 25 for -5 yards (J.Fanene, C.Crocker).1-10-SF 30Penalty on SF-C.Rachal, Offensive Holding, declined.(7:39) Alex Smith pass incomplete short left to B.Miller.2-15-SF 25(7:32) (Shotgun) Alex Smith pass incomplete short left to F.Gore.3-15-SF 25(7:28) A.Lee punts 51 yards to CIN 24, Center-B.Jennings. B.Tate ran ob at CIN 29 for 5 yards (N.Bowman).4-15-SF 25

Cincinnati Bengals at 7:14(7:14) C.Benson right guard to CIN 32 for 3 yards (N.Bowman; I.Sopoaga).1-10-CIN 29(6:34) (Shotgun) A.Dalton pass short right to A.Caldwell to CIN 40 for 8 yards (C.Rogers).2-7-CIN 32 P6(5:56) C.Benson up the middle to CIN 40 for no gain (N.Bowman).1-10-CIN 40(5:18) (Shotgun) A.Dalton pass incomplete short left to A.Caldwell. {Thrown away}2-10-CIN 40(5:12) (Shotgun) A.Dalton pass incomplete short left to J.Simpson.3-10-CIN 40(5:06) K.Huber punts 48 yards to SF 12, Center-C.Harris. T.Ginn pushed ob at SF 26 for 14 yards (G.Wilson).4-10-CIN 40PENALTY on SF-C.Culliver, Illegal Block Above the Waist, 10 yards, enforced at SF 21. {Ginn credited with 9 yardreturn due to the penalty}

San Francisco 49ers at 4:55(4:55) F.Gore up the middle to SF 16 for 5 yards (C.Crocker).1-10-SF 11(4:17) Alex Smith pass short right to J.Morgan pushed ob at SF 21 for 5 yards (N.Clements).2-5-SF 16 P2(3:40) Alex Smith pass short left to V.Davis to SF 43 for 22 yards (R.Maualuga; T.Howard).1-10-SF 21 P3(2:54) (Shotgun) Alex Smith pass short left to K.Hunter to SF 45 for 2 yards (R.Nelson).1-10-SF 43(2:15) F.Gore up the middle to SF 48 for 3 yards (M.Johnson; F.Rucker).2-8-SF 45(1:35) (Shotgun) PENALTY on SF-J.Staley, False Start, 5 yards, enforced at SF 48 - No Play.3-5-SF 48(1:11) (Shotgun) Alex Smith pass incomplete short middle to M.Crabtree.3-10-SF 43(1:03) A.Lee punts 14 yards to CIN 43, Center-B.Jennings, downed by SF.4-10-SF 43

Cincinnati Bengals at 0:59(:59) A.Dalton pass incomplete short left to C.Benson.1-10-CIN 43(:54) C.Benson left tackle to CIN 46 for 3 yards (I.Sopoaga; J.Smith).2-10-CIN 43(:14) (Shotgun) PENALTY on CIN-A.Green, False Start, 5 yards, enforced at CIN 46 - No Play.3-7-CIN 46

END OF QUARTER

San Francisco 49ers 0 5:26 0 3 0 3 0/2 0/0Cincinnati Bengals 3 9:34 0 6 0 6 0/2 0/0

ScoreTimePoss

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San Francisco 49ers vs Cincinnati Bengals at Paul Brown Stadium

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Second QuarterPlay By Play 9/25/2011Cincinnati Bengals continued.

(15:00) (Shotgun) A.Dalton pass short right to A.Caldwell to CIN 46 for 5 yards (C.Rogers).3-12-CIN 41(14:20) K.Huber punts 42 yards to SF 12, Center-C.Harris, fair catch by T.Ginn.4-7-CIN 46

San Francisco 49ers at 14:12(14:12) Alex Smith pass incomplete short right to V.Davis.1-10-SF 12Timeout #1 by SF at 14:06.(14:06) Alex Smith pass short middle to V.Davis to SF 17 for 5 yards (T.Howard; R.Maualuga).2-10-SF 12(13:25) (Shotgun) Alex Smith pass incomplete short left to J.Morgan.3-5-SF 17(13:20) A.Lee punts 60 yards to CIN 23, Center-B.Jennings. B.Tate to CIN 37 for 14 yards (C.Spillman;N.Bowman).

4-5-SF 17

Cincinnati Bengals at 13:08(13:08) A.Dalton pass incomplete deep right to A.Green.1-10-CIN 37PENALTY on SF-P.Haralson, Defensive Offside, 5 yards, enforced at CIN 37 - No Play.(13:03) C.Benson left tackle to CIN 47 for 5 yards (P.Willis).1-5-CIN 42 R7(12:25) A.Dalton pass short right to A.Green ran ob at CIN 48 for 1 yard (M.Williams).1-10-CIN 47(11:47) (Shotgun) A.Dalton pass short middle to J.Simpson to SF 46 for 6 yards (S.Spencer; N.Bowman).2-9-CIN 48(11:08) (Shotgun) A.Dalton pass incomplete short right to A.Caldwell (C.Rogers).3-3-SF 46(11:03) K.Huber punts 33 yards to SF 13, Center-C.Harris, fair catch by T.Ginn.4-3-SF 46

San Francisco 49ers at 10:55(10:55) F.Gore left tackle to SF 10 for -3 yards (F.Rucker).1-10-SF 13(10:17) (Shotgun) Alex Smith right end to SF 15 for 5 yards (N.Clements).2-13-SF 10PENALTY on SF-C.Rachal, Offensive Holding, 5 yards, enforced at SF 10 - No Play.(9:48) F.Gore left end to SF 17 for 12 yards (R.Nelson, T.Howard).2-18-SF 5(9:03) (Shotgun) Alex Smith pass short right to M.Crabtree to SF 25 for 8 yards (N.Clements).3-6-SF 17 P4(8:25) F.Gore right guard to SF 26 for 1 yard (D.Peko).1-10-SF 25(7:45) Alex Smith pass incomplete short middle to M.Crabtree [C.Dunlap]. SF-J.Goodwin was injured during theplay.

2-9-SF 26

(7:41) (Shotgun) PENALTY on SF-A.Davis, False Start, 5 yards, enforced at SF 26 - No Play.3-9-SF 26(7:41) (Shotgun) Alex Smith sacked at SF 13 for -8 yards (J.Fanene).3-14-SF 21(7:11) A.Lee punts 52 yards to CIN 35, Center-B.Jennings, fair catch by B.Tate.4-22-SF 13

Cincinnati Bengals at 7:03(7:03) (Shotgun) A.Dalton sacked at CIN 27 for -8 yards (A.Brooks).1-10-CIN 35(6:36) (Shotgun) A.Dalton pass incomplete deep right to A.Green.2-18-CIN 27(6:32) (Shotgun) A.Dalton pass short middle to J.Gresham to CIN 36 for 9 yards (N.Bowman).3-18-CIN 27(6:03) K.Huber punts 47 yards to SF 17, Center-C.Harris, downed by CIN-J.Miles.4-9-CIN 36

San Francisco 49ers at 5:50(5:50) (Shotgun) F.Gore up the middle to SF 22 for 5 yards (R.Maualuga).1-10-SF 17(5:14) F.Gore left guard to SF 24 for 2 yards (C.Dunlap; M.Lawson).2-5-SF 22(4:31) (Shotgun) Alex Smith pass short left to V.Davis to SF 27 for 3 yards (C.Crocker).3-3-SF 24 P5(3:48) PENALTY on SF-C.Rachal, False Start, 5 yards, enforced at SF 27 - No Play.1-10-SF 27(3:24) (Shotgun) Alex Smith pass incomplete short right to D.Walker.1-15-SF 22(3:19) (Shotgun) F.Gore right guard to SF 29 for 7 yards (R.Maualuga; R.Nelson).2-15-SF 22(2:42) (Shotgun) Alex Smith pass short left to K.Hunter to SF 39 for 10 yards (M.Lawson; L.Hall).3-8-SF 29 P6

Two-Minute Warning(2:00) Alex Smith pass short right to M.Crabtree pushed ob at SF 47 for 8 yards (C.Crocker).1-10-SF 39(1:54) (Shotgun) Alex Smith pass incomplete short right to J.Morgan (N.Clements).2-2-SF 47(1:50) (Shotgun) F.Gore up the middle to SF 46 for -1 yards (P.Sims).3-2-SF 47(1:07) A.Lee punts 39 yards to CIN 15, Center-B.Jennings, fair catch by B.Tate.4-3-SF 46

Cincinnati Bengals at 1:00(1:00) B.Scott left end to CIN 17 for 2 yards (D.Goldson; P.Haralson).1-10-CIN 15(:16) B.Scott left tackle to CIN 25 for 8 yards (N.Bowman).2-8-CIN 17 R8

END OF QUARTER

San Francisco 49ers 0 9:46 0 3 0 3 3/6 0/0Cincinnati Bengals 3 5:14 2 0 0 2 0/3 0/0

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Efficiencies3 Down 4 Down

San Francisco 49ers vs Cincinnati Bengals at Paul Brown Stadium

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Third QuarterPlay By Play 9/25/2011SF elects to Receive, and CIN elects to defend the North goal.M.Nugent kicks 69 yards from CIN 35 to SF -4. T.Ginn, Touchback.San Francisco 49ers at 15:00

(15:00) Alex Smith pass short middle to B.Miller to SF 28 for 8 yards (L.Hall, M.Lawson).1-10-SF 20(14:25) F.Gore left guard to SF 29 for 1 yard (J.Fanene; D.Peko).2-2-SF 28(13:41) F.Gore left guard to SF 32 for 3 yards (R.Maualuga).3-1-SF 29 R7(13:00) Alex Smith pass short middle to D.Walker to SF 41 for 9 yards (R.Nelson). CIN-J.Fanene was injured duringthe play.

1-10-SF 32

(12:28) B.Miller up the middle to SF 43 for 2 yards (D.Peko). FUMBLES (D.Peko), recovered by SF-D.Walker atSF 43. D.Walker to SF 43 for no gain (D.Peko).

2-1-SF 41 R8

(11:51) F.Gore right guard to SF 42 for -1 yards (D.Peko; R.Nelson).1-10-SF 43(11:10) Alex Smith sacked at SF 35 for -7 yards (sack split by R.Nelson and M.Lawson).2-11-SF 42PENALTY on CIN-F.Rucker, Defensive Offside, 5 yards, enforced at SF 42 - No Play.(10:47) F.Gore left end to SF 46 for -1 yards (T.Howard).2-6-SF 47(10:05) (Shotgun) Alex Smith pass incomplete short middle to M.Crabtree.3-7-SF 46(10:00) A.Lee punts 48 yards to CIN 6, Center-B.Jennings, fair catch by B.Tate.4-7-SF 46

Cincinnati Bengals at 9:52(9:52) (Shotgun) A.Dalton pass short right to A.Green to CIN 10 for 4 yards (P.Willis; T.Brown).1-10-CIN 6(9:21) C.Benson right guard to CIN 19 for 9 yards (C.Rogers; P.Willis).2-6-CIN 10 R9(8:42) A.Dalton pass incomplete short right to J.Gresham.1-10-CIN 19(8:37) (Shotgun) A.Dalton pass incomplete short middle to A.Caldwell.2-10-CIN 19(8:31) (Shotgun) PENALTY on CIN-A.Green, False Start, 5 yards, enforced at CIN 19 - No Play.3-10-CIN 19(8:31) (Shotgun) A.Dalton pass short middle to B.Leonard to CIN 21 for 7 yards (N.Bowman).3-15-CIN 14(8:01) K.Huber punts 41 yards to SF 38, Center-C.Harris. T.Ginn to SF 47 for 9 yards (C.Peerman).4-8-CIN 21

San Francisco 49ers at 7:50(7:50) Alex Smith pass short right to M.Crabtree to CIN 45 for 8 yards (R.Maualuga).1-10-SF 47(7:07) Alex Smith pass deep right to V.Davis pushed ob at CIN 6 for 39 yards (R.Nelson) [M.Johnson].2-2-CIN 45 P9Timeout #1 by SF at 06:59.(6:59) Alex Smith sacked at CIN 10 for -4 yards (F.Rucker).1-6-CIN 6(6:38) Alex Smith pass short left to M.Crabtree for 10 yards, TOUCHDOWN NULLIFIED by Penalty.2-10-CIN 10PENALTY on SF-M.Crabtree, Illegal Touch Pass, 5 yards, enforced at CIN 10 - No Play.(6:28) Alex Smith pass short middle to B.Miller to CIN 10 for 5 yards (N.Clements).2-15-CIN 15PENALTY on CIN-R.Maualuga, Unnecessary Roughness, 5 yards, enforced at CIN 10. X10(6:06) PENALTY on SF, False Start, 5 yards, enforced at CIN 5 - No Play.1-5-CIN 5(5:48) K.Hunter right guard to CIN 6 for 4 yards (R.Nelson).1-10-CIN 10(5:11) Alex Smith pass short right to B.Miller to CIN 5 for 1 yard (N.Clements).2-6-CIN 6(4:15) (Shotgun) Alex Smith sacked at CIN 5 for 0 yards (G.Atkins).3-5-CIN 5(3:33) D.Akers 23 yard field goal is GOOD, Center-B.Jennings, Holder-A.Lee.4-5-CIN 5

SF 3 CIN 3, 8 plays, 48 yards, 1 penalty, 4:21 drive, 11:31 elapsedD.Akers kicks 67 yards from SF 35 to CIN -2. B.Tate to CIN 23 for 25 yards (L.Grant).Cincinnati Bengals at 3:29, (1st play from scrimmage 3:23)

(3:23) PENALTY on SF-A.Brooks, Encroachment, 5 yards, enforced at CIN 23 - No Play.1-10-CIN 23(3:23) C.Benson left guard to CIN 36 for 8 yards (M.Williams; A.Brooks).1-5-CIN 28 R10(2:54) C.Benson right guard to CIN 40 for 4 yards (P.Willis; N.Bowman).1-10-CIN 36(2:14) C.Benson right tackle to CIN 41 for 1 yard (N.Bowman).2-6-CIN 40(1:31) (Shotgun) A.Dalton pass incomplete deep middle to A.Caldwell (T.Brown).3-5-CIN 41(1:25) K.Huber punts 59 yards to end zone, Center-C.Harris, Touchback.4-5-CIN 41

San Francisco 49ers at 1:13(1:13) F.Gore left guard to SF 20 for no gain (G.Atkins).1-10-SF 20(:37) Alex Smith sacked at SF 12 for -8 yards (sack split by C.Crocker and D.Skuta).2-10-SF 20

END OF QUARTER

San Francisco 49ers 3 10:42 2 1 1 4 1/3 0/0Cincinnati Bengals 3 4:18 2 0 0 2 0/2 0/0

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Fourth QuarterPlay By Play 9/25/2011San Francisco 49ers continued.

(15:00) (Shotgun) Alex Smith pass short middle to V.Davis to SF 21 for 9 yards (T.Howard; K.Jennings).3-18-SF 12(14:23) A.Lee punts 56 yards to CIN 23, Center-B.Jennings. B.Tate to CIN 35 for 12 yards (B.Costanzo).4-9-SF 21PENALTY on CIN-F.Rucker, Illegal Block Above the Waist, 10 yards, enforced at CIN 35.

Cincinnati Bengals at 14:10(14:10) A.Dalton scrambles right end to CIN 30 for 5 yards (N.Bowman).1-10-CIN 25(13:29) C.Benson left guard to CIN 32 for 2 yards (M.Williams).2-5-CIN 30(12:47) (Shotgun) A.Dalton pass short left to J.Gresham to CIN 35 for 3 yards (P.Willis).3-3-CIN 32 P11(12:04) A.Dalton pass short right to A.Green to CIN 41 for 6 yards (N.Bowman).1-10-CIN 35(11:31) C.Benson left tackle to SF 47 for 12 yards (D.Goldson).2-4-CIN 41PENALTY on CIN-N.Livings, Offensive Holding, 10 yards, enforced at CIN 44. {Benson credited with 3 yards due tothe penalty}(11:06) (Shotgun) A.Dalton pass incomplete short left to A.Caldwell.2-11-CIN 34Timeout #1 by CIN at 10:59.(10:59) (Shotgun) A.Dalton pass incomplete deep right to J.Gresham. {Thrown away}3-11-CIN 34(10:50) (Punt formation) K.Huber punts 47 yards to SF 19, Center-C.Harris. T.Ginn to SF 20 for 1 yard (M.Trent).4-11-CIN 34PENALTY on SF-A.Dixon, Offensive Holding, 10 yards, enforced at SF 20.

San Francisco 49ers at 10:39(10:39) F.Gore right guard to SF 15 for 5 yards (R.Maualuga). FUMBLES (R.Maualuga), RECOVERED by CIN-J.Fanene at SF 16. J.Fanene to SF 16 for no gain (A.Snyder).

1-10-SF 10

Cincinnati Bengals at 10:29(10:29) C.Benson right guard to SF 6 for 10 yards (C.Rogers).1-10-SF 16 R12(9:59) C.Benson left guard to SF 5 for 1 yard (I.Sopoaga; D.Goldson).1-6-SF 6(9:17) A.Dalton pass incomplete short right to J.Gresham (P.Willis).2-5-SF 5(9:11) (Shotgun) A.Dalton pass incomplete short left to J.Simpson.3-5-SF 5(9:08) M.Nugent 23 yard field goal is GOOD, Center-C.Harris, Holder-K.Huber.4-5-SF 5

SF 3 CIN 6, 5 plays, 11 yards, 1:25 drive, 5:56 elapsedM.Nugent kicks 69 yards from CIN 35 to SF -4. T.Ginn to SF 28 for 32 yards (R.Nelson; B.Leonard).San Francisco 49ers at 9:04, (1st play from scrimmage 8:57)

(8:57) (Shotgun) Alex Smith pass short left to J.Morgan to SF 40 for 12 yards (M.Lawson).1-10-SF 28 P11(8:17) K.Hunter right end to CIN 49 for 11 yards (R.Nelson). CIN-R.Maualuga was injured during the play.1-10-SF 40 R12(7:50) Alex Smith pass short right to V.Davis pushed ob at CIN 41 for 8 yards (R.Nelson).1-10-CIN 49(7:19) K.Hunter left end to CIN 39 for 2 yards (G.Atkins; D.Skuta).2-2-CIN 41 R13(6:38) Alex Smith pass incomplete short right to F.Gore.1-10-CIN 39(6:33) Alex Smith pass short right to V.Davis to CIN 31 for 8 yards (D.Skuta). FUMBLES (D.Skuta), ball out ofbounds at CIN 29. {Ball fumbled forward, returned to where ball was fumbled, CIN 31}

2-10-CIN 39

(6:13) F.Gore left tackle to CIN 27 for 4 yards (L.Hall).3-2-CIN 31 R14(5:30) Alex Smith pass short left to V.Davis to CIN 7 for 20 yards (F.Rucker).1-10-CIN 27 P15(4:43) F.Gore left guard to CIN 7 for no gain (D.Skuta; D.Peko).1-7-CIN 7(4:04) K.Hunter left tackle for 7 yards, TOUCHDOWN.2-7-CIN 7 R16Penalty on CIN-D.Peko, Defensive Holding, declined.D.Akers extra point is GOOD, Center-B.Jennings, Holder-A.Lee.

SF 10 CIN 6, 10 plays, 72 yards, 5:05 drive, 11:01 elapsedD.Akers kicks 65 yards from SF 35 to end zone, Touchback.Cincinnati Bengals at 3:59

(3:59) (Shotgun) A.Dalton pass short right intended for A.Caldwell INTERCEPTED by C.Rogers at CIN 32.C.Rogers to CIN 32 for no gain (A.Caldwell).

1-10-CIN 20

San Francisco 49ers at 3:54(3:54) K.Hunter left tackle to CIN 33 for -1 yards (D.Peko).1-10-CIN 32(3:11) K.Hunter right end to CIN 33 for no gain (M.Johnson).2-11-CIN 33Timeout #2 by CIN at 03:05.(3:05) V.Davis left end to CIN 35 for -2 yards (N.Clements). CIN-N.Clements was injured during the play. {Endaround}

3-11-CIN 33

Timeout #2 by SF at 02:21.(2:21) D.Akers 53 yard field goal is GOOD, Center-B.Jennings, Holder-A.Lee.4-13-CIN 35

SF 13 CIN 6, 4 plays, -3 yards, 1:38 drive, 12:44 elapsedD.Akers kicks 73 yards from SF 35 to CIN -8. B.Tate to CIN 17 for 25 yards (T.Gooden).Cincinnati Bengals at 2:16, (1st play from scrimmage 2:11)

(2:11) (Shotgun) A.Dalton pass deep left to J.Gresham ran ob at CIN 39 for 22 yards (D.Goldson) [N.Bowman].1-10-CIN 17 P13(2:04) (Shotgun) A.Dalton pass deep middle to J.Gresham to SF 44 for 17 yards (D.Goldson; P.Willis).1-10-CIN 39 P14

Two-Minute Warning(1:59) (Shotgun) A.Dalton pass short left to A.Caldwell ran ob at SF 36 for 8 yards.1-10-SF 44(1:54) (Shotgun) A.Dalton pass deep middle intended for J.Gresham INTERCEPTED by R.Smith at SF 14. R.Smithto SF 25 for 11 yards (N.Livings).Play Challenged by Replay Assistant and Upheld.

2-2-SF 36

San Francisco 49ers at 1:45(1:45) PENALTY on SF, Offensive 12 On-field, 5 yards, enforced at SF 25 - No Play.1-10-SF 25(1:45) K.Hunter left guard to SF 22 for 2 yards (M.Johnson).1-15-SF 20

San Francisco 49ers vs Cincinnati Bengals at Paul Brown Stadium

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Timeout #3 by CIN at 01:40.(1:40) K.Hunter left guard to SF 23 for 1 yard (D.Peko; R.Maualuga).2-13-SF 22(:54) K.Hunter left guard to SF 23 for no gain (P.Sims).3-12-SF 23(:08) (Punt formation) PENALTY on SF-A.Lee, Delay of Game, 5 yards, enforced at SF 23 - No Play.4-12-SF 23Timeout #3 by SF at 00:08.(:08) (Punt formation) A.Lee ran ob in End Zone for -18 yards, SAFETY.4-17-SF 18

SF 13 CIN 8, Safety, 14:58 elapsedA.Lee kicks 51 yards from SF 20 to CIN 29. N.Clements to CIN 33 for 4 yards. FUMBLES, RECOVERED by SF-D.Walker at CIN 33.END OF QUARTER

San Francisco 49ers 13 9:26 4 2 0 6 1/4 0/1Cincinnati Bengals 8 5:34 1 3 0 4 1/3 0/0

ScoreTimePoss

First DownsR P X T

Efficiencies3 Down 4 Down

San Francisco 49ers vs Cincinnati Bengals at Paul Brown Stadium

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San Francisco 49ers vs Cincinnati Bengals9/25/2011 at Paul Brown Stadium

Miscellaneous Statistics Report

Ten Longest Plays for San Francisco 49ers

Ten Longest Plays for Cincinnati Bengals

VISITOR: San Francisco 49ers 1 0 0

HOME: Cincinnati Bengals 0 0 0

Offense Defense Special TeamsTouchdown Scoring Information

Player Scoring Information

Play Start Play DescriptionQtrYards2-2-CIN 45 (7:07) Alex Smith pass deep right to V.Davis pushed ob at CIN 6 for 39 yards (R.Nelson)

[M.Johnson].339

1-10-SF 21 (3:40) Alex Smith pass short left to V.Davis to SF 43 for 22 yards (R.Maualuga; T.Howard).1221-10-CIN 27 (5:30) Alex Smith pass short left to V.Davis to CIN 7 for 20 yards (F.Rucker).4202-18-SF 5 (9:48) F.Gore left end to SF 17 for 12 yards (R.Nelson, T.Howard).2121-10-SF 28 (8:57) (Shotgun) Alex Smith pass short left to J.Morgan to SF 40 for 12 yards (M.Lawson).4121-10-SF 19 (8:40) Alex Smith pass short left to B.Miller to SF 30 for 11 yards (L.Hall).1111-10-SF 40 (8:17) K.Hunter right end to CIN 49 for 11 yards (R.Nelson). CIN-R.Maualuga was injured during the

play.411

3-8-SF 29 (2:42) (Shotgun) Alex Smith pass short left to K.Hunter to SF 39 for 10 yards (M.Lawson; L.Hall).2102-15-CIN 15 (6:28) Alex Smith pass short middle to B.Miller to CIN 10 for 5 yards (N.Clements).

PENALTY on CIN-R.Maualuga, Unnecessary Roughness, 5 yards, enforced at CIN 10.310

1-10-SF 32 (13:00) Alex Smith pass short middle to D.Walker to SF 41 for 9 yards (R.Nelson). CIN-J.Fanenewas injured during the play.

39

Play Start Play DescriptionQtrYards1-10-CIN 17 (2:11) (Shotgun) A.Dalton pass deep left to J.Gresham ran ob at CIN 39 for 22 yards (D.Goldson)

[N.Bowman].422

1-10-SF 41 (12:11) A.Dalton pass deep middle to A.Green to SF 23 for 18 yards (D.Goldson).1181-10-CIN 39 (2:04) (Shotgun) A.Dalton pass deep middle to J.Gresham to SF 44 for 17 yards (D.Goldson;

P.Willis).417

2-8-CIN 45 (12:53) A.Dalton pass short middle to A.Caldwell to SF 41 for 14 yards (D.Goldson).1142-4-SF 17 (10:58) A.Dalton pass short middle to D.Lee to SF 6 for 11 yards (D.Goldson).1111-10-CIN 20 (15:00) A.Dalton pass short left to A.Caldwell ran ob at CIN 30 for 10 yards (T.Brown).1101-10-SF 16 (10:29) C.Benson right guard to SF 6 for 10 yards (C.Rogers).4103-18-CIN 27 (6:32) (Shotgun) A.Dalton pass short middle to J.Gresham to CIN 36 for 9 yards (N.Bowman).292-6-CIN 10 (9:21) C.Benson right guard to CIN 19 for 9 yards (C.Rogers; P.Willis).392-5-CIN 35 (14:02) A.Dalton pass short middle to A.Caldwell to CIN 43 for 8 yards (P.Willis).18

Club Player TD RushTD

RecTD

KOTD

PuntTD

IntTD

FumTD

MiscTD

FG XP 2PtRush

PointsSfty2PtRec

SF D.Akers 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 2 1 0 0 70SF K.Hunter 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 60CIN M.Nugent 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 2 0 0 0 60

Possession Detail First Half Second Half Game

Largest Lead

Largest Deficit

Drives Leading

Drives Trailing

Time of Possession Leading

Time of Possession Trailing

Times Score Tied Up

Lead Changes

Visitor Home Visitor Home Visitor Home0

0

0:00

-3

5

15:12

3

5

8:32

0

0

0:00

7

2

3:21

-3

3

14:34

3

1

2:02

-7

3

0:38

7

2

3:21

-3

8

29:46

3

6

10:34

-7

3

0:38

1

3

1

2

0

1

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RECORDS

SAN FRANCISCO 49ERS

ALL-TIME REGULAR SEASON SERVICEMOST SEASONS PLAYED

Player Seasons 1. John Brodie (1957-1973) 17 2. Jerry Rice (1985-2000) 16 Jimmy Johnson (1961-1976) 16 4. Charlie Krueger (1959-1973) 15 5. Bryant Young (1994-2007) 14 Matt Hazeltine (1955-1968) 14 Leo Nomellini (1950-1963) 14

MOST CONSECUTIVE GAMES PLAYED Player Games 1. Len Rohde (1960-1974) 208 2. Jerry Rice (1985-2000) 189 3. Brian Jennings (2000-*) 179 4. Leo Nomellini (1950-1963) 174

MOST REGULAR SEASON GAMES PLAYED Player Pos Years Seasons Games 1. Jerry Rice WR 1985-2000 16 238 2. Jimmy Johnson DB/HB 1961-1976 16 213 3. Bryant Young DT 1994-2007 14 208 Len Rohde T 1960-1974 15 208 5. John Brodie QB 1957-1973 17 201 6. Charlie Krueger DT 1959-1973 15 198 7. Randy Cross G/C 1976-1988 13 185 8. Jesse Sapolu G/C 1983-1997 15 182 9. Brian Jennings TE 2000-* 12 17910. Matt Hazeltine LB 1955-1968 14 176

MOST REGULAR SEASON GAMES PLAYED BY POSITION Quarterbacks Pos Years Seasons Games 1. John Brodie QB 1957-1973 17 201 2. Joe Montana QB 1979-1992 14 167 3. Steve Young QB 1987-1999 13 150 4. Y.A. Tittle QB 1951-1960 10 112 5. Steve Spurrier QB 1967-1975 9 92 6. Jeff Garcia QB 1999-2003 5 74 7. Alex Smith QB 2005-* 7 57 8. Elvis Grbac QB 1993-1996 4 43 9. Steve DeBerg QB 1978-1980 3 39 Billy Kilmer QB 1961-1966 6 39

Offensive Linemen Pos Years Seasons Games 1. Len Rohde T 1960-1974 15 208 2. Keith Fahnhorst T 1974-1987 14 193 3. Randy Cross G/C 1976-1988 13 185 4. Jesse Sapolu G/C 1983-1997 15 182 5. Steve Wallace T 1986-1996 11 166 6. Bruce Bosley C/G 1956-1968 13 163 7. John Ayers G 1977-1986 10 148 8. Guy McIntyre G 1984-1993 10 145 9. Fred Quillan C 1978-1987 10 143 10. Harris Barton T 1987-1996 10 138

WRs/TEs Pos Years Seasons Games 1. Jerry Rice WR 1985-2000 16 238 2. Brian Jennings TE/LS 2000-* 12 179 3. Brent Jones TE 1987-1997 11 143 4. Mike Wilson WR 1981-1990 10 136 5. Dwight Clark WR 1979-1987 9 134 6. Gene Washington WR 1969-1977 9 124 7. Terrell Owens WR 1996-2003 8 121 John Taylor WR 1987-1995 9 121 9. Freddie Solomon WR 1978-1985 8 114 10. J.J. Stokes WR 1995-2002 8 111

Running Backs Pos Years Seasons Games 1. Joe Perry FB 1950-1963 12 131 2. Ken Willard FB 1965-1973 9 125 3. Roger Craig RB 1983-1990 8 121 4. Tom Rathman FB 1986-1993 8 115 5. Fred Beasley FB 1998-2005 8 114 6. Terry Jackson RB 1999-2005 7 100 7. Hugh McElhenny HB 1952-1960 9 97 J.D. Smith HB 1956-1964 9 97 9. Dexter Carter RB 1990-1996 7 90 10. Earl Cooper FB/TE 1980-1985 6 88

Defensive Linemen Pos Years Seasons Games 1. Bryant Young DT 1994-2007 14 208 2. Charlie Krueger DT 1959-1973 15 198 3. Leo Nomellini DT 1950-1963 14 174 4. Roland Lakes DT 1961-1970 10 140 5. Cedrick Hardman DE 1970-1979 10 139 6. Tommy Hart DE 1968-1977 10 131 7. Michael Carter NT 1984-1992 9 121 8. Dwaine Board DE 1979-1988 10 117 9. Dennis Brown DE 1990-1996 7 110 10. Dana Stubblefield DT 1993-2002 9 108

Linebackers Pos Years Seasons Games 1. Matt Hazeltine LB 1955-1968 14 176 2. Keena Turner LB 1980-1990 11 153 Dave Wilcox LB 1964-1974 11 153 4. Frank Nunley LB 1967-1976 10 137 5. Willie Harper LB 1973-1983 11 134 Mike Walter LB 1984-1993 10 134 7. Jeff Ulbrich LB 2000-2009 10 120 8. Skip Vanderbundt LB 1969-1977 9 119 9. Ken Norton LB 1994-2000 7 112 10. Karl Rubke C/LB 1957-1965 9 104 Derek Smith LB 2001-2007 7 104

Secondary Pos Years Seasons Games 1. Jimmy Johnson DB/HB 1961-1976 16 213 2. Mel Phillips DB 1966-1977 12 147 3. Ronnie Lott S 1981-1990 10 129 4. Merton Hanks S 1991-1998 8 125 5. Don Griffin CB 1986-1993 8 114 6. Tim McDonald S 1993-1999 7 111 7. Eric Wright CB 1981-1990 10 110 8. Bruce Taylor CB 1970-1977 8 100 9. Dwight Hicks S 1979-1985 7 96 10. Kermit Alexander DB 1963-1969 7 94

Kickers Pos Years Seasons Games 1. Ray Wersching K 1977-1987 11 155 2. Tommy Davis K 1959-1969 11 138 3. Mike Cofer K 1988-1993 6 96 4. Joe Nedney K 2005-2010 6 86 5. Bruce Gossett K 1970-1974 5 70

Punters Pos Years Seasons Games 1. Andy Lee P 2004-* 8 115 2. Tom Wittum P 1973-1977 5 70 3. Max Runager P 1984-1988 5 59 4. Tommy Thompson P 1995-1997 3 48 5. Barry Helton P 1988-1990 3 47

INDIVIDUAL RECORDS

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RECORDS

SAN FRANCISCO 49ERS

ALL-TIME REGULAR SEASON SCORING

MOST POINTS IN SINGLE SEASONPlayer Year TDs XPM XPA FGM FGA 2pt Pts

1. Jerry Rice 1987 23 0 0 0 0 0 138 2. Mike Cofer 1989 0 49 51 29 36 0 136 3. Ray Wersching 1984 0 56 56 25 35 0 131 4. Jeff Wilkins 1996 0 40 40 30 34 0 130 5. Ray Wersching 1983 0 51 51 25 30 0 126 6. Gary Anderson 1997 0 38 38 29 36 0 125 7. Mike Cofer 1988 0 40 41 27 38 0 121 Joe Nedney 2008 0 34 34 29 33 0 121 9. Ray Wersching 1986 0 41 42 25 35 0 116 Joe Nedney 2006 0 29 29 29 35 0 116

Led NFL Led Conference

ALL-TIME LEADING SCORERS Player Years Gms TDs Rsh Rec Ret 2-pt PAT FG Pts 1. Jerry Rice 1985-2000 238 187 10 176 1 4 0/0 0/0 1,130 2. Ray Wersching 1977-1987 155 0 0 0 0 0 409/425 190/261 979 3. Tommy Davis 1959-1969 138 0 0 0 0 0 348/350 130/276 738 4. Mike Cofer 1988-1993 96 0 0 0 0 0 289/297 128/194 673 5. Gordy Soltau 1950-1958 107 25 0 25 0 0 284/302 70/138 6446. Joe Nedney 2005-2010 86 0 0 0 0 0 154/154 129/149 541

7. Terrell Owens 1996-2003 121 83 2 81 0 2 0/0 0/0 502 8. Bruce Gossett 1970-1974 70 0 0 0 0 0 163/168 99/153 460 9. Roger Craig 1983-1990 121 66 50 16 0 0 0/0 0/0 396 10. Ken Willard 1965-1973 125 61 45 16 0 0 0/0 0/0 36611. Gene Washington 1969-1977 124 59 0 59 0 0 0/0 0/0 354 12. Joe Perry 1950-1963 131 57 50 7 0 0 6/7 1/6 351 13. Hugh McElhenny 1952-1960 97 51 35 15 1 0 0/0 0/0 306 14. Billy Wilson 1951-1960 100 49 0 49 0 0 0/0 0/0 294 15. Dwight Clark 1979-1987 134 48 0 48 0 0 0/0 0/0 288 Freddie Solomon 1978-1985 114 48 3 43 0 0 0/0 0/0 288 17. Wade Richey 1998-2000 48 0 0 0 0 0 122/127 54/72 284 18. John Taylor 1987-1995 121 46 0 43 3 0 0/0 0/0 276 19. Frank Gore 2005-* 87 45 36 9 0 1 0/0 0/0 272 20. J.D. Smith 1956-1964 97 42 37 5 0 0 0/0 0/0 252

LONGEST FIELDS GOALS Player Game Lg 1. Joe Nedney at StL (12/24/05) 56 Mike Cofer at Atl. (10/14/90) 56 3. David Akers vs. Dal. (9/18/11) 55 4. Steve Mike-Mayer at LA Rams (11/9/75) 54 Bruce Gossett vs. NO (10/21/73) 54 6. David Akers at Cin. (9/25/11) 53 Joe Nedney vs. Phi. (10/12/08) 53 Ray Wersching at Det. (9/2/84) 53 Tommy Davis at LA Rams (10/17/65 53 Tommy Davis vs. Chi. (10/4/64) 53

50+YARD FIELD GOALS, Career Player Lg 1. Joe Nedney .................................10 2. Mike Cofer ....................................5 3. Ray Wersching ..............................4 Tommy Davis ................................4 5. David Akers .................................2 Todd Peterson ...............................2 Bruce Gossett ...............................2

FIELD GOAL PCT., Career Player Pct. 1. Joe Nedney, 129-149 ............ 86.6 2. Ray Wersching, 190-261 ........ 72.8 3. Mike Cofer, 128-191 .............. 67.0 4. Bruce Gossett, 99-153 ........... 64.7 5. Gordy Soltau, 70-139 ............. 50.4

MOST TOUCHDOWNS, Career Player TD 1. Jerry Rice (WR) .......................... 187 2. Terrell Owens (WR) ...................... 83 3. Roger Craig (RB) ......................... 66 4. Ken Willard (FB) ........................... 61 5. Gene Washington (WR) ................. 59 6. Joe Perry (FB) .............................. 57 7. Hugh McElhenny (HB) .................. 51 8. Billy Wilson (E) ............................. 49 9. Dwight Clark (WR) ........................ 48 Freddie Solomon (WR) .................. 48

MOST FGs MADE, Career Player FGM 1. Ray Wersching ........................... 190 2. Tommy Davis ............................. 130 3. Joe Nedney ................................ 129 4. Mike Cofer ................................. 128 5. Bruce Gossett .............................. 99 6. Gordie Soltau ............................... 70 7. Wade Richey ................................ 54 8. Jeff Wilkins .................................. 42 9. Jose Cortez .................................. 36 10. Steve Mike-Mayer....................... 30 Todd Peterson .............................. 30

MOST FGs ATTEMPTED, Career Player FGA 1. Tommy Davis ............................. 276 2. Ray Wersching ........................... 261 3. Mike Cofer ................................. 191 4. Bruce Gossett ............................ 153 5. Joe Nedney ................................ 149 6. Gordie Soltau ............................. 139 7. Wade Richey ................................ 72 8. Steve Mike-Mayer....................... 56 9. Jose Cortez .................................. 50 10. Jeff Wilkins .................................. 47

MOST PATs MADE, Career Player PAT 1. Ray Wersching ........................... 409 2. Tommy Davis ............................. 348 3. Mike Cofer ................................. 289 4. Gordie Soltau ............................. 284 5. Bruce Gossett ............................ 163 6. Joe Nedney ................................ 154 7. Wade Richey .............................. 122 8. Doug Brien ................................... 79 9. Jose Cortez .................................. 74 10. Jeff Wilkins .................................. 67

MOST PATs ATTEMPTED, Career Player PAT 1. Ray Wersching ........................... 425 2. Tommy Davis ............................. 350 3. Gordie Soltau ............................. 303 4. Mike Cofer ................................. 296 5. Bruce Gossett ............................ 168 6. Joe Nedney ................................ 154 7. Wade Richey .............................. 127 8. Doug Brien ................................... 81 9. Jose Cortez .................................. 74 10. Jeff Wilkins .................................. 69

ALL-TIME SCORING Touchdowns by Rushing ............................................ 923 Touchdowns by Receptions .................................... 1,286 Touchdowns by Interception Return ............................. 76 Touchdowns by Kickoff Return ..................................... 21 Touchdowns by Punt Return ........................................ 30 Fields Goals Made .................................................. 1,044 Safeties ....................................................................... 26

SAFETIES, Career Player Safeties 1. Bryant Young................................3 Charlie Krueger ............................3 3. Leo Nomellini ...............................2 4. 15 Players ...................................1 (Last, J. Ulbrich, 12/7/03 vs. Arz.)

INDIVIDUAL RECORDS

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RECORDS

SAN FRANCISCO 49ERS

ALL-TIME REGULAR SEASON SCORINGMOST TOUCHDOWNS, Season

Player TD 1. Jerry Rice (1987), 22 rec., 1 rush ............................... 23 2. Jerry Rice (1995), 15 rec., 1 rush, 1 fum. rec. ............. 17 Jerry Rice (1989), 17 rec. ........................................... 17 4. Terrell Owens (2001), 16 rec. ..................................... 16 Jerry Rice (1993), 15 rec, 1 rush ................................ 16 Jerry Rice (1986), 15 rec., 1 rush .............................. 16

MOST FGs MADE, Season Player FGM 1. Jeff Wilkins (1996) ..................................................... 30 2. Joe Nedney (2008) ..................................................... 29 Joe Nedney (2006) ..................................................... 29 Gary Anderson (1997) ................................................ 29 Mike Cofer (1989) ...................................................... 29

MOST CONSECUTIVE GAMES WITH FG MADE Player Games 1. Bruce Gossett (11/29/70 to 10/1/72) ...........................21

MOST FGs ATTEMPTED, Season Player FGA 1. Mike Cofer (1988) ...................................................... 38 2. Gary Anderson (1997) ................................................ 36 Mike Cofer (1990) ...................................................... 36 Mike Cofer (1989) ...................................................... 36 Bruce Gossett (1971) ................................................. 36

MOST PATs MADE, Season Player PAT 1. Doug Brien (1994) ...................................................... 60 2. Mike Cofer (1993) ...................................................... 59 3. Ray Wersching (1984) ................................................ 56 4. Mike Cofer (1992) ...................................................... 53 5. Tommy Davis (1965) .................................................. 52 Ray Wersching (1985) ................................................ 52

MOST CONSECUTIVE PATs MADE Player PAT 1. Tommy Davis (9/27/59 to 12/12/65) ......................... 234

MOST PATs ATTEMPTED, Season Player PAT 1. Doug Brien (1994) ...................................................... 62 2. Mike Cofer (1993) ...................................................... 61 3. Ray Wersching (1984) ................................................ 56 4. Mike Cofer (1992) ...................................................... 54 5. Tommy Davis (1965) .................................................. 53 Ray Wersching (1985) ................................................ 53

MOST CONSECUTIVE GAMES WITH A TOUCHDOWN Player Games 1. Jerry Rice (12/19/86 to 12/27/87) .............................. 13 2. Terrell Owens (11/8/98 to 12/27/98) ............................ 8 Jerry Rice (12/8/89 to 11/27/89) .................................. 8 Dave Parks (11/7/65 to 9/11/66) .................................. 8

MOST POINTS Player Game Points 1. Jerry Rice (WR) at Atl. (10/14/90) - 5 TDs 30 2. Gordy Soltau (E) vs. LA Rams (10/28/51) - 3 TDs, 1 FG, 5 PATs 26 3. Jerry Rice (WR) at TB (11/14/93) - 4 TDs 24 Billy Kilmer (QB) at Min. (10/15/61) - 4 TDs 24 5. Jeff Wilkins (K) vs. Atl. (9/29/96) - 6 FGs, 3 PATs 21 Gordy Soltau (E) vs. Bal. (12/13/53) - 2 TDs, 6 PATs, 1 FG 21

MOST TOUCHDOWNS Player Game TDs 1. Jerry Rice (WR) at Atl. (10/14/90) 5 2. Jerry Rice (WR) at TB (11/14/93) 4 Billy Kilmer (QB) at Min. (10/15/61) 4

MOST FIELD GOALS MADE Player Game FGM 1. Jeff Wilkins vs. Atl. (9/29/96) 6 Ray Wersching at NO (10/16/83) 6 3. Joe Nedney vs. TB (10/30/05) 5 Jeff Chandler vs. Chi. (9/7/03) 5 Bruce Gossett at Den. (9/23/73) 5

MOST FIELD GOALS ATTEMPTED Player Game FGA 1. Joe Nedney vs. TB (10/30/05) 6 Jeff Wilkins vs. Atl. (9/29/96) 6 Ray Wersching at NO (10/16/83) 6 Tommy Davis at LA Rams (10/17/65) 6 Tommy Davis at Dal. (11/20/60) 6 Gordy Soltau at GB (11/23/58) 6

MOST PATs MADE Player Game PATs Made 1. Mike Cofer at Det. (12/19/93) 8 Mike Cofer vs. Atl. (10/18/92) 8 Mike Cofer vs. Chi. (10/23/91) 8 Bruce Gossett at Atl. (10/29/72) 8 Tommy Davis at Det. (10/1/61) 8

MOST PATs ATTEMPTED Player Game PATs Att. 1. Mike Cofer at Det. (12/19/93) 8 Mike Cofer vs. Atl. (10/18/92) 8 Mike Cofer vs. Chi. (10/23/91) 8 Bruce Gossett at Atl. (10/29/72) 8 Tommy Davis at Det. (10/1/61) 8

TOP SINGLE-GAME SCORING PERFORMANCES

MOST CONSECUTIVE FIELD GOALS MADE Player FG1. Joe Nedney (11/26/06 to 9/30/07) ..............................................................182. Mike Cofer (12/4/88 to 10/1/89) ..................................................................173. Wade Richey (12/27/98 to 11/7/99) .............................................................16 Gary Anderson (9/14/97 to 11/10/97) ..........................................................165. Jose Cortez (9/5/02 to 11/3/02) ..................................................................13 Bruce Gossett (10/14/73 to 12/2/73) ...........................................................13

INDIVIDUAL RECORDS

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RECORDS

SAN FRANCISCO 49ERS

ALL-TIME REGULAR SEASON PASSING

MOST PASSING YARDS IN SINGLE SEASON QB INT Player Year Att Cmp Pct Yards TD INT LG Rat Pct 1. Jeff Garcia 2000 561 355 63.3 4278 31 10 69t 97.6 1.8 2. Steve Young 1998 517 322 62.3 4170 36 12 81t 101.1 2.3 3. Steve Young 1993 462 314 68.0 4023 29 16 80t 101.5 3.5 4. Steve Young 1994 461 324 70.3 3969 35 10 69t 112.8 2.2 5. Joe Montana 1990 520 321 61.7 3944 26 16 78t 89.0 3.1 6. Joe Montana 1983 515 332 64.5 3910 26 12 77t 94.6 2.3 7. Joe Montana 1985 494 303 61.3 3653 27 13 73 91.3 2.6 8. Steve DeBerg 1979 578 347 60.0 3652 17 21 50 73.1 3.6 9. Joe Montana 1984 432 279 64.6 3630 28 10 80t 102.9 2.3 10. Joe Montana 1981 488 311 63.7 3565 19 12 78t 88.4 2.5

Led NFL Led Conference

ALL-TIME LEADING PASSERS (BY YARDS) QB INT Player Years Gms Att Cmp Pct Yards TD INT Lg Rat Pct. 1. Joe Montana 1979-1992 (14) 167 4600 2929 63.7 35,124 244 123 96t 93.5 2.7 2. John Brodie 1957-1973 (17) 201 4491 2469 55.0 31,548 214 224 83t 72.3 5.0 3. Steve Young 1987-1999 (13) 150 3648 2400 65.8 29,907 221 86 97t 101.4 2.4 4. Jeff Garcia 1999-2003 (5) 74 2360 1449 61.4 16,408 113 56 76t 88.3 2.4 5. Y.A. Tittle 1951-1960 (10) 112 2194 1226 55.9 16,016 108 134 78t 70.0 6.1 6. Alex Smith 2005-* (7) 57 1588 915 57.6 9,904 53 54 75 72.8 3.5 7. Steve DeBerg 1978-1980 (3) 39 1201 670 55.8 7,220 37 60 93t 63.1 5.0 8. Steve Spurrier 1967-1975 (9) 92 840 441 52.5 5,250 33 48 81t 61.2 5.7 9. Tim Rattay 2000-2005 (6) 32 586 356 60.8 3,941 24 18 89t 81.6 3.1 10. Frankie Albert 1950-1952 (3) 36 601 316 52.6 3,847 27 43 60 57.7 7.2 11. Shaun Hill 2007-2009 (3) 18 522 322 61.7 3,490 23 11 61 87.3 2.1 12. Jim Plunkett 1976-1977 (2) 26 491 254 51.7 3,285 22 30 85t 62.5 6.1 13. Elvis Grbac 1994-1996 (3) 42 430 284 66.0 3,098 18 16 81t 85.6 3.7 14. Steve Bono 1989-1993 (5) 34 359 220 61.3 2,558 14 7 78 87.7 1.9 15. Ken Dorsey 2004-2005 (2) 11 316 171 54.1 1,712 8 11 59 63.7 3.5 16. George Mira 1964-1968 (5) 47 240 112 46.7 1,711 17 14 79t 70.0 5.8 17. Norm Snead 1975-1975 (2) 14 237 138 58.2 1,705 11 11 60t 76.7 4.6 18. J.T. O’Sullivan 2008 (1) 9 220 128 58.2 1,678 8 11 63 73.6 5.0 19. Tom Owen 1974-1975 (2) 14 235 112 47.7 1,645 11 17 68t 56.4 7.220. Jeff Kemp 1986 (1) 10 200 119 59.5 1,554 11 8 66t 85.7 4.0

MOST CONSECUTIVE COMPLETIONS Player Game(s) Cmp 1. Joe Montana last 5 vs. Cle. (11/29/87) 22 first 17 at GB (12/6/87) 2. Steve Young at Was. (11/24/96) 19

BEST QB RATING, Career Player QB Rat 1. Steve Young ...........................101.4 2. Joe Montana ............................93.5 3. Jeff Garcia ...............................88.3 4. Shaun Hill ................................87.3 5. Tim Rattay ...............................81.6 6. Alex Smith ..............................73.0 7. John Brodie .............................72.3 8. Y.A. Tittle .................................70.0 9. Steve DeBerg ...........................63.1 10. Steve Spurrier ..........................61.2 (min. 500 attempts)

MOST ATTEMPTS, Career Player Att 1. Joe Montana ........................... 4,600 2. John Brodie ............................ 4,491 3. Steve Young ............................ 3,648 4. Jeff Garcia .............................. 2,360 5. Y.A. Tittle ................................ 2,194 6. Alex Smith ............................. 1,588 7. Steve DeBerg .......................... 1,201 8. Steve Spurrier ............................ 840 9. Frankie Albert ............................ 601 10. Tim Rattay ................................. 586

MOST COMPLETIONS, Career Player Comp 1. Joe Montana ........................... 2,929 2. John Brodie ............................ 2,469 3. Steve Young ............................ 2,400 4. Jeff Garcia .............................. 1,449 5. Y.A. Tittle ................................ 1,226 6. Alex Smith ................................ 915 7. Steve DeBerg ............................. 670 8. Steve Spurrier ............................ 441 9. Tim Rattay ................................. 322 10. Shaun Hill .................................. 322

MOST TD PASSES, Career Player TD 1. Joe Montana .............................. 244 2. Steve Young ............................... 221 3. John Brodie ............................... 214 4. Jeff Garcia ................................. 113 5. Y.A. Tittle ................................... 108 6. Alex Smith .................................. 53 7. Steve DeBerg ............................... 37 8. Steve Spurrier .............................. 33 9. Frankie Albert .............................. 27 10. Tim Rattay ................................... 24

MOST INTs, Career Player INT 1. John Brodie ............................... 224 2. Y.A. Tittle ................................... 134 3. Joe Montana .............................. 123 4. Steve Young ................................. 86 5. Steve DeBerg ............................... 60 6. Jeff Garcia ................................... 56 7. Alex Smith .................................. 54 8. Steve Spurrier .............................. 48 9. Frankie Albert .............................. 43 10. Jim Plunkett ................................ 30

BEST COMPLETION PCT., Career Player Comp. % 1. Steve Young .............................. 65.8 2. Joe Montana ............................. 63.7 3. Shaun Hill ................................. 61.7 4. Jeff Garcia ................................ 61.4 5. Tim Rattay ................................ 60.8 6. Alex Smith ............................... 57.6 7. Y.A. Tittle .................................. 55.9 8. Steve DeBerg ............................ 55.8 9. John Brodie .............................. 55.0 10. Frankie Albert ........................... 52.6 (min. 500 attempts)

AVG YDS PER ATTEMPT, Career Player Y/A 1. Steve Young .............................8.20 2. Joe Montana ............................7.64 3. Y.A. Tittle .................................7.30 4. John Brodie .............................7.02 5. Jeff Garcia ...............................6.95 (min. 500 attempts)

CONSECUTIVE PASSES WITHOUT INTERCEPTION Player Game(s) Cmp 1. Steve Young 22 passes vs. Min. (10/3/93) to 183 13 passes at LA Rams (11/28/93) 2. Joe Montana 12 passes at Phi. (9/24/89) to 154 6 passes vs. GB (11/19/89) 3. Jeff Garcia 26 passes at Dal. (9/24/00) to 150 8 passes at Car. (10/22/00)

CONSECUTIVE GAMES WITH TOUCHDOWN PASS Player Game(s) Games 1. Steve Young at Det. (10/9/94) to vs. StL (11/26/95) 18 note: DNP in 5 games in 1995 2. Steve Young vs. NYJ (9/6/98) to vs. StL (12/27/98) 15 note: EQ on 11/8/98 3. Joe Montana vs. Buf. (12/17/89) to vs. NYG (12/3/90) 14

INDIVIDUAL RECORDS

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RECORDS

SAN FRANCISCO 49ERS

ALL-TIME REGULAR SEASON PASSINGMOST ATTEMPTS, Season

Player Att 1. Steve DeBerg (1979) ............578 2. Jeff Garcia (2000) .................561 3. Jeff Garcia (2002) .................528 4. Joe Montana (1990) .............520 5. Steve Young (1998) ...............517

MOST COMPLETIONS, Season Player Cmp 1. Jeff Garcia (2000) .................355 2. Steve DeBerg (1979) ............347 3. Joe Montana (1983) .............332 4. Jeff Garcia (2002) .................328 5. Steve Young (1994) ...............324

MOST TD PASSES, Season Player TD 1. Steve Young (1998) .................36 2. Steve Young (1994) .................35 3. Jeff Garcia (2001) ...................32 4. Jeff Garcia (2000) ...................31 Joe Montana (1987) ...............31

MOST INTs, Season Player INT 1. Y.A. Tittle (1955) .....................28 2. John Brodie (1971) .................24 3. Frankie Albert (1950) ..............23 4. Steve DeBerg (1978) ..............22 John Brodie (1966) .................22

BEST COMP. PCT., Season Player Pct 1. Steve Young (1994) ..............70.3 2. Joe Montana (1989) ............70.2 3. Steve Young (1993) ..............68.0 4. Steve Young (1996) ..............67.7 5. Steve Young (1997) ..............67.7

BEST QB RATING, Season Player Rat 1. Steve Young (1994) ............112.8 2. Joe Montana (1989) ..........112.4 3. Steve Young (1992) ............107.0 4. Steve Young (1997) ............104.7 5. Joe Montana (1984) ..........102.9

FEWEST INTs, Season Player INT 1. Steve Young (1997) ...................6 Steve Young (1996) ...................6 3. Steve Young (1992) ...................7 4. Shaun Hill (2008) ......................8 Steve Young (1991) ...................8 Joe Montana (1989) .................8

AVG YDS PER ATTEMPT, Season Player Pct 1. John Brodie (1961) ..............9.14 2. Joe Montana (1989) ............9.12 3. Steve Young (1991) ..............9.02 4. Steve Young (1993) ..............8.71 5. Steve Young (1992) ..............8.62

MOST PASSING YARDS Player Game Yards 1. Joe Montana at Atl. (10/14/90) 476 2. Steve Young at LA Rams (11/28/93) 462 3. Joe Montana at LA Rams (12/11/89) 458 4. Steve Young vs. Buf. (9/13/92) 449 5. Joe Montana at Was. (11/17/86) 441

MOST ATTEMPTS Player Game Att 1. Joe Montana at Was. (11/17/86) 60 2. Joe Montana at Atl. (10/6/85) 57 Tim Rattay vs. Arz. (10/10/04) 57 4. Jeff Garcia at Dal. (12/8/02) 55 5. Jeff Garcia at Car. (11/18/01) 54 Steve DeBerg at Atl. (12/16/79) 54 John Brodie at Chi. (11/13/66) 54

MOST COMPLETIONS Player Game Cmp 1. Tim Rattay vs. Arz. (10/10/04) 38 2. Joe Montana at Atl. (10/6/85) 37 3. Jeff Garcia vs. Chi. (12/17/00) 36 Jeff Garcia at Dal. (12/8/02) 36 5. Jeff Garcia at Car. (11/18/01) 34 Joe Montana at Pit. (9/13/87) 34

MOST TOUCHDOWN PASSES Player Game TD 1. Joe Montana at Atl. (10/14/90) 6 2. Joe Montana at Phi. (9/24/89) 5 Joe Montana at Atl. (10/6/85) 5 Steve Spurrier at Chi. (11/19/72) 5 John Brodie at Min. (11/28/65) 5

MOST INTERCEPTIONS Player Game INT 1. John Brodie at Det. (11/4/73) 6 2. Steve DeBerg at Dal. (10/12/80) 5 Scott Bull vs. Pit. (11/27/78) 5 Tom Owen at Cle. (12/1/74) 5 John Brodie vs. Bal. (11/29/64) 5 Y.A. Tittle vs. Bal. (12/5/59) 5 Y.A. Tittle at Bal. (11/30/58) 5 Frankie Albert vs. Pit. (12/7/52) 5

HIGHEST COMPLETION PERCENTAGE (20+ attempts) Player Game Pct. 1. Steve Young vs. Det. (10/20/91), 18-20 90.0 2. Steve Young vs. NO (9/14/97), 18-21 85.7 3. John Brodie vs. Atl. (9/29/68), 17-20 85.0 4. Joe Montana vs. Atl. (9/25/83), 27-32 84.4

AVERAGE YARDS PER ATTEMPT (20+ attempts) Player Game Y/A 1. Steve Young vs. Det. (12/19/93) 15.39 2. Steve Young vs. LA Rams (11/28/93) 14.44 3. Steve Young vs. Atl. (10/18/92) 14.25 4. Steve Young vs. Atl. (9/21/97) 14.00

TOP SINGLE-GAME PASSING Player Win Loss Ties Pct Joe Montana 100 39 0.719 Steve Young 91 33 0.734 John Brodie 74 77 8 0.490 Y.A. Tittle 45 31 2 0.592 Jeff Garcia 35 36 0.493 Alex Smith 21 32 0.396 Steve Spurrier 13 12 1 0.520 Frankie Albert 13 16 1 0.448 Jim Plunkett 11 15 0.423 Shaun Hill 10 6 0.625 Steve DeBerg 7 28 0.200 Elvis Grbac 6 3 0.667 Steve Bono 5 1 0.833 George Mira 4 2 0.667 Tom Owen 4 4 0.500 Tim Rattay 4 12 0.250 Jeff Kemp 3 2 1 0.600 Troy Smith 3 3 0.500 Scott Bull 3 4 0.429 Joe Reed 3 4 0.429 Matt Cavanaugh 2 0 1.000 Norm Snead 2 5 0.286 J.T. O’Sullivan 2 6 0.250 Lamar McHan 2 7 0.222 Ken Dorsey 2 8 0.200 Bob Gagliano 1 0 1.000 Jimmy Cason 1 0 1.000 Jim Druckenmiller 1 0 1.000 Ty Detmer 1 0 1.000 Mike Moroski 1 1 0.500 Jimmy Powers 1 1 0.500 Earl Morrall 1 3 0.250 Trent Dilfer 1 5 0.167 Chris Weinke 0 1 0.000 Bobby Waters 0 2 0.000 Dennis Morrison 0 2 0.000 Cody Pickett 0 2 0.000 Steve Stenstrom 0 3 0.000 473 406 13 0.537

49ERS QB WINS/LOSSES

300-YARD GAMES, Career Player Games 1. Joe Montana ....................................... 35 2. Steve Young ........................................ 28 3. Jeff Garcia .......................................... 14 4. Steve DeBerg ........................................ 5 Y.A. Tittle ............................................... 5

300-YARD GAMES, Season Player Games 1. Steve Young (1998) ............................... 7 2. Jeff Garcia (2000) ................................. 6 3. Steve Young (1994) ............................... 5 Joe Montana (1982, ‘85, ‘87, ‘90) .......... 5

INDIVIDUAL RECORDS

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RECORDS

SAN FRANCISCO 49ERS

STARTING QB YEARLY RECORDS Year Player Record as a Starter 1950 Frankie Albert 3-9 1951 Frankie Albert 6-4-1 Y.A. Tittle 1-0 1952 Frankie Albert 4-3 Y.A. Tittle 3-2 1953 Y.A. Tittle 8-2 Jim Powers 1-1 1954 Y.A. Tittle 6-4-1 Jim Cason 1-0 1955 Y.A. Tittle 4-8 1956 Y.A. Tittle 4-3-1 Earl Morrall 1-3 1957 Y.A. Tittle 7-4 John Brodie 1-0 1958 Y.A. Tittle 3-3 John Brodie 3-3 1959 Y.A. Tittle 6-4 John Brodie 1-1 1960 John Brodie 4-4 Y.A. Tittle 3-1 1961 John Brodie 7-6-1 1962 John Brodie 6-8 1963 Lamar McHan 2-7 John Brodie 0-3 Bob Waters 0-2 1964 John Brodie 3-9 George Mira 1-1 1965 John Brodie 7-5-1 George Mira 0-1 1966 John Brodie 5-6-2 George Mira 1-0 1967 John Brodie 5-5 George Mira 2-0 Steve Spurrier 0-2 1968 John Brodie 7-6-1 1969 John Brodie 2-6-2 Steve Spurrier 2-2 1970 John Brodie 10-3-1 1971 John Brodie 9-5 1972 John Brodie 2-3 Steve Spurrier 6-2-1 1973 John Brodie 2-4 Steve Spurrier 2-3 Joe Reed 1-2 1974 Tom Owen 4-3 Joe Reed 2-2 Dennis Morrison 0-2 Norm Snead 0-1 1975 Norm Snead 2-5 Steve Spurrier 3-3 Tom Owen 0-1 1976 Jim Plunkett 6-6 Scott Bull 2-0 1977 Jim Plunkett 5-9 1978 Steve DeBerg 1-10 Scott Bull 1-4 1979 Steve DeBerg 2-13 Joe Montana 0-1

Year Player Record as a Starter 1980 Steve DeBerg 4-5 Joe Montana 2-5 1981 Joe Montana 13-3 1982 Joe Montana 3-6 1983 Joe Montana 10-6 1984 Joe Montana 14-1 Matt Cavanaugh 1-0 1985 Joe Montana 9-6 Matt Cavanaugh 1-0 1986 Joe Montana 6-2 Jeff Kemp 3-2-1 1987 Joe Montana 10-1 Steve Young 2-1 Bob Gagliano 1-0 1988 Joe Montana 8-5 Steve Young 2-1 1989 Joe Montana 11-2 Steve Young 3-0 1990 Joe Montana 14-1 Steve Young 0-1 1991 Steve Young 5-5 Steve Bono 5-1 1992 Steve Young 14-2 1993 Steve Young 10-6 1994 Steve Young 13-3 1995 Steve Young 8-3 Elvis Grbac 3-2 1996 Steve Young 9-3 Elvis Grbac 3-1 1997 Steve Young 12-3 Jim Druckenmiller 1-0 1998 Steve Young 11-4 Ty Detmer 1-0 1999 Jeff Garcia 2-8 Steve Young 2-1 Steve Stenstrom 0-3 2000 Jeff Garcia 6-10 2001 Jeff Garcia 12-4 2002 Jeff Garcia 10-6 2003 Jeff Garcia 5-8 Tim Rattay 2-1 2004 Tim Rattay 1-8 Ken Dorsey 1-6 2005 Alex Smith 2-5 Tim Rattay 1-5 Ken Dorsey 1-2 2006 Alex Smith 7-9 2007 Alex Smith 2-5 Trent Dilfer 1-5 Shaun Hill 2-0 2008 Shaun Hill 5-3 J.T. O’Sullivan 2-6 2009 Alex Smith 5-5 Shaun HIll 3-3 2010 Alex Smith 3-7 Troy Smith 3-3 2011 Alex Smith 2-1

INDIVIDUAL RECORDS

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RECORDS

SAN FRANCISCO 49ERS

ALL-TIME REGULAR SEASON RUSHING

MOST RUSHING YARDS IN SINGLE SEASON Player Year Att Yards Avg Lg TD 1. Frank Gore 2006 312 1,695 5.4 72 8 2. Garrison Hearst 1998 310 1,570 5.1 96t 7 3. Roger Craig 1988 310 1,502 4.8 46t 9 4. Wendell Tyler 1984 246 1,262 5.1 40 7 5. Charlie Garner 1999 241 1,229 5.1 53 4 6. Garrison Hearst 2001 252 1,206 4.8 43t 4 7. Delvin Williams 1976 248 1,203 4.9 80t 7 8. Charlie Garner 2000 258 1,142 4.4 42 7 9. Frank Gore 2009 229 1,120 4.9 80t 10 10. Frank Gore 2007 260 1,102 4.2 43t 5 11. Roger Craig 1989 271 1,054 3.9 27 6 12. Roger Craig 1985 214 1,050 4.9 62t 9 13. Joe Perry 1954 173 1,049 6.1 58 8 14. Frank Gore 2008 240 1,036 4.3 41t 6 J.D. Smith 1959 207 1,036 5.0 73t 10

Led NFL Led Conference

ALL-TIME LEADING RUSHERS (BY YARDS) Player Years Gms Att Yards Avg Lg TD 1. Joe Perry 1950-1960, ‘63 (12) 131 1,475 7,344 4.9 78t 50 2. Roger Craig 1983-1990 *8) 121 1,686 7,064 4.2 71 50 3. Frank Gore 2005-* (7) 87 1,430 6,562 4.6 80t 36 4. Ken Willard 1965-1973 (9) 125 1,582 5,930 3.7 69t 45 5. Garrison Hearst 1997-2003 (7) 73 1,189 5,535 4.7 96t 26 6. J.D. Smith 1956-1964 (9) 97 1,007 4,370 4.3 80t 37 7. Hugh McElhenny 1952-1960 (9) 97 877 4,288 4.9 89t 35 8. Kevan Barlow 2001-2005 (5) 72 891 3,614 4.1 78t 24 9. Steve Young 1987-1999 (13) 150 608 3,581 5.9 49t 37 10. Wendell Tyler 1983-1986 (4) 48 624 3,112 4.9 40 16 11. Delvin Williams 1974-1977 (4) 54 669 2,966 4.4 80t 20 12. Wilbur Jackson 1974-1979 (6) 72 745 2,955 4.0 80 10 13. Ricky Watters 1992-1994 (3) 43 653 2,840 4.3 43 25 14. Charlie Garner 1999-2000 (2) 32 499 2,371 4.8 53 11 15. Tom Rathman 1986-1993 (8) 115 516 1,902 3.7 35 26 16. Vic Washington 1971-1973 (3) 40 483 1,813 3.8 42 14 17. Paul Hofer 1976-1981 (6) 77 416 1,746 4.2 47 16 18. Larry Schreiber 1971-1975 (5) 60 502 1,734 3.5 23 10 19. Joe Montana 1979-1992 (14) 167 414 1,595 3.9 21 20 20. Jeff Garcia 1999-2003 (5) 74 318 1,571 4.9 33 21

MOST ATTEMPTS, Career Player Att 1. Roger Craig .....................................1,686 2. Ken Willard .....................................1,582 3. Joe Perry ........................................1,475 4. Frank Gore ....................................1,430 5. Garrison Hearst ...............................1,189 6. J.D. Smith .......................................1,007 7. Kevan Barlow.....................................891 8. Hugh McElhenny ................................877 9. Wilbur Jackson ..................................745 10. Delvin Williams ..................................669

MOST TOUCHDOWNS, Career Player TD 1. Roger Craig ..........................................50 Joe Perry .............................................50 3. Ken Willard ..........................................45 4. Steve Young .........................................37 J.D. Smith ............................................37 6. Frank Gore .........................................36 7. Hugh McElhenny ..................................35 8. Garrison Hearst ....................................26 9. Tom Rathman ......................................26 10. Ricky Watters .......................................25

HIGHEST RUSHING AVG., Career Player Avg 1. Steve Young ......................................5.89 2. Wendell Tyler ....................................4.99 3. Joe Perry ..........................................4.98 4. Jeff Garcia ........................................4.94 5. Hugh McElhenny ...............................4.89 6. Charlie Garner...................................4.75 7. Garrison Hearst .................................4.66 8. Frank Gore ......................................4.58 9. Delvin Williams .................................4.43 10. Ricky Watters ....................................4.35 (min. 300 attempts)

100-YARD GAMES, Career Player Games 1. Frank Gore .........................................24 2. Joe Perry .............................................20 3. Garrison Hearst ....................................16 4. Roger Craig ..........................................14 5. J.D. Smith ............................................12 Hugh McElhenny ..................................12

1,000-YD SEASONS, Career Player Seasons 1. Frank Gore ...........................................4 2. Garrison Hearst ......................................3 Roger Craig ............................................3 4. Charlie Garner........................................2 Joe Perry ...............................................2

CONSECUTIVE 1,000-YD SEASONS, Career

Player Seasons 1. Frank Gore (2006-09)..........................4 2. Charlie Garner (1999-2000) ..................2 Garrison Hearst (1997-98) ....................2 Roger Craig (1988-89) ..........................2 Joe Perry (1953-54) ..............................2

INDIVIDUAL RECORDS

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RECORDS

SAN FRANCISCO 49ERS

MOST RUSHING ATTEMPTS, Season Player Att

1. Frank Gore (2006) .........................................................312 2. Roger Craig (1988) .........................................................310 Garrison Hearst (1998) ...................................................310 4. Roger Craig (1989) .........................................................271 5. Delvin Williams (1977) ....................................................268

MOST RUSHING TOUCHDOWNS, Season Player TD 1. Frank Gore (2009) ...........................................................10 Derek Loville (1995) .........................................................10 Ricky Watters (1993) ........................................................10 Billy Kilmer (1961) ............................................................10 J.D. Smith (1959) .............................................................10 Joe Perry (1953) ...............................................................10

HIGHEST RUSHING AVG., Season Player Avg 1. Joe Perry (1958) ............................................................6.06 2. Joe Perry (1954) ............................................................6.06 3. Frank Gore (2006) ........................................................5.43 4. Delvin Williams (1975) ...................................................5.39 5. Joe Perry (1953) ............................................................5.30

MOST 100-YARD RUSHING GAMES, Season Player Games 1. Frank Gore (2006) .............................................................9 2. Garrison Hearst (1998) .......................................................6 Roger Craig (1988) .............................................................6 4. Frank Gore (2009) .............................................................5 J.D. Smith (1959) ...............................................................5 Joe Perry (1953) .................................................................5

MOST RUSHING YARDS Player Game Yards 1. Frank Gore vs. Sea. (11/19/06) 212 2. Frank Gore vs. Sea. (9/20/09) 207 3. Charlie Garner at Dal. (9/24/00) 201 4. Garrison Hearst vs. Det. (12/14/98) 198 5. Delvin Williams at StL (10/31/76) 194

MOST RUSHING ATTEMPTS Player Game Att 1. Charlie Garner at Dal. (9/24/00) 36 2. Maurice Hicks at Arz. (12/12/04) 34 Delvin Williams at StL (10/31/76) 34 4. Frank Gore at Den. (12/31/06) 31 Garrison Hearst vs. Sea. (12/1/02) 31 J.D. Smith at Bal. (10/7/62) 31 J.D. Smith at Chi. (10/14/62) 31

MOST RUSHING TOUCHDOWNS Player Game TD 1. Billy Kilmer at Min. (10/15/61) 4

HIGHEST RUSHING AVERAGE (10+ Attempts) Player Game Avg 1. Joe Perry vs. Det. (11/2/58) 13.4 2. Frank Gore vs. Sea. (9/20/09) 12.9 3. Wilbur Jackson vs. NO (11/27/77) 11.9 4. Hugh McElhenny at Chi. (10/17/54) 11.4 5. Maurice Hicks at StL (12/24/05) 10.9

TOP SINGLE-GAME RUSHING

MOST CONSECUTIVE 100-YARD RUSHING GAMES Player Game(s) Games 1. Garrison Hearst vs. NYG (11/30/98) to at NE (12/20/98) 4 2. Frank Gore vs. Oak. (10/17/10) to vs. Den. (10/31/10) 3 Frank Gore at Det. (11/12/06) to at StL (11/26/06) 3 J.D. Smith at Bal. (10/7/62) to at GB (10/21/62) 3 Billy Kilmer at Det. (10/1/61) to at Min. (10/15/61) 3

MOST CONSECUTIVE GAMES WITH A RUSHING TD Player Game(s) Games 1. Joe Perry at GB (11/22/53) to at GB (10/10/54) 7 2. Hugh McElhenny vs. Was. (9/26/54) to vs. Det. (10/24/54) 5

ALL-TIME REGULAR SEASON RUSHING

INDIVIDUAL RECORDS

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RECORDS

SAN FRANCISCO 49ERS

ALL-TIME REGULAR SEASON RECEIVING

MOST RECEPTIONS IN SINGLE SEASON Player Year Rec Yards Avg Lg TD 1. Jerry Rice 1995 122 1,848 15.1 81t 15 2. Jerry Rice 1994 112 1,499 13.4 69t 13 3. Jerry Rice 1996 108 1,254 11.6 39 8 4. Terrell Owens 2002 100 1,300 13.0 76t 13 Jerry Rice 1990 100 1,502 15.0 64t 13 6. Jerry Rice 1993 98 1,503 15.3 80t 15 7. Terrell Owens 2000 97 1,451 15.0 69t 13 8. Terrell Owens 2001 93 1,412 15.2 60t 16 9. Roger Craig 1985 92 1,016 11.0 73 6 10. Derek Loville 1995 87 662 7.6 31 3 11. Jerry Rice 1986 86 1,570 18.3 66t 15 12. Dwight Clark 1981 85 1,105 13.0 78t 4 13. Jerry Rice 1992 84 1,201 14.3 80t 10 14. Earl Cooper 1980 83 567 6.8 66t 4 15. Eric Johnson 2004 82 825 10.1 25 2 Jerry Rice 1998 82 1,157 14.1 75t 9 Jerry Rice 1989 82 1,483 18.1 68t 17 Dwight Clark 1980 82 991 12.1 71t 8

Led NFL Led Conference

ALL-TIME LEADING RECEIVERS (BY YARDS) Player Years Gms Rec Yards Avg Lg TD

1. Jerry Rice 1985-2000 (16) 238 1,281 19,247 15.0 96t 187 2. Terrell Owens 1996-2003 (8) 121 592 8,572 14.5 79t 81 3. Roger Craig 1983-1990 (8) 121 508 4,442 8.7 73 16 4. Dwight Clark 1979-1987 (9) 134 506 6,750 13.3 80t 48 5. Brent Jones 1987-1997 (11) 143 417 5,195 12.5 69t 33 6. Billy Wilson 1951-1960 (10) 100 407 5,902 14.5 77t 49 7. Gene Washington 1969-1977 (9) 124 371 6,664 17.9 79t 59 8. John Taylor 1987-1995 (9) 121 347 5,598 16.3 97t 43 9. J.J. Stokes 1995-2002 (8) 111 327 4,139 12.7 53 30 10. Freddie Solomon 1978-1985 (8) 114 310 4,873 15.7 93t 43 11. Tom Rathman 1986-1993 (8) 115 294 2,490 8.5 36 8 12. Bernie Casey 1961-1966 (6) 79 277 4,008 14.5 68t 27 13. Frank Gore 2005-* (7) 87 276 2,319 8.4 48 9 14. Ken Willard 1965-1973 (9) 125 273 2,156 7.9 62 16 15. Vernon Davis 2006-* (6) 75 252 3,190 12.7 73t 29 16. Gordie Soltau 1950-1958 (9) 107 249 3,487 14.0 54t 25 17. Earl Cooper 1980-1985 (6) 88 213 1,908 9.0 73t 12 18. Dave Parks 1964-1967 (4) 50 208 3,334 16.0 83t 27 19. Monty Stickles 1960-1967 (8) 102 207 2,993 14.5 54 14 20. Clyde Conner 1956-1963 (8) 80 203 2,643 13.0 65t 18

MOST RECEIVING YARDS, Career Player Yds 1. Jerry Rice .....................................19,247 2. Terrell Owens ..................................8,572 3. Dwight Clark ...................................6,750 4. Gene Washington ............................6,664 5. Billy Wilson .....................................5,902 6. John Taylor .....................................5,598 7. Brent Jones ....................................5,195 8. Freddie Solomon .............................4,873 9. Roger Craig .....................................4,442 10. J.J. Stokes ......................................4,139

MOST TOUCHDOWNS, Career Player TD 1. Jerry Rice ..........................................176 2. Terrell Owens .......................................81 3. Gene Washington .................................59 4. Billy Wilson ..........................................49 5. Dwight Clark ........................................48 6. Freddie Solomon ..................................43 John Taylor ..........................................43 8. Brent Jones .........................................33 9. J.J. Stokes ...........................................3010. Vernon Davis ......................................29

BEST RECEIVING AVG., Career Player Avg 1. Gene Washington ..............................18.0 2. John Taylor .......................................16.1 3. Dave Parks .......................................16.0 4. Freddie Solomon ...............................15.7 5. Jerry Rice .........................................15.0 (min. 200 attempts)

100-YARD GAMES, Career Player Games 1. Jerry Rice ............................................66 2. Terrell Owens .......................................25 3. Gene Washington .................................17 4. Dwight Clark ........................................16 5. John Taylor ..........................................12

1,000-YD SEASONS, Career Player Seasons 1. Jerry Rice ............................................12 2. Terrell Owens .........................................5 3. John Taylor ............................................2

NFL Record

INDIVIDUAL RECORDS

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RECORDS

SAN FRANCISCO 49ERS

MOST RECEIVING TOUCHDOWNS, Season Player TD 1. Jerry Rice (1987) ..............................................................22 2. Jerry Rice (1989) ..............................................................17 3. Terrell Owens (2001) ........................................................16 4. Jerry Rice (1995) ..............................................................15 Jerry Rice (1993) ..............................................................15 Jerry Rice (1986) ..............................................................15 7. Terrell Owens (1998) ........................................................14 Jerry Rice (1991) ..............................................................14 9. (5 Times) Last: Vernon Davis (2009) ................................13

CONSECUTIVE GAMES WITH A TOUCHDOWN RECEPTION Player Games 1. Jerry Rice (12/19/86 to 12/27/87) ....................................13 2. Terrell Owens (11/8/98 to 12/27/98) ...................................8 Jerry Rice (12/8/89 to 11/27/89) ........................................8 Dave Parks (11/7/65 to 9/11/66) ........................................8

BEST RECEIVING AVERAGE, Season Player Avg 1. Freddie Solomon (1983) ................................................21.4 2. Gene Washington (1974)................................................21.2 3. Gene Washington (1970)................................................20.8 4. Jerry Rice (1988) ...........................................................20.4 5. Gene Washington (1972)................................................20.0 (min. 25 receptions)

MOST 100-YARD RECEIVING GAMES, Season Player Games 1. Jerry Rice (1995) ................................................................9 2. Jerry Rice (1989) ................................................................8 3. Jerry Rice (1990) ................................................................7 4. Terrell Owens (2001) ..........................................................6 Dwight Clark (1982) ...........................................................6

CONSECUTIVE 100-YARD RECEIVING GAMES Player Games 1. Jerry Rice (10/29/95 to 11/20/95) ......................................4 2. Jerry Rice (12/10/95 to 12/24/95) ......................................3 Jerry Rice (9/10/89 to 9/24/89) ..........................................3 Jerry Rice (9/11/88 to 9/25/88) ..........................................3 Jerry Rice (11/15/87 to 11/29/87) ......................................3 Dwight Clark (12/11/82 to 12/26/82) ..................................3 Dwight Clark (9/12/82 to 11/21/82) ....................................3

MOST RECEVING YARDS Player Game Yards

1. Jerry Rice vs. Min. (12/18/95) 289 2. John Taylor at LA Rams (12/11/89) 286 3. Terrell Owens vs. Chi. (12/17/00) 283 4. Jerry Rice vs. LA Rams (12/9/85) 241 5. Dave Parks at Bal. (10/3/65) 231 6. Jerry Rice at Atl. (10/14/90) 225 Bernie Casey at Chi. (11/13/66) 225 8. Jerry Rice at Was. (11/17/86) 204 9. Gordie Soltau at NYG (11/9/52) 196 10. Billy Wilson vs. Chi. (10/23/55) 192

MOST RECEPTIONS Player Game Rec 1. Terrell Owens vs. Chi. (12/17/00) 20 2. Jerry Rice vs. LA Rams (11/20/94) 16 3. Jerry Rice vs. Min. (12/18/95) 14 4. Eric Johnson vs. Arz. (10/10/04) 13 Terrell Owens vs. Phi. (11/25/02) 13 Jerry Rice at Atl. (10/14/90) 13

MOST RECEIVING TOUCHDOWNS Player Game TD 1. Jerry Rice at Atl. (10/14/90) 5 2. Jerry Rice at TB (11/14/93) 4 3. (17 Times) Last: Vernon Davis at Hou. (10/25/09) 3

RECEIVING AVERAGE 5+ Attempts) Player Game Avg 1. John Taylor at Atl. (12/3/89), 5-162 32.4 2. Jerry Rice at Dal. (11/12/95), 5-161 32.2 3. Gene Washington vs. NE (10/31/71), 5-160 32.0 4. Jerry Rice at GB (11/4/90), 6-187 31.2 5. Billy Wilson at Bal. (12/2/56), 5-148 29.6

TOP SINGLE-GAME RECEIVING

MOST CONSECUTIVE GAMES WITH A RECEPTION Player Game(s) Games 1. Jerry Rice (12/9/85) to (12/23/00) 225* 2. Terrell Owens (10/20/96) to (12/21/03) 115 3. Dwight Clark (9/14/80 to (9/13/87) 105 * NFL Record (streak extended to 274 in ‘04 as member of Raiders)

ALL-TIME REGULAR SEASON RECEIVING

INDIVIDUAL RECORDS

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RECORDS

SAN FRANCISCO 49ERS

ALL-TIME REGULAR SEASON SCRIMMAGE YARDS

MOST TOTAL YARDS FROM SCRIMMAGE IN SINGLE SEASON Player Year Touches Yards Avg Yds/Gm TD 1. Frank Gore 2006 373 2,180 5.8 136.3 9 2. Garrison Hearst 1998 349 2,105 6.0 131.6 9 3. Roger Craig 1985 306 2,066 6.8 129.1 15 4. Roger Craig 1988 386 2,036 5.3 127.3 10 5. Jerry Rice 1995 127 1,884 14.8 117.8 16 6. Charlie Garner 2000 326 1,789 5.5 111.8 10 7. Charlie Garner 1999 297 1,764 5.9 110.3 6 8. Jerry Rice 1986 96 1,642 17.1 102.6 16 9. Ricky Watters 1994 305 1,596 5.2 99.8 11 10. Jerry Rice 1994 119 1,592 13.4 99.5 15 11. Jerry Rice 1993 101 1,572 15.6 98.3 16 12. Garrison Hearst 2001 293 1,553 5.3 97.1 5 13. Frank Gore 2007 313 1,538 4.9 102.5 6 14. Roger Craig 1989 320 1,527 4.8 95.4 7 15. Frank Gore 2009 281 1,526 5.4 109.0 13

Led NFL Led Conference

ALL-TIME LEADERS IN TOTAL YARDS FROM SCRIMMAGE Player Years Gms Touches Yards Avg Yds/Gm TD

1. Jerry Rice 1985-2000 (16) 238 1,365 19,872 14.6 83.5 176 2. Roger Craig 1983-1990 (8) 121 2,194 11,506 5.2 95.1 66 3. Frank Gore 2005-* (7) 87 1,706 8,881 5.2 102.1 45 4. Terrell Owens 1996-2003 (8) 121 613 8,734 14.2 72.2 83 5. Joe Perry 1950-1960, ‘63 (12) 131 1,660 8,624 5.2 65.8 57 6. Ken Willard 1965-1973 (9) 125 1,855 8,086 4.4 64.7 61 7. Garrison Hearst 1997-2003 (7) 73 1,363 7,139 5.2 97.8 33 8. Hugh McElhenny 1952-1960 (9) 97 1,072 6,954 6.5 71.7 50 9. Dwight Clark 1979-1987 (9) 134 512 6,800 13.3 50.7 48 10. Gene Washington 1969-1977 (9) 124 376 6,663 17.7 53.7 59 11. Billy Wilson 1951-1960 (10) 100 407 5,902 14.5 59.0 49 12. John Taylor 1987-1995 (9) 121 353 5,629 15.9 46.5 43 13. J.D. Smith 1956-1964 (9) 97 1,128 5,479 4.9 56.5 42 14. Freddie Solomon 1978-1985 (8) 114 357 5,202 14.6 45.6 43 15. Brent Jones 1987-1997 (11) 143 417 5,195 12.5 36.3 33 16. Kevan Barlow 2001-2005 (5) 72 1,028 4,757 4.6 66.1 27 17. Tom Rathman 1986-1993 (8) 115 810 4,392 5.4 38.2 34 18. Ricky Watters 1992-1994 (3) 43 793 4,290 5.4 99.8 33 19. Wilbur Jackson 1974-1979 (6) 72 893 4,188 4.7 58.2 13 20. J.J. Stokes 1995-2002 (8) 111 328 4,145 12.6 37.3 30

MOST TOUCHES, Career Player Touches 1. Roger Craig .....................................2,194 2. Ken Willard .....................................1,855 3. Frank Gore ....................................1,706 4. Joe Perry ........................................1,660 5. Jerry Rice .......................................1,365 6. Garrison Hearst ...............................1,363 7. J.D. Smith .......................................1,128 8. Hugh McElhenny .............................1,072 9. Kevan Barlow..................................1,028 10. Wilbur Jackson ..................................893

BEST YARDS PER TOUCH, Career Player Avg 1. Jerry Rice .........................................14.6 2. Hugh McElhenny .................................6.5 3. Tom Rathman .....................................5.4 4. Ricky Watters ......................................5.4 5. Frank Gore ........................................5.2 6. Roger Craig .........................................5.2 7. Garrison Hearst ...................................5.2 8. Joe Perry ............................................5.2 9. Delvin Williams ...................................5.1 10. J.D. Smith ...........................................4.9 (min. 750 touches)

MOST TOUCHES, Season Player Touches 1. Roger Craig (1988).............................386 2. Frank Gore (2006) ............................373 3. Garrison Hearst (1998) .......................349 4. Charlie Garner (2000).........................326 5. Roger Craig (1989).............................320

BEST YARDS PER TOUCH, Season Player Avg 1. Paul Hofer (1980) ..............................7.06 2. Roger Craig (1985)............................6.75 3. Delvin Williams (1975) ......................6.63 4. John David Crow (1965) ...................6.29 5. Joe Perry (1958) ...............................6.29 (min. 150 touches)

MOST RECEVING YARDS IN SINGLE GAME Player Game Yards

1. Jerry Rice vs. Min. (12/18/95) 299 2. Terrell Owens vs. Chi. (12/17/00) 288 3. John Taylor at LA Rams (12/11/89) 286 4. Delvin Williams vs. Was. (11/7/76) 279 5. Jerry Rice vs. LA Rams (12/9/85) 255 6. Frank Gore vs. Sea. (9/20/09) 246 7. Frank Gore vs. Sea. (11/19/06) 238 8. Charlie Garner at Dal. (9/24/00) 235 9. Garrison Hearst vs. NYJ (9/6/98) 225 Jerry Rice at Atl. (10/14/90) 225

TOP SINGLE-GAME SCRIMMAGE YARD TOTALSMOST TOUCHES IN SINGLE GAME

Player Game Touches 1. Maurice Hicks at Arz. (12/12/04) 39 Charlie Garner at Dal. (9/24/00) 39 3. Delvin Williams at StL (10/31/76) 35 4. Derek Loville vs. Buf. (12/3/95) 34 5. Frank Gore at Den. (12/31/06) 33 Frank Gore at Sea. (12/14/06) 33 Kevan Barlow at Phi. (12/21/03) 33 Garrison Hearst vs. Sea. (12/1/02) 33 J.D. Smith at Bal. (10/7/62) 33 10. (Four Times) Last: Frank Gore vs. Det. (12/27/09) 32

INDIVIDUAL RECORDS

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RECORDS

SAN FRANCISCO 49ERS

ALL-TIME REGULAR SEASON INTERCEPTIONS

MOST INTERCEPTIONS IN SINGLE SEASON Player Year INT Yards Avg Lg TD 1. Ronnie Lott 1986 10 134 13.4 57t 1 Dave Baker 1960 10 96 9.6 28 0 3. Tony Parrish 2003 9 202 22.4 49 0 Dwight Hicks 1981 9 239 26.6 72 1 Kermit Alexander 1968 9 155 17.2 66t 1 Lowell Wagner 1951 9 115 12.8 40 0 7. Walt Harris 2006 8 84 10.5 42 1 Dick Moegle 1957 8 107 13.4 40 0 Jim Cason 1951 8 147 18.4 65t 1 10. Tony Parrish 2002 7 204 29.1 60 0 Ahmed Plummer 2001 7 45 6.4 24 0 Zack Bronson 2001 7 165 23.6 97t 2 Merton Hanks 1994 7 93 13.3 38 0 Dave Waymer 1990 7 64 9.1 24 0 Tim McKyer 1988 7 11 1.6 7 0 Eric Wright 1983 7 164 23.4 60t 2 Ronnie Lott 1981 7 117 16.7 41t 3 Rex Berry 1953 7 142 20.3 29 1

Led NFL Led Conference

ALL-TIME INTERCEPTION LEADERS Player Years Gms INT Yards Avg Lg TD 1. Ronnie Lott 1981-1990 (10) 129 51 643 12.6 83t 5 2. Jimmy Johnson 1961-1976 (16) 213 47 615 13.1 63 2 3. Kermit Alexander 1963-1969 (7) 94 36 499 13.9 66t 1 4. Merton Hanks 1991-1998 (8) 125 31 380 12.3 67t 2 5. Dwight Hicks 1979-1985 (7) 96 30 586 19.5 72 3 6. Lowell Wagner 1950-1953, ‘55 (5) 47 25 331 13.2 40 0 7. Tony Parrish 2002-2006 (5) 66 22 504 22.9 60 1 Don Griffin 1986-1993 (8) 114 22 49 2.2 23 0 Rex Berry 1951-1956 (6) 66 22 404 18.4 44t 3 10. Dave Baker 1959-1961 (3) 38 21 294 14.0 40 0 11. Tim McDonald 1993-1999 (7) 111 20 325 16.3 73t 3 Dick Moegle 1955-1959 (5) 47 20 232 11.6 40 1 13. Zack Bronson 1997-2003 (7) 84 19 346 18.2 97t 2 14. Eric Wright 1981-1990 (10) 110 18 256 14.2 60t 2 Bruce Taylor 1970-1977 (8) 109 18 201 11.2 70 0 16. Carlton Williamson 1981-1987 (7) 88 17 294 17.3 82 1 17. Tim McKyer 1986-1989 (4) 51 16 62 3.9 21t 1 18. Walt Harris 2006-2008 (3) 46 15 151 10.1 42 1 Abe Woodson 1958-1964 (7) 89 15 159 10.6 61 0 20. Skip Vanderbundt 1969-1977 (9) 119 14 165 11.8 37t 2 Frank Nunley 1967-1976 (10) 137 14 136 9.7 24 0 Dave Wilcox 1964-1974 (11) 153 14 149 10.6 35 1

MOST INT RETURN YARDS, Career Player Yards 1. Ronnie Lott ........................................643 2. Jimmy Johnson .................................615 3. Dwight Hicks .....................................586 4. Tony Parrish .......................................504 5. Kermit Alexander ...............................499 6. Rex Berry ...........................................404 7. Merton Hanks ....................................380 8. Zack Bronson .....................................346 9. Lowell Wagner ...................................331 10. Tim McDonald ...................................325

MOST INTs RETURNED FOR TD, Career Player TD 1. Ronnie Lott ............................................5 2. Deion Sanders .......................................3 Tim McDonald .......................................3 Dwight Hicks .........................................3 Rex Berry ...............................................3 6. (10 players) Last: Patrick Willis ...............2

MOST INT RETURN YARDS, Season Player Yards 1. Deion Sanders (1994) ........................303 2. Dwight Hicks (1981) ..........................239 3. Tony Parrish (2002) ............................204 4. Tony Parrish (2004) ............................202 5. Zack Bronson (2001)..........................165

MOST INTs RETURNED FOR TD, Season Player TD 1. Deion Sanders (1994) ............................3 Ronnie Lott (1981) .................................3 3. Zack Bronson (2001)..............................2 Tim McDonald (1995) ............................2 Ken Norton (1995) .................................2 Tom Holmoe (1986) ...............................2 Eric Wright (1983) ..................................2 Dwight Hicks (1983) ..............................2 Skip Vanderbundt (1972) ........................2

MOST INTs BY A NON-DB, Season Player INT 1. Jim Fahnhorst, LB (1986) .......................4 Keena Turner, LB (1984) .........................4 Frank Nunley, LB (1974) .........................4

MOST INTERCEPTIONS IN SINGLE GAME Player Game INT 1. Dave Baker at LA Rams (12/4/60) 4 2. Walt Harris vs. Oak. (10/8/06) 3 Ronnie Heard vs. Arz. (10/27/02) 3 Rod Woodson vs. NO (9/14/97) 3 Eric Wright at Min. (9/8/83) 3 Tony Leonard vs. Cin. (10/1/78) 3 Dave Baker at Dal. (11/20/60) 3

MOST INTERCEPTIONS RETURNED FOR TD IN SINGLE GAME Player Game INT 1. Ken Norton at StL (10/22/95) 2

TOP SINGLE-GAME INTERCEPTION TOTALSMOST INTERCEPTION RETURN YARDS IN SINGLE GAME

Player Game Yards 1. Dwight Hicks at Was. (10/4/81) 104 2. Zack Bronson at Chi. (10/28/01) 97 3. Merton Hanks vs. NO (11/22/93) 94 Al Randolph vs. Chi. (12/11/66) 94 5. Deion Sanders at Atl. (10/16/94) 93 6. Deion Sanders at SD (12/11/94) 90 Kermit Alexander at Pit. (11/24/68) 90 8. Tory Dixon at GB (10/26/86) 88 9. Patrick Willis at Sea. (9/14/08) 86 Eric Davis vs. StL (11/26/95) 86

INDIVIDUAL RECORDS

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RECORDS

SAN FRANCISCO 49ERS

ALL-TIME REGULAR SEASON SACKSALL-TIME SACK LEADERS

Player Years Sacks 1. Bryant Young (DT) 1994-2007 (14) 89.5 2. Charles Haley (LB) 1986-1999 (7) 66.5 3. Dana Stubblefield (DT) 1993-2002 (7) 46.5 4. Dwaine Board (DE) 1979-1988 (10) 45.0 5. Chris Doleman (DE) 1996-1998 (3) 38.0 6. Andre Carter (DE) 2001-2005 (5) 32.0 7. Jeff Stover (DE) 1982-1988 (7) 30.5 8. Roy Barker (DE) 1996-1998 (3) 30.0 9. Pierce Holt (DE) 1988-1992 (5) 29.5 10. Larry Roberts (DE) 1986-1993 (8) 28.0 Fred Dean (DE) 1981-1985 (5) 28.0 12. Tim Harris (LB) 1991-1995 (4) 26.0 13. Kevin Fagan (DE) 1987-1993 (7) 25.5 14. Dennis Brown (DE) 1990-1996 (7) 24.5 15. Justin Smith (DT) 2008-* (4) 23.5 16. Michael Carter (NT) 1984-1992 (9) 22.5 17. Parys Haralson (LB) 2006-* (6) 21.5 Julian Peterson (LB) 2000-2005 (6) 21.5 19. Keena Turner (LB) 1980-1990 (11) 19.5 20. John Engelberger (DE) 2000-2004 (5) 17.5

MOST SACKS IN SINGLE SEASON Player Year Sacks 1. Fred Dean 1983 17.5 2. Tim Harris 1992 17.0 3. Charles Haley 1990 16.0 4. Chris Doleman 1998 15.0 Dana Stubblefield 1997 15.0 6. Dwaine Board 1983 13.0 7. Andre Carter 2002 12.5 Roy Barker 1996 12.5 9. Chris Doleman 1997 12.0 Charles Haley 1986 12.0 Roy Barker 1998 12.0

Note: Includes figures since 1982, when sacks first became an official statistic

MOST SACKS IN SINGLE GAME Player Game Sacks 1. Fred Dean vs. NO (11/13/83) 6.0 2. Roy Barker at StL (10/25/98) 4.0 Chris Doleman at NO (10/11/98) 4.0 Dana Stubblefield at Phi. (11/10/97) 4.0 Pierce Holt vs. NYG (11/27/89) 4.0 Dwaine Board at LA Raiders (9/22/85) 4.0

Led Conference

ALL-TIME REGULAR SEASON PUNTING

BEST PUNTING AVERAGE IN SINGLE SEASON Player Year Punts Yards Avg Net Lg In20 Blk 1. Andy Lee 2008 66 3,155 47.8 39.0 82 13 1 2. Andy Lee 2009 99 4,711 47.6 41.0 64 30 0 3. Andy Lee 2007 105 4,968 47.3 41.0 74 42 0 4. Andy Lee 2010 91 4,203 46.2 38.2 64 34 0 5. Tommy Davis 1965 54 2,471 45.8 NA 65 NA 0 6. Tommy Davis 1959 59 2,694 45.7 NA 71 NA 0 7. Tommy Davis 1962 48 2,188 45.6 NA 82 NA 0 8. Tommy Davis 1964 79 3,599 45.6 NA 68 NA 0 9. Tommy Davis 1961 50 2,269 45.4 NA 67 NA 0 10. Tommy Davis 1963 73 3,311 45.4 NA 64 NA 2

ALL-TIME LEADING PUNTERS Player Years Punts Yards Avg Net Lg In20 Blk 1. Andy Lee 2004-* (8) 663 30,049 45.3 38.5 82 185 2 2. Tommy Davis 1959-1969 (11) 511 22,833 44.7 NA 82 NA 2 3. Frankie Albert 1950-1952 (3) 139 5,830 41.9 NA 70 NA 1 4. Tommy Thompson 1995-1997 (3) 208 8,711 41.9 35.6 65 55 3 5. Tom Wittum 1973-1977 (5) 380 15,494 40.8 NA 68 NA 9 6. Jim Miller 1980-1982 (3) 214 8,686 40.6 31.7 80 36 1 7. Jason Baker 2001-2002 (2) 111 4,501 40.5 34.1 64 33 0 8. Max Runager 1984-1988 (5) 281 11,394 40.5 33.8 62 36 1 9. Klaus Wilmsmeyer 1992-1994 (3) 145 5,871 40.5 35.0 61 48 0 10. Chad Stanley 1999-2000 (2) 138 5,464 39.6 31.5 70 35 3 *minimum 100 punts

MOST PUNTS, Career Player Punts 1. Andy Lee ..........................................663 2. Tommy Davis .....................................511 3. Tom Wittum .......................................380 4. Max Runager .....................................281 5. Steve Spurrier ....................................230

MOST PUNTS INSIDE 20, Career Player IN20 1. Andy Lee ..........................................185 2. Max Runager .......................................84 3. Tommy Thompson ...............................55 4. Barry Helton .........................................50 5. Klaus Wilmsmeyer ...............................48 *inside-the-20 became official stat in 1976

MOST PUNTS, Season Player Punts 1. Andy Lee (2005) ...............................107 2. Andy Lee (2007) ...............................105 3. Andy Lee (2009) .................................99 4. Andy Lee (2004) .................................96 Mike Connell (1978) .............................96

MOST PUNTS INSIDE 20, Season Player IN20 1. Andy Lee (2007) .................................42 2. Andy Lee (2010) .................................34 3. Andy Lee (2009) .................................30 Max Runager (1985) ............................30 5. Andy Lee (2004) ..................................25 *inside-the-20 became official stat in 1976

Led NFL Led Conference

MOST PUNTS IN SINGLE GAME Player Game Punts1. Tom Wittum vs. LA Rams (11/21/76) 11 2. Andy Lee vs. Sea. (9/30/07) 10 Jim Miller vs. Atl. (11/8/81) 10 Jim Miller vs. LA Rams (10/25/81) 10 Mike Connell at Atl. (11/5/78) 10 Mike Connell vs. Cin. (10/1/78) 10 Tom Wittum at Atl. (11/6/77) 10 Tom Wittum vs. Atl. (10/23/76) 10 Tommy Davis at Det. (10/6/63) 10

BEST PUNTING AVERAGE IN SINGLE GAME Player Game Avg 1. Andy Lee vs. Sea. (9/11/11) 59.6 2. Andy Lee at Pit. (9/23/07) 57.2 3. Andy Lee vs. Dal. (9/18/11) 55.3 4. Klaus Wilmsmeyer vs. Det. (10/9/94) 55.0 5. Andy Lee vs. StL (12/21/08) 54.8 6. Andy Lee vs. Sea. (9/30/07) 54.3 7. Tommy Davis vs. Chi. (11/19/61) 54.3 8. Tommy Davis vs. LA Rams (10/18/64) 54.2 *minimum 4 punts

INDIVIDUAL RECORDS

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RECORDS

SAN FRANCISCO 49ERS

ALL-TIME REGULAR SEASON PUNT RETURNS

BEST PUNT RETURN AVERAGE IN SINGLE SEASON Player Year PR FC Yards Avg Lg TD 1. Jimmy Williams 2002 20 8 336 16.8 89t 1 2. Hugh McElhenny 1952 20 NA 284 14.2 94t 1 3. Ted Ginn Jr. 2010 24 18 321 13.4 78t 1 4. Joe Arenas 1951 21 NA 272 13.0 51 0 5. John Taylor 1988 44 7 556 12.6 95t 2 6. Dana McLemore 1987 21 7 265 12.6 83t 1 7. Dexter Carter 1993 34 20 411 12.1 72t 1 8. Bruce Taylor 1970 43 10 516 12.0 76 0 9. John Taylor 1989 36 20 417 11.6 37 0 10. Dana McLemore 1984 45 11 521 11.6 79t 1 *minimum 20 returns

ALL-TIME LEADERS IN PUNT RETURNS (BY AVERAGE) Player Years PR FC Yards Avg Lg TD

1. Manfred Moore 1974-1975 (2) 21 0 309 14.7 88t 1 2. Ted Ginn Jr. 2010-* (2) 36 21 477 13.3 78t 2 3. Jim Cason 1950-1952, ‘54 (4) 24 NA 288 12.0 33 0 4. Allen Rossum 2008-2009 (2) 27 8 307 11.4 45 0 5. Iheanyi Uwaezuoke 1996-1998 (3) 34 14 373 11.0 36 0 6. Dana McLemore 1982-1987 (6) 142 38 1,531 10.8 93t 4 7. Jimmy Williams 2001-2004 (4) 55 18 576 10.5 89t 1 8. Dexter Carter 1990-1996 (7) 117 56 1,213 10.4 78t 2 9. John Taylor 1987-1995 (9) 149 55 1,517 10.2 95t 2 10. Bruce Taylor 1970-1977 (8) 142 38 1,323 9.3 76 0

*minimum 20 returns

MOST PUNT RETURNS, Career Player PR 1. John Taylor ........................................149 2. Dana McLemore ................................142 Bruce Taylor .......................................142 4. Joe Arenas .........................................124 5. Kermit Alexander ...............................120 6. Dexter Carter .....................................117 7. Freddie Solomon ................................106 8. Ralph McGill ......................................105 Abe Woodson .....................................105 10. Hugh McElhenny ..................................99

MOST PUNT RETURN YARDS, Career Player Yards 1. Dana McLemore .............................1,531 2. John Taylor .....................................1,517 3. Bruce Taylor ....................................1,323 4. Dexter Carter ..................................1,213 5. Ralph McGill ......................................964 6. Abe Woodson .....................................949 7. Freddie Solomon ................................804 8. Kermit Alexander ...............................782 9. Joe Arenas .........................................774 10. Don Griffin .........................................667

MOST PUNT RETURN TDs, Career Player TD 1. Dana McLemore ....................................4 2. Ted Ginn Jr. .........................................2 Dexter Carter .........................................2 John Taylor ............................................2 Freddie Solomon ....................................2 Kermit Alexander ...................................2 Abe Woodson .........................................2

MOST PUNT RETURNS, Season Player PR 1. R.W. McQuarters (1998) .......................47 2. Dana McLemore (1984) .......................45 3. Michael Lewis (2007) ...........................44 John Taylor (1988) ...............................44 5. Bruce Taylor (1970) ..............................43 6. Dexter Carter (1996) ............................38 Don Griffin (1986) ................................38 Dana McLemore (1985) .......................38 9. Dexter Carter (1996) ............................36 John Taylor (1989) ...............................36

MOST PUNT RETURN TDs, Season Player TD 1. John Taylor (1988) .................................2 Freddie Solomon (1980) .........................2

MOST PUNT RETURN YARDS IN SINGLE GAME Player Game Yards 1. Tony Leonard vs. NO (10/17/76) 141 2. Bruce Taylor at Hou. (11/15/70) 133 3. Dexter Carter vs. Min. (10/3/93) 131 4. Dexter Carter vs. Min. (12/18/95) 126 5. Dana McLemore vs. LA Rams (1/2/83) 125

MOST PUNT RETURNS IN SINGLE GAME Player Game Returns

1. Tony Leonard vs. NO (10/17/76) 9 Ralph McGill at Atl. (10/29/72) 9 3. Michael Lewis vs. StL (11/18/07) 7 Dana McLemore at NO (11/25/84) 7 Tony Leonard at Atl. (11/6/77) 7 Tony Leonard vs. LA Rams (11/21/76) 7 Ralph McGill at Phi. (11/30/75) 7 Ralph McGill vs. Atl. (10/12/75) 7

BEST PUNT RETURN AVERAGE IN SINGLE GAME Player Game Avg 1. Ted Ginn Jr. at StL (12/26/10) 32.3 2. Dexter Carter vs. Min. (12/18/95) 31.5 3. Dana McLemore vs. LA Rams (1/2/83) 31.3 4. Abe Woodson at GB (10/21/62) 30.3 5. John Taylor vs. Was. (11/21/88) 28.3 6. Chuck Levy at Phi. (11/10/97) 27.3 7. Dexter Carter vs. Min. (10/3/93) 26.2 8. Dana McLemore at NYG (10/8/84) 25.8 9. Bruce Taylor vs. NYG (12/21/75) 25.7 10. Freddie Solomon vs. TB (10/26/80) 25.0 *minimum of 3 punt returns

TOP SINGLE-GAME PUNT RETURN PERFORMANCES

Led NFL Led Conference

INDIVIDUAL RECORDS

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RECORDS

SAN FRANCISCO 49ERS

ALL-TIME REGULAR SEASON KICKOFF RETURNS

BEST KICKOFF RETURN AVERAGE IN SINGLE SEASON Player Year KR Yards Avg Lg TD 1. Joe Arenas 1953 16 551 34.4 82 0 2. Abe Woodson 1963 29 935 32.2 103t 3 3. Abe Woodson 1962 37 1,157 31.3 79 0 4. Lenny Lyles 1960 17 526 30.9 97t 1 5. Joe Arenas 1956 27 801 29.7 96 1 6. Abe Woodson 1960 17 498 29.3 64 0 7. Abe Woodson 1961 27 782 29.0 98t 1 8. Vic Washington 1972 27 771 28.6 98t 1 9. Abe Woodson 1964 32 880 27.5 70 0 10. Joe Arenas 1957 24 657 27.4 64 0 *minimum 1.25 ret/game

ALL-TIME LEADERS IN KICKOFF RETURNS (BY AVERAGE) Player Years KR Yards Avg Lg TD

1. Abe Woodson 1958-1964 (7) 166 4,873 29.4 105t 5 2. Joe Arenas 1951-1957 (7) 139 3,798 27.3 96 1 3. Allen Rossum 2008-2009 (2) 54 1,411 26.1 104t 1 4. Lenny Lyles 1959-1960 (2) 42 1,091 26.0 97t 1 5. Vic Washington 1971-1973 (3) 84 2,178 25.9 98t 1 6. Mike Holmes 1974-1975 (2) 27 671 24.9 57 0 7. J.D. Smith 1956-1964 (9) 36 882 24.5 39 0 8. Amos Lawrence 1981-1982 (2) 26 627 24.1 92t 1 9. James Owens 1979-1980 (2) 72 1,728 24.0 101t 2 10. Kermit Alexander 1963-1969 (7) 137 3,271 23.9 56 0

*minimum 25 returns

MOST KICKOFF RETURNS, Career Player KR 1. Dexter Carter .....................................217 2. Maurice Hicks ....................................185 3. Abe Woodson .....................................166 4. Joe Arenas .........................................139 5. Kermit Alexander ...............................137 6. Vic Washington ....................................84 7. Carl Monroe .........................................76 8. James Owens ......................................72 9. Paul Hofer ............................................68 Doug Cunningham ...............................68

MOST KICKOFF RETURN YARDS, Career Player Yards 1. Abe Woodson ..................................4,873 2. Dexter Carter ..................................4,707 3. Maurice Hicks .................................4,242 4. Joe Arenas ......................................3,798 5. Kermit Alexander ............................3,271 6. Vic Washington ...............................2,178 7. James Owens .................................1,728 8. Carl Monroe ....................................1,660 9. Doug Cunningham ..........................1,613 10. Hugh McElhenny .............................1,494

MOST KICKOFF RETURN TDs, Career Player TD 1. Abe Woodson .........................................5 2. Dexter Carter .........................................2 James Owens ........................................2 Dave Williams ........................................2 5. (9 times) Last: Allen Rossum ..................1

MOST KICKOFF RETURNS, Season Player KR 1. Maurice Hicks (2007) ...........................63 2. Maurice Hicks (2006) ...........................57 3. Vinny Sutherland (2001) .......................50 4. Dexter Carter (1994) ............................48 5. Ted Ginn Jr. (2010) .............................47 Allen Rossum (2008) ............................47 7. Dexter Carter (1996) ............................41 Dexter Carter (1990) ............................41 James Owens (1979) ...........................41

MOST KICKOFF RETURN TDs, Season Player TD 1. Abe Woodson (1963) ..............................3

MOST KICKOFF RETURN YARDS IN SINGLE GAME Player Game Yards

1. Abe Woodson vs. Det. (11/11/62) 210 2. Abe Woodson at Det. (9/23/62) 205 3. Lenny Lyles vs. Bal. (12/18/60) 202 4. Maurice Hicks vs. SD (10/15/06) 195 5. Allen Rossum vs. Phi. (10/12/08) 194

MOST KICKOFF RETURNS IN SINGLE GAME Player Game Returns

1. Maurice Hicks vs. SD (10/15/06) 9 Allen Rossum vs. Phi. (10/12/08) 9 3. Maurice Hicks at Was. (1023/05) 8 4. (15 times) Last: Ted Ginn Jr. at SD (12/16/10) 7

BEST KICKOFF RETURN AVERAGE IN SINGLE GAME Player Game Avg 1. Lenny Lyles vs. Bal. (12/18/60) 67.3 2. Doug Cunningham vs. NO (10/22/67) 53.0 3. Abe Woodson vs. Min. (9/29/63) 51.0 4. Allen Rossum vs. Arz. (11/10/08) 46.5 5. Amos Lawrence vs. LA Rams (11/22/81) 46.0 Abe Woodson vs. NYG (11/17/63) 46.0 *minimum of 3 kickoff returns

MOST KICKOFF RETURNS FOR A TOUCHDOWN IN SINGLE GAME Player Game TD 1. (21 times) Last: Ted Ginn Jr. vs. Sea. (9/11/11) 1

TOP SINGLE-GAME KICKOFF RETURN PERFORMANCES

Led NFL Led Conference

INDIVIDUAL RECORDS

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RECORDS

SAN FRANCISCO 49ERS

LONGEST RUNS FROM SCRIMMAGE 96t Garrison Hearst vs. NYJ ......................................................... 9/6/98 89t Hugh McElhenny at Dal. Texans ........................................... 10/5/52 86t Hugh McElhenny at GB ...................................................... 11/18/56 82t Hugh McElhenny vs. Dal. Texans ........................................ 10/26/52 80 Wilbur Jackson vs. NO ....................................................... 11/27/77 80t Frank Gore vs. Sea. ............................................................9/20/09 80t Delvin Williams vs. Was. ....................................................... 11/7/76 80t J.D. Smith vs. GB ................................................................. 12/7/58 79t Frank Gore vs. Sea. ............................................................9/20/09 78t Kevan Barlow vs. Pit. ......................................................... 11/17/03 78t Joe Perry vs. Dal. Texans ................................................... 10/26/52 78t Joe Perry vs. GB ................................................................ 12/10/50

LONGEST PASSES 97t Steve Young to John Taylor at Atl. .......................................... 11/3/91 96t Joe Montana to Jerry Rice at SD ......................................... 11/27/88 95t Joe Montana to John Taylor at LA Rams ............................. 12/11/89 93t Steve DeBerg to Freddie Solomon vs. Atl. ............................. 9/28/80 92t Joe Montana to John Taylor at LA Rams ............................. 12/11/89 89t Tim Rattay to Brandon Lloyd vs. Dal. ..................................... 9/25/05 85t Jim Plunkett to Delvin Williams vs. Was. ................................ 11/7/76 83t John Brodie to Dave Parks at LA Rams ............................... 10/18/64 82 Steve Young to Terry Kirby at Atl. ......................................... 10/19/97 81t Steve Young to Garrison Hearst vs. NO ................................ 11/22/98 81t Elvis Grbac to Jerry Rice at Dal. .......................................... 11/12/95 81t Steve Spurrier to Ted Kwalick vs. NO................................... 10/22/72 80t Steve Young to Jerry Rice at Det. ........................................ 12/19/93 80t Steve Young to Jerry Rice vs. Atl. ........................................ 10/18/92 80t Joe Montana to Jerry Rice vs. Was. ..................................... 11/21/88 80t Joe Montana to Dwight Clark at Hou. .................................. 10/21/84 80t John Brodie to Clifton McNeil at GB ...................................... 9/28/69 80t John Brodie to Dave Parks vs. Min. ..................................... 10/25/64 80t John Brodie to Jimmy Johnson at Chi. ................................ 10/14/62

LONGEST PUNTS 86 Larry Barnes vs. Chi. .............................................................9/29/57 82 Andy Lee vs. NE ................................................................. 10/5/08 82 Tommy Davis vs. Min. ...........................................................9/30/62 81 Andy Lee at TB ................................................................. 11/21/04 81 Tommy Davis at StL Cardinals ............................................11/25/62 80 Jim Miller at Den. .................................................................9/19/82 79 Tommy Davis at Chi. ...........................................................10/14/62 76 Larry Barnes vs. Bal. .............................................................12/8/57 75 Verl Lillywhite vs. Cle. ...........................................................9/30/57 74 Andy Lee at Bal. ................................................................. 10/7/07 74 Tommy Davis vs. Chi. ..........................................................10/30/51 72 Jon Kilgore vs. Chi. ...............................................................12/6/69 71 Andy Lee vs. Sea. ............................................................... 9/30/07 71 Andy Lee at StL .................................................................. 9/16/07 71 Tommy Davis vs. Chi. ..........................................................10/25/59

LONGEST PUNT RETURNS 95t John Taylor vs. Was. ............................................................11/21/88 94t Hugh McElhenny at Chi. ......................................................10/19/52 93t Dana McLemore vs. LA Rams ..................................................1/2/83 89t Jimmy Williams vs. Sea. ........................................................12/1/02 88t Manfred Moore vs. Atl. ........................................................11/24/74 85t Abe Woodson at GB ............................................................10/21/62 83t Dana McLemore vs. Chi. ......................................................12/14/87 80t Abe Woodson vs. Det. ............................................................11/5/61 79t Dana McLemore at NYG ........................................................10/8/84 78t Ted Ginn Jr. at StL ............................................................ 12/26/10 78t Dexter Carter vs. Min. ..........................................................12/18/95

LONGEST KICKOFF RETURNS 105t Abe Woodson at LA Rams .....................................................11/8/59 104t Allen Rossum at Arz. ...........................................................11/11/08 103t Abe Woodson vs. Min. ...........................................................9/15/63 102t Ted Ginn Jr. vs. Sea. ........................................................... 9/11/11 101t Terry Kirby vs. Car. ..............................................................11/16/97 101t James Owens at Det. ............................................................11/2/80 99t Abe Woodson at NYG ..........................................................11/17/63 98t Dexter Carter vs. NO .............................................................12/1/91 98t Vic Washington at Atl. .........................................................10/29/72 98t Abe Woodson at Det. .............................................................10/1/61 97t Vic Washington vs. Dal. .......................................................12/23/72 97t Lenny Lyles vs. Bal. ............................................................12/18/60 96t Dexter Carter at Was. ............................................................11/6/94 96 Joe Arenas vs. Bal...............................................................12/16/56

LONGEST INTERCEPTION RETURNS 97t Zack Bronson at Chi. ........................................................... 10/28/01 94t Alvin Randolph vs. Chi. ........................................................ 12/11/66 93t Deion Sanders at Atl. .......................................................... 10/16/94 90t Deion Sanders at SD .......................................................... 12/11/94 88t Tory Nixon at GB ................................................................. 10/26/86 86t Eric Davis vs. StL ................................................................ 11/26/95 83t Ronnie Lott at KC ................................................................ 12/26/82 82 Carlton Williamson vs. Sea. ................................................. 11/25/85 77t Tom Holmoe vs. StL Cardinals ............................................... 11/9/86 74t Deion Sanders vs. NO ........................................................... 9/25/94 73t Tim McDonald at Was. .......................................................... 11/6/94

LONGEST FUMBLE RETURNS 99t Don Griffin vs. Chi. ..............................................................12/23/91 96t Lee Woodall vs. Buf. ..............................................................12/3/95 80t Dwaine Carpenter at Chi. ....................................................10/31/04 80t Dwight Hicks at Was. ............................................................10/4/81 78t Derrick Johnson at Arz. (Mexico City) ....................................10/2/05 75t Clark Miller at Det. ..............................................................11/14/65 73t Skip Vanderbundt at Dal. .....................................................11/23/72 71 Gerard Williams vs. NO .........................................................9/23/79 71t Darnell Walker at Min. .........................................................10/24/99 66t Windlan Hall vs. Phi. .............................................................12/2/73 65t Keena Turner at Was. ............................................................12/1/85 63t Tommy Hart at StL Cardinals...............................................10/24/71

LONGEST FIELD GOALS 56 Joe Nedney at StL ...............................................................12/24/05 56 Mike Cofer at Atl. .................................................................10/14/90 55 David Akers vs. Dal. ........................................................... 9/18/11 54 Steve Mike-Mayer at LA Rams .............................................11/9/75 54 Bruce Gossett vs. NO ...........................................................10/21/73 53 David Akers at Cin. ............................................................. 9/25/11 53 Joe Nedney vs. Phi. .............................................................10/12/08 53 Ray Wersching at Det. .............................................................9/2/84 53 Tommy Davis at LA Rams ....................................................10/18/64

LONGEST RETURNS OF FIELD GOAL ATTEMPT 92t Bruce Taylor at NO ..............................................................12/13/70 74t Nate Clements at NYG .........................................................10/19/08 62t Johnny Jackson at Dal. .......................................................10/15/89 58t Bruce Taylor at NO ................................................................9/26/71 41t Donald Strickland vs. Phi. ....................................................10/12/08 38 Kermit Alexander vs. Phi. .....................................................11/20/66 30 Kermit Alexander at Phi. ........................................................9/20/64

49ERS LONGEST PLAYS

INDIVIDUAL RECORDS

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RECORDS

SAN FRANCISCO 49ERS

RUSHING CHAMPIONS 1953 Joe Perry ...............................................................................1,018 1954 Joe Perry ...............................................................................1,049

PASSING CHAMPIONS (Passer Rating) 1970 John Brodie .............................................................................93.9 1987 Joe Montana ..........................................................................102.1 1989 Joe Montana ..........................................................................112.4 1991 Steve Young ...........................................................................101.8 1992 Steve Young ...........................................................................107.0 1993 Steve Young ...........................................................................101.5 1994 Steve Young ...........................................................................112.8 1996 Steve Young .............................................................................97.2 1997 Steve Young ...........................................................................104.7

RECEIVING CHAMPIONS (Receptions) 1954 Billy Wilson .................................................................................60 1956 Billy Wilson .................................................................................60 1957 Billy Wilson .................................................................................52 1965 Dave Parks .................................................................................80 1968 Clifton McNeil .............................................................................71 1982 Dwight Clark ...............................................................................60 1985 Roger Craig .................................................................................92 1990 Jerry Rice .................................................................................100 1996 Jerry Rice .................................................................................108

RECEIVING CHAMPIONS (Touchdowns) 1953 Billy Wilson .................................................................................10 1972 Gene Washington ........................................................................12 1986 Jerry Rice ...................................................................................16 1987 Jerry Rice ...................................................................................22 1989 Jerry Rice ...................................................................................17 1990 Jerry Rice ...................................................................................13 1991 Jerry Rice ...................................................................................14 1993 Jerry Rice ...................................................................................16 1994 Jerry Rice ...................................................................................13 2001 Terrell Owens ..............................................................................16 2002 Terrell Owens ..............................................................................13 2009 Vernon Davis ...............................................................................13

PUNTING CHAMPIONS (Based on Average) 1962 Tommy Davis ...........................................................................45.6

SCORING 1952 Gordy Soltau ...............................................................................94 1953 Gordy Soltau .............................................................................114 1984 Ray Wersching ..........................................................................131 1987 Jerry Rice .................................................................................138 1989 Mike Cofer ................................................................................136

KICKOFF RETURNS (Based on Average) 1953 Joe Arenas ...............................................................................34.4 1959 Abe Woodson ...........................................................................29.4 1962 Abe Woodson ...........................................................................31.3 1963 Abe Woodson ...........................................................................32.2

FIELD GOALS 1960 Tommy Davis ..............................................................................19

PUNT RETURNS (Based on Yards) 1960 Abe Woodson ............................................................................174 1988 John Taylor ...............................................................................556

INTERCEPTIONS 1960 Dave Baker .................................................................................10 1986 Ronnie Lott .................................................................................10 2003 Tony Parrish ................................................................................9#*NFL Record #Shared NFL Lead

49ERS NFL LEADERS

Most Consecutive Seasons Leading NFL in Passer Rating 4 Steve Young (1991-94)

Most Consecutive 300-Yard Passing Games 6 Steve Young (1998); tied with StL Kurt Warner (2000) and Oak. Rich Gannon (2000)

Most Seasons Leading League in Passing Touchdowns 4 Steve Young (1992-94, ‘98); tied with Johnny Unitas (1957-60), Len Dawson (1962-63, 1965-66), Brett Favre (1995-97, 2003)

Most Receiving Yards Gained in a Season 1,848 Jerry Rice (1995)

Most Receiving Touchdowns in a Game 5 Jerry Rice vs. Atl. (10/14/90); tied with Chi. Bob Shaw vs. Bal. (10/2/50) and SD Kellen Winslow vs. Oak. (11/22/81)

Most Interceptions in a Game 4 Dave Baker vs. LA Rams (12/4/60); tied with 17 others

Most Interceptions Returned for a Touchdown in a Game 2 Ken Norton vs. StL (10/22/95); tied with 25 others

Most Interceptions Returned for Touchdowns as a Rookie 3 Ronnie Lott (1981); tied with Det. Lem Barney (1967)

Most Punts Downed Inside 20-Yard Line 42 Andy Lee (2008); tied with Arz. Ben Graham (2009) and NYJ Steve Weatherford (2010)

Most Seasons Leading League in Kickoff Return Avg. 3 Abe Woodson (1959, 1962-63)

NFL RECORDS HELD BY 49ERS

INDIVIDUAL RECORDS

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RECORDS

SAN FRANCISCO 49ERS

RUSHING ATTEMPTS NO ATT PLAYER YEAR 1. 191 Vic Washington 1971 2. 189 Ken Willard 1965 3. 174 Wilbur Jackson 1974 4. 171 Earl Cooper 1980 5. 129 John H. Johnson 1954 6. 127 Frank Gore 2005 7. 125 Kevan Barlow 2001 8. 109 Don Lisbon 1963 9. 98 Hugh McElhenny 1952 10. 96 Billy Kilmer 1961

RUSHING YARDS NO YDS PLAYER YEAR 1. 811 Vic Washington 1971 2. 778 Ken Willard 1965 3. 725 Roger Craig 1983 4. 720 Earl Cooper 1980 5. 705 Wilbur Jackson 1974 6. 684 Hugh McElhenny 1952 7. 681 John H. Johnson 1954 8. 608 Frank Gore 2005 9. 512 Kevan Barlow 2001 10. 509 Billy Kilmer 1961

RUSHING TOUCHDOWNS NO TD PLAYER YEAR 1. 10 Billy Kilmer 1961 2. 9 John H. Johnson 1954 3. 8 Roger Craig 1983 4t. 6 Hugh McElhenny 1952 6 William Floyd 1994 6t. 5 Ken Willard 1965 5 Dicky Moegle 1955 8t. 4 Kevan Barlow 2001 9t. 3 Frank Gore 2005 3 Earl Cooper 1980 3 Delvin Williams 1974 3 Vic Washington 1971 3 J.D. Smith 1958

RECEPTIONS NO REC PLAYER YEAR 1. 83 Earl Cooper 1980 2. 51 Gene Washington 1969 3. 49 Jerry Rice 1985 4t. 48 Michael Crabtree 2009 Roger Craig 1983 6. 40 Eric Johnson 2001 7. 38 J.J. Stokes 1995 8t. 36 Dave Parks 1964 36 Vic Washington 1971 10. 35 Terrell Owens 1996

RECEIVING YARDS NO YDS PLAYER YEAR 1. 927 Jerry Rice 1985 2. 711 Gene Washington 1969 3. 703 Dave Parks 1964 4. 625 Michael Crabtree 2009 5. 567 Earl Cooper 1980 6. 520 Terrell Owens 1996 7. 517 J.J. Stokes 1995 8. 402 Alex Loyd 1950 9. 395 R.C. Owens 1957 10. 367 Hugh McElhenny 1952

RECEIVING TOUCHDOWNS NO TD PLAYER YEAR 1. 8 Dave Parks 1964 2t. 5 Jimmy Thomas 1969 5 R.C. Owens 1957 4t. 4 Terrell Owens 1996 4 J.J. Stokes 1995 4 Roger Craig 1983 4 Earl Cooper 1980 4 Vic Washington 1971 4 Ken Willard 1965 4 Carroll Hardy 1955

PASSES COMPLETED NO COMP PLAYER YEAR 1. 88 Tom Owen 1974 2. 84 Alex Smith 2005 3. 38 Earl Morrall 1956 4t. 23 Steve Spurrier 1967 23 George Mira 1964 6t. 21 Jim Druckenmiller 1997 21 Scott Bull 1976 21 Dennis Morrison 1975 9. 19 Billy Kilmer 1961 10. 13 Joe Montana 1979

PASSING YARDS NO YDS PLAYER YEAR 1. 1,327 Tom Owen 1974 2. 875 Alex Smith 2005 3. 621 Earl Morrall 1956 4. 331 George Mira 1964 5. 286 Billy Kilmer 1961 6. 252 Scott Bull 1976 7. 239 Jim Druckenmiller 1997 8. 227 Dennis Morrison 1974 9. 211 Steve Spurrier 1967 10. 160 John Brodie 1957

PASSING TOUCHDOWNS NO TD PLAYER YEAR 1. 10 Tom Owen 1974 2t. 2 Scott Bull 1976 2 George Mira 1964 2 John Brodie 1957 5t. 1 Alex Smith 2005 1 Jim Druckenmiller 1997 1 Bill Musgrave 1991 1 Joe Montana 1979 1 Dennis Morrison 1974 1 Bob Waters 1960 1 Earl Morrall 1956

PASSES ATTEMPTED NO ATT PLAYER YEAR 1. 184 Tom Owen 1974 2. 165 Alex Smith 2005 3. 78 Earl Morrall 1956 4. 53 George Mira 1964 5. 52 Jim Druckenmiller 1997 6. 51 Dennis Morrison 1974 7. 50 Steve Spurrier 1967 8. 48 Scott Bull 1976 9. 34 Billy Kilmer 1961 10. 23 Joe Montana 1979

PASSES INTERCEPTED NO INT PLAYER YEAR 1. 15 Tom Owen 1974 2. 11 Alex Smith 2005 3. 7 Steve Spurrier 1967 4. 6 Earl Morrall 1956 5t. 5 Dennis Morrison 1974 5 George Mira 1964 7t. 4 Jim Druckenmiller 1997 4 Scott Bull 1976 4 Billy Kilmer 1961 10. 3 John Brodie 1957

PUNT RETURNS NO RET PLAYER YEAR 1. 47 R.W. McQuarters 1998 2. 38 Don Griffin 1986 3. 35 Anthony Leonard 1976 4t. 22 Brandon Williams 2006 22 Ralph McGill 1972 6t. 21 Vinny Sutherland 2001 21 Joe Arenas 1951 8. 20 Hugh McElhenny 1952

PUNT RETURN YARDS NO YDS PLAYER YEAR 1. 406 R.W. McQuarters 1998 2. 377 Don Griffin 1986 3. 293 Anthony Leonard 1976 4. 284 Hugh McElhenny 1952 5. 272 Joe Arenas 1951 6. 219 Ralph McGill 1972

PUNT RETURN TOUCHDOWNS NO TD PLAYER YEAR 1t. 1 Otis Amey 2005 1 R.W. McQuarters 1998 1 Don Griffin 1986 1 Dana McLemore 1982 1 Anthony Leonard 1976 1 Manfred Moore 1974 1 Hugh McElhenny 1952

PUNTING ATTEMPTS NO ATT PLAYER YEAR 1. 96 Andy Lee 2004 2. 79 Tom Wittum 1973 3. 78 Barry Helton 1988 4. 77 Jim Miller 1980 5. 73 Steve Spurrier 1967

PUNTING YARDS NO YDS PLAYER YEAR 1. 3,990 Andy Lee 2004 2. 3,455 Tom Wittum 1973 3. 3,152 Jim Miller 1980 4. 3,069 Barry Helton 1988 5. 2,813 Jason Baker 2001

PUNTING AVERAGE* NO AVG PLAYER YEAR 1. 45.7 Tommy Davis 1959 2. 43.7 Tom Wittum 1973 3. 41.6 Andy Lee 2004 4. 40.9 Jim Miller 1980 5. 40.7 Jason Baker 2001 *minimum of 20 punts

ROOKIE SEASON RECORDS

INDIVIDUAL RECORDS

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RECORDS

SAN FRANCISCO 49ERS

KICKOFF RETURNS NO RET PLAYER YEAR 1. 50 Vinny Sutherland 2001 2. 41 James Owens 1979 3. 41 Dexter Carter 1971 4. 33 Vic Washington 1990 5t. 26 Rasheed Marshall 2005 26 Anthony Leonard 1976 7. 21 Joe Arenas 1951

KICKOFF RETURN YARDS NO YDS PLAYER YEAR 1. 1,140 Vinny Sutherland 2001 2. 1,002 James Owens 1979 3. 858 Vic Washington 1971 4. 783 Dexter Carter 1990 5. 553 Anthony Leonard 1976 6. 542 Joe Arenas 1951

KICKOFF RETURN TOUCHDOWNS NO TD PLAYER YEAR 1t. 1 Amos Lawrence 1981 1 James Owens 1979 1 Dave Williams 1977

INTERCEPTIONS NO INT PLAYER YEAR 1. 7 Ronnie Lott 1981 2t. 6 Tim McKyer 1986 6 Dicky Moegle 1955 4t. 5 Kermit Alexander 1963 5 Jimmy Johnson 1961 5 Dave Baker 1959 5 Fred Bruney 1953 5 Jim Powers 1950 9t. 4 Carlton Williamson 1981 4 Ricky Churchman 1980 4 Rex Berry 1951

INTERCEPTION RETURN YARDS NO YDS PLAYER YEAR 1. 138 Alvin Randolph 1967 2. 117 Ronnie Lott 1981 3. 116 Jimmy Johnson 1961 4. 81 Todd Shell 1984 5. 77 Rex Berry 1951 6. 75 Dave Baker 1959 7. 72 Kermit Alexander 1963 8. 70 Bruce Taylor 1970 9. 59 Fred Bruney 1953

INTERCEPTION RETURN TOUCHDOWNS NO TD PLAYER YEAR 1. 3 Ronnie Lott 1981 2t. 1 Tim McKyer 1986 1 Bill Belk 1968 1 Alvin Randolph 1966

TOTAL TOUCHDOWNS NO TD PLAYER YEAR 1. 12 Roger Craig 1983 2t. 10 Billy Kilmer 1961 10 Hugh McElhenny 1952 4t. 9 Earl Cooper 1980 9 Ken Willard 1965 9 John H. Johnson 1954

TOTAL POINTS NO PTS PLAYER YEAR 1. 105 Doug Brien 1994 2. 103 Wade Richey 1997 3. 72 Roger Craig 1983

RUSHING YARDS NO YDS PLAYER DATE OPPONENT 1. 170 Hugh McElhenny 10/5/52 Dal. 2. 134 Amp Lee 12/13/92 Min. 3. 131 Billy Kilmer 10/8/61 LA Rams 4. 125 Vic Washington 11/28/71 NYJ 5t. 124 Dexter Carter 12/17/90 LA Rams 124 John H. Johnson 11/20/54 Pit. 7. 118 Jimmy Thomas 12/6/69 Chi. 8. 108 Frank Gore 1/1/06 Hou. 9. 100 Ricky Watters 9/6/92 NYG

RUSHING TOUCHDOWNS NO TD PLAYER DATE OPPONENT 1. 4 Billy Kilmer 10/15/61 Min. 2t. 3 Ricky Watters 10/18/92 Atl. 3 Roger Craig 12/4/83 TB

RECEPTIONS NO REC PLAYER DATE OPPONENT 1t. 10 Jerry Rice 12/9/85 LA Rams 10 Earl Cooper 9/7/80 NO 3. 9 Earl Cooper 9/14/80 StL 4t. 8 Earl Cooper 10/26/80 TB 8 Earl Cooper 10/19/80 LA Rams 8 Monty Stickles 9/25/60 NYG

RECEIVING YARDS NO YDS PLAYER DATE OPPONENT 1. 241 Jerry Rice 12/9/85 LA Rams 2. 146 Dave Parks 10/25/64 Min. 3. 131 Aaron Thomas 11/19/61 Chi. 4. 125 Clyde Conner 12/8/56 GB 5. 123 Monty Stickles 9/25/60 NYG

TOTAL TOUCHDOWNSNO TD PLAYER DATE OPPONENT 1. 4 Billy Kilmer 10/15/61 Min. 2. 3 Roger Craig 12/4/83 TB

PUNT RETURN YARDS NO YDS PLAYER DATE OPPONENT 1. 141 Anthony Leonard 10/17/76 NO 2. 133 Bruce Taylor 11/15/70 Houston 3. 125 Dana McLemore 1/2/83 LA Rams 4. 122 Hugh McElhenny 10/19/52 Chi. 5. 109 Ralph McGill 10/29/72 Atl.

KICKOFF RETURN YARDSNO YDS PLAYER DATE OPPONENT 1. 179 Vic Washington 11/14/71 NO 2. 163 Jamal Willis 10/15/95 Ind. 3. 159 Doug Cunningham 10/22/67 NO 4t. 147 Dana McLemore 12/2/82 LA Rams 147 Vinny Sutherland 11/18/01 Car.

INTERCEPTIONS NO INT PLAYER DATE OPPONENT 1t. 2 Tim McKyer 12/19/86 LA Rams 2 Ronnie Lott 10/11/81 Det. 2 Carlton Williamson 11/29/81 NYG 2 Ricky Churchman 11/30/80 NE 2 Jimmy Johnson 11/5/61 Det. 2 Dicky Moegle 10/23/55 Chi. 2 Rex Berry 10/21/51 Chi. 2 Jimmy Powers 10/22/50 Det.

ROOKIE SEASON RECORDS (CONT.)

ROOKIE SINGLE GAME RECORDS

INDIVIDUAL RECORDS

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RECORDS

SAN FRANCISCO 49ERS

LONG RUNS FROM SCRIMMAGE NO YDS PLAYER OPPONENT DATE 1. 89t Hugh McElhenny at Dal. 10/5/52 2. 82t Hugh McElhenny Dal. 10/26/52 3. 75t Jimmy Thomas Chi. 12/6/69 4. 74t Dexter Carter at Atl. 10/14/90 5. 72t Frank Gore at Was. 10/23/05

LONG RECEPTIONS NO YDS PLAYER OPPONENT DATE 1. 83t Dave Parks at LA Rams 10/18/64 2. 80t Dave Parks Min. 10/25/64 3. 79t Dave Parks at Min. 11/8/64 4. 78 Keith Henderson Atl. 11/12/89 78t Carroll Hardy Det. 10/30/55

LONG PUNTS NO YDS PLAYER OPPONENT DATE 1. 86 Larry Barnes Chi. 9/29/57 2. 81 Andy Lee TB 11/21/04 3. 71 Tommy Davis Chi. 10/25/59 4. 70 Chad Stanley at Jac. 9/12/99 5. 65 Jim Miller at NYJ 9/21/80

LONG PUNT RETURNS NO YDS PLAYER OPPONENT DATE 1. 94t Hugh McElhenny Chi. 10/16/52 2. 93t Dana McLemore LA Rams 1/2/83 3. 88t Manfred Moore Atl. 11/24/74 4. 76t Don Griffin Atl. 11/23/86 76 Bruce Taylor at Chi. 11/8/70

LONG KICKOFF RETURNS NO YDS PLAYER OPPONENT DATE 1. 94 Doug Cunningham NO 11/22/67 2. 92t Amos Lawrence LA Rams 11/22/81 3. 85t James Owens Den. 11/18/79 4. 80t Dave Williams at Min. 12/4/77 5. 74 Vic Washington NE 10/31/71

LONG RETUNS OF FIELD GOAL ATTEMPTS NO YDS PLAYER OPPONENT DATE 1. 92t Bruce Taylor at NO 12/13/70 2. 62t Johnny Jackson at Dal. 10/15/89

LONG COMPLETIONS NO YDS PLAYER OPPONENT DATE 1. 79t George Mira at Min. 11/8/64 2. 68t Tom Owen at Chi. 11/17/74 3. 53t Tom Owen Atl. 11/24/74 4. 50t Harry Sydney NO 11/15/87 50 Jim Powers at Det. 10/8/50

LONG INTERCEPTION RETURNS NO YDS PLAYER OPPONENT DATE 1. 94t Alvin Randolph Chi. 12/11/66 2. 70t Jason Webster Atl. 11/19/00 70 Bruce Taylor GB 11/1/70 4. 63 Jimmy Johnson GB 12/10/61 5. 53t Todd Shell at NO 11/25/84

LONG FIELD GOALS NO YDS PLAYER OPPONENT DATE 1. 54 Steve Mike-Mayer at LA Rams 11/9/75 2. 52 Jose Cortez StL 9/23/01 3. 49 Jose Cortez at NYJ 10/1/01 4. 48 Doug Brien at NO 11/28/94 5. 47 Doug Brien at LA Rams 9/18/94

LONG FUMBLE RETURNS NO YDS PLAYER OPPONENT DATE 1. 75t Derrick Johnson at Arz. 10/2/05 2. 34 Eric Davis at LA Rams 12/17/90 3. 18 Ed Pine at Min. 12/2/62 4. 17 Jamie Winborn at NO 1/6/02 5. 16 Jack Capple Min. 10/24/65

ROOKIE HIGHLIGHTS

100-YARD RUSHING GAMES Player Game(s) YDS (ATT-LG-TD) 1. Hugh McElhenny at Dal. Texans (10/5/52) 170 (7-89t-1) 2. Joe Perry vs. Bal. (10/29/50) 142 (16-49-0) 3. Joe Perry vs. GB (12/10/50) 135 (9-78t-1) 4. Amp Lee at Min. (12/13/92) 134 (23-43-1) 5. Billy Kilmer vs. LA Rams (10/8/61) 131 (19-26-2) 6. Vic Washington at NYJ (11/28/71) 125 (27-20-1) 7. Dexter Carter at LA Rams (12/17/90) 124 (13-74t-1) John Henry Johnson at Pit. (11/20/54) 124 (17-24t-1) 9. Jimmy Thomas vs. Chi. (12/6/69) 118 (6-75t-1) 10. Billy Kilmer at Min. (10/15/61) 115 (20-21-4) 11. Ken Willard at Min. (11/28/65) 113 (18-21-0) 12. Frank Gore vs. Hou. (1/1/06) 108 (25-28-0) Joe Arenas vs. GB (12/9/51) 108 (12-14-2) 14. Billy Kilmer at Det. (10/1/61) 103 (16-31-2) Hugh McElhenny at Chi. (10/19/52) 103 (12-25t-2)

100-YARD RECEIVING GAMES Player Game(s) YDS (REC-TD) 1. Jerry Rice vs. LA Rams (12/9/85) 241 (10-1) 2. Dave Parks vs. Min. (10/25/64) 146 (5-1) 3. Aaron Thomas vs. Chi. (11/19/61) 131 (3-2) 4. Clyde Conner vs. GB (12/8/56) 125 (7-1) 5. Monty Stickles vs. NYG (9/25/60) 123 (8-0) 6. Carroll Hardy at GB (11/20/55) 122 (4-2) 7. Bernie Casey vs. GB (12/10/61) 118 (5-1) Hugh McElhenny at NYG (11/9/52) 118 (4-0) 9. Dave Parks at LA Rams (10/18/64) 112 (3-1) 10. Jerry Rice vs. Dal. (12/22/85) 111 (7-0) 11. Terrell Owens vs. Car. (12/8/96) 110 (5-1) 12. Alyn Beals vs. LA Rams (10/1/50) 106 (7-0) J.J. Stokes at Atl. (12/24/95) 106 (5-1) 14. Alex Loyd at Cle. (11/12/50) 102 (5-0) Don Lisbon vs. Dal. (11/10/63) 102 (5-2)

INDIVIDUAL RECORDS

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RECORDS

SAN FRANCISCO 49ERS

CAREER 100-YARD RUSHING GAMES NO PLAYER W-L-T 24 Frank Gore 17-7-0 20 Joe Perry 16-4-0 16 Garrison Hearst 15-1-0 14 Roger Craig 11-3-0 12 Hugh McElhenny 8-4-0 12 J.D. Smith 7-5-0 10 Wendell Tyler 8-2-0 10 Delvin Williams 5-5-0 9 Ricky Watters 8-1-0 9 Ken Willard 5-3-1 6 Charlie Garner 3-3-0 5 Kevan Barlow 2-3-0 4 Billy Kilmer 4-0-0 3 Wilbur Jackson 2-1-0 3 Paul Hofer 0-3-0 2 Joe Cribbs 2-0-0 2 Larry Schreiber 2-0-0 2 Maurice Hicks 2-0-0 1 Brian Westbrook 1-0-0 1 Joe Arenas 1-0-0 1 Dexter Carter 1-0-0 1 Lenvil Elliott 1-0-0 1 Keith Henderson 1-0-0 1 John Henry Johnson 1-0-0 1 Terry Kirby 1-0-0 1 Amp Lee 1-0-0 1 Gary Lewis 1-0-0 1 Verl Lillywhite 1-0-0 1 Lawrence Phillips 1-0-0 1 C.R. Roberts 1-0-0 1 Jimmy Thomas 1-0-0 1 Vic Washington 1-0-0 1 O.J. Simpson 0-1-0 1 Steve Young 0-1-0 178 131-46-1

CAREER 300-YARD PASSING GAMES NO PLAYER W-L-T 35 Joe Montana 26-9-0 28 Steve Young 21-7-0 14 Jeff Garcia 5-9-0 6 John Brodie 4-1-1 5 Y.A. Tittle 4-1-0 5 Steve DeBerg 0-5-0 3 Elvis Grbac 2-1-0 2 Alex Smith 0-2-0 2 Steve Bono 2-0-0 2 Jeff Kemp 1-1-0 2 Steve Spurrier 0-2-0 1 Troy Smith 1-0-0 1 Tim Rattay 1-0-0 1 George Mira 1-0-0 1 Tom Owen 1-0-0 1 J.T. O’Sullivan 1-0-0 1 Shaun Hill 0-1-0 1 Mike Moroski 0-1-0 111 70-40-1

CAREER 100-YARD RECEIVING GAMES NO PLAYER W-L-T 66 Jerry Rice 46-20-0 25 Terrell Owens 15-10-0 17 Gene Washington 11-5-1 16 Dwight Clark 11-5-0 12 John Taylor 10-2-0 11 Freddie Solomon 5-6-0 11 Dave Parks 2-8-1 10 Gordy Soltau 5-5-0 9 Bernie Casey 3-4-2 9 Billy Wilson 3-4-2 8 R.C. Owens 5-2-1 6 Vernon Davis 1-5-0 5 Monty Stickles 3-2-0 4 Paul Hofer 2-2-0 4 J.J. Stokes 2-2-0 3 J.R. Boone 2-1-0 3 Dick Witcher 2-1-0 3 Clinton McNeil 1-2-0 3 Ted Kwalick 0-2-1 3 Garrison Hearst 2-1-0 3 Brandon Lloyd 0-3-0 2 Isaac Bruce 1-1-0 2 Antonio Bryant 1-1-0 2 Clyde Conner 2-0-0 2 Roger Craig 2-0-0 2 John David Crow 1-1-0 2 Eric Johnson 1-1-0 2 Hugh McElhenny 1-1-0 2 Michael Crabtree 0-2-0 1 Joshua Morgan 0-1-0 1 Frank Gore 0-1-0 1 Danny Abramowicz 1-0-0 1 Arnaz Battle 0-1-0 1 Alyn Beals 0-1-0 1 Jimmy Cason 0-1-0 1 Curtis Conway 0-1-0 1 Charlie Garner 0-1-0 1 Carroll Hardy 0-1-0 1 Jimmy Johnson 1-0-0 1 Brent Jones 1-0-0 1 Don Lisbon 1-0-0 1 Alex Loyd 0-1-0 1 Willie McGee 1-0-0 1 Jeff Moore 1-0-0 1 Renaldo Nehemiah 1-0-0 1 Joe Perry 0-1-0 1 Ted Popson 1-0-0 1 Tom Rathman 1-0-0 1 Mike Sherrard 0-1-0 1 J.D. Smith 1-0-0 1 Aaron Thomas 1-0-0 1 Ricky Watters 1-0-0 1 Cedrick Wilson 0-1-0 1 Mike Wilson 1-0-0 272 153-111-8

CAREER 100/300 YARD GAMES

INDIVIDUAL RECORDS

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RECORDS

SAN FRANCISCO 49ERS

356 - Troy Smith vs. StL 11/15/10 (17 of 28)309 - Alex Smith vs. Phi. 10/10/10 (25 of 39)310 - Alex Smith at Sea. 12/6/09 (27 of 45)303 - Shaun Hill at Dal. 11/23/08 (21 of 33)321 - J.T. O’Sullivan at Sea. 9/14/08 (20 of 32)417 - Tim Rattay vs. Arz. 10/10/04 (38 of 57)344 - Jeff Garcia at Cin. 12/14/03 (26 of 33)337 - Jeff Garcia at SD 11/17/02 (25 of 43)305 - Jeff Garcia at Car. 11/18/01 (34 of 54)332 - Jeff Garcia at Atl. 10/14/01 (27 of 41)335 - Jeff Garcia vs. Atl. 9/9/01 (26 of 40)402 - Jeff Garcia vs. Chi. 12/17/00 (36 of 44) 305 - Jeff Garcia vs. NO 12/10/00 (25 of 38)323 - Jeff Garcia at SD 12/3/00 (18 of 32)307 - Jeff Garcia at Car. 10/22/00 (25 of 39)336 - Jeff Garcia at GB 10/15/00 (27 of 42)336 - Jeff Garcia vs. Oak. 10/8/00 (28 of 41)373 - Jeff Garcia at Atl. 1/3/00 (26 of 34)303 - Jeff Garcia at Car. 12/18/99 (29 of 46)437 - Jeff Garcia at Cin. 12/5/99 (33 of 49)309 - Steve Young at NO 10/11/98 (21 of 40)342 - Steve Young at Atl. 11/15/98 (21 of 40)331 - Steve Young vs. Ind. 10/18/98 (33 of 51)329 - Steve Young at Buf. 10/4/98 (23 of 38)387 - Steve Young vs. Atl. 9/27/98 (28 of 39)303 - Steve Young at Was, 9/14/98 (21 of 32)363 - Steve Young vs. NYJ 9/6/98 (26 of 46)336 - Steve Young vs. Atl. 9/21/97 (17 of 24)393 - Steve Young vs. Car. 12/8/96 (27 of 41)316 - Steve Young at Atl. 12/24/95 (31 of 44)425 - Steve Young vs. Min. 12/18/95 (30 of 49)336 - Steve Young at Car. 12/10/95 (31 of 45)382 - Elvis Grbac at Mia. 11/20/95 (31 of 41)327 - Elvis Grbac at Car. 11/5/95 (26 of 37)305 - Elvis Grbac at Dal. 11/12/95 (20 of 30)348 - Steve Young at Det. 9/25/95 (27 of 44)331 - Steve Young vs. Atl. 9/10/95 (27 of 40)350 - Steve Young vs. Den. 12/17/94 (20 of 29)304 - Steve Young at SD 12/11/94 (25 of 32)325 - Steve Young vs. LA Rams 11/20/94 (30 of 44)355 - Steve Young at LA Rams 9/18/94 (31 of 39)308 - Steve Young vs. LA Raiders 9/5/94 (19 of 32)354 - Steve Young at Det. 12/19/93 (17 of 23)462 - Steve Young at LA Rams 11/28/93 (26 of 32)311 - Steve Young at TB 11/14/93 (23 of 29)342 - Steve Young vs. Phi. 11/29/92 (24 of 35)399 - Steve Young vs. Atl. 10/18/92 (18 of 28)449 - Steve Young vs. Buf, 9/13/92 (26 of 37)338 - Steve Young vs. Chi. 12/23/91 (21 of 32)347 - Steve Bono vs. NO 12/1/91 (27 of 41)306 - Steve Bono at LA Rams 11/25/91 (18 of 33)348 - Steve Young vs. Atl. 10/13/91 (22 of 38)348 - Steve Young vs. SD 9/8/91 (26 of 36)411 - Joe Montana at GB 11/4/90 (25 of 40)476 - Joe Montana at Atl. 10/14/90 (32 of 49)

318 - Joe Montana at Hou, 10/7/90 (20 of 28)398 - Joe Montana vs. Atl. 9/23/90 (24 of 36)390 - Joe Montana vs. Was, 9/16/90 (29 of 44)458 - Joe Montana at LA Rams 12/11/89 (30 of 42)325 - Joe Montana vs. GB 11/19/89 (30 of 42)302 - Joe Montana vs. NO 11/6/89 (22 of 31)428 - Joe Montana at Phi. 9/24/89 (25 of 34)302 - Joe Montana at Sea. 9/25/88 (20 of 29)343 - Joe Montana vs. Atl. 9/18/88 (32 of 48)308 - Joe Montana at GB 12/6/87 (26 of 35)342 - Joe Montana vs. Cle, 11/29/87 (23 of 31)304 - Joe Montana at TB 11/22/87 (29 of 45)334 - Joe Montana vs. StL Cardinals 10/18/87 (31 of 39)316 - Joe Montana at Pit, 9/13/87 (34 of 49)441 - Joe Montana at Was, 11/17/86 (33 of 60)332 - Mike Moroski at NO 11/2/86 (23 of 40)359 - Jeff Kemp vs. Min. 10/12/86 (23 of 42)332 - Jeff Kemp vs NO 9/21/86 (29 of 44)356 - Joe Montana at TB 9/7/86 (32 of 46)322 - Joe Montana vs. Dal. 12/22/85 (24 of 34)354 - Joe Montana at NO 12/15/85 (25 of 38)328 - Joe Montana vs. LA Rams 12/9/85 (26 of 36)306 - Joe Montana at LA Rams 10/27/85 (22 of 30)429 - Joe Montana at Atl. 10/6/85 (37 of 57)301 - Joe Montana vs. Cin. 11/4/84 (27 of 42)365 - Joe Montana at LA Rams 10/28/84 (21 of 31)353 - Joe Montana at Hou, 10/21/84 (25 of 35)381 - Joe Montana vs. Was, 9/10/84 (24 of 40)358 - Joe Montana at LA Rams 10/23/83 (25 of 39)316 - Joe Montana vs. LA Rams 10/9/83 (28 of 42)341 - Joe Montana at StL Cardinals 9/18/83 (20 of 32)356 - Joe Montana vs. SD 12/11/82 (31 of 46)305 - Joe Montana vs. LA Rams 12/2/82 (26 of 37)334 - Joe Montana vs. NO 11/28/82 (27 of 42)408 - Joe Montana at StL Cardinals 11/21/82 (26 of 39)336 - Joe Montana at Den. 9/19/82 (26 of 37)345 - Steve DeBerg at Atl. 9/28/80 (32 of 51)345 - Steve DeBerg vs. Atl. 12/16/79 (29 of 54)348 - Steve DeBerg vs. Chi. Bears 10/28/79 (26 of 41)306 - Steve DeBerg vs. Sea. 10/7/79 (31 of 40)321 - Steve DeBerg at Hou, 9/17/78 (20 to 32) 316 - Tom Owen at Chi. 11/17/74 (15 of 26)320 - Steve Spurrier vs. Min. 10/14/73 (31 of 48)315 - Steve Spurrier at GB 11/5/72 (19 of 37)317 - John Brodie at Chi. 11/8/70 (21 of 28)301 - John Brodie vs. GB 12/1/68 (24 of 39)324 - George Mira at Atl. 12/10/67 (20 of 34)328 - John Brodie vs. GB 12/10/61 (19 of 29)322 - John Brodie vs. Chi. 11/19/61 (11 of 19)316 - Y.A. Tittle at Det. 10/16/55 (15 of 31)371 - Y.A. Tittle vs. Bal. 12/13/53 (29 of 44)301 - Y.A. Tittle at LA Rams 11/8/53 (18 of 32)304 - Y.A. Tittle vs. Chi. 11/1/53 (25 of 43)341 - Y.A. Tittle at NYG 11/9/52 (16 of 29)

49ERS 300-YARD PASSERS

INDIVIDUAL RECORDS

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RECORDS

SAN FRANCISCO 49ERS

136 - Brian Westbrook at Arz. 11/29/10 (23 carries)118 - Frank Gore vs. Den. (London) 10/31/10 (29 carries)102 - Frank Gore at Car. 10/24/10 (19 carries)149 - Frank Gore vs. Oak. 10/17/10 (25 carries)112 - Frank Gore vs. NO 9/20/10 (20 carries)107 - Frank Gore at StL 1/3/10 (23 carries)107 - Frank Gore at Phi. 12/20/09 (16 carries)167 - Frank Gore vs. Arz. 12/14/09 (25 carries)104 - Frank Gore vs. Chi. 11/12/09 (25 carries)207 - Frank Gore vs. Sea. 9/20/09 (16 carries)106 - Frank Gore vs. StL 11/16/08 (18 carries)101 - Frank Gore vs. Phi. 10/12/08 (19 carries)130 - Frank Gore vs. Det. 9/21/08 (27 carries)138 - Frank Gore vs. Cin. 12/15/07 (29 carries)116 - Frank Gore at Arz. 11/25/07 (21 carries)153 - Frank Gore at Den. 12/31/06 (31 carries)130 - Frank Gore vs. GB 12/10/06 (18 carries)144 - Frank Gore at Sea. 12/14/06 (29 carries)134 - Frank Gore at StL 11/26/06 (21 carries)212 - Frank Gore vs. Sea. 11/19/06 (24 carries)159 - Frank Gore at Det. 11/12/06 (22 carries)111 - Frank Gore at Chi. 10/29/06 (12 carries)134 - Frank Gore vs. Oak. 10/8/06 (27 carries)127 - Frank Gore vs. StL 9/17/06 (29 carries)108 - Frank Gore vs. Hou 1/1/06 (25 carries)109 - Maurice Hicks at StL 12/24/05 (10 carries)101 - Kevan Barlow vs. TB 10/30/05 (26 carries)103 - Kevan Barlow at NE 1/2/05 (25 carries)139 - Maurice Hicks at Arz. 12/12/04 (34 carries)114 - Kevan Barlow at NO 9/19/04 (20 carries)154 - Kevan Barlow at Phi. 12/21/03 (30 carries)154 - Kevan Barlow vs. Arz. 12/7/03 (18 carries)117 - Garrison Hearst vs. TB 10/19/03 (20 carries) 124 - Garrison Hearst vs. Sea. 12/1/02 (31 carries)116 - Garrison Hearst vs. StL 10/6/02 (13 carries)103 - Garrison Hearst vs. Mia. 12/16/01 (26 carries)124 - Garrison Hearst vs. Buf 12/2/01 (25 carries)106 - Garrison Hearst at Ind. 11/25/01 (12 carries)145 - Garrison Hearst vs. NO 11/11/01 (17 carries)102 - Charlie Garner vs. KC 11/12/00 (25 carries)109 - Charlie Garner vs. Oak. 10/8/00 (24 carries)201 - Charlie Garner at Dal. 9/24/00 (36 carries)129 - Charlie Garner vs. Was 12/26/99 (16 carries)107 - Charlie Garner vs. Atl. 12/12/99 (26 carries)166 - Charlie Garner vs. Pit 11/7/99 (20 carries)102 - Lawrence Phillips at Arz. 9/27/99 (9 carries)107 - Garrison Hearst at NE 12/20/98 (27 carries)198 - Garrison Hearst vs. Det. 12/14/98 (24 carries)139 - Garrison Hearst at Car. 12/6/98 (20 carries)166 - Garrison Hearst vs. NYG 11/30/98 (20 carries)138 - Garrison Hearst at Was 9/14/98 (22 carries)187 - Garrison Hearst vs. NYJ 9/6/98 (20 carries)104 - Garrison Hearst vs. Dal. 11/2/97 (22 carries)105 - Garrison Hearst at Atl. 10/19/97 (18 carries)141 - Garrison Hearst at Car. 9/29/97 (28 carries)105 - Terry Kirby at Atl. 12/2/96 (12 carries)105 - Ricky Watters at NO 11/28/94 (26 carries)103 - Ricky Watters vs. TB 10/23/94 (14 carries)116 - Ricky Watters vs. NO 11/22/93 (16 carries)135 - Ricky Watters at NO 9/26/93 (25 carries)

112 - Ricky Watters vs. Atl. 9/19/93 (19 carries)134 - Amp Lee at Min. 12/13/92 (23 carries)163 - Ricky Watters at LA Rams 11/22/92 (26 carries)115 - Ricky Watters vs. NO 11/15/92 (21 carries)104 - Ricky Watters at NE 10/11/92 (19 carries)100 - Ricky Watters at NYG 9/6/92 (13 carries)104 - Keith Henderson vs. Det. 10/20/91 (20 carries)102 - Steve Young vs. NO 12/23/90 (8 carries)124 - Dexter Carter at LA Rams 12/17/90 (13 carries)105 - Roger Craig vs. Buf. 12/17/89 (25 carries)109 - Roger Craig vs. Atl. 11/12/89 (17 carries)131 - Roger Craig at Ind. 9/10/89 (24 carries)115 - Roger Craig vs. NO 12/11/88 (22 carries)103 - Roger Craig at Atl. 12/4/88 (23 carries)162 - Roger Craig at Phx. 11/6/88 (22 carries)190 - Roger Craig at LA Rams 10/16/88 (22 carries)143 - Roger Craig vs. Den. 10/9/88 (26 carries)107 - Roger Craig at Sea. 9/25/88 (21 carries)110 - Roger Craig at NYG 9/11/88 (18 carries)104 - Roger Craig at LA Rams 11/1/87 (23 carries)107 - Joe Cribbs at NE 12/14/86 (23 carries)101 - Roger Craig vs. Atl. 11/23/86 (17 carries)105 - Joe Cribbs vs. StL 11/9/86 (21 carries)111 - Wendell Tyler vs. KC 11/17/85 (16 carries)117 - Roger Craig at Den. 11/11/85 (22 carries)107 - Wendell Tyler at Det. 10/20/85 (16 carries)107 - Roger Craig vs. Atl. 9/15/85 (11 carries)125 - Wendell Tyler at Min. 9/8/85 (21 carries)117 - Wendell Tyler at NO 11/25/84 (15 carries)108 - Wendell Tyler at Hou. 10/21/84 (23 carries)101 - Wendell Tyler at NYG 10/8/84 (14 carries)113 - Wendell Tyler at Phi. 9/23/84 (21 carries)102 - Wendell Tyler vs. TB 12/4/83 (16 carries)108 - Wendell Tyler at StL 9/18/83 (18 carries)107 - Wendell Tyler at Min. 9/8/83 (19 carries)125 - Lenvil Elliot vs. NO 12/7/80 (20 carries)147 - Paul Hofer at NO 11/11/79 (17 carries)102 - Paul Hofer at Oak. 11/4/79 (12 carries)104 - Paul Hofer vs. LA Rams 11/19/78 (20 carries)108 - O.J. Simpson vs. Chi. 9/10/78 (27 carries)107 - Delvin Williams at Min. 12/4/77 (27 carries)190 - Wilbur Jackson vs. NO 11/27/77 (16 carries)123 - Wilbur Jackson at NO 11/13/77 (22 carries)110 - Delvin Williams at NO 11/13/77 (25 carries)106 - Delvin Williams vs. Det. 10/23/77 (27 carries)104 - Delvin Williams at SD 12/5/76 (26 carries)156 - Wilbur Jackson vs. Min. 11/29/76 (30 carries)153 - Delvin Williams vs. Min. 11/29/76 (20 carries)180 - Delvin Williams vs. Was. 11/7/76 (23 carries)194 - Delvin Williams at StL Cardinals 10/31/76 (34 carries)121 - Delvin Williams at GB 9/12/76 (25 carries)104 - Delvin Williams at Atl. 12/14/75 (10 carries)106 - Delvin Williams vs. Chi. 11/16/75 (12 carries)129 - Ken Willard at NYJ 11/28/71 (15 carries)125 - Vic Washington at NYJ 11/2871 (27 carries)106 - Larry Schreiber vs. Atl. 11/24/74 (20 carries)117 - Ken Willard vs. Phi. 12/2/73 (15 carries)104 - Larry Schreiber vs. Bal. 11/12/72 (17 carries)105 - Ken Willard vs. Cle. 9/27/70 (22 carries)

49ERS 100-YARD RUSHERS SINCE 1970

INDIVIDUAL RECORDS

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RECORDS

SAN FRANCISCO 49ERS

114 - Vernon Davis at Cin. 9/25/11 (8 catches)122 - Michael Crabtree at StL 12/26/10 (6 catches)106 - Josh Morgan at SD 12/16/10 (7 catches)126 - Vernon Davis at GB 12/5/10 (4 catches)105 - Michael Crabtree vs. Phi. 10/10/10 (9 catches)104 - Vernon Davis vs. Phi. 10/10/10 (5 catches)102 - Frank Gore at KC 9/26/10 (9 catches)111 - Vernon Davis at Sea. 12/6/09 (6 catches)108 - Vernon Davis at GB 11/22/09 (6 catches)102 - Vernon Davis vs. Ten. 11/8/09 (10 catches)125 - Isaac Bruce at Dal. 11/23/08 (8 catches)106 - Frank Gore vs. StL 11/16/08 (18 carries)120 - Arnaz Battle at NO 9/28/08 (7 catches)153 - Isaac Bruce at Sea. 9/14/08 (4 catches)131 - Antonio Bryant vs. StL 9/17/06 (4 catches)114 - Antonio Bryant at Arz. 9/10/06 (4 catches)119 - Brandon Lloyd vs. Sea. 11/20//05 (7 catches) 102 - Brandon Lloyd at Arz. 10/2/05 (7 catches)142 - Brandon Lloyd vs. Dal. 9/25/05 (4 catches)101 - Cedrick Wilson vs. Car. 11/14/04 (5 catches)162 - Eric Johnson vs. Arz. 10/10/04 (13 catches)113 - Eric Johnson vs. StL 10/3/04 (10 catches)112 - Curtis Conway at NO 9/19/04 (8 catches)127 - Terrell Owens at Cin. 12/14/03 (8 catches)155 - Terrell Owens vs. Pit. 11/17/03 (8 catches)152 - Terrell Owens vs. TB 10/19/03 (6 catches)112 - Terrell Owens vs. Chi. 9/7/03 (7 catches)123 - Terrell Owens at Dal. 12/8/02 (12 catches)166 - Terrell Owens vs. Phi. 11/25/02 (13 catches)171 - Terrell Owens at SD 11/17/02 (7 catches)191 - Terrell Owens at Oak. 11/3/02 (12 catches)132 - Terrell Owens vs. Arz. 10/27/02 (8 catches)116 - Terrell Owens at NO 1/6/02 (2 catches)103 - Terrell Owens at Ind. 11/25/01 (6 catches)100 - Terrell Owens vs. NO 11/11/01 (8 catches)125 - Terrell Owens vs. Det. 11/4/01 (9 catches)105 - Garrison Hearst at Chi. 10/28/01 (4 catches)183 - Terrell Owens at Atl. 10/14/01 (9 catches)118 - Terrell Owens vs. Car. 10/7/01 (8 catches)283 - Terrell Owens vs. Chi. 12/17/00 (20 catches)129 - Terrell Owens vs. NO 12/10/00 (6 catches)115 - Terrell Owens vs. StL 10/29/00 (8 catches)112 - Charlie Garner at Car. 10/22/00 (7 catches)176 - Terrell Owens vs. Oak. 10/8/00 (12 catches)108 - Terrell Owens at StL 9/17/00 (6 catches)143 - Jerry Rice at Atl. 1/3/00 (6 catches)130 - J.J. Stokes at Atl. 1/3/00 (5 catches)157 - Jerry Rice at Cin. 12/5/99 (9 catches)145 - Terrell Owens at Cin. 12/5/99 (9 catches)120 - Terrell Owens vs. StL 11/21/99 (6 catches)115 - Jerry Rice at NE 12/20/98 (5 catches)140 - Terrell Owens vs. NYG 11/30/98 (5 catches)103 - Garrison Hearst vs. NO 11/22/98 (4 catches)169 - Jerry Rice at Atl. 11/15/98 (10 catches)120 - Terrell Owens at StL. 10/25/98 (5 catches)110 - J.J. Stokes vs. Ind. 10/18/98 (9 catches)162 - Jerry Rice vs. Atl. 9/27/98 (8 catches)105 - Garrison Hearst vs. Atl. 9/27/98 (4 catches)

111 - J.J. Stokes vs. NYJ 9/6/98 (7 catches)129 - Jerry Rice vs. Car. 12/8/96 (10 catches)110 - Terrell Owens vs. Car. 12/8/96 (5 catches)116 - Ted Popson vs. Cin. 10/20/96 (8 catches)108 - Jerry Rice at StL 10/6/96 (7 catches)127 - Jerry Rice at Car. 9/22/96 (10 catches)153 - Jerry Rice at Atl. 12/24/95 (12 catches)106 - J.J. Stokes at Atl. 12/24/95 (5 catches)289 - Jerry Rice vs. Min. 12/18/95 (14 catches)121 - Jerry Rice at Car. 12/10/95 (6 catches)149 - Jerry Rice at Mia. 11/20/95 (8 catches)161 - Jerry Rice at Dal. 11/12/95 (5 catches)111 - Jerry Rice vs. Car. 11/5/95 (8 catches)108 - Jerry Rice vs. NO 10/29/95 (8 catches)181 - Jerry Rice at Det. 9/25/95 (11 catches)167 - Jerry Rice vs. Atl. 9/10/95 (11 catches)121 - Jerry Rice vs. Den. 12/17/94 (9 catches)106 - Rickey Watters vs. Den. 12/17/94 (4 catches)144 - Jerry Rice at SD 12/11/94 (12 catches)165 - Jerry Rice vs. LA Rams 11/20/94 (16 catches)147 - Jerry Rice at LA Rams 9/18/94 (11 catches)103 - John Taylor at LA Rams 9/18/94 (7 catches)169 - Jerry Rice vs. LA Raiders 9/5/94 (7 catches)132 - Jerry Rice at Det. 12/19/93 (4 catches)115 - John Taylor at Det. 12/19/93 (4 catches)105 - Jerry Rice at Atl. 12/11/93 (6 catches)150 - John Taylor at LA Rams 11/28/93 (6 catches)166 - Jerry Rice at LA Rams 11/28/93 (8 catches)172 - Jerry Rice at TB 11/14/93 (8 catches)155 - Jerry Rice vs. Phx. 10/24/93 (9 catches)118 - Jerry Rice vs. TB 12/19/92 (7 catches)133 - Jerry Rice vs. Phi. 11/29/92 (8 catches)183 - Jerry Rice vs. Atl. 10/18/92 (7 catches)159 - Mike Sherrard vs. Buf. 9/13/92 (6 catches)112 - John Taylor vs. Buf. 9/13/92 (5 catches)125 - Jerry Rice vs. Chi. 12/23/91 (5 catches)113 - John Taylor at Sea. 12/8/91 (7 catches)154 - Jerry Rice vs. NO 12/1/91 (9 catches)121 - John Taylor at LA Rams 11/25/91 (6 catches)127 - John Taylor at Atl. 11/3/91 (2 catches)138 - Jerry Rice vs. Atl. 10/13/91 (7 catches)150 - Jerry Rice vs. SD 9/8/91 (9 catches)118 - Jerry Rice at Min. 12/30/90 (9 catches)104 - Jerry Rice at LA Rams 12/17/90 (5 catches)101 - Jerry Rice at Cin. 12/9/90 (8 catches)147 - Jerry Rice at Dal. 11/11/90 (12 catches)187 - Jerry Rice at GB 11/4/90 (6 catches)132 - John Taylor at Hou. 10/7/90 (4 catches)225 - Jerry Rice at Atl. 10/24/90 (13 catches)171 - Jerry Rice vs. Atl. 9/23/90 (8 catches)125 - Brent Jones vs. Atl. 9/23/90 (5 catches)160 - John Taylor vs. Was. 9/16/90 (8 catches)101 - Jerry Rice vs. Chi. 12/24/89 (4 catches)286 - John Taylor at LA Rams 12/11/89 (11 catches)162 - John Taylor at Atl. 12/3/89 (5 catches)117 - Jerry Rice vs. NYG 11/27/89 (7 catches)106 - Jerry Rice vs. GB 11/19/89 (9 catches)112 - Jerry Rice vs. NE 10/22/89 (6 catches)

49ERS 100-YARD RECEIVERS SINCE 1970

INDIVIDUAL RECORDS

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RECORDS

SAN FRANCISCO 49ERS

103 - Tom Rathman vs. NE 10/22/89 (11 catches)149 - Jerry Rice at NO 10/8/89 (7 catches)136 - John Taylor at Phi. 9/24/89 (6 catches)164 - Jerry Rice at Phi. 9/24/89 (6 catches)122 - Jerry Rice at TB 9/17/89 (8 catches)163 - Jerry Rice at Ind. 9/10/89 (6 catches)171 - Jerry Rice at SD 11/27/88 (6 catches)105 - Jerry Rice vs. Was. 11/21/88 (3 catches)163 - Jerry Rice at Sea. 9/25/88 (6 catches)163 - Jerry Rice vs. Atl. 9/18/88 (8 catches)109 - Jerry Rice at NYG 9/11/88 (4 catches)126 - Jerry Rice vs. Cle. 11/29/87 (7 catches)103 - Jerry Rice at TB 11/22/87 7 catches)108 - Jerry Rice vs. NO 11/15/87 (4 catches)104 - Mike Wilson at Cin. 9/20/87 (7 catches)106 - Jerry Rice at Pit. 9/13/87 (8 catches)204 - Jerry Rice at Was. 11/17/86 (12 catches)156 - Jerry Rice vs. StL 11/9/86 (4 catches)144 - Jerry Rice vs. Min. 10/12/86 (7 catches)172 - Jerry Rice vs. Ind. 10/5/86 (6 catches)120 - Jerry Rice vs. NO 9/21/86 (7 catches)100 - Dwight Clark vs. NO 9/21/86 (7 catches)157 - Jerry Rice at LA Rams 9/14/86 (6 catches)100 - Dwight Clark at TB 9/7/86 (7 catches)111 - Jerry Rice vs. Dal. 12/22/85 (7 catches)241 - Jerry Rice vs. LA Rams 12/9/85 (10 catches)132 - Roger Craig at LA Rams 10/27/85 (6 catches)167 - Roger Craig at Atl. 10/6/85 (12 catches)125 - Renaldo Nehemiah vs. Min. 12/8/84 (6 catches)105 - Freddie Solomon at Cle. 11/11/84 (5 catches)124 - Dwight Clark vs. Cin. 11/4/84 (7 catches)127 - Dwight Clark at Hou. 10/21/84 (5 catches)105 - Dwight Clark vs. Was. 9/10/84 (5 catches)103 - Freddie Solomon vs. Atl. 9/25/83 (6 catches)121 - Freddie Solomon at StL 9/18/83 (3 catches)104 - Dwight Clark at KC 12/26/82 (4 catches)101 - Dwight Clark vs. Atl. 12/19/82 (8 catches)135 - Dwight Clark vs. SD 12/11/82 (12 catches)102 - Jeff Moore at LA Rams 12/2/82 (8 catches)103 - Dwight Clark at StL 11/21/82 (6 catches)127 - Dwight Clark at Den. 9/19/82 (9 catches)

109 - Freddie Solomon at Den. 9/19/82 (4 catches)106 - Dwight Clark vs. LA Raiders 9/12/82 (6 catches)124 - Freddie Solomon at LA Rams 11/22/81 (5 catches)128 - Dwight Clark vs. Atl. 11/8/81 (7 catches)109 - Dwight Clark vs. LA Rams 10/25/81 (8 catches)135 - Dwight Clark vs. Dal. 10/11/81 (4 catches)113 - Freddie Solomon vs. Chi. 9/13/81 (5 catches)155 - Dwight Clark vs. NO 12/7/80 (6 catches)104 - Freddie Solomon at GB 11/9/80 (5 catches)148 - Dwight Clark at Dal. 10/12/80 (8 catches)132 - Freddie Solomon vs. Atl. 9/28/80 (5 catches)135 - Paul Hofer vs. StL 9/14/80 (9 catches)114 - Paul Hofer at NO 9/7/80 (7 catches)130 - Paul Hofer at Atl. 12/16/79 (9 catches)104 - Paul Hofer at NYG 10/14/79 (9 catches)144 - Freddie Solomon vs. NO 9/23/79 (8 catches)107 - Freddie Solomon at Min. 9/2/79 (4 catches)110 - Freddie Solomon at Hou. 9/17/78 (3 catches)130 - Gene Washington vs. Dal. 12/12/77 (5 catches)112 - Gene Washington vs. Det. 10/23/77 (4 catches)104 - Willie McGee at Sea. 9/26/76 (5 catches)101 - Gene Washington at Phi. 11/30/75 (6 catches)144 - Gene Washington at LA Rams 11/9/75 (5 catches)121 - Gene Washington at Dal. 11/10/74 (7 catches)133 - Ted Kwalick at Det. 11/4/73 (8 catches)101 - Dan Abramowicz vs. NO 10/21/73 (4 catches)118 - Gene Washington vs. Min. 10/14/73 (8 catches)119 - Gene Washington vs. Min. 12/16/72 (4 catches)114 - Gene Washington at Chi. 11/18/72 (4 catches)164 - Gene Washington at GB 11/5/72 (6 catches)102 - Ted Kwalick vs. NO 10/22/72 (2 catches)126 - Ted Kwalick vs. NYG 10/15/72 (6 catches)140 - Gene Washington vs. SD 9/17/72 (8 catches)160 - Gene Washington vs. NE 10/31/71 (5 catches)112 - Gene Washington at Phi. 10/3/71 (3 catches)131 - Gene Washington at NO 12/13/70 (5 catches)115 - Gene Washington vs. Atl. 12/6/70 (3 catches)119 - Gene Washington at Chi. 11/8/70 (5 catches)126 - Gene Washington vs. NO 10/18/70 (4 catches)145 - Gene Washington at LA Rams 10/11/70 (7 catches)

49ERS 100-YARD RECEIVERS SINCE 1970 (CONT.)

INDIVIDUAL RECORDS

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RECORDS

SAN FRANCISCO 49ERS

ALL-TIME INTERCEPTION RETURNS FOR TDSDATE PLAYER YARDS OPPONENT1/2/11 Brown, Tarell 62t vs. Arz.12/12/10 Goldson, Dashon 39 vs. Sea.10/24/10 McDonald, Ray 31 at Car.10/4/09 Willis, Patrick 23 vs. StL9/14/08 Willis, Patrick 86 at Sea.12/31/06 Harris, Walt 28 at Den.1/1/06 Adams, Mike 40 vs. Hou.11/27/05 Spencer, Shawntae 61 at Ten.9/25/05 Parrish, Tony 34 vs. Dal.9/7/03 Plummer, Ahmed 68 vs. Chi.10/6/02 Webster, Jason 37 vs. StL11/25/01 Bronson, Zack 48 at Ind.10/28/01 Bronson, Zack 97 at Chi.12/3/00 Montgomery, Monty 46 at SD11/19/00 Webster, Jason 70 vs. Atl.10/17/99 Walker, Darnell 27 vs. Car. 9/19/99 Shulters, Lance 64 at NO1/3/98 Norton, Ken Jr. 23 vs. Min.12/15/97 Hanks, Merton 55 vs. Den.9/29/96 Pope, Marquez 55 vs. Atl.11/26/95 Davis, Eric 86 vs. StL10/22/95 Norton, Ken Jr. 35 at StL10/22/95 Norton, Ken Jr. 21 at StL9/10/95 McDonald, Tim 13 vs. Atl.9/3/95 McDonald, Tim 52 at NO1/15/95 Davis, Eric 44 vs. Dal.12/11/94 Sanders, Deion 90 at SD11/6/94 McDonald, Tim 73 at Was.10/16/94 Sanders, Deion 93 at Atl.9/25/94 Sanders, Deion 74 vs. NO11/22/93 Hanks, Merton 67 vs. NO10/31/93 McGruder, Michael 31 vs. LA Rams10/3/93 Davis, Eric 41 vs. Min.9/6/92 Johnson, John 56 at NYG1/12/91 Carter, Michael 61 vs. Was.*1/6/90 Lott, Ronnie 58 vs. Min.*1/9/88 Fuller, Jeff 48 vs. Min.*11/9/86 Holmoe, Tom 78 vs. StL Cardinals10/26/86 Nixon, Tory 88 at GB 10/26/86 Lott, Ronnie 55 at GB10/5/86 McKyer, Tim 21 vs. Ind.9/28/86 Holmoe, Tom 66* at Mia.10/13/85 Williamson, Carlton 43 vs. Chi.12/2/84 McLemore, Dana 54 at Atl.11/25/84 Shell, Todd 53 at NO12/19/83 Wright, Eric 48 vs. Dal.10/16/83 Hicks, Dwight 62 at NO9/18/83 Collier, Tim 32 at StL Cardinals9/18/83 Hicks, Dwight 40 at StL Cardinals9/8/83 Wright, Eric 60 at Min.12/26/82 Lott, Ronnie 83 at KC1/3/82 Lott, Ronnie 20 vs. NYG*11/22/81 Lott, Ronnie 25 at LA Rams10/11/81 Lott, Ronnie 41 vs. Dal.10/4/81 Hicks, Dwight 32 at Was.9/27/81 Lott, Ronnie 26 vs. NO10/1/78 Leonard, Anthony 30 vs. Cin.10/19/75 Allen, Nate 37 vs. NO12/15/74 Wilcox, Dave 21 vs. NO11/23/72 Vanderbundt, Skip 21 at Dal.10/29/72 Vanderbundt, Skip 37 at Atl.10/1/72 Simpson, Mike 32 at NO12/20/70 Johnson, Jimmy 36 at Oak. 9/27/70 Phillips, Mel 35 vs. Cle.10/26/69 Woitt, Johnny 57 at Bal.11/24/68 Belk, Bill 6 at Pit.11/24/68 Alexander, Kermit 66 at Pit.9/15/68 Hindman, Stan 25 at Bal. Colts12/11/66 Randolph, Alvin 94 vs. Chi.11/24/66 Dowdle, Mike 27 at Det.10/16/66 Johnson, Jimmy 35 at Atl.

DATE PLAYER YARDS OPPONENT11/22/59 Mertens, Jerry 30 at Bal. Colts11/30/58 Hazeltine, Matt 13 at Bal. Colts10/27/57 Herchman, Bill 54 vs. Chi.12/8/56 Moegle, Dick 32 vs. GB10/16/55 Berry, Rex 44 at Det.10/17/54 Brown, Hardy 41 at Chi.9/26/54 Berry, Rex 34 vs. Was.12/6/53 Berry, Rex 29 vs. GB10/12/52 Burke, Don 35 at Det.10/14/51 Cason, Jim 65 at Pit.11/5/50 Livingston, Howie 35 at LA Rams

ALL-TIME FUMBLE RETURNS FOR TDSDATE PLAYER YARDS OPPONENT10/4/09 McDonald, Ray 11 vs. StL10/4/09 McKillop, Scott end zone vs. StL11/25/07 Banta-Cain, Tully end zone at Arz.10/8/06 Oliver, Melvin 12 vs. Oak.10/2/05 Johnson, Derrick 78 at Arz. (Mex. City)10/2/05 Smith, Derek end zone at Arz. (Mex. City)11/28/04 Smith, Derek 46 vs. Mia.10/31/04 Carpenter, Dwaine 80 at Chi.10/26/03 Harris, Kwame 1 at Arz.10/28/01 Peterson, Julian 26 at Chi.10/24/99 Walker, Darnell 71 at Min.10/17/99 McMillan, Mark 41 vs. Car.10/10/99 Young, Bryant end zone at StL12/15/97 Greene, Kevin 40 vs. Den.11/10/97 Hanks, Merton 38 at Phi.11/17/96 Doleman, Chris end zone vs. Bal.12/24/95 Rice, Jerry end zone at Atl.12/3/95 Woodall, Lee 96 vs. Buffalo11/12/95 Hanks, Merton 38 at Dal.10/16/94 McDonald, Tim 49 at Atl.11/14/93 Tamm, Ralph 1 at TB10/17/93 Davis, Eric 47 at Dal.11/1/92 Sherrard, Mike 38 at Phx. Cardinals12/22/91 Griffin, Don 99 vs. Chi.11/12/89 Haley, Charles 3 vs. Atl.12/27/87 Taylor, John 26 vs. LA Rams12/1/85 Turner, Keena 65 at Was.10/20/85 McIntyre, Guy end zone at Det.9/22/85 McColl, Milt 28 at LA Raiders12/2/84 Johnson, Gary 33 at Atl.10/23/83 Board, Dwaine end zone at LA Rams10/4/81 Hicks, Dwight 80 at Was.10/3/76 Elam, Cleveland 31 vs. NYJ11/16/75 Hart, Tommy 10 vs. Chi.10/26/75 McGill, Ralph 14 at NE12/15/74 Belk, Bill 19 vs. NO12/2/73 Hall, Windlan 66 vs. Phi.11/23/72 Vanderbundt, Skip 73 at Dal.12/26/71 Hoskins, Bob end zone vs. Was.*10/31/71 Blue, Forrest 25 vs. NE10/24/71 Hart, Tommy 63 at StL Cardinals10/19/69 Lakes, Roland 2 vs. Atl.10/27/68 Witcher, Dick 12 at Det.10/15/67 Windsor, Bob 2 at Phi.12/11/66 Alexander, Kermit 14 vs. Chi.10/9/66 Hazeltine, Matt 22 vs. GB11/28/65 Kopay, Dave end zone at Min.11/14/65 Miller, Clark 75 at Det.11/14/65 Wilcox, Dave 8 at Det.10/24/65 Chapple, Jack 8 vs. Min.9/19/65 Krueger, Charlie 6 vs. Chi.10/14/62 Woodson, Abe 37 at Chi.10/18/59 Hazeltine, Matt 40 at Det.

* - Postseason

ALL-TIME RETURNS FOR TOUCHDOWNS

INDIVIDUAL RECORDS

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RECORDS

SAN FRANCISCO 49ERS

ALL-TIME BLOCKED FIELD GOALS RETURNED FOR TDS(1970-Present)

DATE PLAYER YARDS OPPONENT9/27/09 Clements, Nate 59 at Min.10/19/08 Clements, Nate 74 at NYG10/12/08 Strickland, Donald 41 vs. Phi.10/15/89 Jackson, Johnnie 62 at Dal.9/26/71 Taylor, Bruce 58 at NO12/13/70 Taylor, Bruce 92 at NO

ALL-TIME PUNT RETURNS FOR TDSDATE PLAYER YARDS OPPONENT9/11/11 Ginn, Ted 55 vs. Sea.12/26/10 Ginn, Ted 78 at StL9/11/05 Amey, Otis 75 vs. StL10/10/04 Battle, Arnaz 71 vs. Arz.12/1/02 Williams, Jimmy 89 vs. Sea.12/27/98 McQuarters, R.W. 72 vs. StL11/11/97 Levy, Chuck 73 at Phi.12/19/95 Carter, Dexter 78 vs. Min.10/3/93 Carter, Dexter 72 vs. Min.11/9/92 Hanks, Merton 48 at Atl.11/21/88 Taylor, John 95 vs. Was.10/2/88 Taylor, John 77 vs. Det.12/14/87 McLemore, Dana 83 vs. Chi.11/23/86 Griffin, Don 76 vs. Atl.10/8/84 McLemore, Dana 79 at NYG12/19/83 McLemore, Dana 56 vs. Dal.1/2/83 McLemore, Dana 93 vs. LA Rams12/7/80 Solomon, Freddie 57 vs. NO10/26/80 Solomon, Freddie 53 vs. TB10/17/76 Leonard, Anthony 60 vs. NO9/26/76 McGill, Ralph 50 at Sea.11/24/74 Moore, Manfred 88 vs. Atl.12/11/66 Alexander, Kermit 44 vs. Chi.11/15/64 Alexander, Kermit 70 vs. GB10/21/62 Woodson, Abe 85 at GB11/5/61 Woodson, Abe 80 vs. Det.12/16/56 Arenas, Joe 67 at Bal. Colts10/19/52 McElhenny, Hugh 94 at Chi.19.26/52 O’Donahue, Pat 23 vs. Dal.10/28/51 Nomellini, Leo 20 vs. LA Rams

ALL-TIME KICKOFF RETURNS FOR TDSDATE PLAYER YARDS OPPONENT9/11/11 Ginn, Ted 102 vs. Sea.11/10/08 Rossum, Allen 104 at Arz.11/2/03 Wilson, Cedrick 95 vs. StL1/11/98 Levy, Chuck 95 vs. GB*11/16/97 Kirby, Terry 101 vs. Car.11/6/94 Carter, Dexter 96 at Was.12/1/91 Carter, Dexter 98 vs. NO12/20/87 Cribbs, Joe 92 vs. Atl.12/1/85 Monroe, Carl 95 at Was.11/22/81 Lawrence, Amos 92 at LA Rams11/2/80 Owens, James 101 at Det.11/18/79 Owens, James 85 vs. Den.11/19/78 Williams, Dave 89 vs. LA Rams12/4/77 Williams, Dave 80 at Min.12/23/72 Washington, Vic 97 vs. Dal.*10/29/72 Washington, Vic 98 at Atl.11/17/63 Woodson, Abe 99 at NYG9/29/63 Woodson, Abe 95 at Min.9/15/63 Woodson, Abe 103 vs. Min.10/1/61 Woodson, Abe 98 at Det.12/18/60 Lyles, Lenny 97 vs. Bal. Colts11/22/59 Woodson, Abe 105 at LA Rams11/4/56 Arenas, Joe 90 vs. Det.

ALL-TIME BLOCKED PUNTS RETURNED FOR TDS(1970-Present)

DATE PLAYER YARDS OPPONENT10/3/10 Taylor Mays 0 at Atl.9/25/77 Mike Baldassin 0 vs. Mia.9/21/75 Dave Washington 15 at Min.12/15/73 Windlan Hall 0 vs. Pit.

RUSHING YARDS PLAYER YEAR 1,695 Frank Gore 2006 1,570 Garrison Hearst 1998 1,502 Roger Craig 1988 1,262 Wendell Tyler 1984 1,229 Charlie Garner 1999 1,206 Garrison Hearst 2001 1,203 Delvin Williams 1976 1,142 Charlie Garner 2000 1,120 Frank Gore 2009 1,102 Frank Gore 2007 1,054 Roger Craig 1989 1,050 Roger Craig 1985 1,049 Joe Perry 1954 1,036 Frank Gore 2008 1,036 J.D. Smith 1959 1,024 Kevan Barlow 2003 1,019 Garrison Hearst 1997 1,018 Joe Perry 1953 1,013 Ricky Watters 1992

RECEIVING YARDS PLAYER YEAR *1,848 Jerry Rice 1995 1,570 Jerry Rice 1986 1,503 Jerry Rice 1993 1,502 Jerry Rice 1990 1,499 Jerry Rice 1994 1,483 Jerry Rice 1989 1,451 Terrell Owens 2000 1,412 Terrell Owens 2001 1,344 Dave Parks 1965 1,306 Jerry Rice 1988 1,300 Terrell Owens 2002 1,254 Jerry Rice 1996 1,206 Jerry Rice 1991 1,201 Jerry Rice 1992 1,157 Jerry Rice 1998 1,105 Dwight Clark 1981 1,102 Terrell Owens 2003 1,100 Gene Washington 1970 1,097 Terrell Owens 1998 1,078 Jerry Rice 1987 1,077 John Taylor 1989 1,032 R.C. Owens 1961 1,016 Roger Craig 1985 1,011 John Taylor 1991

PASSING YARDS PLAYER YEAR 4,278 Jeff Garcia 2000 4,170 Steve Young 1998 4,023 Steve Young 1993 3,969 Steve Young 1994 3,944 Joe Montana 1990 3,910 Joe Montana 1983 3,653 Joe Montana 1985 3,652 Steve DeBerg 1979 3,630 Joe Montana 1984 3,565 Joe Montana 1981 3,538 Jeff Garcia 2001 3,521 Joe Montana 1989 3,465 Steve Young 1992 3,344 Jeff Garcia 2002 3,200 Steve Young 1995 3,112 John Brodie 1965 3,054 Joe Montana 1987 3,029 Steve Young 1997 3,020 John Brodie 1968

ALL-TIME 1,000/3,000 YARD SEASONS* - Postseason

INDIVIDUAL RECORDS

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RECORDS

SAN FRANCISCO 49ERS

RUSHING (BASED ON YARDS) YEAR PLAYER ATT YDS AVG LG TD RANK 1946 Standlee, Norm 134 683 5.1 — 2 — 1947 Strzykalski, John 143 906 6.3 50 5 — 1948 Strzykalski, John 141 915 6.5 — 4 — 1949 Perry, Joe 115 783 6.8 59 8 — 1950 Perry, Joe 124 647 5.2 78t 5 5 1951 Perry, Joe 136 677 5.0 58t 3 5 1952 Perry, Joe 158 725 4.6 78t 8 3 1953 Perry, Joe 192 1,018 5.3 51t 10 1 1954 Perry, Joe 173 1,049 6.1 58 8 1 1955 Perry, Joe 156 701 4.5 42 2 5 1956 McElhenny, Hugh 185 916 5.0 86t 8 3 1957 McElhenny, Hugh 102 478 4.7 61 1 15 1958 Perry, Joe 125 758 6.1 73t 4 3 1959 Smith, J.D. 207 1,036 5.0 73t 10 2 1960 Smith, J.D. 174 780 4.5 41 5 5 1961 Smith, J.D. 167 823 4.9 33 8 5 1962 Smith, J.D. 258 907 3.5 28 6 6 1963 Smith, J.D. 162 560 3.5 52t 5 13 1964 Kopay, Dave 75 271 3.6 18 0 32 1965 Willard, Ken 189 778 4.1 32 5 4 1966 Willard, Ken 191 763 4.0 49 5 5 1967 Willard, Ken 169 510 3.0 20 5 17 1968 Willard, Ken 227 967 4.3 69t 7 2 1969 Willard, Ken 171 557 3.3 18 7 13 1970 Willard, Ken 236 789 3.3 20 7 9/6 1971 Willard, Ken 216 855 4.0 49 4 15/9 1972 Washington, Vic 141 468 3.3 33 3 42/20 1973 Washington, Vic 151 534 3.5 25 8 32/15 1974 Jackson, Wilbur 174 705 4.1 64 0 17/8 1975 Williams, Delvin 117 631 5.4 52 3 21/13 1976 Williams, Delvin 248 1,203 4.9 80t 7 3/2 1977 Williams, Delvin 268 931 3.5 40 7 10/5 1978 Simpson, O.J. 161 593 3.7 34 1 39/19 1979 Hofer, Paul 123 615 5.0 47 7 33/17 1980 Cooper, Earl 171 720 4.2 47 5 23/12 1981 Patton, Ricky 152 543 3.6 28 4 35/16 1982 Moore, Jeff 85 281 3.3 19 4 37/16 1983 Tyler, Wendell 176 856 4.9 39 4 19/10 1984 Tyler, Wendell 246 1,262 5.1 40 7 5/5 1985 Craig, Roger 214 1,050 4.9 62t 9 13/8 1986 Craig, Roger 204 830 4.1 25 7 13/8 1987 Craig, Roger 215 815 3.8 25 3 8/5 1988 Craig, Roger 310 1,502 4.8 46t 9 3/2 1989 Craig, Roger 271 1,054 3.9 27 6 10/5 1990 Carter, Dexter 114 460 4.0 74t 1 39/19 1991 Henderson, Keith 137 561 4.1 25 2 30/11 1992 Watters, Ricky 206 1,013 4.9 43 9 13/8 1993 Watters, Ricky 208 950 4.6 39 10 12/8 1994 Watters, Ricky 239 877 3.7 23 6 15/8 1995 Loville, Derek 218 723 3.3 27 10 24/13 1996 Kirby, Terry 134 559 4.2 31 3 33/15 1997 Hearst, Garrison 234 1,019 4.4 51 4 15/7 1998 Hearst, Garrison 310 1,570 5.1 96t 7 3/2 1999 Garner, Charlie 241 1,229 5.1 53 4 8/5 2000 Garner, Charlie 258 1,142 4.4 42 7 16/7 2001 Hearst, Garrison 252 1,206 4.8 43t 4 10/5 2002 Hearst, Garrison 215 972 4.5 40 8 21/9 2003 Barlow, Kevan 201 1,024 5.1 78t 6 17t/6t 2004 Barlow, Kevan 244 822 3.4 60 7 26/12 2005 Gore, Frank 127 608 4.8 72t 3 32/14 2006 Gore, Frank 312 1,695 5.4 72 8 3/1 2007 Gore, Frank 260 1,102 4.2 43t 5 13/5 2008 Gore, Frank 240 1,036 4.3 41t 6 13t/9 2009 Gore, Frank 229 1,120 4.9 80t 10 11t/5 2010 Gore, Frank 203 853 4.2 64 3 21/8

PASSING (BASED ON RATING) YEAR PLAYER ATT CMP PCT YDS TD INT RTG RANK 1946 Albert, Frank 197 104 52.9 1,404 14 14 — — 1947 Albert, Frank 242 128 52.9 1,692 18 15 — — 1948 Albert, Frank 264 154 58.3 1,990 29 10 — — 1949 Albert, Frank 260 129 49.6 1,862 27 16 — — 1950 Albert, Frank 306 155 50.7 1,767 14 23 52.6 8 1951 Albert, Frank 166 90 50.7 1,116 5 10 60.2 8 1952 Tittle, Y.A. 208 106 51.0 1,407 11 12 66.4 5 1953 Tittle, Y.A. 259 149 57.5 2,121 20 16 84.0 3 1954 Tittle, Y.A. 295 170 57.6 2,205 9 9 78.4 7 1955 Tittle, Y.A. 287 147 51.2 2,185 17 28 56.5 4 1956 Tittle, Y.A. 218 124 56.9 1,641 7 12 68.5 7 1957 Tittle, Y.A. 279 176 63.1 2,157 13 15 79.6 6 1958 Tittle, Y.A. 208 120 57.7 1,467 9 15 59.1 3 1959 Tittle, Y.A. 199 102 51.3 1,331 10 15 58.2 4 1960 Brodie, John 207 103 49.8 1,111 6 9 57.8 5 1961 Brodie, John 283 155 54.8 2,588 14 12 84.5 4 1962 Brodie, John 304 175 57.6 2,272 18 16 78.1 6 1963 McHan, Lamar 195 83 42.3 1,243 8 11 54.3 15 1964 Brodie, John 392 193 49.2 2,498 14 16 64.3 12 1965 Brodie, John 391 242 61.9 3,112 30 16 95.2 3 1966 Brodie, John 427 232 54.3 2,810 16 22 65.5 8 1967 Brodie, John 349 168 48.1 2,013 11 16 57.5 11 1968 Brodie, John 404 234 57.9 3,020 22 21 77.9 3 1969 Brodie, John 347 194 55.9 2,405 16 15 74.9 7 1970 Brodie, John 378 223 59.0 2,941 24 10 93.9 1/1 1971 Brodie, John 387 208 53.7 2,642 18 24 64.7 12/6 1972 Spurrier, Steve 269 147 54.6 1,983 18 16 76.2 8/5 1973 Spurrier, Steve 157 83 52.9 882 4 7 59.2 21/13 1974 Owen, Tom 184 88 47.8 1,327 10 15 54.8 25/11 1975 Snead, Norm 189 108 57.1 1,337 9 10 77.2 11/5 1976 Plunkett, Jim 243 126 51.9 1,592 13 16 62.8 17/8 1977 Plunkett, Jim 248 128 51.6 1,693 9 14 62.1 17/8 1978 DeBerg, Steve 302 137 45.4 1,570 8 22 39.8 28/17 1979 DeBerg, Steve 578 347 60.0 3,652 17 21 70.3 13/5 1980 Montana, Joe 273 176 64.5 1,795 15 9 87.8 5/4 1981 Montana, Joe 488 311 63.7 3,565 19 12 88.2 4/1 1982 Montana, Joe 346 213 61.6 2,613 17 11 87.9 5/3 1983 Montana, Joe 515 332 64.5 3,910 26 12 94.6 5/3 1984 Montana, Joe 432 279 64.6 3,630 28 10 102.9 2/1 1985 Montana, Joe 494 303 61.3 3,653 27 13 91.3 3/1 1986 Montana, Joe 307 191 62.2 2,236 8 9 80.7 9/2 1987 Montana, Joe 398 266 66.8 3,054 31 13 102.1 1/1 1988 Montana, Joe 397 238 59.9 2,981 18 10 87.9 6/3 1989 Montana, Joe 386 271 70.2 3,521 26 8 112.4 1/1 1990 Montana, Joe 520 321 61.7 3,944 26 16 89.0 7/3 1991 Young, Steve 279 180 64.5 2,517 17 8 101.8 1/1 1992 Young, Steve 402 268 66.7 3,465 25 7 107.0 1/1 1993 Young, Steve 462 314 68.0 4,023 29 16 101.5 1/1 1994 Young, Steve 461 324 70.3 3,969 35 10 112.8 1/1 1995 Young, Steve 447 299 66.9 3,200 20 11 92.3 5/4 1996 Young, Steve 316 214 67.7 2,410 14 6 97.2 1/1 1997 Young, Steve 356 241 67.7 3,029 19 6 104.7 1/1 1998 Young, Steve 517 322 62.3 4,170 36 12 101.1 3/2 1999 Garcia, Jeff 375 225 60.0 2,544 11 11 77.9 17/10 2000 Garcia, Jeff 561 355 63.3 4,287 31 10 97.6 5/4 2001 Garcia, Jeff 504 316 62.7 3,538 32 12 94.8 3/2 2002 Garcia, Jeff 528 328 62.1 3,344 21 10 85.6 11t/4 2003 Garcia, Jeff 392 225 57.4 2,704 18 13 80.1 15/8 2004 Rattay, Tim 325 198 60.9 2,169 10 10 78.1 20/10 2005 Smith, Alex 165 84 50.9 875 1 11 40.8 NA 2006 Smith, Alex 442 257 58.1 2,890 16 16 74.8 22/11 2007 Smith, Alex 193 94 48.7 914 2 4 57.2 NA 2008 Hill, Shaun 288 181 62.8 2,046 13 8 87.5 12/7 2009 Smith, Alex 372 225 60.5 2,350 18 12 81.5 19/9 2010 Smith, Alex 342 204 59.6 2,370 14 10 82.1 21/9

49ERS YEARLY STATISTICAL LEADERS

INDIVIDUAL RECORDS

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RECORDS

SAN FRANCISCO 49ERS

RECEIVING (BASED ON CATCHES) YEAR PLAYER NO YDS AVG LG TD RANK 1946 Beals, Alyn 40 586 14.7 — 10 — 1947 Beals, Alyn 47 655 13.9 54 10 — 1948 Beals, Alyn 46 591 12.8 — 14 — 1949 Beals, Alyn 44 678 15.4 — 12 — 1950 Loyd, Alex 32 402 12.6 38 0 18 1951 Soltau, Gordy 59 826 14.0 48t 7 2 1952 Soltau, Gordy 55 774 14.1 49t 7 4 1953 Wilson, Billy 51 840 16.5 61t 10 6 1954 Wilson, Billy 60 830 13.8 43 5 1 1955 Wilson, Billy 53 831 15.7 72t 7 2 1956 Wilson, Billy 60 889 14.8 77t 5 1 1957 Wilson, Billy 52 757 14.6 40 6 1 1958 Conner, Clyde 49 512 10.4 26 5 5 1959 Wilson, Billy 44 540 12.3 57t 4 6 1960 Conner, Clyde 38 531 14.0 65t 2 1 1961 Owens, R.C. 55 1,032 18.8 54 5 7 1962 Casey, Bernie 53 819 15.5 48t 6 11 1963 Casey, Bernie 47 762 16.2 68t 7 14 1964 Casey, Bernie 58 808 13.9 63t 4 6 1965 Parks, Dave 80 1,344 16.8 53t 12 1 1966 Parks, Dave 66 974 14.8 65t 5 3 1967 Witcher, Dick 46 705 15.3 63t 3 17 1968 McNeil, Clifton 71 994 14.0 65t 7 1 1969 Washington, Gene 51 711 13.9 52 3 10 Cunningham, Doug, RB 51 484 9.5 58 0 11 1970 Washington, Gene 53 1,100 20.8 79t 12 4/3 1971 Kwalick, Ted 52 664 12.8 42t 5 4/2 1972 Washington, Gene 46 978 20.0 62t 12 13/7 1973 Kwalick, Ted 47 729 15.5 48 5 10/6 1974 Schreiber, Larry, RB 30 217 7.2 16 1 60/36 1975 Washington, Gene 44 735 16.7 68t 9 31/10 1976 Washington, Gene 33 457 13.8 55t 6 52/25 Jackson, Wilbur, RB 33 324 9.8 32 1 53/27 1977 Washington, Gene 32 638 19.9 47t 5 52/22 1978 Solomon, Freddie 31 458 14.8 58 2 83/42 1979 Hofer, Paul, RB 58 662 11.4 44 2 17/7 1980 Cooper, Earl, RB 83 567 6.8 66t 4 2/1 1981 Clark, Dwight 85 1,105 13.0 78t 4 2/1 1982 Clark, Dwight 60 913 15.2 51 5 1/1 1983 Clark, Dwight 70 840 12.0 46t 8 11/5 1984 Craig, Roger, RB 71 675 9.5 64t 3 11/6 1985 Craig, Roger, RB 92 1,016 11.0 73 6 1/1 1986 Rice, Jerry 86 1,570 18.3 66t 15 2/1 1987 Craig, Roger, RB 66 492 7.5 35t 1 3/2 1988 Craig, Roger, RB 76 534 7.0 22 1 7/5 1989 Rice, Jerry 82 1,483 18.1 68t 17 5/4 1990 Rice, Jerry 100 1,502 15.0 64t 13 1/1 1991 Rice, Jerry 80 1,206 15.1 73t 14 5/3 1992 Rice, Jerry 84 1,201 14.3 80t 10 5/3 1993 Rice, Jerry 98 1,503 15.3 80t 15 2/2 1994 Rice, Jerry 112 1,499 13.4 69t 13 2/1 1995 Rice, Jerry +122 *1,848 15.1 81t 15 2/2 1996 Rice, Jerry 108 1,254 11.6 39 8 1/1 1997 Owens, Terrell 60 936 15.6 56t 8 32t/13t 1998 Rice, Jerry 82 1,157 14.1 75t 9 7t/3t 1999 Rice, Jerry 67 830 12.4 62 5 31t/19 2000 Owens, Terrell 97 1,451 15.0 69t 13 5/2 2001 Owens, Terrell 93 1,412 15.2 60t 16 9/4 2002 Owens, Terrell 100 1,300 13.0 76t 13 4t/2 2003 Owens, Terrell 80 1,102 13.8 75t 9 12/7 2004 Johnson, Eric, TE 82 825 10.1 25 2 35/14 2005 Lloyd, Brandon 48 733 15.3 89t 5 44/20 2006 Gore, Frank, RB 61 485 8.0 39 1 40t/21t 2007 Gore, Frank, RB 53 436 8.2 23t 1 54t/27t 2008 Bruce, Isaac 61 835 13.7 63 7 37/19 2009 Davis, Vernon, TE 78 965 12.4 73t 13 19t/10 2010 Davis, Vernon, TE 56 914 16.3 66t 7 51/23+ Team Record * NFL Record

PUNTING (BASED ON GROSS AVG.) YEAR PLAYER NO AVG LG BLCK RANK 1946 Albert, Frank 54 41.0 73 0 — 1947 Albert, Frank 40 44.0 69 1 — 1948 Albert, Frank 35 44.8 82 0 — 1949 Albert, Frank 31 48.2 72 0 — 1950 Lillywhite, Verl 26 39.1 57 1 11 1951 Albert, Frank 34 44.3 66 0 2 1952 Albert, Frank 68 42.6 70 0 5 1953 Powers, Jim 42 40.6 55 1 8 1954 Brown, Hardy 10 38.4 58 0 11 1955 Luna, Bob 63 40.6 63 3 8 1956 Jessup, Bill 14 40.2 63 0 16 1957 Barnes, Larry 19 47.1 86 0 13 1958 Atkins, Bill 25 39.3 51 0 11 1959 Davis, Tommy 59 45.7 71 0 3 1960 Davis, Tommy 62 44.1 74 0 3 1961 Davis, Tommy 50 45.4 67 0 3 1962 Davis, Tommy 48 45.6 82 0 1 1963 Davis, Tommy 73 45.4 64 2 4 1964 Davis, Tommy 79 45.6 68 0 4 1965 Davis, Tommy 54 45.8 65 0 2 1966 Davis, Tommy 63 41.4 60 0 6 1967 Spurrier, Steve 73 37.6 61 1 12 1968 Spurrier, Steve 68 39.0 54 0 12 1969 Davis, Tommy 23 41.5 55 0 17 1970 Spurrier, Steve 75 38.4 58 0 14/11 1971 McCann, Jim 49 38.7 54 1 25/12 1972 McCann, Jim 64 39.7 63 1 21/10 1973 Wittum, Tom 79 43.7 62 0 4/1 1974 Wittum, Tom 68 41.2 67 1 4/2 1975 Wittum, Tom 67 41.9 64 3 3/2 1976 Wittum, Tom 89 40.8 64 3 3/2 1977 Wittum, Tom 77 36.4 54 3 26/13 1978 Connell, Mike 96 37.3 59 1 21/10 1979 Melville, Dan 71 37.0 53 1 25/14 1980 Miller, Jim 77 40.9 65 0 10/5 1981 Miller, Jim 93 41.5 65 0 15/6 1982 Miller, Jim 44 38.1 80 1 25/13 1983 Orosz, Tom 65 39.3 61 1 25/11 1984 Runager, Max 56 41.8 59 1 17/17 1985 Runager, Max 86 39.8 57 1 26/13 1986 Runager, Max 83 41.6 62 2 10/6 1987 Runager, Max 55 39.2 56 1 22/11 1988 Helton, Barry 78 39.3 53 1 21/11 1989 Helton, Barry 55 40.5 56 1 12/8 1990 Helton, Barry 69 36.8 56 1 28/1 1991 Prokop, Joe 40 38.5 58 0 27/13 1992 Wilmsmeyer, Klaus 49 39.1 58 0 26/14 1993 Wilmsmeyer, Klaus 42 40.9 61 0 23/11 1994 Wilmsmeyer, Klaus 54 41.4 60 0 14t/7t 1995 Thompson, Tommy 57 40.6 65 0 25/13t 1996 Thompson, Tommy 73 44.1 65 2 10/4 1997 Thompson, Tommy 78 40.8 55 1 30/15 1998 Roby, Reggie 60 41.9 66 0 22/9 1999 Stanley, Chad 69 39.7 70 2 26/11 2000 Stanley, Chad 69 39.5 56 1 27/12 2001 Baker, Jason 69 40.8 64 0 23/13 2002 Baker, Jason 42 40.2 51 0 25t/13 2003 LaFleur, Bill 68 38.7 56 1 29t/16 2004 Lee, Andy 96 41.6 81 0 20/10 2005 Lee, Andy 107 41.6 58 1 25/12 2006 Lee, Andy 81 44.8 66 0 7/6 2007 Lee, Andy 105 47.3 74 0 2/1 2008 Lee, Andy 66 47.8 82 1 4/3 2009 Lee, Andy 99 47.6 64 0 2/2 2010 Lee, Andy 91 46.2 64 0 4/2

49ERS YEARLY STATISTICAL LEADERS

INDIVIDUAL RECORDS

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RECORDS

SAN FRANCISCO 49ERS

SCORING (BASED ON POINTS) YEAR PLAYER TD PAT FG POINTS RANK 1946 Beals, Alyn 10 1 0 61 — 1947 Beals, Alyn 10 0 0 60 — 1948 Beals, Alyn 14 0 0 84 — 1949 Beals, Alyn 12 1 0 73 — 1950 Soltau, Gordy 1 26 4 44 22 1951 Soltau, Gordy 7 30 6 90 5 1952 Soltau, Gordy 7 34 6 94 — 1953 Soltau, Gordy 6 48 10 114 1 1954 Soltau, Gordy 2 31 11 76 4 1955 Soltau, Gordy 1 27 3 42 24 Wilson, Billy 7 0 0 42 24 1956 Soltau, Gordy 1 26 13 71 6 1957 Soltau, Gordy 0 33 9 60 9 1958 Soltau, Gordy 0 29 8 53 20 1959 Davis, Tommy 0 31 12 67 9 1960 Davis, Tommy 0 21 12 67 9 1961 Davis, Tommy 0 44 12 80 8 1962 Davis, Tommy 0 36 10 66 16 1963 Davis, Tommy 0 24 10 54 21 1964 Davis, Tommy 0 30 8 54 24 1965 Davis, Tommy 0 52 17 103 4 1966 Davis, Tommy 0 38 16 86 12 1967 Davis, Tommy 0 33 14 75 10 1968 Davis, Tommy 0 26 9 53 19 1969 Willard, Ken 10 0 0 60 21 1970 Gossett, Bruce 0 39 21 102 6/4 1971 Gossett, Bruce 0 32 23 101 5/3 1972 Gossett, Bruce 0 41 18 95 13/7 1973 Gossett, Bruce 0 26 26 104 7/4 1974 Gossett, Bruce 0 25 11 58 25/8 1975 Mike-Mayer, Steve 0 27 14 69 22/9 1976 Mike-Mayer, Steve 0 26 16 74 25/9 1977 Williams, Delvin 9 0 0 54 14/10 1978 Wersching, Ray 0 24 15 69 22/9 1979 Wersching, Ray 0 32 20 92 12/5 1980 Wersching, Ray 0 33 15 78 18/10 1981 Wersching, Ray 0 30 17 81 22/13 1982 Wersching, Ray 0 23 12 59 9/4 1983 Wersching, Ray 0 51 25 126 3/3 1984 Wersching, Ray 0 56 25 131 1/1 1985 Wersching, Ray 0 52 13 91 21/11 1986 Wersching, Ray 0 41 25 116 3/3 1987 Rice, Jerry 23 0 0 138 1/1 1988 Cofer, Mike 0 40 27 121 2/1 1989 Cofer, Mike 0 49 29 136 1/1 1990 Cofer, Mike 0 39 24 111 4/3 1991 Cofer, Mike 0 49 14 91 17/8 1992 Cofer, Mike 0 53 18 107 8/4 1993 Cofer, Mike 0 59 16 107 11t/6 1994 Brien, Doug 0 60 15 105 11t/4 1995 Rice, Jerry 17 1(2PT) 0 104 19/10 1996 Wilkins, Jeff 0 40 30 130 4/2 1997 Anderson, Gary 0 38 29 125 3/2 1998 Richey, Wade 0 49 18 103 14/6 1999 Richey, Wade 0 30 21 93 21/8 2000 Richey, Wade 0 43 15 88 28/13 2001 Cortez, Jose 0 47 18 101 16/8 2002 Owens, Terrell 14 0 0 84 8t/3* 2003 Peterson, Todd 0 22 12 58 30/14 2004 Peterson, Todd 0 23 18 77 42/18 2005 Nedney, Joe 0 19 26 97 22t/8t 2006 Nedney, Joe 0 29 29 116 7t/4t 2007 Nedney, Joe 0 22 17 73 35/17 2008 Nedney, Joe 0 34 29 121 15/9 2009 Nedney, Joe 0 33 17 84 28t/14 2010 Nedney, Joe 0 17 11 50 65t/31t

FIELD GOAL PERCENTAGE YEAR PLAYER ATT MADE PCT LONG RANK 1946 Vetrano, Joe 7 4 .571 26 — 1947 Vetrano, Joe 8 4 .500 30 — 1948 Vetrano, Joe 8 5 .625 47 — 1949 Vetrano, Joe 4 3 .750 28 — 1950 Soltau, Gordy 8 4 .500 26 DNQ 1951 Soltau, Gordy 18 6 .333 42 9 1952 Soltau, Gordy 12 6 .500 31 5 1953 Soltau, Gordy 15 10 .667 39 2 1954 Soltau, Gordy 18 11 .611 37 3 1955 Soltau, Gordy 12 3 .250 28 11 1956 Soltau, Gordy 20 13 .650 40 3 1957 Soltau, Gordy 15 9 .600 37 5 1958 Soltau, Gordy 21 8 .381 39 9 1959 Davis, Tommy 26 12 .462 43 5 1960 Davis, Tommy 32 19 .594 40 7 1961 Davis, Tommy 22 12 .545 46 6 1962 Davis, Tommy 23 10 .435 42 15 1963 Davis, Tommy 31 10 .323 46 22 1964 Davis, Tommy 25 8 .320 *53 19 1965 Davis, Tommy 27 17 .630 *53 5t 1966 Davis, Tommy 31 16 .516 46 15t 1967 Davis, Tommy 33 14 .424 50 23 1968 Davis, Tommy 16 9 .563 38 14 1969 Davis, Tommy 10 3 .300 48 DNQ Gavric, Momcilo 11 3 .273 32 DNQ 1970 Gossett, Bruce 31 21 .611 48 5/3 1971 Gossett, Bruce 36 23 .639 48 9/5 1972 Gossett, Bruce 29 18 .621 50 15/6 1973 Gossett, Bruce 33 26 .788 54 1**/1 1974 Gossett, Bruce 24 11 .458 46 22/11 1975 Mike-Mayer, Steve 28 14 .500 54 22t/11 1976 Mike-Mayer, Steve 28 16 .571 45 16t/9 1977 Wersching, Ray 17 10 .588 50 15/5 1978 Wersching, Ray 23 15 .652 45 12/6 1979 Wersching, Ray 24 20 .833 45 2/1 1980 Wersching, Ray 19 15 .789 47 2/1 1981 Wersching, Ray 23 17 .739 45 5/4 1982 Wersching, Ray 17 12 .706 45 15/8 1983 Wersching, Ray 30 25 .833 52 5t/1t 1984 Wersching, Ray 35 25 .714 53 17/11 1985 Wersching, Ray 21 13 .619 45 22/11 1986 Wersching, Ray 35 25 .714 50 11t/5t 1987 Wersching, Ray 17 13 .764 45 12/6 1988 Cofer, Mike 38 27 .711 52 17/10 1989 Cofer, Mike 36 29 .806 47 4/2 1990 Cofer, Mike 36 24 .666 *56 26t/11t 1991 Cofer, Mike 28 14 .500 50 28/14 1992 Cofer, Mike 27 18 .666 46 21/11 1993 Cofer, Mike 26 16 .615 46 26/12 1994 Brien, Doug 20 15 .750 48 20/7 1995 Wilkins, Jeff 13 12 .923 40 DNQ 1996 Wilkins, Jeff 34 30 .882 49 4/3 1997 Anderson, Gary 36 29 .806 51 11/7 1998 Richey, Wade 27 18 .667 46 27t/13t 1999 Richey, Wade 23 21 .913 52 1**/1 2000 Richey, Wade 22 15 .681 47 28/14 2001 Cortez, Jose 25 18 .720 52 21/12 2002 Cortez, Jose 24 18 .750 45 26/13t 2003 Peterson, Todd 15 12 .800 48 DNQ 2004 Peterson, Todd 22 18 .818 51 15t/6t 2005 Nedney, Joe 28 26 .929 56 3/2 2006 Nedney, Joe 35 29 .829 51 16/9 2007 Nedney, Joe 19 17 .895 50 5/1 2008 Nedney, Joe 33 29 .878 53 12/7 2009 Nedney, Joe 21 17 .810 51 21/9 2010 Reed, Jeff 10 9 .900 47 NA

* LONGEST FIELD GOAL IN NFL THAT YEAR ** LEADER BASED ON FIELD GOAL PCT OF KICKERS WITH 15-OR-MORE MADE.DNQ - DID NOT QUALIFY FOR THE LEAGUE MINIMUM

49ERS YEARLY STATISTICAL LEADERS

INDIVIDUAL RECORDS

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RECORDS

SAN FRANCISCO 49ERS

KICKOFF RETURNS (BASED ON AVERAGE) YEAR PLAYER NO YDS AVG LG TD RANK 1946 Eshmont, Len 10 264 26.4 — 0 * 1947 Eshmont, Len 9 177 19.7 — 0 * 1948 Hall, Forrest 13 369 28.4 — 0 3 1949 Perry, Joe 14 337 24.1 — 0 5 1950 Cathcart, Sam 14 329 23.9 62 0 20 1951 Arenas, Joe 21 542 25.8 49 0 8 1952 McElhenny, Hugh 18 396 22.0 40 0 16 1953 Arenas, Joe 16 551 34.4 82 0 1 1954 Arenas, Joe 16 362 22.6 41 0 11 1955 Arenas, Joe 24 594 24.8 42 0 7 1956 Arenas, Joe 27 801 29.7 96t 1 2 1957 Arenas, Joe 24 657 27.4 64 0 2 1958 Smith, J.D. 15 356 23.7 39 0 8 1959 Lyles, Lenny 25 565 22.6 46 0 10 1960 Lyles, Lenny 17 526 30.9 97t 1 2 1961 Woodson, Abe 27 782 29.0 98t 1 3 1962 Woodson, Abe 37 1,157 31.3 79 0 1 1963 Woodson, Abe 29 935 32.2 103t 3 1 1964 Woodson, Abe 32 880 27.5 70 0 4 1965 Alexander, Kermit 32 741 23.2 46 0 20 1966 Alexander, Kermit 37 984 26.6 56 0 7 1967 Cunningham, Doug 31 826 26.6 94 0 5 1968 Alexander, Kermit 20 360 18.0 35 0 24 1969 Smith, Noland 14 310 22.1 60 0 * 1970 Smith, Noland 14 315 22.5 60 0 16 1971 Washington, Vic 33 858 26.0 74 0 12/8 1972 Washington, Vic 27 771 28.6 98t 1 4/3 1973 Washington, Vic 24 549 22.9 38 0 26/10 1974 Holmes, Mike 25 612 24.5 57 0 15/6 1975 Moore, Manfred 26 650 25.0 52 0 10/5 1976 Leonard, Anthony 26 553 21.3 39 0 29/13 1977 Hofer, Paul 36 871 24.2 48 0 12/7 1978 Williams, Dave 34 745 21.9 89t 1 23/8 1979 Owens, James 41 1,002 24.4 85t 1 5/3 1980 Owens, James 31 726 23.4 101t 1 4/3 1981 Lawrence, Amos 17 437 25.7 92t 1 3/2 1982 McLemore, Dana 16 353 22.1 45 0 18/9 1983 McLemore, Dana 30 576 19.2 39 0 30/14 1984 Monroe, Carl 27 561 20.8 44 0 19/9 1985 Monroe, Carl 28 717 25.6 95t 1 4/3 1986 Crawford, Derrick 15 280 18.7 34 0 * 1987 Rodgers, Del 17 358 21.1 50 0 * 1988 DuBose, Doug 32 608 19.0 44 0 27/11 1989 Flagler, Terrence 32 643 20.1 41 0 18/11 1990 Carter, Dexter 41 783 19.1 35 0 21/11 1991 Carter, Dexter 37 839 22.7 98t 1 5/3 1992 Logan, Marc 22 478 21.7 82 0 9/6 1993 Carter, Dexter 25 494 19.8 60 0 18/11 1994 Carter, Dexter 48 1,105 23.0 96t 1 15/11 1995 Carter, Dexter 23 522 22.7 46 0 * 1996 Carter, Dexter 41 909 22.2 71 0 21/10 1997 Levy, Chuck 36 793 22.0 59 0 22/12 1998 Levy, Chuck 22 383 17.4 30 0 * 1999 McQuarters, R.W. 26 568 21.8 37 0 * 2000 Williams, Kevin 30 536 17.9 33 0 * 2001 Sutherland, Vinny 50 1,140 22.8 65 0 19/11 2002 Williams, Jimmy 35 765 21.9 50 0 29/18 2003 Wilson, Cedrick 37 836 22.6 95t 1 16/10 2004 Hicks, Maurice 31 623 20.1 35 0 33/19 2005 Hicks, Maurice 34 689 20.3 40 0 36/18 2006 Hicks, Maurice 57 1,428 25.1 64 0 12/4 2007 Hicks, Maurice 63 1,502 23.8 55 0 20/9 2008 Rossum, Allen 47 1,259 26.8 104t 1 6/3 2009 Robinson, Michael 18 414 23.0 40 0 * 2010 Ginn, Ted 47 992 21.1 61 0 33/17* Insufficient returns to qualify for NFL rankings

PUNT RETURNS (BASED ON AVERAGE) YEAR PLAYER NO YDS AVG LG TD RANK 1946 Casanega, Ken 18 248 13.8 — 0 * 1947 Vetrano, Joe 12 137 11.4 — 0 * 1948 Cason, Jim 22 309 14.0 — 0 * 1949 Cason, Jim 21 351 16.7 — 0 * 1950 Cathcart, Sam 16 185 11.6 29 0 10 1951 Arenas, Joe 21 272 13.0 51 0 6 1952 McElhenny, Hugh 20 284 14.2 94t 1 5 1953 McElhenny, Hugh 15 104 6.9 25 0 7 1954 Arenas, Joe 23 117 5.1 23 0 6 1955 Arenas, Joe 21 55 2.6 7 0 17 1956 Arenas, Joe 19 117 6.2 67t 1 8 1957 Arenas, Joe 25 80 3.2 26 0 13 1958 McElhenny, Hugh 24 93 3.9 18 0 16 1959 Woodson, Abe 15 143 9.5 65 0 6 1960 Woodson, Abe 13 174 13.4 48 0 1 1961 Woodson, Abe 16 172 10.8 80t 1 4 1962 Woodson, Abe 19 179 9.4 85t 1 4 1963 Woodson, Abe 13 95 7.3 13 0 13 1964 Alexander, Kermit 21 189 9.0 70t 1 8 1965 Alexander, Kermit 35 262 7.5 40 0 7 1966 Alexander, Kermit 30 198 6.6 44t 4 6 1967 Cunningham, Doug 27 249 9.2 57 0 3 1968 Alexander, Kermit 24 87 3.6 26 0 16 1969 Smith, Noland 10 46 4.6 18 0 19 1970 Taylor, Bruce 43 516 12.0 76 0 2/1 1971 Taylor, Bruce 34 235 6.9 38 0 15/6 1972 McGill, Ralph 22 219 10.0 33 0 4/3 1973 Taylor, Bruce 15 207 13.8 61 0 1/1 1974 McGill, Ralph 20 161 8.3 47 0 20/13 1975 McGill, Ralph 31 290 9.4 34 0 18/9 1976 Leonard, Anthony 35 293 8.4 60t 1 20/9 1977 Leonard, Anthony 22 154 7.0 19 0 30/13 1978 Steptoe, Jack 11 129 11.7 28 0 * 1979 Solomon, Freddie 23 142 6.2 14 0 23/9 1980 Solomon, Freddie 27 298 11.0 57t 2 3/2 1981 Solomon, Freddie 29 173 6.0 19 0 25/13 1982 McLemore, Dana 7 156 22.3 93t 1 * 1983 McLemore, Dana 31 331 10.7 56t 1 6/2 1984 McLemore, Dana 45 521 11.6 79t 1 4/2 1985 McLemore, Dana 38 258 6.8 22 0 21/9 1986 Griffin, Don 38 377 9.9 76t 1 5/2 1987 McLemore, Dana 21 265 12.6 83t 1 2/2 1988 Taylor, John 44 556 12.6 95t 2 1/1 1989 Taylor, John 36 417 11.6 37 0 5/4 1990 Taylor, John 26 212 8.2 30 0 13/8 1991 Taylor, John 31 267 8.6 24 0 9/5 1992 Grant, Alan 29 249 8.6 46 0 12/6 1993 Carter, Dexter 34 411 12.1 72t 1 5/2 1994 Carter, Dexter 38 321 8.4 26 0 14/11 1995 Carter, Dexter 9 164 18.2 78t 1 * 1996 Carter, Dexter 36 317 8.8 52 0 18/9 1997 Uwaezuoke, Iheanyi 34 373 11.0 36 0 11/6 1998 McQuarters, R.W. 47 406 8.6 72t 1 19/10 1999 McQuarters, R.W. 18 90 5.0 32 0 * 2000 Williams, Kevin 26 220 8.5 25 0 * 2001 Sutherland, Vinny 21 147 7.0 19 0 * 2002 Williams, Jimmy 20 336 16.8 89t 1 1/1 2003 Williams, Jimmy 35 240 6.9 20 0 26/11, 2004 Battle, Arnaz 31 266 8.6 71t 1 15/6 2005 Marshall, Rasheed 17 87 5.1 13 0 * 2006 Williams, Brandon 22 147 6.7 25 0 28/15 2007 Lewis, Michael 44 336 7.6 51 0 18/9 2008 Rossum, Allen 15 223 14.9 45 0 * 2009 Battle, Arnaz 21 61 2.9 18 0 28/13 2010 Ginn, Ted 24 321 13.4 78t 1 3/2* Insufficient returns to qualify for NFL rankings

49ERS YEARLY STATISTICAL LEADERS

INDIVIDUAL RECORDS

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RECORDS

SAN FRANCISCO 49ERS

YEAR PLAYER NO YDS AVG LG TD RANK 1946 Casanega, Ken 8 146 18.3 68 0 — 1947 Eshmont, Len 6 72 12.0 — 0 — 1948 Carr, Eddie 7 144 20.6 56 1 — 1949 Cason, Jim 9 152 19.9 — 0 — 1950 Powers, Jim 5 42 8.4 26 0 27 1951 Wagner, Lowell 9 115 12.8 40 0 8 1952 Wagner, Lowell 6 69 11.5 30 0 12 1953 Berry, Rex 7 142 20.3 29 1 8 1954 Berry, Rex 3 69 23.0 34t 1 32 1955 Moegle, Dick 6 50 8.3 37 0 14 1956 Moegle, Dick 6 75 12.5 31t 1 12 1957 Moegle, Dick 8 107 13.4 40 0 6 1958 Ridlon, Jim 4 10 2.5 3 0 23 1959 Baker, Dave 5 75 15.0 29 0 10 1960 Baker, Dave 10 96 9.6 28 0 1 1961 Baker, Dave 6 123 20.5 10 0 11 1962 Woodson, Abe 2 31 15.5 31 0 58 1963 Alexander, Kermit 5 72 17.4 38 0 18 1964 Alexander, Kermit 5 65 13.0 24 0 9 1965 Johnson, Jimmy 6 47 7.8 26 0 10 1966 Alexander, Kermit 4 73 18.3 55 0 25 1967 Alexander, Kermit 5 72 14.4 48 0 17 1968 Alexander, Kermit 9 155 17.2 66t 1 2 1969 Alexander, Kermit 5 39 7.8 22 0 14 1970 Taylor, Bruce 3 70 23.3 70 0 48/24 1971 Taylor, Bruce 3 68 22.7 49 0 65/33 1972 Johnson, Jimmy 4 18 4.5 15 0 43/17 1973 Taylor, Bruce 6 30 5.0 22 0 10/5 1974 McGill, Ralph 5 71 14.2 45 0 19/9 1975 Taylor, Bruce 3 29 9.7 15 0 75/36 1976 Rhodes, Bruce 3 42 14.0 30 0 — 1977 Washington, Dave 2 68 34.0 50 0 93/37 1978 Crist, Chuck 6 59 26.5 32 0 11/10 1979 Hicks, Dwight 5 57 11.4 29 0 28/12 1980 Hicks, Dwight 4 73 18.3 44 0 41/19 Churchman, Ricky 4 7 1.8 7 0 41/19 1981 Hicks, Dwight 9 239 26.6 72 1 3/2 1982 Hicks, Dwight 3 5 1.7 3 0 22/8 1983 Wright, Eric 7 164 23.4 60t 2 6/4

INTERCEPTIONS

YEAR PLAYER NO YDS AVG LG TD RANK 1984 Turner, Keena 4 51 12.8 21 0 40/17 Lott, Ronnie 4 26 6.5 15 0 48/21 1985 Lott, Ronnie 6 68 11.3 25 0 16/7 1986 Lott, Ronnie 10 134 13.4 57t 1 1/1 1987 Lott, Ronnie 5 62 12.4 34 0 11/7 Griffin, Don 5 1 0.2 1 0 14/9 1988 McKyer, Tim 7 11 1.6 7 0 5/6 1989 Lott, Ronnie 5 34 6.8 28 0 16/9 1990 Waymer, Dave 7 64 9.1 24 0 4/4 1991 Waymer, Dave 4 77 19.3 42 0 23/13 1992 Griffin, Don 5 4 0.8 2 0 15/5 1993 McGruder, Michael 5 89 17.8 37 1 14t/6t 1994 Hanks, Merton 7 93 13.3 38 0 4t/4t 1995 Drakeford, Tyronne 5 54 10.8 37 0 16t/10t Hanks, Merton 5 31 6.2 23 0 16t/10t 1996 Pope, Marquez 6 98 16.3 55t 1 4t/2t 1997 Hanks, Merton 6 103 17.2 55t 1 5t/3t 1998 Walker, Darnell 4 78 19.5 36 0 — Hanks, Merton 4 37 9.3 37 0 — Bronson, Zack 4 34 8.5 28 0 — McDonald, Tim 4 22 5.5 18 0 — 1999 Schulters, Lance 6 127 21.2 64t 1 6t/3t 2000 Bronson, Zack 3 75 25.0 43 0 — Montgomery, Monty 3 68 22.7 46t 1 — 2001 Bronson, Zack 7 165 23.6 97t 2 7t/4t Plummer, Ahmed 7 45 6.4 24 0 7t/4t 2002 Parrish, Tony 7 204 29.1 60 0 3t/2t 2003 Parrish, Tony 9 202 22.4 49 0 1t/1t 2004 Parrish, Tony 4 64 16.0 26 0 21t/10t 2005 Spencer, Shawntae 4 85 21.3 61t 1 19t/9t Adams, Mike 4 36 9.0 40t 1 19t/9t 2006 Harris, Walt 8 84 10.5 42 1 3t/1t 2007 Nate Clements 4 74 18.5 62 0 23t/11t Walt Harris 4 42 10.5 23 0 23t/11t 2008 Walt Harris 3 25 8.3 24 0 30t/13t Takeo Spikes 3 14 4.7 13 0 30t/13t 2009 Goldson, Dashon 4 39 9.8 34 0 23t/14t 2010 Clements, Nate 3 46 15.3 39 0 30/21t Spikes, Takeo 3 9 3.0 6 0 30/21t Spencer, Shawntae 3 0 0.0 0 0 30/21t

YEAR PLAYER SACKS YARDAGE 1971 Hardman, Cedrick 18.0 - NA - 1972 Hart, Tommy 17.0 - NA - 1973 Hardman, Cedrick 9.0 - NA - 1974 Hardman, Cedrick 9.0 - NA - 1975 Hardman, Cedrick 15.0 - NA - 1976 Hart, Tommy 16.0 - NA - 1977 Elam, Cleveland 17.5 - NA - 1978 Hardman, Cedrick 10.5 - NA - 1979 Board, Dwaine 7.0 52.0 1980 Stuckey, Jim 8.5 49.5 1981 Dean, Fred 12.0 106.5 1982 Dean, Fred 3.5 28.5 1983 Dean, Fred 17.5 151.5 1984 Board, Dwaine 10.0 82.0 1985 Board, Dwaine 11.5 95.5 1986 Haley, Charles 12.0 109.0 1987 Haley, Charles 6.0 42.0 1988 Haley, Charles 11.5 77.0 1989 Haley, Charles 10.5 88.5 Holt, Pierce 10.5 85.5 1990 Haley, Charles 16.0 107

QUARTERBACK SACK LEADERS (SINCE 1971)

YEAR PLAYER SACKS YARDAGE 1991 Roberts, Larry 7.0 50.0 Haley, Charles 7.0 49.0 1992 Harris, Tim 17.0 116.0 1993 Stubblefield, Dana 10.5 61.5 1994 Stubblefield, Dana 8.5 53.5 1995 Jackson, Rickey 9.5 49.0 1996 Barker, Roy 12.5 74.5 1997 Stubblefield, Dana 15.0 99.0 1998 Doleman, Chris 15.0 81.5 1999 Young, Bryant 11.0 81.0 2000 Young, Bryant 9.5 77.5 2001 Carter, Andre 6.5 57.5 2002 Carter, Andre 12.5 84.0 2003 Peterson, Julian 7.0 64.0 2004 Engleberger, John 6.0 40.5 2005 Young, Bryant 8.0 50.0 2006 Moore, Brandon 6.5 56.0 2007 Young, Bryant 6.5 31.0 2008 Haralson, Parys 8.0 45.0 2009 Lawson, Manny 6.5 38.0 2010 Smith, Justin 8.5 51.5

49ERS YEARLY STATISTICAL LEADERS

INDIVIDUAL RECORDS

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RECORDS

SAN FRANCISCO 49ERS

ALL-PURPOSE YARDS (SINCE 1950) Rush Rec Off Punt Ret Kick Ret Ret Def Tot Year Player No Yds No Yds Yds No Yds No Yds Yds Yds Yds 1950 Perry, Joe 124 647 13 69 716 0 0 12 223 0 0 939 1951 Perry, Joe 136 677 18 167 844 0 0 1 32 0 0 876 1952 McElhenny, Hugh 98 684 26 367 1,051 20 284 20 284 680 0 1,731 1953 McElhenny, Hugh 112 503 30 474 977 15 104 15 368 472 0 1,449 1954 Perry, Joe 173 1,049 26 203 1,252 0 0 0 0 0 0 1,252 1955 Wilson, Billy 0 0 53 831 831 0 0 0 0 0 0 831 1956 McElHenny, Hugh 185 916 16 193 1,109 15 38 13 300 338 0 1,447 1957 McElhenny, Hugh 102 478 37 458 936 0 0 0 0 0 0 936 1958 Perry, Joe 125 758 23 218 976 0 0 0 0 0 0 976 1959 Smith, J.D. 207 1,036 13 133 1,169 0 0 0 0 0 0 1,169 1960 Smith, J.D. 174 780 36 181 961 0 0 0 0 0 0 961 1961 Smith, J.D. 167 823 28 343 1,166 0 0 0 0 0 0 1,166 1962 Woodson, Abe 0 0 0 0 0 19 179 37 1,157 1,336 0 1,336 1963 Woodson, Abe 0 0 0 0 0 13 95 29 935 1,030 0 1,030 1964 Woodson, Abe 0 0 0 0 0 22 133 32 880 1,013 0 1,013 1965 Parks, Dave 0 0 80 1,344 1,344 0 0 0 0 0 0 1,344 1966 Alexander, Kermit 0 0 0 0 0 30 198 37 984 1,182 0 1,182 1967 Cunningham, Doug 0 0 0 0 0 27 249 31 826 1,075 0 1,075 1968 Willard, Ken 227 967 36 232 1,199 0 0 0 0 0 0 1,199 1969 Cunningham, Doug 147 541 51 484 1,025 0 0 0 0 0 0 1,025 1970 Washington, Gene 0 0 53 1,100 1,100 0 0 0 0 0 0 1,100 1971 Washington, Vic 191 811 36 317 1,128 0 0 33 858 858 0 1,986 1972 Washington, Vic 141 468 43 393 861 0 0 27 771 771 0 1,632 1973 McGill, Ralph 0 0 0 0 0 22 186 17 374 560 0 560 1974 Jackson, Wilbur 174 705 23 190 895 0 0 0 0 0 0 895 1975 Williams, Delvin 117 631 34 370 1,001 0 0 0 0 0 0 1,001 1976 Williams, Delvin 248 1,203 27 283 1,486 0 0 0 0 0 0 1,486 1977 Williams, Delvin 268 931 20 179 1,110 0 0 0 0 0 0 1,110 1978 Williams, Dave 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 34 745 745 0 745 1979 Hofer, Paul 123 615 58 662 1,277 0 0 0 0 0 0 1,277 1980 Cooper, Earl 171 720 83 567 1,287 0 0 0 0 0 0 1,287 1981 Clark, Dwight 3 32 85 1,105 1,137 0 0 0 0 0 0 1,137 1982 Clark, Dwight 0 0 60 913 913 0 0 0 0 0 0 913 1983 Craig, Roger 176 725 48 427 1,152 0 0 0 0 0 0 1,152 1984 Tyler, Wendell 246 1,262 28 230 1,492 0 0 0 0 0 0 1,492 1985 Craig, Roger 214 1,050 92 1,016 2,066 0 0 0 0 0 0 2,066 1986 Rice, Jerry 10 72 86 1,570 1,642 0 0 0 0 0 0 1,642 1987 Craig, Roger 215 815 66 492 1,307 0 0 0 0 0 0 1,307 1988 Craig, Roger 310 1,502 76 534 2,036 0 0 0 0 0 0 2,036 1989 Taylor, John 1 6 60 1,077 1,083 36 417 2 51 468 0 1,551 1990 Rice, Jerry 2 0 100 1,502 1,502 0 0 0 0 0 0 1,502 1991 Rice, Jerry 1 2 80 1,206 1,208 0 0 0 0 0 0 1,208 1992 Watters, Ricky 206 1,013 43 405 1,418 0 0 0 0 0 0 1,418 1993 Rice, Jerry 3 69 98 1,503 1,572 0 0 0 0 0 0 1,572 1994 Watters, Ricky 239 877 66 719 1,596 0 0 0 0 0 0 1,596 1995 Rice, Jerry 5 36 122 1,848 1,884 0 0 0 0 0 0 1,884 1996 Rice, Jerry 11 77 108 1,254 1,331 0 0 0 0 0 0 1,331 1997 Hearst, Garrison 234 1,019 21 194 1,213 0 0 0 0 0 0 1,213 1998 Hearst, Garrison 310 1,570 39 535 2,105 0 0 0 0 0 0 2,105 1999 Garner, Charlie 241 1,229 56 535 1,764 0 0 0 0 0 0 1,764 2000 Garner, Charlie 258 1,142 68 647 1,789 0 0 0 0 0 0 1,789 2001 Hearst, Garrison 252 1,206 41 347 1,553 0 0 0 0 0 0 1,553 2002 Owens, Terrell 7 79 100 1,300 1,379 0 0 0 0 0 0 1,379 2003 Barlow, Kevan 201 1,024 35 307 1,331 0 0 0 0 0 0 1,331 2004 Barlow, Kevan 244 822 35 212 1,034 0 0 0 0 0 0 1,034 2005 Hicks, Maurice 59 308 3 12 320 0 0 34 689 689 0 1,009 2006 Gore, Frank 312 1,695 61 485 2,180 0 0 0 0 0 0 2,180 2007 Gore, Frank 260 1,102 53 436 1,538 0 0 0 0 0 0 1,538 2008 Rossum, Allen 1 1 1 4 5 15 223 47 1,259 1,482 0 1,487 2009 Gore, Frank 229 1,120 52 406 1,526 0 0 0 0 0 0 1,526 2010 Ginn, Ted 2 11 12 163 174 24 321 47 992 1,313 0 1,487

49ERS YEARLY STATISTICAL LEADERS

INDIVIDUAL RECORDS

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RECORDS

SAN FRANCISCO 49ERS

SCORINGPoints 36 Gale Sayers, at Chi. (12/12/65)Touchdowns 6 Gale Sayers, at Chi. (12/12/65)PATs 8 Rafael Septien, at Dal. (10/12/80) 8 Paige Cothren, vs. LA Rams (10/5/58)PAT Attempts 8 Rafael Septien, at Dal. (10/12/80) 8 Paige Cothren, vs. LA Rams (10/5/58)Field Goals 6 Neil Rackers, at Arz. in Mexico City (10/2/05) 5 Morten Andersen, at Atl. (9/3/00) Chris Jacke, at GB (10/14/96) Morten Andersen, at NO (10/25/87) Lou Michaels, at Bal. (9/25/66)Field Goal Attempts 7 Morten Andersen, at NO (10/25/87)Long Field Goal 59 Morten Andersen, at Atl. (12/24/95) 56 Al Del Greco, at Hou. (10/27/96) 55 John Kasay, at Car. (10/24/10) 54 Josh Brown, at StL (1/3/10) Jan Stenerud, vs. KC (12/6/71)

RUSHING Attempts 35 Clinton Portis, vs. Was. (12/18/04) Marcel Shipp, at Arz. (10/26/03) 32 Calvin Hill, at Dal. (11/10/74) Steven Jackson, at StL Rams (12/21/08)Yards 192 Erric Pegram, vs. Atl. (9/19/93), 27 att. 181 Willie Galimore, vs. Chi. (9/16/62), 22 att. 175 Barry Sanders, vs. Det. (12/23/96), 28 att. 174 Rudi Johnson, at Cin. (12/14/03), 21 att. 174 Leroy Kelly, vs. Cle. (11/3/68), 27 att.Touchdowns 4 LaDainian Tomlinson, vs. SD (10/15/06) Gale Sayers, at Chi. (12/12/65) Rick Casares, vs. Chi. (10/28/56)Long 84t Chester Taylor, vs. Min. (12/9/07)

PASSINGAttempts 61 Brett Favre, at GB (10/14/96) 60 Richard Todd, at NYJ (9/21/80) 58 Glenn Foley, vs. NYJ (9/6/98) Jay Schroeder, at Was. (12/1/85) 56 Marc Bulger, vs. StL (9/11/05)Completions 42 Richard Todd, at NYJ (9/21/80) 35 Dieter Brock, at LA Rams (10/27/85)Yards 484 Kurt Warner, at Arz. (11/25/07) 471 Brad Johnson, vs. Was. (12/26/99) 460 Don Meredith, vs. Dal. (11/10/63) 447 Richard Todd, at NYJ (9/21/80) 444 Dan Fouts vs. SD (12/11/82)Touchdowns 5 Donovan McNabb, at Phi. (9/18/05) Kurt Warner, at StL (10/10/99) Vince Ferragamo, at LA Rams (10/23/83) Dan Fouts, vs. SD (12/11/82)Interceptions 7 Steve DeBerg, at TB (9/7/86) 6 Steve Grogan, vs. NE (11/30/80)Long 96t Tobin Rote to Billy Grimes, vs. GB (12/10/50)Times sacked 10 Phil Simms, vs. NYG (11/23/80) James Harris, at LA Rams (10/11/76) Bill Munson, vs. LA Rams (12/6/64)

RECEIVINGReceptions 17 Clark Gaines, at NYJ (9/21/80) 12 Reggie Wayne, at Ind. (11/1/09) Tim Hightower, at Ari. (9/13/09) Cris Carter, vs. Min. (12/18/95) Michael Irvin, at Dal. (10/17/93)Yards 220 Don Beebe, at GB (10/14/96) 214 Harlon Hill, vs. Chi. (10/31/54) 213 Terrell Owens, at Dal. (11/23/08) 210 Roddy White, vs. Atl. (10/11/09) 202 Paul Flatley, vs. Min. (10/24/65)Touchdowns 4 Isaac Bruce, at StL (10/10/99) Ahmad Rashad, at Min. (9/2/79) Harlon Hill, vs. Chi. (10/31/54)Long 96t Billy Grimes, vs. GB (12/10/50)

INTERCEPTIONSInterceptions 3 Bill Simpson, vs. LA Rams (11/20/77) Gene Howard, at LA Rams (11/21/71) Roy Winston, vs. Min. (10/25/64) Donald Doll, at Det. (10/8/50)Yards 107 Aaron Martin, at LA Rams (10/18/64) 101 Tom Pridemore, at Atl. (9/20/81)Long 101t Tom Pridemore, at Atl. (9/20/81)

PUNTINGPunts 12 Wilbur Summers, vs. Det. (10/23/77) Rusty Jackson, vs. LA Rams (11/21/76)Average 58.5 Reggie Roby, at Mia. (9/28/86) (min. 4 pts)Long 90 Don Chandler, at GB (10/10/65)

PUNT RETURNSRETURNS

Returns 8 Rolland Lawrence, vs. Atl. (10/9/77) 7 Nate Burleson, at Sea. (12/6/09) Alvin Pearman, at Jac. (12/18/05) J.T. Smith, at Phx. (11/6/88) Robbie Martin, vs. Ind. (10/5/86) LeRoy Irvin, vs. LA Rams (10/25/81) Roland Lawrence, vs. Atl. (10/23/76)Yards 184 Larry Watkins, at Det. (10/6/63)Long 90t Larry Watkins, at Det. (10/6/63)

KICKOFF RETURNSReturns 9 Ahmad Merritt, vs. Chi. (9/7/03) Eric Metcalf, vs. Atl. (9/29/96)Yards 222 Leon Washington, vs. Sea. (12/12/10) 208 Ron Smith, at Chi. (11/19/72)Long 109 Mel Gray, vs. NO (9/21/86)

BEST PERFORMANCES VS. 49ERS

INDIVIDUAL RECORDS

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RECORDS

SAN FRANCISCO 49ERS

49ERS SINGLE SEASON TEAM RECORDSSCORING

Most Points Scored 505 (1994, 16 games) 479 (1998, 16 games) 475 (1984, 16 games)Highest Average 31.6 (1994, 16 games) 31.0 (1953, 12 games) 30.6 (1987, 15 games)Fewest Points Scored 198 (1963, 14 games) 208 (1960, 12 games) 213 (1950, 12 games) 209 (1982, 9 games)Lowest Average 13.7 (2007, 16 games) 13.7 (1978, 16 games) 14.1 (1963, 14 games)

TOUCHDOWNSMost Scored 66 (1994, 16 games) 61 (1998, 16 games) (1993, 16 games) 59 (1987, 16 games)Fewest Scored 21 (1960, 12 games) 23 (2005, 16 games)Most Allowed 54 (2004, 16 games) 54 (1979, 16 games) 53 (1999, 16 games)Fewest Allowed 23 (1971, 14 games) 24 (1984, 16 games) 24 (1982, 9 games) 24 (1951, 12 games)Most by Rushing 24 (1979, 16 games) (1955, 12 games) 23 (1956, 12 games)Most by Passing 36 (1999, 16 games) 29 (1980, 16 games) 28 (2005, 16 games)

KICKINGMost Field Goals Made 30 (1996, 16 games) 29 (2008, 16 games) (2006, 16 games) (1997, 6 games) (1989, 16 games) Most PATs Made 60 (1994, 16 games) 59 (1993, 16 games) 56 (1984, 16 games)

RUSHINGMost Attempts 585 (1978, 16 games) 576 (1976, 14 games) 564 (1977, 14 games)Most Yards Gained 2,544 (1998, 16 games) 2,523 (1988, 16 games) 2,498 (1954, 12 games)Highest Average 5.7 (1954, 12 games) 5.2 (1998, 16 games) 5.0 (1953, 12 games)Most Touchdowns 28 (1954, 12 games) 27 (1961, 14 games) 26 (1993, 16 games) 26 (1953, 12 games)

PASSINGMost Attempts 644 (1995, 16 games) 602 (1979, 16 games) 597 (1980, 16 games) 583 (2000, 16 games) 583 (1990, 16 games)Most Completions 432 (1995, 16 games) 366 (2000, 16 games) 363 (1980, 16 games) 361 (1979, 16 games) 360 (1990, 16 games)Highest Completion Pct. 70.3 (1994, 16 games) 70.2 (1989, 16 games) 67.6 (1993, 16 games) 67.1 (1995, 16 games) 66.5 (1992, 16 games)Most Yards Gained (Gross) 4,779 (1995, 16 games) 4,584 (1989, 16 games) 4,510 (1998, 16 games) 4,480 (1993, 16 games) 4,400 (2000, 16 games)Most Touchdowns 44 (1987, 16 games) 41 (1998, 16 games) 37 (1994, 16 games) 35 (1965, 14 games) 35 (1989, 16 games)Highest Avg. Gain Per Att. 9.49 (1989, 16 games) 8.84 (1961, 14 games) 8.55 (1993, 16 games)

TOTAL NET YARDSMost Yards Gained 6,800 (1998, 16 games) 6,435 (1993, 16 games) 6,366 (1984, 16 games) 6,268 (1989, 16 games) 6,195 (1992, 16 games)

FIRST DOWNSMost First Downs 381 (1998, 16 games) 372 (1993, 16 games) 362 (1994, 16 games) 357 (1987, 15 games) 356 (1984, 16 games)Most by Rushing 141 (2002, 16 games) 141 (1988, 16 games) 138 (1984, 16 games)Most by Passing 231 (1995, 16 games) 223 (1998, 16 games) 213 (1986, 16 games)Most by Penalty 34 (1978, 16 games) 30 (1994, 16 games) 29 (1998, 16 games)

FUMBLESMost Opp. Fumbles Recovered 27 (1978, 16 games) 22 (1959, 12 games) 21 (1981, 16 games) 21 (1950, 12 games)

INTERCEPTIONSMost Thrown 36 (1978, 16 games) 29 (1958, 12 games) 28 (1974, 14 games) 28 (1955, 12 games)Most Intercepted 39 (1986, 16 games) 33 (1951, 12 games) 27 (1981, 16 games)

PENALTIESMost Penalties 134 (2000, 16 games) 133 (1998, 16 games) 120 (1999, 16 games)Most Yards Penalized 1,156 (1998, 16 games) 1,135 (2000, 16 games) 1,045 (1999, 16 games)

QUARTERBACK SACKSMost Sacks Made 61 (1976, 14 games) 60 (1985, 16 games) 57 (1983, 16 games) 54 (1997, 16 games)Most Sacks Allowed 55 (2008, 16 games) 55 (2007, 16 games) 53 (1998, 16 games)Fewest Sacks Allowed 20 (1982, 9 games) 22 (2002, 16 games) 24 (1991, 16 games)

Best Season, win percentage .938 - 1984 Best Season, win total Won 15, Lost 1 - 1984Worst Season, win percentage .125 - 1978, 1979, 2002Longest Winning Streak 15 - 11/27/89 to 11/18/90Longest Winning Streak at Home 19 - 12/23/96 to 10/3/99Longest Losing Streak at Home 7 - 10/28/62 to 9/22/63Longest Winning Streak on Road 18 - 11/27/88 to 12/30/90Longest Losing Streak on Road 18 - 12/4/77 to 12/16/79Longest Losing Streak 9 - 10/8/78 to 12/3/78Most Consecutive Wins to start season 10 - 1990Most Consecutive Wins to end season 9 - 1984Most Consecutive Losses to start season 7 - 1979Most Consecutive Losses to end season 5 - 1963Total Shutouts by 49ers 27 - Last vs. StL (10/4/09)Most Shutouts in a Season 3 - 2001Most Consecutive Games Scored Points 420 - 10/16/77 to 9/19/04Largest Comeback Victory38-35 (OT) victory vs. New Orleans at Can-dlestick Park, December 7, 1980 (came back from 35-7 deficit in 2nd qtr.)

TEAM RECORDS

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RECORDS

SAN FRANCISCO 49ERS

49ERS SINGLE-GAME TEAM RECORDSSCORING

Most Points Scored 56 vs. Atl. (10/18/92) 55 at Det. (12/19/93) 52 vs. Chi. (12/23/91) 52 vs. Chi. (12/19/65) 51 vs. Min. (12/8/84)Most Points Allowed 61 at Chi. (12/12/65) 59 at Dal. (10/12/80) 52 at Was. (10/23/05)Most Points by Both Teams 83 49ers 41, Vikings 42 (at SF), 10/24/65 81 49ers 20, Bears 61 (at Chi.), 12/12/65 81 49ers 38, Saints 43 (at NO), 11/23/69Most Points Scored in 1st Quarter 27 vs. GB (12/7/58) 21 (Several times) Last: vs. Min. (12/18/95)Most Points Allowed in 1st Quarter 24 at Chi. (10/29/06)Most Points Scored in 2nd Quarter 28 at Min. (9/8/83) 28 vs. LA Rams (10/28/51) 24 (Several times) Last: vs. Atl. (12/4/94)Most Points Allowed in 2nd Quarter 28 at Min. (9/29/63) 27 at NYG (10/14/79)Most Points Scored in 1st Half 42 vs. Atl. (10/18/92) 41 at Min. (9/8/83) 38 vs. LA Rams (10/28/51)Most Points Allowed in 1st Half 41 at Chi. (10/29/06) 38 at Dal. (10/12/80)Most Points Scored in 3rd Quarter 21 vs. Arz. (1/2/11) 21 at NO (9/4/88) 21 at StL (9/18/83) 21 vs. Hou. (12/13/81) 21 vs. NO (10/21/73)Most Points Allowed in 3rd Quarter 24 vs. StL (10/6/74) 21 (Several times) Last: at Ten. (11/27/05)Most Points Scored in 4th Quarter 28 vs. Chi. (12/22/91) 28 at Phi. (9/24/89) 28 at LA Rams (10/23/83)Most Points Allowed in 4th Quarter 28 at StL (12/30/02) 23 vs. Phi. (10/12/08) 22 at NO (10/20/02)Most Points Scored in 2nd Half 35 vs. Atl. (9/15/85) 31 at LA Rams (10/23/83) 30 vs. NO (10/21/73)Most Points Allowed in 2nd Half 36 at NO (11/23/69) 35 at Jac. (9/12/99)Most Decisive Victory 49 49ers 49 at Lions 0, 10/1/61Most Decisive Loss 45 Cowboys 59 vs. 49ers 14, 10/12/80

TOUCHDOWNSMost Scored 8 vs. Atl. (10/18/92) 7 vs. Arz. (12/7/03) 7 at Det. (12/19/93) 7 vs. Chi. (12/23/91) 7 vs. LA Rams (12/27/87) 7 at Atl. (10/29/72) 7 at Det. (10/1/61) 7 vs. Dal. Texans (10/26/52)Most Allowed 9 at Chi. (12/12/65) 8 at Dal. (10/12/80) at LA Rams (11/9/58)Most Scored by Rushing 6 at Det. (10/1/61)Most Allowed by Rushing 5 at Chi. (12/12/65)Most Scored by Passing 6 at Atl. (10/14/90)Most Allowed by Passing 5 (Five times) Last: at Phi. (9/18/05)

KICKINGMost Field Goals Made 6 vs. Atl. (9/29/96) 6 at NO (10/16/83)Most Field Goals Allowed 6 vs. Arz. (10/2/05), Mex. City

NET YARDSMost Yards Gained 598 vs. Buf. (9/13/92) (159 rush, 439 pass) 597 vs. Bal. (12/13/53) (252 rush, 345 pass) 590 vs. Atl. (10/18/92) (191 rush, 399 pass)Most Yards Allowed 584 at Chi. (12/12/65) (183 rush, 401 pass) 583 at Phi. (9/18/05) (140 rush, 443 pass) 577 vs. LA Rams (11/9/58) (324 rush, 253 pass)Fewest Yards Gained 61 at Det. (10/6/63) (71 rush, -10 pass) 81 vs. GB (12/10/60) (71 rush, 10 pass) 88 vs. LA Rams (11/21/76) (70 rush, 18 pass)Fewest Yards Allowed 44 vs. Atl. (10/23/76) (83 rush, -39 pass) 61 at Det. (10/6/63) (71 rush, -10 pass) 65 at Det. (10/12/52) (40 rush, 25 pass)

FIRST DOWNSMost First Downs 36 vs. Ind. (10/18/98) 33 vs. Hou. (11/8/87) 32 vs. LA Rams (11/20/94)Most First Downs Allowed 32 at StL (9/17/00)Fewest First Downs 3 vs. Bal. (11/22/59) 5 at Bal. (10/13/63)Fewest First Downs Allowed 2 vs. NO (10/21/73) 4 at Det. (10/12/52) 5 at Bal. (10/13/63)Most by Rushing 21 vs. Det. (12/14/98) 20 at Min. (10/15/61)Fewest by Rushing 0 at Min. (12/14/69) 0 at Bal. (10/13/63)Most Allowed by Rushing 19 at GB (10/11/59)Fewest Allowed by Rushing 0 (Seven times) Last: at Arz. (11/29/10)Most by Passing 24 at Cin. (12/5/99) 24 at Atl. (10/14/90)Most Allowed by Passing 25 at NYJ (9/21/80) 23 vs. Dal. (11/10/63)Fewest by Passing 1 (Six times) Last: vs. TB (10/30/05)Fewest Allowed by Passing 0 vs. NO (10/21/73) 0 vs. LA Rams (10/10/71)Most by Penalty 8 at NO (10/11/98)Most Allowed by Penalty 8 vs. Oak. (10/8/00)

RUSHINGMost Attempts 59 at Min. (12/4/77) 56 vs. Det. (10/25/63) 56 at GB (Milw.) (10/10/54) 56 vs. Bal. (10/29/50)Most Attempts Allowed 59 at Dal. (10/12/80)Fewest Attempts 10 at GB (11/22/09)Most Yards Gained 328 vs. Det. (12/14/98) 324 at Min. (10/15/61) 317 vs. Min. (11/29/76)Most Yards Allowed 324 at LA Rams (11/9/58)Fewest Yards Gained 5 vs. Hou. (12/7/75) 12 at Min. (12/14/69)Fewest Yards Yards Allowed 7 at NO (10/1/72) 9 vs. StL (11/2/03)

TEAM RECORDS

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RECORDS

SAN FRANCISCO 49ERS

PASSINGMost Attempts 63 vs. Phi. (11/25/02) 60 at Was. (12/17/86) 57 vs. Arz. (10/10/04) 57 at Atl. (10/6/85)Most Attempts Allowed 61 at GB (10/14/96) 60 at NYJ (9/21/80) 58 vs. NYJ (9/6/98) 58 at Mia. (9/28/86) 58 at Was. (12/1/85)Fewest Attempts 8 vs. NO (11/27/77) 8 vs. Min. (11/29/76) 12 at Atl. (11/6/77) 12 at GB (9/12/76)Fewest Attempts Allowed 4 vs. NO (10/15/78) 6 at NYG (10/16/77) 7 at NO (11/13/77)Most Completions 38 vs. Arz. (10/10/04) 37 at Atl. (10/6/85) 36 at Dal. (12/8/02) 36 vs. Phi. (11/25/02) 36 vs. Chi. (12/17/00)Most Completions Allowed 42 at NYJ (11/21/80) 35 at Arz. (11/25/07) 35 at LA Rams (10/27/85) 35 at Mia. (9/28/86)Fewest Completions 1 at Chi. (11/13/05) 3 vs. Min. (11/29/76) 4 vs. Pit. (9/19/77)Fewest Completions Allowed 2 vs. NO (10/15/78) 2 at NYG (10/16/77) 2 vs. LA Rams (10/10/71)Most Yards Gained (gross) 488 at LA Rams (11/29/93) 476 at Atl. (10/14/90) 458 at LA Rams (12/11/89)Most Yards Allowed (gross) 486 at Arz. (11/25/07) 471 vs. Was. (12/26/99) 460 vs. Dal. (11/10/63)Fewest Yards Gained (gross) 28 at Chi. (11/13/05) 32 vs. Min. (11/29/76) 34 vs. GB (12/10/60)Fewest Yards Allowed (gross) 13 vs. Chi. (9/16/62) 13 vs. LA Rams (10/10/71) 17 vs. NO (10/21/73) 31 vs. NO (10/15/78)

49ERS SINGLE-GAME TEAM RECORDSPENALTIES

Most Penalties 22 at Buf. (10/4/98) 16 at Atl. (1/3/00) 15 vs. Car. (12/8/96) 15 at Was. (11/17/86)Most Penalties by Opponent 22 at Buf. (10/4/98)Fewest Penalties 0 (Three times) Last: at NO (1/6/02)Fewest Penalties by Opponent 0 (Five times) Last: at Bal. (10/26/69)Most Yards Penalized 178 at Buf. (10/4/98) 177 at LA Rams (9/18/94) 168 at StL (10/24/71)Most Yards Opponent Penalized 165 at Min. (10/13/66) 136 at LA Rams (10/8/78) 133 vs. Cin. (10/1/78)Fewest Yards Penalized 0 (Three times) Last: at NO (1/6/02)Fewest Yards Opponent Penalized 0 (Five times) Last: at Bal. (10/26/69)

FUMBLESMost Committed 10 vs. Det. (12/17/78)Most Lost 6 at Min. (10/15/61) 6 at Cle. (11/12/50)Most Committed by Opponent 8 vs. Min. (10/24/65) 8 at NYG (12/1/57)Most Lost by Opponent 6 at NYG (12/1/57)

INTERCEPTIONSMost Intercepted 7 at TB (9/7/86) 6 vs. NO (9/14/97) 6 vs. NE (11/30/80) 6 at Chi. (10/17/54) 6 vs. LA Rams (10/28/51)Most Thrown 7 at LA Rams (10/18/64) 6 vs. Bal. (12/5/59) 6 at Det. (11/4/73)Most Interception Yards 171 vs. StL (11/26/95) 163 at GB (10/26/86)Most Interception Yards By Opponent 314 at LA Rams (10/18/64) 147 vs. Was. (12/18/04)

TURNOVERSMost Forced by Defense 9 at Oak. (12/20/70), 4 FRs, 5 INTs 8 vs. NO (9/14/97), 2 FRs, 6 INTs 8 vs. Cin. (10/1/78), 3 FRs, 5 INTsMost Committed 10 at Dal. (10/12/80), 5 FRs, 5 INTs 9 at Cle. (11/12/50), 6 FRs, 3 INTs

PUNTSMost Punts 11 vs. LA Rams (11/21/76) 11 at Chi. (10/17/54)Most Punts by Opponent 12 vs. Det. (10/23/77) 12 vs. LA Rams (11/21/76)Fewest Punts 0 (Eight times) Last at Det. (12/19/93)Fewest Punts by Opponent 0 (Several times) Last: at NO (10/20/02)

PUNT RETURNSMost Punt Returns 9 vs. NO (10/17/76) 9 at Atl. (10/29/72) 8 (Four times) Last: vs. StL (11/21/82)Most Punt Returns by Opponent 9 at Det. (10/6/63) 9 vs. Atl. (10/9/77)Most Punt Return Yards 144 vs. Phi. (9/27/59) 141 vs. NO (10/17/76) 133 at Hou. (11/15/70)Most Punt Return Yards by Opponent 231 at Det. (10/6/63) 166 vs. LA Rams (10/25/81)

KICKOFF RETURNSMost Kickoff Returns 10 vs. SD (10/15/06) 9 (Five times): Last vs. Phi. (10/12/08)Most Kickoff Returns by Opponent 10 vs. Atl. (9/29/96) 9 (Six times) Last vs. Chi. (9/7/03)Most Kickoff Return Yards 256 at Det. (11/14/54) 248 at Det. (9/23/62)Most Kickoff Return Yards by Opponent 260 at Dal. (11/11/65) 233 vs. NO (9/21/86)

SACKSMost Sacks Made 10 vs. NYG (11/23/80) 10 at LA Rams (10/11/76) 10 vs. LA Rams (12/6/64)Most Sacks Allowed 9 at GB (11/1/98) 9 vs. LA Rams (12/18/88)

TEAM RECORDS

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RECORDS

SAN FRANCISCO 49ERS

ALL-TIME TEAM HIGHS AND LOWS 49ERS HIGHS CATEGORY 49ERS LOWS 56 vs. Atl. 10/18/92 POINTS 0 last vs. TB 11/21/10 8 vs. Atl. 10/18/92 TOUCHDOWNS 0 last vs. TB 11/21/10 6 at Det. 10/1/61 RUSHING TOUCHDOWNS 0 last vs. Sea. 9/11/11 6 at Atl. 10/14/90 PASSING TOUCHDOWNS 0 last at Cin. 9/25/11 6 last vs. TB 10/30/05 FIELD GOALS ATTEMPTED 0 last at SD 12/16/10 6 last vs. Atl. 9/29/96 FIELD GOALS MADE 0 last at SD 12/16/10 36 vs. Ind. 10/18/98 TOTAL FIRST DOWNS 3 vs. Bal. 11/22/59 21 vs. Det. 12/14/98 RUSHING FIRST DOWNS 0 last at Min. 12/14/69 24 (2x) last at Cin. 12/5/99 PASSING FIRST DOWNS 1 (6x) last vs. TB 10/30/05 598 vs. Buf. 9/13/92 TOTAL NET YARDS 61 at Det. 10/6/63 59 at Min. 12/4/77 RUSHING ATTEMPTS 10 at GB 11/22/09 328 vs. Det. 12/14/98 NET RUSHING YARDS 5 vs. Hou. 12/7/75 475 at LA Rams 11/29/93 NET YARDS PASSING 10 at Det. 10/6/63 10 (3x) last vs. NYG 11/23/80 QB SACKS ALLOWED 0 last vs. Sea. 9/11/11 488 at LA Rams 11/29/93 GROSS YARDS PASSING 28 at Chi. 11/13/05 63 vs. Phi. 11/25/02 PASS ATTEMPTS 10 at Det. 10/6/63 38 vs. Arz. 10/10/04 PASS COMPLETIONS 1 at Chi. 11/13/05 7 at LA Rams 10/18/64 INTERCEPTIONS 0 last vs. Arz. 1/2/11 9 at Oak. 12/20/70 TOTAL TAKEAWAYS 0 last at SD 12/16/10 10 at Det. 12/17/78 FUMBLES BY 0 last vs. Dal. 9/18/11 6 at Min. 10/15/61 FUMBLES LOST 0 last vs. Dal. 9/18/11 11 (2x) last vs. LA Rams 11/21/76 PUNTS 0 (8x) last at Det. 12/19/93 61.0 at Cle. 9/13/93 PUNTING AVERAGE 0 (8x) last at Det. 12/19/93 22 at Buf. 10/4/98 PENALTIES 0 (3x) last at NO 1/6/02 178 at Buf. 10/4/98 YARDS PENALIZED 0 (3x) last at NO 1/6/02

OPPONENT’S HIGHS CATEGORY OPPONENT’S LOWS 61 at Chi. 12/12/65 POINTS 0 last vs. StL 10/4/09 9 at Chi. 12/12/65 TOUCHDOWNS 0 last at Cin. 9/25/11 5 at Chi. 12/12/65 RUSHING TOUCHDOWNS 0 last at Cin. 9/25/11 5 (6x) last at Phi. 9/18/05 PASSING TOUCHDOWNS 0 last at Cin. 9/25/11 7 vs. NO 10/25/87 FIELD GOALS ATTEMPTED 0 last vs. Arz. 1/2/11 6 at Arz. 10/2/05 FIELD GOALS MADE 0 last vs. Arz. 1/2/11 32 at StL 9/17/00 TOTAL FIRST DOWNS 2 vs. NO 10/21/73 19 at GB 10/11/59 RUSHING FIRST DOWNS 0 (7x) last at Arz. 11/29/10 25 at NYJ 9/21/80 PASSING FIRST DOWNS 0 (2x) last vs. NO 10/21/73 584 at Chi. 12/12/65 TOTAL NET YARDS 44 vs. Atl. 10/23/76 62 vs. Chi. 9/24/50 RUSHING ATTEMPTS 8 vs. StL 11/2/03 324 at LA Rams 11/9/58 NET RUSHING YARDS 7 at NO 10/1/72 456 at Arz. 11/25/07 NET YARDS PASSING -39 vs. Atl. 10/23/76 9 (2x) last at GB 11/1/98 QB SACKS ALLOWED 0 last vs. Sea. 9/11/11 486 at Arz. 11/25/07 GROSS YARDS PASSING 13 (2x) last vs. LA Rams 10/10/71 61 at GB 10/14/96 PASS ATTEMPTS 4 vs. NO 10/15/78 42 vs. NYJ 9/21/80 PASS COMPLETIONS 2 (3x) vs. NO 10/15/78 7 at TB 9/7/86 INTERCEPTIONS 0 last at Cin. 9/25/11 10 at Dal. 10/12/80 TOTAL TAKEAWAYS 0 last vs. Sea. 9/11/11 8 vs. Min. 10/24/65 FUMBLES BY 0 last at SD 12/16/10 5 vs. Arz. 12/14/09 FUMBLES LOST 0 last vs. Dal. 9/18/11 12 (2x) last vs. Det. 10/23/77 PUNTS 0 (2x) last at NO 10/20/02 62.0 at GB 10/21/62 PUNTING AVERAGE 21.0 at Bal. 10/1/67 17 at Atl. 11/5/78 PENALTIES 0 (5x) last at Bal. 10/26/69 165 at Min. 10/13/66 YARDS PENALIZED 0 (5x) last at Bal. 10/26/69

TEAM RECORDS

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Front Office Feature Stories Jed York – “Praise for Jed York” – Santa Rosa Press Democrat – 1/7/11 Jed York – “Jed York grows up as 49ers owner” – San Jose Mercury News – 1/8/11 Trent Baalke – “New 49ers GM Baalke fitting right in as a scout” – San Francisco Chronicle – 1/25/11 Trent Baalke – “49ers’ new GM gives victory to grinders” – Yahoo! Sports – 1/6/11 Trent Baalke – “A Baalke refresher: From high school A.D. to 49ers G.M.” – San Jose Mercury – 1/6/11 Trent Baalke – “Baalke Dedicated to Winning” – 49er.com – 1/8/11

Coach Feature Stories

Jim Harbaugh – “Mike Ditka on Jim Harbaugh: '49ers, you made a great choice'” – USA Today – 1/9/11 Jim Harbaugh – “Need to win is a way of life for new 49ers coach Harbaugh” – The Sacramento Bee – 1/30/11 Jim Harbaugh – “Jim Harbaugh could make immediate impact in soft NFC West” – SportingNews.com – 6/20/11 Jim Harbaugh – “Harbaugh brothers' lifelong competition hits NFL” – San Francisco Chronicle – 9/3/11 Geep Chryst – “A Coach’s Coach” – 49ers.com – 5/27/11 Reggie Davis – “Davis leaves Beavers for 49ers” – Gazette-Times – 2/4/11 Vic Fangio – “Up for the Challenge” – 49ers.com – 8/26/11 Greg Roman – “49ers hire Stanford assistant Greg Roman as offensive coordinator” – San Jose Mercury News – 1/14/11 Brad Seely – “Seely's special teams steal the show in 49ers' win” – San Francisco Chronicle – 9/12/11 Jim Tomsula – “Jim Tomsula, interim coach, gives 49ers energy” – San Francisco Chronicle – 1/1/11 Jim Tomsula – “Now he's Jim Somebody” – Santa Rosa Press Democrat – 5/8/11 Jim Tomsula – “The Tomsula Effect” – 49ers.com – 9/21/11

Player Feature Stories

David Akers – “Kicker David Akers brings years of accuracy to 49ers as Joe Nedney's replacement” – San Jose Mercury News – 8/2/11 NaVorro Bowman – “Bowman Poised For Year Two” – 49ers.com – 1/19/11 Tramaine Brock – “49ers' small-school search landed Brock” – Sacramento Bee – 8/27/11 Ahmad Brooks – “Notebook: Brooks Shows Versatility” – 49ers.com – 8/27/11 Ahmad Brooks – “49ers' Brooks matures from Bengals days” – Sacramento Bee – 9/25/11 Vernon Davis – “A Man Of All Seasons” – Haute Living Magazine – 3/16/11 Vernon Davis – “San Francisco 49ers: Tight end Vernon Davis matures into a team-first leader” – San Jose Mercury News – 8/27/11 Demarcus Dobbs – “The Frisco kid: Savannah's Demarcus Dobbs living a dream as 49ers rookie” – Savannah Morning News – 9/9/11 Braylon Edwards – “Roster Bonus: Edwards Joins 49ers” – 49ers.com – 8/5/11 Braylon Edwards – “Edwards looks for fresh start with 49ers” – CSNBayArea.com – 8/5/11 Ricky Jean Francois – “Master of His Domain” – 49ers.com – 1/31/11 Ted Ginn Jr. – “The payoff: Ginn returns key 49ers' victory” – CSNBayArea.com – 9/11/11 Ted Ginn Jr. – “49ers' Ginn making the most of his chance” – Santa Rosa Press Democrat – 9/14/11 Frank Gore – “It's full speed ahead for rejuvenated Gore” – San Francisco Chronicle – 9/7/11 Colin Kaepernick – “Rookie Niners coach Harbaugh got his man in QB Kaepernick; mailbag” – SI.com – 5/3/11 Colin Kaepernick – “San Francisco 49ers' Colin Kaepernick has motivation on his side” – San Jose Mercury News – 6/25/11 Ray McDonald – “49ers' Ray McDonald paying immediate dividends” – San Francisco Chronicle – 9/16/11 Bruce Miller – “Rookie Miller arrives for final day of 49ers minicamp” – Sacramento Bee – 7/5/11 Chilo Rachal – “Fitness push paying off for Niners' Chilo Rachal” – San Francisco Chronicle – 8/26/11 Aldon Smith – “So Far, So Good for Aldon Smith” – 49ers.com – 8/3/11

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Aldon Smith – “49ers Aldon Smith is volatile windmill at line of scrimmage” – Sacramento Bee – 9/16/11 Justin Smith – “49ers key to success: DE Justin Smith” – Scout.com – 8/26/11 Isaac Sopoaga – “Two-way Sopoaga?” – CSNBayArea.com – 9/22/11 Donte Whitner – “Safety Donte Whitner earns praise from 49ers coach Jim Harbaugh” – San Jose Mercury – 8/7/11 Patrick Willis – “49ers' Willis now a 4-time Pro Bowl pick” – Santa Rosa Press Democrat – 1/24/11 Patrick Willis – “Willis on pace to land in Hall of Fame” - CSNBayArea.com – 1/24/11 Patrick Willis – “Poll: Best defensive players in NFC West” ESPN.com – 5/24/11

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Front Office Feature Stories

Praise for Jed York By Lowell Cohn, Santa Rosa Press Democrat This is in praise of Jed York and Trent Baalke, total praise, no secret agenda. They wanted Jim Harbaugh as head coach and they competed against other teams who wanted him. They showed patience and wisdom and persistence. And they got him. They won. This is a major growing step for the 49ers’ ownership to be able to attract and land Harbaugh. This is the first time the Niners have shown competence and gravitas in a long time and this is good. Harbaugh promises to return to the West Coast Offense, to abandon whatever that thing was Mike Singletary employed. In other words, he is returning to the Niner roots. This is wonderful and as it should be. I am impressed and you should be too, and I believe we should give these people the benefit of the doubt even though their task is hard — they have no quarterback for starters. But this is a start, a good start. ---------------------- Jed York grows up as 49ers owner By Mark Purdy, San Jose Mercury News This makes it official. As of now, Jed York is no longer a kid. He's still 29 years old, but I can't call him Kid York any more. Not after what happened Friday. Not after the 49ers' owner/operator grew up as an NFL executive right before our eyes. Not after he ended a week of speculation and wild Internet piranha feeding by pulling off the one thing that many people were wondering if York could accomplish: He hired Jim Harbaugh, the hottest coaching commodity in football, away from Stanford to lead the 49ers out of the NFL mediocrity wilderness. "It was obviously a stressful week," York said afterward. From the outside, it didn't just look stressful. It looked completely and totally freakazoid nuts. York and new 49ers general manager Trent Baalke first interviewed Harbaugh on Wednesday afternoon for six to seven hours at a private home that belonged to one of York's friends on the peninsula. The meeting broke up with Harbaugh promising to seriously consider the 49ers' offer of about $5 million per year for five years. But then, over the next 48 hours, reports surfaced that the Miami Dolphins were going to offer Harbaugh up to $8 million per year ... and that the Denver Broncos wanted their own interview ... and that the University of Michigan, Harbaugh's alma mater, was also a player ... and that Stanford alums were prepared to almost match the 49ers' financial package to keep Harbaugh. York, however, stayed calm as he nursed a case of the flu and waited for the circus to end. His feeling was that if Harbaugh really wanted to coach the 49ers, he would come around and strike a deal. And if Harbaugh didn't want to coach the 49ers, it wouldn't happen. "You can't make this about the money," York said. "It had to be the right fit."

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And damned if he wasn't right, according to Harbaugh. "I wanted to be here as much or more than they wanted me here," he said. So there you are. Harbaugh may or may not turn out to be the man who shakes the 49ers from their non-playoff torpor. However, he has a better shot at doing so than anyone currently on the open market. Stanford's impressive 40-12 victory in the Orange Bowl made Harbaugh even more of a catch. But the 49ers had him on their radar through the autumn. And their sales pitch to him clearly worked. Even so, York definitely grasps why some 49ers fans were skeptical about whether he and Baalke could navigate the treacherous NFL coaching-search waters to land Harbaugh. "I understand that," York said. "I'm 29 years old, Trent's a first-time general manager. People are going to have questions. And we haven't done anything yet. It's time to get to work." Friday, after York was introduced to musical fanfare at the start of a news conference, he made the conscious decision to stay out of the spotlight. York did not even sit on the stage with Harbaugh and Baalke as they spoke and took questions. Afterward, when cornered by reporters, York also deferred credit. "Trent is the guy I hired," York said, "and Trent was the guy who hired Jim." Nevertheless, York played an important role in the lengthy meeting with Harbaugh two days earlier. Baalke did 90 percent of the 49ers' talking during the interview. However, York sat in on the whole discussion -- and spoke up only when talking about the big picture. "Jed talked about his vision," Harbaugh said. "It was productive. ... That sealed the deal." York's favorite part of the meeting probably occurred when Baalke pulled out some special custom clothing he had ordered. They were khaki work shirts. The 49ers' logo and the names "Trent" and "Jim" stitched on the left upper chest of the shirts. The message was that Baalke wanted the two of them to roll up their sleeves together and get going on the 49ers rebuild. Said York: "It was good for me to watch and see as the discussion with Trent and Jim went from 'This is an interview' to 'This is how we can build a team together.'" York admitted, also, that he leaned on his uncle, former 49ers owner Eddie DeBartolo Jr., for guidance during the process. And when the deal was done, with everyone riding together to San Francisco for the Friday news conference, York called DeBartolo and put him on the phone with the new 49ers head coach. "My uncle's fired up," York said. And what did York plan to do next? "Sleep," he said. Not like a baby, though. Forget those analogies, from this point forward. He managed this coaching search like a veteran. No matter what happens after this, he is definitely the Non-Kid York. ---------------------- New 49ers GM Baalke fitting right in as a scout By David White, San Francisco Chronicle

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Trent Baalke stood unnoticed in a sea of scouts and coaches, most of them packing NFL-size bodies into team-issued warm-up jackets. His red 49ers hat was tucked low to his brow, his hands behind his back gripping a laminated roster listing heights, weights and proper spellings of all the Senior Bowl draft hopefuls. Baalke might have the title of Boss for the first time in his life, but he doesn't try to come off big-time as the new general manager of the 49ers. On an overcast Monday at Fairhope Stadium, he looked like just another scout hunting for the next great "get," which is exactly the look he's looking for. "It's the same to me," Baalke said. "You always look at it like you're the guy making the decisions. I think you have to. You're the one making the decision which of these guys that you want on your team." Only, this time, Baalke really is the one making the decisions on who makes the team. He got control of the 53-man roster written into the contract he signed three weeks ago. Not even his predecessor, Scot McCloughan, enjoyed that strong of a last word. Some have speculated that new 49ers head coach Jim Harbaugh was given some of that roster control no matter how the respective contracts read. But with a cast of college all-stars auditioning at this week's Senior Bowl, where was the first-time NFL head coach? Back in Santa Clara, meeting with his coaching staff for the first time. The 49ers' coaches are skipping the Senior Bowl, a first since before Mike Nolan. Harbaugh won't be joining a band of NFL coaches and assistant staffs - including new Raiders head coach Hue Jackson and his incomplete staff - this week. While Harbaugh was studying video and planning schemes at the office, Baalke was the highest-ranking 49ers employee leading a contingent of scouts at the NFL-run all-star game, which held practice here Monday in advance of Saturday's game at Ladd-Peebles Stadium in Mobile, Ala. Truth is, there is nothing Baalke would rather do. He wasn't drawn to the NFL by a deep-rooted passion for negotiating with free agents and hosting media luncheons, though he does both as general manager. Deep inside, Baalke will forever be a field-level scout, and has been since the day he made the career change from high school athletic director in North Dakota to regional scout with the Jets 14 years ago. Some scouts socialized and schmoozed at the South team's practice Monday. Not Baalke. He stood on the sideline, often alone, eyes fixed on a receiver getting around a jam at the line of scrimmage, a left tackle getting leverage on a pass rusher, a cornerback breaking up a seam pass. "There's no replacement for seeing it with your own eyes," Baalke said. "You can watch all the film you want, but when you see it live, it kind of ties it together. "You just get a different perspective with the size, different skills, the energy, the way they move around, body language, things that are hard to see on film. Are they engaged, are they working?" At the morning weigh-in, Baalke settled anonymously into the ballroom crowd as players in underwear took the stage. He wasn't there to hear heights and weights rattled off. He was there to see body types and growth potential. After all, that's what scouts live to do - even the ones who now possess full control of the 49ers' roster. "It's kind of like when you were a kid in school always picking teams," Baalke said. " 'Oh, I want this guy, I want that guy.' That's the reality of what we do.

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"It's a talent-acquisition business, right? If you don't have it, it's hard to win." ---------------------- 49ers’ new GM gives victory to grinders By Michael Silver, Yahoo! Sports Trent Baalke remembers the realization that he’d figured out everything there was to know about NFL talent evaluation, at an alarmingly early stage of his career. Let’s just say he didn’t make a great effort to hide his discovery. Plucked out of anonymity in Fargo, N.D. – Baalke, a former high school principal and coach, was “between jobs” and preparing to become a financial adviser when he got a random and miraculous call from legendary New York Jets personnel director Dick Haley in 1998 – the blunt, prescient scout made a good initial impression and quickly began projecting an aura of prideful self-assurance. More From Michael SilverChiefs' Haley not afraid to turn up the heat Jan 5, 2011 Packers, Falcons reflect before moving forward Jan 3, 2011 Around that time, Baalke started noticing that his peers and colleagues began treating him as though he were in dire need of a shower. Eventually, he came to realize why they found him so off-putting. “I think when you first get into this business, you come in and once you get confidence, you believe you have all the answers,” Baalke explained last Friday at a restaurant near the San Francisco 49ers’ training facility, four days before he was officially named the team’s general manager. “I definitely was one of those individuals that fell victim to it. “Well, the more you’re in it, the more you realize you never have all the answers, and you’re always searching for ‘em. I was humbled early on. You have to be put back in your place by mistakes, by turning off people in the business – you start sensing that people are looking at you like you think you know everything – and coming to the realization that if you don’t change and become better grounded, you’re never going to make it in the business.” Baalke took the lesson to heart, reining in his ego and working his way up the scouting ladder. After serving as an area scout for the Jets, Baalke worked as a national scout and college scouting coordinator for the Washington Redskins before joining the Niners organization in 2005. In San Francisco he had stints as a regional scout, pro personnel director and vice president of player personnel before owner Jed York gave him the GM gig – and immediately thrust him into a head-coaching search targeting Stanford coach Jim Harbaugh. York’s decision to promote Baalke was widely criticized for two reasons: The interview process that preceded it was viewed as somewhat of a sham, with Baalke regarded as the preordained choice; and because of Baalke’s links to the prior regimes of since-fired coaches Mike Nolan and Mike Singletary and deposed GM Scot McCloughan. Yet I believe York’s faith in Baalke, who has modeled much of his approach after Bill Parcells (the Jets’ coach when Baalke got hired in ’98), is the product of some sound sensibilities by the young owner. For one thing, Baalke is regarded by many respected people in the business as a highly gifted assessor of players’ abilities – and one with the guts to stand up for his opinions and go against the grain. “Trent Baalke is a football guy through and through, with a very good understanding of the game and a very sound evaluation process,” said Falcons general manager Thomas Dimitroff. “And he’s driven – he has a tireless work ethic. He’ll do everything in his power to help restore that organization to prominence.” The endorsement from Dimitroff brings us to the second reason I’m encouraged by the ascent of Baalke: He represents another victory for the unheralded, observant grinders who are the lifeblood of the player-acquisition process, but are often overlooked when it comes to landing high-profile gigs.

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Dimitroff was once one of these behind-the-scenes standouts, a former area scout who’d at first been marginalized because of his counter-culture appearance and vegetarian diet but had risen through the Patriots’ front-office ranks because he turned out to be damn good at what he did. When Falcons owner Arthur Blank offered him the GM job following the franchise’s Bobby Petrino fiasco of 2007 and an unsuccessful effort to land Parcells to run its front office – and did so after interviewing Dimitroff via videoconference – it was a decidedly unsexy hire that provoked mockery from outsiders. A year later, Dimitroff was named the NFL’s executive of the year. Three years later (last Sunday), his Falcons clinched the No. 1 seed in the NFC. He now has plenty of name recognition, in that numerous franchises are searching for “The Next Thomas Dimitroff.” That’s a positive development in a league in which people from the business side – and even a high-profile TV commentator like Matt Millen, who became the Detroit Lions’ president without any scouting or front-office experience – have been granted decision-making power more and more frequently in recent years. “That’s been my dad’s thing forever: There are so many non-football guys making football decisions now, and they’re not going to be good ones generally,” Chiefs coach Todd Haley said of his father, Dick, the executive who gave Baalke his break back in ’98. “I think it’s important that these guys who’ve been out on the road, scouting, grinding away, are the ones who are put in those positions.” Baalke, too, believes that scouting is the ideal launching pad for a successful front-office career. “College scouts don’t get a lot of notoriety ‘cause they’re out of sight, out of mind,” he says. “In my humble opinion, there’s not enough respect given to the job they do. But what’s the foundation of the business? Scouting. It’s the road scout – the guy who’s getting up early, staying up late, staying in crappy motels, eating lousy food. “You go to bed thinking about what you’re evaluating and you wake up thinking about what grades you’re going to give. It’s a lonely existence on the road. To be good, you have to be organized and detail-oriented; you have to develop intimate-type relationships with key people at universities, people that’ll tell you the truth. You can never assume you’ve got all the information you need. You’re always searching until the final pick on draft day. Your quest for information never ends.” In that spirit, let’s take a moment to scout the scouts: Who are some of the overlooked talent evaluators who might be ready to make a jump similar to the one Baalke just completed? Two years ago, I wrote about Arizona Cardinals player personnel director Steve Keim, who’d helped reshape the roster of the NFC’s surprising Super Bowl XLIII entrant. Before I tell you a little bit more of Baalke’s story, here are some other front-office executives regarded by insiders as potential GM material: • Les Snead, Falcons director of player personnel. Snead has certainly benefited from having spent the past three years under Dimitroff, but the argument could be made that he gained equally valuable knowledge about what not to do while observing Petrino’s ill-fated and abbreviated 2007 season in charge. (Talk about crisis-management experience.) He has served under numerous regimes (including Dan Reeves/Ron Hill and Jimmy Mora/Rich McKay in Atlanta and Tom Coughlin in Jacksonville), has been involved in the coaching-search process and has scouting experience on the pro and collegiate sides. He has a strong work ethic and a passion for the game, and he has impressed his peers with a keen eye for talent. Snead’s strong support of undrafted free agents Harvey Dahl(notes) (signed off the Niners’ practice squad in ’07) and Tyson Clabo(notes) proved prophetic, as they have helped add nastiness and physicality to the Falcons’ underrated offensive line. • Doug Whaley, Bills assistant general manager/director of player personnel. Before joining the Bills a year ago, Whaley spent more than a decade with the Pittsburgh Steelers, where he was part of a highly successful scouting operation. Prior to serving as the Steelers’ pro scouting coordinator, Whaley was an

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area scout for the Seahawks. He is well-rounded, with his intelligence, passion and people skills standing out. Involved from top to bottom under the Steelers’ excellent and low-key GM, Kevin Colbert, Whaley is a Pittsburgh native with an outgoing personality – yet he has impressed coworkers with his humility and lack of self-promotion. And Whaley, who spent a year on Wall Street working as a retail stockbroker following his collegiate career at Pitt, would be ideally suited to interacting with people on the business side of the building as well. • Nick Caserio, Patriots director of player personnel. With the recent departures of Dimitroff and Scott Pioli, Bill Belichick’s longtime right-hand man (and now the Kansas City Chiefs’ GM), Caserio is the second-most powerful person on the football side of the organization. Granted, that’s like saying someone is outweighed only by nose tackle Vince Wilfork(notes) – but Belichick, while firmly in charge, leans on Caserio’s expertise considerably. Though only 35, Caserio has immersed himself in all aspects of the operation, from coaching wide receivers (during the team’s record-setting 2007 season) to pro- and college-scouting stints. He’s focused, highly driven and known for his loyalty and long hours – and he’s not only versed in Belichick’s system but also secure enough to work well with an omnipotent, exacting head coach. Belichick would surely hate to lose him, but if Caserio leaves, the Patriots have another highly promising executive, pro personnel director Jason Licht, in the fold as a potential successor. • George Paton, Minnesota Vikings director of player personnel. A steadying force in a sometimes tumultuous organization, Paton is a smart, articulate executive who has displayed the fortitude to deal with a headstrong head coach without sporting the type of ego that can cause internal problems. He’s known as a savvy judge of personnel who gets along well with coworkers. Paton’s peers say he has an aptitude for focusing on individual issues without being overwhelmed by the big picture – a key trait for a potential GM. Now back to Baalke. A former assistant coach at North Dakota State and South Dakota State, he moved to Fargo to become a high school principal and athletics director, eventually leaving those jobs in search of a career change. A day after interviewing for an adviser position at the Principal Financial Group in May 1998, Baalke went on a weekend fishing trip on Minnesota’s Cass Lake. While there, he got a call from his wife, Beth, relaying a message that someone from the Jets had called. “I thought, ‘Someone’s [messing] with me,’” Baalke said. “At that point, working in the NFL wasn’t even in the back of my mind, let alone the forefront.” It turned out that Jets scout Lionel Vital, now the Falcons’ assistant director of player personnel, had recommended Baalke to Dick Haley. Vital had interacted with Baalke during the latter’s coaching days and apparently had come away with a favorable impression. Baalke went straight from the fishing trip to the Jets’ training facility and wore jeans and a casual shirt to the interview with Haley, who asked him to give reports on two players. “I was wrong about [future Packers and Seahawks guard Mike] Wahle – I didn’t think he was as good as Adam Timmerman, who I’d coached at South Dakota State, and didn’t rate him very high,” he said. “They asked me to compare two nose tackles, [future Chargers standout] Jamal Williams(notes) with Jason Peter [a Panthers first-round pick who flopped], and I said Williams was by far the better of the two – which he was.” After fighting nerves upon being brought down the hall to meet with Parcells, Baalke got the job and started grinding, eventually learning not to project himself like a know-it-all. He tempered his impulse to give candid, searing opinions about players to others whose views differed and might get offended, and he came to understand the value of a steady progression up the flow chart. “People ask me, ‘What makes you prepared?’ ” Baalke said. “One of the things you look at that’s important, whether you’re hiring coaches or front-office people, is have they gone through all the steps? Have they started at the bottom and worked their way up? Now if you got someone who fits that profile, it’s not definitely going to work, but it’s a proven model for success.

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“I haven’t missed any of the steps. And that’s one reason I feel very prepared for this opportunity.” There are a lot of no-name scouts hoping he succeeds. ---------------------- A Baalke refresher: From high school A.D. to 49ers G.M. By Daniel Brown, San Jose Mercury News The 49ers begin head coaching interviews today, starting with Raiders offensive coordinator Hue Jackson. Stanford coach Jim Harbaugh is also expected in by the end of the week. I’ll post updates on the blog throughout the day. In the meantime, here’s a refresher course on general manager Trent Baalke. It’s a profile I did on him last April when he took over for Scot McCloughan. There’s no new ground , but it’s a reminder that this guy came from nowhere — Baalke was once a high school athletic director in North Dakota. Now, he’s the man the 49ers entrust to turn around the franchise. # # # About this time a year ago, Trent Baalke and Scot McCloughan had a daily ritual. They would meet for morning walks to rack up some miles and kick around 49ers draft scenarios. It was on one such stroll that Baalke and McCloughan deduced, a week ahead of time, that receiver Michael Crabtree would still be on the board at No. 10 and that they should be ready to pounce. And this year? “It’s a lonely walk,” Baalke joked. With McCloughan out as the 49ers general manager, Baalke will call the draft-day shots. He was quick to note that he’s not really lonely: Coach Mike Singletary accompanied him on recent scouting missions, and the 49ers’ pre-draft meetings solicit the input of everyone from the team’s top brass to the assistant coaches. But in the end, Baalke walks alone. “Trent is the point person,” team president Jed York said. “It is his decision.” Baalke debuts with two picks, Nos. 13 and 17, when the first round begins Thursday. There is lots of speculation about who the heck Trent Baalke will take. But first, there’s another question. Who the heck is Trent Baalke? If his plan had gone the way he envisioned, Baalke would have walked away from football long ago. In fact, he quit the game once. He gave up his job as a college assistant to become a high school administrator in the late 1990s. Baalke became the athletic director at Shanley High, a small but mighty sports powerhouse in Fargo, N.D. Leo Ringey, who helped hire him, recalled that Baalke’s predecessor was still too much of a coach at heart to spend any time in an office. Baalke, in contrast, could push paper as if it were a tackling sled.

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“He came in and got the coaches coordinated, did a nice job with the budget, upgraded the weight room, improved the training and medical facilities and was very organized,” Ringey said. Baalke had a wife, Beth, and two young daughters. He was content. But a funny thing happened on his way to settling down. Baalke had been a liaison to pro scouts at South Dakota State, and a New York Jets representative liked his eye for talent for so much that he recommended Baalke for a job. The Jets called with an offer so out of the blue that Baalke thought it was a friend pulling a prank. “I never even contemplated getting into the NFL,” he recalled. Working for the Jets gave him a chance to learn from the some of football’s most famous minds. The 1998 Jets coaching staff featured head coach Bill Parcells and assistant head coach Bill Belichick. Baalke also learned from Dick Haley, the Jets director of player personnel who had the same role for the Pittsburgh Steelers from 1971-90. Haley is best remembered for a fairly decent 1974 draft: Lynn Swann, Jack Lambert, John Stallworth and Mike Webster — four future Hall of Famers. But with the Jets and later the Redskins (2001-03), Baalke learned that even the sharpest scouting eyes have blind spots and that humility can be a valuable asset. Asked to name a few of his favorite scouting discoveries, Baalke declined. “I’d love to tell you all the ones I was right on, but then I’d have to tell you all the guys I was wrong on, and there have been many,” he said. “I don’t think there’s anybody in this business that can say they hit on every player they’ve ever evaluated.” A Wisconsin native, Baalke attended Bemidji (Minn.), arriving at the school in 1982, just as its football program drooped to an all-time low. Bemidji had lost 20 in a row and was threatening make it 21 by blowing a fourth-quarter lead. That’s when Baalke, a 215-pound freshman outside linebacker, sniffed out a screen pass in the final minute and made the most important tackle of the game. The 14-10 victory over Minnesota-Morris turned around the fortunes of the program. “Trent was always on top of the situation, always had a sense of what might happen,” recalled John Peterson, who in ‘82 was in his first season as Bemidji’s coach. Peterson is now an area scout for the Carolina Panthers. Baalke was a two-time all-conference player. Peterson kept him around for an extra season as an assistant coach. Baalke then headed for North Dakota State (1989) and South Dakota State (1990-95), where his duties included strength-and-conditioning coach. Baalke was known to prowl the weight room and berate any player giving less than a full effort. “He was a perfectionist. He took the performance of his players to a personal level,” said South Dakota State coach John Stiegelmeier, who was defensive coordinator during Baalke’s time. Told that Baalke now has the buttoned-up demeanor of a front-office executive, Stiegelmeier joked: “Then he’s hiding it. He’s Dr. Jekyll.” It was during his South Dakota stop that Baalke impressed NFL scouts with his player evaluations. Notably, he campaigned on behalf of kicker Adam Vinatieri and offensive lineman Adam Timmerman.

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Baalke once persuaded a Green Bay scout that Timmerman was a diamond in the rough. The Packers listened, took Timmerman as a seventh-round pick — and landed a player who lasted 12 NFL seasons and made two Pro Bowls. That Packers scout remained forever grateful and, years later, repaid him with a job: Scot McCloughan was that scout, and upon becoming general manager he hired Baalke as the 49ers’ Western region scout. “That’s really when Scot and my friendship started,” Baalke said, looking back to the Timmerman recommendation. “This business is all about relationships.” The 49ers don’t have a 20-game losing streak, as Bemidji did, but they’ll be counting on Baalke to bring a skid to an end. The 49ers haven’t had a winning season or a playoff appearance since 2002. Who the heck is Trent Baalke? With two first-round picks on Thursday, the 49ers are about to get their answer. “We’re not going to sit back and say, ‘Everyone else, go pick the players,”‘ Baalke said. “We’re going to get the players we have targeted, I promise you that.” ---------------------- Baalke Dedicated to Winning By Sam Good, 49ers.com Nothing will change for Trent Baalke, at least in how he approaches his job. Dedication, commitment and hard work are how Baalke got to this point in his career, and those are the pillars upon which he will continue to operate as he takes over the role of general manager for the 49ers. “You can’t change who you are as a person or how you go about your business,” Baalke said. “I’m going to approach my job the same way. I’m going to go to work and try to get a little bit better at what I do every day. “I will have a lot of the same responsibilities, there is just a broader scope of things I am now responsible for.” Part of that scope will include complete control over the team’s 53-man roster. But as Baalke said, he “won’t rule with a gavel.” He will take everyone’s opinion into account and make decisions based upon what is in the best interest of the team. After he was named GM on Tuesday, Baalke’s first order of business was to find a man to lead the 49ers on the field. And in hiring Jim Harbaugh, arguably the hottest coaching candidate on the market, you could say he did pretty well with his first task. An earthquake with a 4.1 magnitude struck the Bay Area during Baalke and Harbaugh’s introductory press conference, but the ground shaking could have just been the 49ers Faithful jumping with excitement, showing their approval for Baalke’s first move. “We’re very excited about what Jim brings to the table,” said Baalke, who met with Harbaugh for six hours on Wednesday to discuss the head coaching position. “I think more than what he said, it’s how he came across – just the passion and the energy. “He’s a ball coach... He’s a guy who can lead the 49ers franchise back to where it belongs.”

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In hiring Harbaugh, Baalke believes he has the man who is the right fit for the job. The new GM said the most important thing to him is winning with class, and with that in mind Harbaugh, was the perfect candidate. “When you sit down with somebody, whether it’s a player, whether it’s a coach or whether it’s an executive, you’re looking for the right fit,” Baalke said. “From the first time I met him, and every contact I’ve had with him, whether it was at the University of San Diego or Stanford, I’ve just enjoyed being around him. “He’s everything you look for in a football man.” Prior to being named GM, Baalke spent the past nine months in a similar role as the team’s vice president of player personnel. In that role Baalke was the team’s lead scout and responsible for bringing the right players into the 49ers organization. Baalke’s first move as the head of the personnel department came during the 2010 NFL Draft, and all eight players he selected suited up for the 49ers this season. Baalke was one of several qualified candidates for the GM position. Team President and CEO Jed York was responsible for hiring the GM, and he said he was looking for a person who had the passion and vision that are necessary to make the 49ers “a team that will compete for the Super Bowl year-in and year-out.” Prior to his promotion to vice president of player personnel, Baalke was the 49ers director of player personnel from 2008-09 where he oversaw both the college and pro personnel departments. He first joined the franchise in 2005 as the team’s Western Region Scout, a position he held through 2007. But Baalke isn’t concerned about the past. He’s focused on the future – a winning future with the 49ers – and that work begins tonight. “This isn’t the end of the process, it’s just the beginning,” Baalke said, “Now that we have everybody in place it’s time to get started.”

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Coach Feature Stories Mike Ditka on Jim Harbaugh: '49ers, you made a great choice' By Mike Bambach, USAToday.com Mike Ditka offered a strong endorsement of new 49ers head coach Jim Harbaugh, his former Bears quarterback, on ESPN's Sunday NFL Countdown . . . especially strong for those of us who remember Ditka's eruption at Harbaugh on Oct. 4, 1992. As Ditka said: "He took all that crap I threw at him in Minnesota. If he could handle that, he can handle anything. I like what he's doing. 49ers, you made a great choice. You'll like what you get. . . . He's going to be a heck of a head coach. He's a strong guy." That game, considered the 32nd most memorable in Bears history, was a turning point for Ditka and the Bears. The 2-2 Bears played the 3-1 Vikings that day and led 20-0 in the middle of the third quarter. Then, on third-and-short inside the Bears 30, Harbaugh called an audible, which RB Neal Anderson didn't hear. That miscommunication led to a 35-yard interception return for a touchdown by Vikings CB Todd Scott. Ditka exploded at Harbaugh on the sidelines, admonishing him for calling an audible. The Vikings went on to win 21-20, the Bears went on to finish 5-11, Ditka was dismissed after the season and Harbaugh lasted one more season in Chicago before moving on to the Indianapolis Colts. There, Harbaugh came within one Hail Mary play of leading the Colts to the 1995 AFC championship against the Pittsburgh Steelers. ---------------------- Need to win is a way of life or new 49ers coach Harbaugh By Matt Barrows, Sacramento Bee Shortly after being hired as Stanford's head football coach in 2007, Jim Harbaugh gathered his staff in a meeting room and asked three questions. The first, recalled a coach in the room: "How many of you think we can win six ball games and go to a bowl?" Stanford had won a single game the previous year, but everyone's hand went up. "OK, how many think we can win a Pac-10 title?" Most of the men in the room raised their hands. When Harbaugh asked his final question – "Who thinks we can win a national title?" – only a few tentative hands crept up. "Well, we're going to," Harbaugh snapped. "And the guys who don't think that need to find another job." Anyone who's ever coached in the NFL is competitive. What sets the 49ers' new head coach apart, according to those who know him, is that he's in a perpetual state of competition. Not only does Harbaugh need to win football games, he needs to win everything. Willie Taggart, who served as Harbaugh's running backs coach at Stanford from 2007-09, was there for the meeting room exchange. He also recalls watching a pickup basketball game between Harbaugh and his son, who was 9 at the time.

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Harbaugh didn't just win the match. He boxed the kid out, swatted away shots and otherwise dominated the third-grader as if an Olympic gold medal were on the line. "Jim – you walk down the hallway next to him and he's going to try and walk better than you," Taggart said. "I've never met anyone as competitive as Jim." Pete Carroll ran into that ever-churning buzz saw in 2009. At the time, Carroll's USC team was the Goliath of the Pac-10, one that had been conference champion seven years running and had thumped Stanford 45-23 a year earlier. In 2009, David knocked Goliath down and then kicked dirt in its face. After Stanford's seventh touchdown, Harbaugh – always competing – opted to go for a gratuitous two-point conversion. The final score: Stanford 55, USC 21. And Harbaugh remains combative long after the game has ended. Most 49ers fans took their first hard look at their team's prospective coach during last month's Orange Bowl. After the game, Harbaugh spent the next hour curtly dismissing reporters – first ESPN's Michelle Tafoya and Reese Davis, then a room full of scribes – who wanted to know if he were leaving for the NFL. "Oh please, please," Harbaugh sniffed. "Give me a break. Have some respect for the game." Strong work ethic What drives Harbaugh is difficult to explain. The man known as Captain Comeback might as well be Captain America. He's tall, square-jawed and handsome. He has two young children with his wife, Sarah, and three from a previous marriage. He is the big man on campus incarnate. No one should be more content about his lot in life. Yet Harbaugh has the grinding work ethic of a perennial underdog. "I think it's just who Jim is," said his father, Jack, who was head football coach at Western Kentucky University for 14 seasons. "I think he looks at himself differently. He looks at himself like a grunt. He looks at himself as a guy who always has to prove something." Jack Harbaugh said his son's ferocity may stem from the family's peripatetic lifestyle. When Jim was growing up, the Harbaughs moved from Ohio to Kentucky to Iowa to Michigan to Palo Alto as Jack climbed the coaching ladder. At each stop, Jim and older brother John, head coach for the Baltimore Ravens, had to enroll at a new school and try out for a new football team. "When you move around like that, you never feel comfortable," Jack said. "It's always, 'Now I've got to do it all over again, prove myself all over again.' " Harbaugh is amused by his dad's theory. He said he's simply drawn to hard work, always has been. As a boy, Harbaugh said, he loved cutting the grass and would mow it – first horizontally, then diagonally – as if it were a baseball infield. Then he'd climb to the top of a tree and take in his accomplishment. "I like being able to work hard at something and see the body of work, whatever it is," he said. "I once watched a guy direct traffic for an hour and a half – just mesmerized watching him. He was just really good at it. I appreciate that. It was somebody who was expert at something and was doing a wonderful job at it." Asked if Harbaugh's intensity can be off-putting, Taggart – the guy who watched Harbaugh whip his son in basketball – said, "No, it's contagious. You end up being that way."

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Leader of the Colts Indeed, what has made Harbaugh successful is his ability to get those around him to buy into his mighty ambition. His nickname, Captain Comeback, was born in 1995 when, as the Colts quarterback, he engineered a series of last-minute victories and took a middling Indianapolis squad to within one play – a Hail Mary pass that slipped through the arms of a receiver – of the Super Bowl. "We weren't that great of a ball club, and then Marshall Faulk, our young running back, goes down in the playoffs," recalled Ted Marchibroda, who coached the Colts that season. "Jim basically had to take over the ball club and lead the ball club. And they believed in him." During that season, Todd Stewart was a 29-year-old assistant public relations director for the Colts. Stewart remembers Indianapolis, a town that had never had a champion, falling in love with Harbaugh. "It wasn't just the football side of things," Stewart said. "The marketing department, the PR department – people rallied around him. If you heard his voice out in the hallway, you wanted him to come into your office." Steve Wisniewski spent 13 years as a Raiders offensive lineman, but last year found himself at the bottom of the coaching chart as Stanford's strength and conditioning intern. His most tedious tasks: folding letters to potential recruits, placing them in envelopes and pasting on labels. Sometimes more than 1,000 were mailed a week. "He'd sit down and start doing that with me," Wisniewski said of Harbaugh. "I'd say, 'Coach, you don't have to help me.' But he'd do stuff like that. When the team flight landed, he's out there next to the staff pulling luggage off the team flight." To Harbaugh, it's just work. "That's my personality," he said. "I don't know if it was the grasshopper or the … who's the one saving stuff up for winter? The ant. I'm like the ant. I have a hard time living for today or in the past. To me it's all about making the future the best it can be." Double duty Look at Harbaugh's résumé and you'll find an odd overlap. From 1993-2001 he was both an NFL quarterback and an assistant coach at Western Kentucky. When the school's football program ran out of money and was in danger of being dropped, Harbaugh became certified as a college coach and spent the NFL offseasons recruiting – gratis – for his father. His first target was Taggart, who in 1993 was a high school quarterback in Bradenton, Fla. Taggart recalls coming home one day after track practice and getting a message from his sister: Jim Harbaugh called. Taggart thought someone was playing a trick on him. "Who? The only Jim Harbaugh I had heard of played quarterback for the Chicago Bears," Taggart said. Taggart's family couldn't afford long distance, so he went around the corner to a pay phone and called the number back. Even after hanging up, Taggart wasn't convinced he had talked to the Jim Harbaugh until the following Tuesday when he saw the Bears quarterback walk into his school cafeteria. Taggart not only ended up going to Western Kentucky, he became one of the best players in the program's history, one of four who have had their jerseys retired. Today he is the school's head coach.

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The relationship between quarterback and recruit didn't end in the Manatee High cafeteria. In 1999 Harbaugh was the best man at Taggart's wedding. Three years ago, Taggart was part of Harbaugh's wedding party. "You know how back then everyone wanted to be like Mike?" Taggart said. "Well, I wanted to be like Jim. The way he carried himself – that's how I wanted to be." Taggart also was one of the Stanford assistants in the room in 2007 when Harbaugh targeted a national championship. There may have been skeptics that day, but there aren't any now. Stanford's convincing Orange Bowl win – and the fact that quarterback Andrew Luck is returning for another season – have made the Cardinal a favorite next season. The lesson, said Taggart: "Never doubt Jim Harbaugh." ---------------------- Jim Harbaugh could make immediate impact in soft NFC West By Clifton Brown, SportingNews.com Jim Harbaugh parlayed success at Stanford into a ticket to the NFL. After leading Stanford to a 12-1 season and a Orange Bowl victory, Harbaugh’s cell phone wouldn’t stop buzzing. The Dolphins wanted him. Stanford wanted to keep him. But Harbaugh chose the challenge of coaching the 49ers, a franchise that has missed the playoffs the past eight seasons. Jim Harbaugh has solid skill-position players in place in San Francisco. (AP photo) The NFL is not foreign to Harbaugh, and that should be an asset. He played 15 seasons as a quarterback with the Bears, Colts, Ravens, Chargers, and Panthers. Harbaugh also spent two seasons (2002-03) as the Raiders’ quarterback coach, and his brother, John Harbaugh, has been a successful head coach with the Ravens. When Jim Harbaugh walks into the 49ers’ locker room, he will bring credibility with him. "I think he’s going to be an excellent coach for us," veteran 49ers center Eric Heitmann said during a telephone interview. "Everyone out here had a pretty close eye on what he was able to do at Stanford. I think it’s pretty remarkable how he was able to turn that program around, and turn it into an elite program in just three years." Now Harbaugh hopes to spark a 49ers’ resurgence. Biggest asset. Playing in the NFC West is a huge advantage. The Seahawks won this division with a 7-9 record last season. That may not be quality, but it’s parity. A similar scenario could play out next season. The division looks wide open again, and many people would say the 49ers (6-10) underachieved last season. If Harbaugh can squeeze two or three more wins out of them, the 49ers’ postseason drought could end. Biggest headache. Hopefully for Harbaugh’s sake, it will not be Michael Crabtree. This is a huge season for Crabtree, the 10th pick in the 2009 draft, who has not been the impact receiver the 49ers expected. The struggles of quarterback Alex Smith and the 49ers’ other offensive woes have certainly played a part in keeping Crabtree from breaking out. But the 49ers need more big plays from Crabtree (55 catches, 741 yards, six touchdowns). With the lockout threatening training camp, Crabtree and Smith may have difficulty improving their chemistry in a new offensive system. X-factor. Smith’s play will be critical to this team’s fortunes. Though he is a free agent, Smith is virtually certain to re-sign with the 49ers once the lockout ends, and Harbaugh has been steady in his public

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support of Smith. But can Harbaugh really get more out of Smith than previous coaches? We’ll see. The 49ers have already drafted Colin Kaepernick to be their quarterback of the future, but they would prefer not to rush him. An improved Smith would give the 49ers a better chance to win this division. If he plays poorly, Smith could take the offense down with him. Systems check. It will be interesting to see how Harbaugh utilizes the 49ers’ offensive talent. This is another situation where the lockout could hurt the 49ers, a team with a new coach that may be rushed to install a new system. Harbaugh has some impressive skill position players in running back Frank Gore, tight end Vernon Davis, and Crabtree. But the 49ers have been more impressive on paper than on the field. Harbaugh’s job is to change that, and Heitmann believes the 49ers have the right coach at the right time. "I think we’ve got a lot of young talent that’s waiting for the right offensive and defensive structure," said Heitmann, who is still rehabbing a serious neck injury. "I think coach Harbaugh is going to bring the best out of us. "Every team is trying to get guys to be on the same page before training camp starts. We’ve had a great group of guys working out here since the lockout. I think we’ll be fine.’’ Turnaround potential. The potential is there. A weak division, a team with talent, and a coach like Harbaugh bringing a different voice and energy. Even in the NFC West, the 49ers will need better play from their quarterback and from their secondary to play .500 or better. But as Seahawks coach Pete Carroll showed last season, making serious noise as a first-year coach in this division is doable. ---------------------- Harbaugh brothers' lifelong competition hits NFL By Antonio Gonzalez, SFGate.com One of the regular chores Jack Harbaugh gave his sons growing up was mowing the lawn. The Harbaugh home in Ann Arbor, Mich., had a large, sloping backyard that was far more challenging to cut than the front. John and younger brother Jim, his junior by 15 months, took turns between the front and back. At least that was the plan. "I can remember our summers being consumed with who had done the backyard the week before," Jack said. "When that settled, it would turn into who could do it faster and who could do it better. With those two, everything was a competition." The sibling rivalry that began in games back home will reach a historic level this year. Jim, entering his first season with the San Francisco 49ers, and John, in his fourth year with the Baltimore Ravens, are the first brothers to be NFL head coaches. Despite their fierce but friendly competition, the two always have held a strong bond. Even while taking opposite paths to the pros. Sons of a football coach, they were born and raised into the profession. The pair shared a room for almost 18 years, the one constant growing up while they moved from city to city for their father's job. Though Jim was younger, he was always more athletic than John and his older brother's friends. He would tag along with them, but he never took it easy on them — or anybody — just so he could fit in. Once during a youth baseball game, Jim beaned a girl in the back because she was crowding the plate. Another time, when the two were ice hockey teammates, Jim, not much of a skater, barreled over smaller players just to score a goal.

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"He would alienate the other kids, so I was really the only friend he had," said John, now 48 years old. "We joke that dad's profession was the perfect profession for Jim, because after two years, he'd be like, `It's time to move, dad. I've lost all my friends.' We were in Iowa one time and dad felt bad because we were leaving for Michigan. He tried to break it to us, and Jim goes, `Just in time, dad. I just ran out of my last friend.'" That's how things went for the Harbaugh boys when they were young. During their formative years, when Jack was the defensive backs coach at Michigan under Bo Schembechler, the brothers shared a third-floor bedroom converted from attic space. They competed in everything, from wrestling to cards to who could run down the stairs faster or finish dinner first. "They made up games and then competed against each other," said their mother, Jackie. "It was constant." The most memorable competition involved a tree in the front yard of their Michigan home. Jim and John would try to throw a football over the giant evergreen. Jim, blessed with a rocket arm, could sail the pigskin over the top easily. John never could. Little brother would always remind him, too. John hated it. "A few months ago, we found a picture of just the tree," Jack said. "Why anybody would take a photo of just a tree is beyond me. Then I remembered it was THAT tree. It's so silly when you think about it now." The athletic competitions exposed the one divide between the two brothers. John never had the same physical gifts as his younger brother, and when he tried to match him in sports, things got messy. He would have been the quarterback at Pioneer High School in Ann Arbor, but he caught his finger in another player's jersey and broke it. When he switched to defensive back, he tore a ligament in his right knee his senior year. He still played defensive back at Miami of Ohio, although most of his action came in practice. Jim's playing career took a more glamorous path, leading him to Michigan and a starring role as quarterback. In his junior year, he led the nation in passing efficiency, helped the Wolverines to a Fiesta Bowl victory over Nebraska and finished ranked second. And he was cocky doing it, too. Before his second-to-last regular-season game at Michigan, Jim guaranteed a victory over rival Ohio State. Schembechler was furious. "Bo came into the locker room and said, `Our quarterback shot off his mouth, and now we better win,'" former Michigan running back Jamie Morris said. "Jim stood up and said, `We WILL win the game.' And he played like hell to make sure we did." While John couldn't keep up with his brother athletically, he shared that perpetual drive. The frustration of watching Jim beat him at everything — and reach the NFL — was more than enough motivation. So he found a new place to score victories over his brother: in the classroom. John won Miami of Ohio's football scholar athlete award and earned a degree in political science. "You thought maybe for a second he might go to law school," Jackie said, laughing. No chance. Coaching was in the blood.

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The only Harbaugh sibling not to go into the profession was their sister, Joani. And she ended up marrying Tom Crean, now Indiana's basketball coach. That all of his children embraced coaching makes Jack proud. After all, his kids were around football all their lives. "We thought our dad had the best job in the whole world," John said. "We were the kings of the whole town because our dad coached football." Fittingly, the brothers' coaching careers took hold while helping their dad. Jack was the head coach at Western Kentucky in the early 1990s. Four days before spring practice one year, the university president told him football was going to be dropped because of a lack of funding. After Jack convinced his players to go ahead with practice, the university's board voted to keep the program, but sliced the budget in half and slashed scholarships. His boys came to the rescue. John was at Cincinnati, and he took time to compile two recruiting lists: one for Cincinnati, the second for Western Kentucky. Jim was still playing in the NFL, but he took a coaching position at Western Kentucky with no salary, allowing him to recruit for his dad with the list his brother put together. One of the first players Jim landed was dual-threat quarterback Willie Taggart. The rest is history: more recruits signed, the school improved and won a Division I-AA national title in 2002. Taggart, a former Stanford assistant under Jim, is now the coach at Western Kentucky — which moved up to the Sun Belt Conference and is BCS eligible. "Without John and Jim Harbaugh," Jack said, "there would be no football at Western Kentucky." John was the first sibling to dive into the family business. He took the long route through the coaching ranks, working his way up as a college assistant for 13 years, starting under his father at Western Michigan. Finally, the Philadelphia Eagles hired him as special teams coordinator. Nine years later, John was in the same position with Philadelphia. During that time, Jim was enjoying NFL stardom — he's still the last quarterback to start for Indianapolis not named Peyton Manning. The two spoke often, and the odd dynamic of little brother outshining older brother never fractured the relationship. "The greatest thing that I can say about John and of all the things that he has accomplished, never once in that entire experience was John ever anything but totally supportive in Jim and what he was doing," Jack said. "I never heard him ever say, `Why am I not 6-feet-3 or why am I not 215 pounds?' Never once." While John was waiting for his turn at the front of the coaching line, Jim found a way to skip in front. Again. He retired from playing and went straight to offensive assistant with the Oakland Raiders in 2002. He was quarterbacks coach by the following season. Still, they never stopped helping each other. One morning before dawn, Jim woke up behind the wheel in his driveway and didn't know whether he had just come home or was about to leave. He called John, who had been used to the coaching grind for more than a decade, and he told him to go inside and kiss his wife and kids — then go to work. After only two years in Oakland, Jim was offered the head coaching position at the University of San Diego. Everybody Jim knew tried to steer him away, including Raiders owner Al Davis.

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"He told me that he had been at U-S-C, not U-S-D," Jim said. Jim took the job anyway and offered his brother a job as coordinator. John told Eagles coach Andy Reid he was considering the move. Reid immediately promoted him to defensive backs coach. Jim won two Division I-AA national titles in three years at San Diego. He took over at Stanford after the program went 1-11 in 2006 under Walt Harris, leading the Cardinal to a 12-1 record last season capped by a 40-12 victory over Virginia Tech in the Orange Bowl, riding the wave into 49ers headquarters. For once, little brother has some catching up to do. John took the reins at Baltimore in 2008 and guided the Ravens to the AFC Championship game, losing to the eventual Super Bowl champion Pittsburgh Steelers. Baltimore has made the playoffs in all three of his seasons. Now the Harbaugh brothers have a date with history. Jim will lead his 49ers against John's Ravens in Baltimore on Thanksgiving, a fitting day for an unprecedented NFL family affair. The brothers still send game film to their father back home every week, asking for tips, but mostly just to keep him involved in football. Don't expect any advice that week, Jack said. Though family is sure to be scattered throughout the stadium on game day, their parents, as of now, aren't planning to attend. The way the Harbaughs see it, they've watched their boys compete against each other enough. "It will be hard because you want them both to win," Jackie said. "I guess it's still possible in the pros for a regular-season game to end in a tie, so I guess if all things being equal, that might be the best way for it to end." "But," she said, "I know they would never think that." ---------------------- A Coach’s Coach By Taylor Price, 49ers.com Geep Chryst has been friends with the Harbaugh family for more than two decades. He once coached Jim in the NFL. Now he calls his old friend “boss." And for the first time ever, the two will work together on a coaching staff this season with the San Francisco 49ers. JUST LIKE the Harbaughs, the Chrysts have always been a football family. Family patriarch, George Chryst, coached 30 years in Wisconsin, mostly as the athletic director and football coach at Wisconsin-Platteville. He passed away at the age of 55. But his teaching legacy lives on through his sons, who carry their father’s passion for the game of football. Two have coached in the college and professional ranks for more than two decades. Currently, Paul Chryst serves as the offensive coordinator and quarterbacks coach for the University of Wisconsin – Geep Chryst, as the quarterbacks coach of the San Francisco 49ers. It should come as no surprise that football families like the Chrysts and Harbaughs became competitive allies. Fathers George and Jack coached against each other for many years in the Big Ten Conference. A mutual respect was formed there, one that would trickle down to their sons, who first crossed paths on the Platteville campus in 1987. Chryst, who broke into coaching working for his father, also pursued coaching opportunities with the Chicago Bears, who were in town for training camp. Harbaugh on the other hand, was simply in town as the team’s first-round draft pick.

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“Like Jim, I came from a coaching family," explains Chryst on a cool May afternoon in the offseason at 49ers headquarters. “Our fathers knew each other. And once I was done with college, since I didn’t play for my dad, I wanted to coach with my dad. That was at Wisconsin-Platteville where the Bears trained. So I have the distinction on the coaching staff of knowing Jim the longest.” GROWING UP, Chryst played multiple sports, however, his future was primarily in football and baseball. He attended Princeton to play both, with his experience on the football team being most unique. Chryst played quarterback to start his collegiate career and moved to defense so he could help his team where they needed bodies most. “They said they needed help defensively, so I played outside linebacker,” recalls Chryst. “And as I joked, ‘They still needed help when I was on defense.’” A modest Chryst always felt he’d make a good coach if his playing career didn’t pan out. After all, it was in his bloodline. So when Chryst’s playing days came to an end, he began a lengthy coaching career by working for his father in 1987, before moving on to the University of Wisconsin-Madison the following season. There, it took a unique circumstance for Chryst to venture out of the Midwest. When an opportunity came for Chryst to coach at the University of Wyoming, the self-described “Cheesehead,” jumped at the chance and moved to Wyoming where he coached offensive linemen. If not for Chryst’s friend who wrote computer software for the Wyoming program, Chryst may have never made the move. But once he visited the campus, Chryst found himself in the middle of the Rocky Mountains coaching linemen in 1989 and quarterbacks the following season. Looking back on the move, it’s funny how everything worked out for the Chrysts. At Wyoming, Geep worked for Paul Roach, the same coach who created a job vacancy for his father George, when he left Wisconsin’s staff to join Bart Starr’s staff with the Green Bay Packers. “It seems like football is a small world,” says Geep looking back on the circumstance. At Wyoming, Geep thrived in the various roles that were put on his plate. He coached offensive linemen, but enjoyed greater responsibilities, even some play-calling duties. It molded him for future opportunities like his big break with the Bears. EXPERIENCE AND proximity enabled Chryst to catch on as Chicago’s director of research and quality control in 1991. Though Chryst held the title for five seasons, he actually began helping the team first in ’87 by taking care of “various capacities.” Despite being exposed to NFL practices and coaching techniques, Chryst remained eager to get more experience under his belt. Following his two-year stint at Wyoming, he drove to Orlando along with his brother Paul to look for other coaching jobs at the now defunct World League’s Draft. “It turned out to be a great break,” Geep says of the trip. At the event, the Chryst brothers forged a friendship with current Oregon State head coach Mike Riley. Geep began a unique relationship with the World League’s Orlando Thunder too. Because of the trip, Geep was offered a coaching position as Orlando’s wide receivers and running backs coach. He coached the Thunder in the spring and was hired by the Bears in the fall of ‘91. The following season, Chryst received a call from the Thunder in what he thought would be a request for his coaching services, instead, the Thunder needed a long snapper for the playoffs. “After years of not having pads on it was a lot of fun,” recalls Chryst of the experience. “We ended up making the playoffs and going to the World Bowl. But I remember grabbing Jim and having him throw me a few passes because that was the first time in a while I had a helmet and shoulder pads on.” POISE UNDER pressure is what Chryst recalled most vividly of his current boss. Though he had held out of camp for a short period, Harbaugh came to the Chicago Bears full of confidence. Chryst recalls Harbaugh nearly crashing his moped into William “The Refrigerator” Perry’s gold Mercedes. But the rookie quarterback made up for it when he displayed veteran moxie at the team’s rookie talent show. When his partner bowed out of their scheduled embarrassing performance, Harbaugh was left to entertain the veterans all by himself. “You could tell Jim had a lot of poise just how much he loved football from the get-go,” says Chryst of the rookie’s performance in a Blues Brothers skit. On the practice field, Chryst immediately gravitated to Harbaugh’s demeanor, an attitude that Harbaugh has carried throughout his football career. “He was very passionate – he competed on the practice fields,”

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says Chryst. “But at the end of the day, once he crossed the lines on Sunday – it was all business. I think Jim is a great head coach because he’s getting ready for the game just like when he was playing.” HE OFTEN marveled over Harbaugh’s preparation when the two reunited for the 1999 and 2000 NFL seasons in San Diego. Harbaugh was in the final two years of his playing career while Chryst was in the first of his two seasons coaching the Chargers. On Mike Riley’s staff, who he met at that fateful World League Draft, Chryst was San Diego’s offensive coordinator and quarterbacks coach. In addition, Chryst was responsible for getting the most of his close friend and eventual boss. That season, Harbaugh totaled his second-highest passing output of his 15-year career, throwing for 2,761 passing yards. But soon after, it became clear to both men that Harbaugh’s career was winding down. Chryst figured it was only a matter of time before Harbaugh would embark on a new line of work, one where he’d be joining his brother John and the Chryst brothers in the coaching profession. “In San Diego, Jim was contemplating getting into coaching knowing that his playing career was tapering off to an end,” recalls Chryst of the transitional period in Harbaugh’s life. Chryst remained supportive of Harbaugh’s coaching interests while working with the quarterbacks for the Arizona Cardinals (2001-2003) at the same time Harbaugh began a two-year stint as a quality control coach for the Oakland Raiders in 2002. Once Harbaugh was offered a head coaching position at the University of San Diego, Chryst knew his old friend would become successful. “He had all the qualities of a head coach,” remembers Chryst. “I knew in no short order, when he took the San Diego job, it wasn’t going to be a typical bus stop to bus stop trip for Jim.” CHRYST ADMIRED Harbaugh’s coaching rise from afar. From the turnaround he guided at the University of San Diego to his impressive, four-year run at Stanford, Chryst frequently watched the growth of a dear friend. “One of the greatest inventions ever was the DVR because over the course of a long weekend you can DVR some games,” jokes Chryst. “I was pretty excited whenever I could watch his games. You could see the Stanford team really take his personality and the incredible improvement.” Even if it meant in-person visits, Chryst would take the time to watch Harbaugh’s team compete. Chryst later moved on to a five-year coaching stint with the Carolina Panthers, where he served as the team’s tight ends and offensive quality control coach. But throughout his time in Carolina, Chryst was always eager to catch up with Harbaugh whenever given the chance. In 2009, while coaching with the Panthers, Chryst drove to Winston Salem to watch Wake Forest host Harbaugh’s Stanford team. Chryst can vividly recall Harbaugh’s enthusiasm about the game and a particular emerging player. “He was so excited about a guy who was going to get his first collegiate start,” Chryst says, “A guy by the name of Andrew Luck. He was very excited about the player and it turned out everything he said about Luck turned out true.” THEIR RELATIONSHIP is typical of the entire 49ers coaching staff, who have all seemingly come into contact at one point or another in their coaching lives. Their friendship is certainly most unique as it dates back to their father’s coaching days, but it doesn’t overshadow the relationships being formed on the staff. “I’ve really been impressed with the coaching staff Jim has put together. We’ve even had a chance to mingle with the defensive coaches and get to like them on a modest basis,” jokes Chryst with a big grin on his face. In a typical offseason, Chryst and the 49ers coaches would be implementing their schemes while working with the players in various organized team activities and minicamps. But because of the NFL’s current work stoppage, the 49ers coaches have had more time to bond. “We joke that it’s a time for rainy day projects and it continues to rain,” smirks the quarterbacks coach appropriately dressed in a hooded 49ers sweatshirt. One such project had the offensive staff looking at old 49ers pass cutups, which the team acquired from various resources this offseason from the original Bill Walsh West Coast collection. Chryst, along with

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offensive coordinator Greg Roman, wide receivers coach John Morton and the offensive staff, has spent a lot of time familiarizing themselves with Walsh’s teachings. “That stuff is invaluable,” Chryst says. “You realize how talented he was and how some of the same principles he was teaching from the deck of VCRs, those coaching points are still true today. And you also saw as he repeats the installation just how fine of a teacher he was.” IT’S NO secret; Chryst isn’t the only one eager to work with the quarterbacks on the 49ers roster. But he knows his old friend won’t be far from the group once practices begin. “I joke with Jim that he really wants to be coaching the quarterbacks. Having known Jim as long as I have, and knowing how important it is to Jim to work with these quarterbacks, it’s a nice role to have where it’s not all on my shoulders,” says Chryst. “Jim is going to do a nice job of jumping in whenever he has a chance.” As for Chryst jumping into a new experience on the West Coast, the Midwesterner is enjoying himself just fine in the Bay Area. “Anytime you’re outside,” Chryst says, “It seems like it’s been great weather.” Until his family relocates with him in the South Bay, Chryst has enjoyed getting to know his fellow coaches as well as being stopped by fans when he’s out for lunch. “I’ve been impressed with the number of Niner fans out here,” says Chryst. “Anytime you get a bite to eat or are out and about, there are a lot of great Niner fans. You don’t realize how close the Niners are to making the playoffs last year and I think without a doubt that’s a legitimate goal this year.” ---------------------- Davis leaves Beavers for 49ers By Cliff Kirkpatrick, Gazette-Times Reporter Running backs coach Reggie Davis stepped down from the Oregon State football team to be the tight ends coach with the San Francisco 49ers. He is in San Francisco on the job, looking to move his family to the Bay Area. Davis left Corvallis right after Wednesday's signing day. New 49ers coach Jim Harbaugh and Davis are old friends. They played together with the San Diego Chargers for two seasons under current OSU coach Mike Riley. "The timing was perfect, and we felt it was a good move for us," Davis said. "It's a coach we know, and know how to work with him. Plus, it's one of the greatest organizations in the league. There's a lot of talent here, and we can win a lot of games." Davis joined the Beavers in 2008, and coached running backs at UNLV the previous three years. Harbaugh hired Davis before that to coach the tight ends at the University of San Diego. In his three seasons with the Beavers, Davis helped mold standout running back Jacquizz Rodgers, who recently left school to try the NFL. Rodgers was one of three running backs in Pacific-10 Conference history to earn first-team all-conference honors three times, and was the first Pac-10 Freshman and Offensive Player of the Year in the same season. "It wasn't an easy decision," Davis said. "Coach Riley is great to work for. He made things so wonderful for me and my family. So it's not easy to leave a man like coach Riley. I learned so much from him, and will continue to do so. He gave me his blessings and I'm going to keep his number." While most of his coaching experience is with running backs, he played tight end in college at Washington and with the Chargers.

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Davis looked at this opportunity to get into the NFL as too great to pass up. "It was hard because I got to know the recruits we brought in, and I was looking forward to coaching guys like Ryan McCants in his senior year," Davis said. "But this is a big opportunity." Riley didn't return calls about the change in his staff, or what he's going to do. The Beavers also have a graduate assistant opening that has been used as a tight end coach. ---------------------- Up for the Challenge By Alex Espinoza, 49ers.com Vic Fangio returns to the NFL this season after a successful one-year stint with Jim Harbaugh at Stanford. Family ties, old coaching friends and new faces surround Fangio, who has spent much of his 25-year NFL career building franchises from the ground up. The no-nonsense defensive coordinator from Pennsylvania has is looking forward to the 2011 season, as he tries to help lead the 49ers back to the pinnacle of football. THE ZIP code may have changed and his office may be different, but Vic Fangio wasn’t exactly jumping into uncharted waters when he signed on to become the 49ers defensive coordinator this offseason. For starters, Fangio has a quarter century of NFL experience to look back on. With stints in New Orleans, Carolina, Indianapolis, Houston and Baltimore, Fangio knows a thing or two about winning in this league. Consider his existing relationships with several members of the 49ers coaching staff, and Fangio is merely jumping back on the horse. “I knew coming here would be a nice challenge to try and get this franchise back to where it was,” Fangio says. “I think they’ve lost their tradition or mystique that they once had. … I just looked at it as another challenge, like it seems all my stops have been.” Fangio is just one piece of this year’s revamped coaching staff under first-year head coach Jim Harbaugh. Like Bill Walsh before him, Harbaugh is trying to make the leap from Stanford to the 49ers. His mission: turn around a 49ers team that hasn’t reached the playoffs since 2002. Fangio took a brief hiatus from the pro game last year, when he took over as Harbaugh’s defensive coordinator on ‘The Farm.’ All they did was guide Stanford to a 12-1 record, an Orange Bowl victory and a No. 4 team ranking in the final polls. But when Harbaugh took the job with San Francisco, Fangio couldn’t resist the opportunity to coach in the NFL again. WHILE LAST year was their first together on the sidelines, the paths of Fangio and Harbaugh crossed many moons ago. During Fangio’s days as a linebackers coach at New Orleans, he overlooked the “Dome Patrol,” – one of the greatest linebackers units in NFL history. He also coached against Harbaugh a couple of times, splitting the series. But Harbaugh knows how tough Fangio can be as an opposing defensive coordinator. In two starts against Fangio as a quarterback during his career, Harbaugh came up winless with some less-than-stellar performances. While they may have game-planned against each other in decades past, Fangio and Harbaugh were formally introduced to each other within the past few years. The broker of their relationship turns out to be Harbaugh’s brother, John, currently the coach of the Baltimore Ravens. Fangio spent two seasons as an assistant for John Harbaugh, who would occasionally host his brother in Baltimore to watch a game and spend time together. Fangio and Jim Harbaugh got to know each other a bit, so when Jim needed a defensive coordinator with Stanford last year, his brother had just the guy. “It had been four years since I was a coordinator and the circumstances were right,” Fangio says. “I always felt like I missed something by not coaching college so that was good to get a taste of college football, too. I enjoyed my year at Stanford. Obviously, when you win, you’re always going to enjoy it.”

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With coaching roots as long as Fangio’s, perhaps it comes as no surprise he has another long-term connection with another member of the 49ers staff. Turns out, Fangio was instrumental in propelling the career of current San Francisco offensive coordinator Greg Roman. Initially, Roman was part of Carolina’s weight room and training staff during the franchise’s inaugural 1995 season, when Fangio coordinated the defense for head coach Dom Capers. But Fangio gave Roman some more responsibilities as a defensive assistant and quality control coach and so began Roman’s NFL coaching career. “He expressed to me one time that he did have a desire to be a coach, so I just started putting him to work,” Fangio says. “He did a great job for me in those areas and from there he moved on to the offensive side of the ball in our third year together. He’s really been a great coach and had a great coaching career since.” IT’S SUBTLE, but one can detect a slice of an East Coast accent when Fangio speaks. He got his coaching feet wet at his alma mater Dunmore High School near Scranton in 1979, under the tutelage of national hall of fame high school coach Jack Henzes. “His enthusiasm and love for the game was kind of infectious and it was something that I caught,” says Fangio, who was voted into the Northeastern Pennsylvania Hall of Fame in 1993. “I knew I wanted to be a coach from that point going forward.” From there, Fangio moved on to a prep school in Connecticut before securing his first college gig as a graduate assistant at North Carolina. He would work at Chapel Hill for one season before joining Jim Mora for two years with the USFL, a prelude to Fangio’s vaunted NFL coaching career. Not only did Fangio work with Mora in the USFL, but he shared game plans with current Green Bay defensive coordinator Dom Capers. Both Capers and Fangio jumped ship with Mora to New Orleans before the 1986 season, where they would be on the same staff for six years. Fangio and Capers reunited in Carolina in 1995, when Capers took over as the franchise’s first coach. Fangio’s system was paramount to the team’s instant success, as the stingy Panthers defense guided the team to the NFC Championship game in the franchise’s second season. That year, Fangio’s unit – spearheaded by All-Pro linebackers Mills, Lamar Lathon and Kevin Greene – only gave up 56 second-half points all season, a mark that still stands as the best in NFL history. Fangio lucked out with his first NFL gig as linebackers coach with the Saints, holding the reins on Rickey Jackson, Sam Mills, Vaughan Johnson and Pat Swilling – otherwise known as the “Dome Patrol.” For seven seasons the feared quartet stayed together, en route to being named the top linebackers unit in NFL history by NFL network. In 1987, the Saints would reach the playoffs for the first time in 21 years as a franchise. WHILE THE 49ers may not have a group of “Dome Patrol” proportions, Fangio says he’s enjoyed working with linebackers like Pro Bowler Patrick Willis and rising players like Ahmad Brooks. Not to mention first-round pick Aldon Smith, an explosive pass-rusher in college who will be used as a linebacker and a down lineman in Fangio’s scheme this year. When the 49ers host the Texans at 5 p.m. on Saturday, Fangio will be countering another one of his former teams. Capers took over as the head coach of the expansion Houston franchise in 2002, calling upon Fangio to guide his defense once again. To this day, Fangio and Capers maintain a close relationship, talking scheme and strategy about the league. “We know each other well and know how each other thinks,” Fangio says. “I have a lot of respect for Dom and what he’s accomplished. To this day, he’s a good friend and we remain in contact.” In fact, Fangio says the 49ers have dissected all 20 games of Green Bay’s championship run last year, as Fangio shares much of Capers’ principles on defense. Fangio has even called the defense a 3-4-3, as it can morph into a unit that moves like a 4-3. SINCE COMING back to the NFL this season, Fangio says he’s enjoyed getting to see familiar faces and get to know the new personalities on his coaching staff. Fangio had glowing reviews of all members of

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Harbaugh’s supporting cast, too. Outside of football, Fangio likes to visit his son, Christian, and daughter, Cassie, on the East Coast whenever he can. Otherwise, you can find him at 49ers headquarters or on the links. “I love to play golf,” Fangio says. “Although, it’s funny – I moved from Baltimore in the Northeast out here to California and I’ve played way less golf here in 16 months than I would have in Baltimore. Go figure.” ---------------------- 49ers hire Stanford assistant Greg Roman as offensive coordinator By Daniel Brown, San Jose Mercury News Greg Roman, who helped Stanford produce a pair of Heisman Trophy runners-up over the past two seasons, will follow his boss a few miles down the road. New 49ers coach Jim Harbaugh hired Roman as his offensive coordinator Friday, sources told The Mercury News. The 49ers have yet to confirm the announcement. Roman spent 13 seasons as an NFL assistant before joining Harbaugh’s Stanford staff in 2009. Click here to see his Stanford bio. He has never been a coordinator at any level — at least by title — but his wide-ranging job description at Stanford demonstrates the influence he had in the Cardinal’s offensive success and creativity. He was listed most recently as the associate head coach / assistant head coach offense / tight ends / offensive tackles coach. In that role, he helped Andrew Luck emerge as one of top players in the nation. Luck led the Pac 10 in quarterback rating, total offense, passing yards and touchdown passes. A year earlier, when his title also included “running game coordinator,” Roman helped orchestrate Toby Gerhart’s breakthrough season of 1,871 yards and 28 rushing touchdowns. Now, he inherits a 49ers offense stuck in an eight-year slump. The 49ers have not finished in the NFL’s top 10 for yards since 2003, despite churning through quarterbacks and coordinators at a staggering rate. Since that ‘03 season under coordinator Greg Knapp, the 49ers have turned to Ted Tollner (2004), Mike McCarthy (2005), Norv Turner (2006), Jim Hostler (2007), Mike Martz (2008), Jimmy Raye (2009-’10) and Mike Johnson (2010). Roman joins a 49ers team in search of a quarterback. Alex Smith, the on-again, off-again starter since 2005, is a free agent and not expected back. General manager Trent Baalke said earlier this week that the 49ers’ passer for 2011 is not currently on the roster. Roman is no stranger to rebuilding. He began his NFL coaching career as a defensive quality control coach for the expansion Carolina Panthers franchise in 1995. He went on to spend seven seasons at Carolina before joining another new franchise, the Houston Texans, as a tight ends coach in 2002. He spent 2003-04 as the Texans’ quarterbacks coach, where he worked with current 49ers backup David Carr. Roman took an unusual route to becoming a man heralded for Xs and Os. He was an all-conference linebacker at John Carroll University, a Division III school in Ohio. Roman finished his college career with 145 tackles and 9.5 sacks.

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Vic Fangio, his fellow Stanford assistant, might follow him onto the 49ers staff. Fangio is the favorite to land job as the Harbaugh’s defensive coordinator. ---------------------- Seely's special teams steal the show in 49ers' win By Eric Branch, San Francisco Chronicle Jim Harbaugh? Vic Fangio? Greg Roman? Please. Welcome to the Brad Seely era. The 49ers' special teams was the story in their 33-17 victory over the Seahawks on Sunday and the performance only enhanced Seely's reputation as one of the game's best special-teams coaches. Seely, a two-time Special Teams Coach of the Year, has coached three Pro Bowl returners and won three Super Bowls with the Patriots in his 22-year career. But the best indicator of his impact might come from examining the 2009 Browns, a wretched team that was golden in the area Seely oversaw. Cleveland (5-11) ranked 32nd in the NFL in total offense, 31st in total defense and first in special teams, according to statistics compiled by Rich Gosselin of the Dallas Morning News (considered the industry standard). Now, in Seely's first game with the 49ers ... * Ted Ginn set a single-game franchise record for return yards (268) and became the first player in team history to return a punt and a kickoff for a touchdown in the same game. Ginn also became the 12th player in NFL history to have a punt return and kickoff return for a touchdown. I'm guessing he's the only one to do it in less than a minute. (At the risk of appearing immodest, here's a blog I wrote in the offseason speculating that Seely's hiring could be a boon for Ginn. I know, shameless). * Punter Andy Lee had the highest single-game gross average (59.6) in franchise history and his 54.2 net is the highest single-game figure by a 49ers punter in at least 35 years. * Delanie Walker had four special-teams tackles, tying him for the fourth-most by a 49ers player since 2000. Admittedly, it's hard to measure Seely's precise impact. After all, he didn't kick any of David Akers' field goals (4 of 4) or boot any of Lee's punts. And was it his blocking schemes -- or simply Ginn's brilliance -- that explain those back-to-back touchdown returns? Whatever the case, here's a point that can't be argued: Seely showed up and the special teams immediately stole the show. ---------------------- Jim Tomsula, interim coach, gives 49ers energy By Kevin Lynch, San Francisco Chronicle Mike Singletary would often strike a contemplative pose during 49ers practice while staring into the grass with one hand on his chin.

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Call interim replacement Jim Tomsula the anti-Singletary. The defensive line coach is constantly chattering, praising, exhorting and hauling his 250-plus pounds up and down the field on his surgically replaced hips at a quickened pace. If the stoic Singletary is Tom Landry, Tomsula is Rex Ryan, replete with profuse sweat and ribald humor. The mood Tomsula exudes is also felt in the locker room, where players are louder and looser as they prepare for Sunday's season finale against visiting Arizona. The entire coaching staff could be fired, depending on decisions made by general manager-in-waiting Trent Baalke and his yet-to-be-named head coach, but Tomsula said he has witnessed no reduction in duty from his inherited staff. "All the coaches in this building have a lot of questions in their life," Tomsula said. "Their futures are unknown. We've all had that feeling in our life. It's kind of hard to take your mind off that and put it on something else." Yet 49ers coaches are still putting in their typical long hours, devotion Tomsula called a "pretty unselfish deal." It led to a crisp practice Friday that was shortened by 28 minutes as the team moved through plays briskly, prodded by Tomsula and his constant urging by repeating the word, "tempo, tempo." It sounded more like a dance recital than a football practice. All this could ultimately be trouble for the 49ers should they beat the Cardinals. Win and the 49ers could drop to the low double digits in April's NFL draft. If the 49ers lose, they could vault into the low single digits in the draft order. The final record will also determine the difficulty of the team's schedule next season. Win and the 49ers would finish second in the NFC West should St. Louis (7-8) defeat Seattle (6-9) on Sunday. If the 49ers lose to the Cardinals, who are also 5-10, they'll finish fourth. A last-place finish in the division means the 49ers would go to Detroit and play a home game against Carolina next season. If they finish second, they would go to Green Bay and would face the New Orleans Saints at home. ---------------------- Now he's Jim Somebody By Eric Branch, Santa Rosa Press Democrat His furniture was in storage, his mailing address was nonexistent and Jim Tomsula's bed was the reclined driver's seat of a red Cadillac. To Tomsula's right, sleeping shotgun, was his black lab, Harley. In the back, curled up on the ledge near the window, was the cat, Cali. In Florida, or maybe Missouri, was his family. His wife and two young daughters were visiting various relatives while Tomsula re-established himself as a football coach by leaping back on the lowest rung of the ladder. It was 1997 and Tomsula, now the 49ers' fifth-year defensive line coach, was then a 29-year-old college graduate sleeping in a deserted parking lot at Division II Catawba College, his alma mater, which had hired him as an unpaid volunteer assistant. Tomsula laughs as he looks back — Cali eventually swapped her litter box for his ties — but looks quizzical when asked this: Did he ever dream he'd travel from that parking lot in Salisbury, N.C., to the NFL?

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“I've never thought that way, man,” Tomsula explained. “I mean, the only goal I ever had was to be able to coach football.” Tomsula, 43, a journeyman coach on a one-of-a-kind journey, has ditched big paychecks and worked an endless string of odd jobs — janitor and rug salesman among them — to pursue his passion. A tireless worker raised near Pittsburgh's steel mills, Tomsula has crammed 28 seasons of coaching into the past 22 years. As a result, he's slogged his way out of obscurity to become the youngest head coach in NFL Europe history and the 17th head coach of the 49ers, a position he held for one game as an interim last year. He is the longest-tenured coach on San Francisco's staff, the only assistant retained by both Mike Singletary and Jim Harbaugh. Against long odds, Tomsula has reached the top of his profession. And it's telling that his outlook hasn't changed along with his bank account. Fourteen years after snoozing in his car, Tomsula, who has dubbed himself a “little fat guy” and “Jim Nobody from Nowhere,” remains all passion and no pretense: He still just wants to coach football. “I can tell when he's had grown-up meetings at work because he comes home with a scowl on his face,” said Julie Tomsula, his wife of 19 years. “I'll say, ‘Oh, no. Did you have a grown-up meeting? What was it about?' And he'll say healthcare. Or 401(k). Honestly, standing in the grass and coaching is the only interest Jim has in the profession.” The lockout, naturally, is torture for Tomsula, who is thoroughly bored by the business of the NFL. He has refused to hire an agent and his “contract negotiation” was almost comical when the Niners hired him in 2007. Then-head coach Mike Nolan told him the salary and Tomsula, after asking if it was fair, accepted. Given his attitude toward money, it's surprising to discover Tomsula's goal out of college: Get rich. A former defensive lineman at Catawba, Tomsula blew out his knee as a senior and served as a student assistant coach to retain his scholarship. After graduation, biding his time until he landed a real job, he worked as an assistant for one season at Woodland Hills (Pa.) High, his alma mater. But he eagerly left coaching when he had the chance. He got a job selling medical supplies for Thera-Kinetics, which quickly had him in a two-story house on two acres overlooking a lake in North Carolina. FOUR JOBS AT ONE TIME Money couldn't make an unexpectedly powerful pull inside him disappear, however. Whatever satisfaction he found in selling Pulsed-Galvanic stimulators paled in comparison to the camaraderie he'd felt in football. With Julie's blessing, they left the good life after their honeymoon and, as Tomsula puts it, took up residence in a “questionable apartment” in Charleston, S.C., in 1992. Tomsula's job as an assistant coach at Charleston Southern University was also less than extravagant. His office was a dorm room, the practice field was a grassy area of the quad and his salary was $9,100, which presented a problem. “Once we paid the car payment and the rent,” Tomsula said, “we were out of money.” Tomsula responded by collecting various job titles. He had no choice. Britney, now 18, and Brooke, 16, were born during their three years in Charleston and Julie stayed home to care for them (their son, Bear, is 3).

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At one point, Tomsula had four jobs: football coach, janitor at an insurance agency, newspaper deliverer for The Charleston Post and Courier and, finally, he cut firewood, earning $55 for every third truckload. His schedule was seemingly impossible to maintain: running a chainsaw late into the night, picking up newspapers at the Piggly-Wiggly at 3:30 a.m., scrubbing toilets and vacuuming after throwing his last Post and Courier, coaching football, running a chainsaw ... It was a struggle with a smile. He was coaching football, man. “I was just so excited,” he said. “A bill came and you had to pay it. I never saw it as working. I saw it as a living.” ‘HE WAS DYING A SLOW DEATH' But Tomsula's dad wasn't so thrilled with his son's paycheck-to-paycheck existence. He urged him to get out of coaching — a hobby, in his mind — and properly provide for his family. The words weighed heavily on Tomsula, whose devotion to his wife and children has always overwhelmed his love of football. During his nine-year stint in NFL Europe, Tomsula twice turned down promotions with life-altering raises because Britney and Brooke, both younger than 10, didn't want to stop spending half the year overseas. Tomsula's motto: If it's not good for one of us, it's not good for none of us. He eventually agreed with his dad — his coaching lifestyle wasn't good for his family. He left Charleston Southern, moved his family to Pennsylvania and began working as a sales rep for Cisco Foods. He was a natural. His family settled into a white-picket-fence life in Ligonier, Pa., and Julie Tomsula watched as her husband's pager went off at all hours with “side-of-beef emergencies.” “I felt like he was dying a slow death,” Julie said. “ ... I told him, ‘This is no way to live.'” So Tomsula began living ... in his red Cadillac with Harley and Cali. He coached the defensive line at Catawba in 1997 as an unpaid assistant and started selling entrance rugs on straight commission to earn a paycheck. Catawba head coach Chip Hester, then in his first year as an assistant with Tomsula, quickly recognized the new guy had a gift. “Jim's got a passion for the game, but even more than that he's got a passion for people,” Hester said. “... Guys have to know that you care about them for you to be able to coach them. And that's something that comes across. He is genuine. He's got a huge heart. And on top of that, he has a knowledge base that guys trust. They know if they do what he says, it's going to work.” PHONE CALL OUT OF THE BLUE Hester wasn't the only one to notice. Based on the recommendation of a coach who knew Tomsula, legendary NFL wide receiver Lionel Taylor, the head coach of NFL Europe's London Monarchs, called and offered Tomsula a job as the team's defensive line coach. Tomsula, who had just lost his sales job because the rug company went out of business, was at a loss for words, a rare occurrence. His initial response: What are you talking about? Who is this? “I'm not giving religion lessons or anything else,” Tomsula said. “I'm just telling you that out of the blue I get this call. ... I mean, here we are, one minute I'm looking for a job trying to buff some floors or cut some

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plywood. And the next thing I know we're living in London and I'm coaching with Lionel Taylor. That's the God's truth.” Tomsula, a master of teaching technique and fundamentals, flourished in the developmental league. The Monarchs folded after he was there one season, but Tomsula was hired by the Scottish Claymores and stayed in Glasgow for five seasons as the defensive line coach. He became the defensive coordinator for the Berlin Thunder, who won the World Bowl in his first season with a defense that ranked first against the run. Finally, at 38, he became the youngest head coach in league history when the Rhein Fire hired him in 2006. After the NFL Europe seasons, Tomsula worked at coaching clinics across the continent. The family would then spend the other half of the year back in North Carolina, where Tomsula continued to coach as an assistant at Catawba. CAN'T LIVE WITHOUT THE GAME Catawba defensive coordinator Bob Lancaster, whom Tomsula hired when he coached the Rhein Fire, recognizes his friend as a fellow coaching junkie. “It's like my dad would tell me, if you can live without the game, do it,” said Lancaster, whose dad coached in the Canadian Football League. “Jimmy's one of those guys, I don't think he can live without the game. He loves football. It's just the way he coaches. He has guys willing to run through a brick wall for him.” Tomsula's passionate style has translated to the NFL. The 49ers haven't allowed a 100-yard rusher in 22 straight games, the longest active streak in the league. They have also allowed 3.7 yards per carry since Tomsula's arrival in 2007, the NFL's fourth-best mark during that span. At this point in his one-of-a-kind journey, Tomsula, Jim Nobody from Nowhere, has been everywhere, from the Piggly Wiggly to Paris to the Pyrenees. Plenty of other coaches have also slogged their way to the top, but how many have savored their time at the bottom? Did he ever despair at any point? Maybe while scrubbing toilets, or selling rugs or sleeping with a dog and cat in a Cadillac? Tomsula smiles. “Heck, no,” he said. “I was coaching football.” ---------------------- The Tomsula Effect By Taylor Price, 49ers.com There’s a reason why the longest tenured coach on the San Francisco 49ers coaching staff understands the importance of teamwork. Jim Tomsula, the team’s defensive line coach, has held a number of positions in his 28 seasons of coaching. So it should come as no surprise that Tomsula goes out of his way to show appreciation for everyone around him. OVER THE past four seasons, San Francisco’s defense has allowed just 3.7 yards per carry thanks to the tutelage of respected line coach Jim Tomsula. The 43-year-old former collegiate coach and youngest head coach in NFL Europa history has plenty to share with his players, who will do just about anything for

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their leader. The unique relationship is largely due to Tomsula’s role in his players’ lives on and off the field. Not only does the coach stress the importance of football techniques, but he emphasizes topics away from the football field, too. In three seasons playing for Tomsula, 49ers defensive tackle Ricky Jean Francois can attest to the difference his position coach has on his teammates. Call it, “The Tomsula Effect,” if you will. Jean Francois credits Tomsula for believing in him and giving him a chance to go from a seventh-round pick to a key contributor in the team’s defensive line rotation. “Every day when I go out on the field,” says Jean Francois, “I want to represent him in the best way. So when you look at me, you’re looking at a reflection of my coach.” The 49ers defensive linemen have represented Tomsula well in his five seasons with the club. Since Tomsula’s arrival, the 49ers have not allowed more than 3.8 yards per carry in any season and currently have a streak of 24-consecutive games of not allowing an individual 100-yard rusher. Hired in 2005 by former 49ers head coach Mike Nolan, Tomsula has proved his importance to the organization, having been retained by coaches Mike Singletary and Jim Harbaugh. Tomsula, who finished last season as the team’s interim coach for a Week 17 victory over Arizona, is proud to be a part of the 49ers organization. And while he’s pleased to be around the hard-working players in the locker room and in his meeting room, Tomsula equally takes enjoyment from interacting with people throughout team headquarters. “Everybody’s job is so important,” says Tomsula. “When you’re under one roof, it opens up your eyes to all this going on, and all the people that do the things that they do to make that experience when the cameras go on what it is. And that’s not to downplay what the coaches or players do, it’s amazing what the players do, but you have all these people that work together. The team concept is important on the field, but team is from the ownership all the way down. And everybody, everybody, is a part of that team. Most of the teamwork is happening off the field.” PERHAPS NOBODY appreciates quality collaboration quite like Tomsula. Without the support of Julie, his wife of nearly 20 years, as well as his two daughters and son, Tomsula would never been able to live out his coaching pursuit. But before he started a family, Tomsula was hoping to carve out a football career as a player. Much like the group of men he coaches today, Tomsula was a hard-worker while playing on the defensive line at Middle Tennessee State and lesser-known Catawba College. After transferring to Catawba, a small school in Salisbury, N.C., Tomsula maximized his ability with the right attitude and outlook. “I wasn’t a professional athlete,” jokes Tomsula. “I had to work like crazy to play college football. I had to out-work people to get on the field.” So when it became clear Tomsula wasn’t destined to become a professional football player once he suffered a major knee injury, he turned his sights elsewhere. Tomsula’s first gig was coaching at Catawba where he served as an assistant with the defensive line and special teams. He even ran the school’s strength and conditioning program. “Coming from Pittsburgh, football is engrained in you,” explains Tomsula. “It’s a way of life… I was afforded that opportunity (to coach) and I loved it, loved every minute of it. But once I graduated, I got out, and got into the business world.” Tomsula tried his hand at various jobs, some in medical and food sales, and some in construction. He enjoyed masonry work especially, but after time, it couldn’t compare to his time on the football field. So after careful thought, Tomsula went back into coaching. “My wife is really the one who has encouraged me to follow this passion and keep going,” says Tomsula. “As long as I was with my wife, as long as we were on the same page, life was good.” LIFE GOT even better for the Tomsulas; even though it didn’t take much for them to truly appreciate it. Tomsula landed as job as an assistant at Charleston Southern University from 1992-95, but that didn’t guarantee financial security. So the football coach took on side jobs, as many as four at a time, to make ends meet. Soon after, Tomsula returned to Pittsburgh to hold down multiple jobs again, including one as a sales rep for Sysco Foods. Ultimately, it didn’t give him the same satisfaction as football. So Tomsula, determined to get back into coaching, returned to Catawba in 1997 as a volunteer defensive line coach while selling entrance matting and doing construction work in addition to his coaching responsibilities. “It wasn’t ordinary,” says Tomsula. “But, everybody, no matter what they’re doing or what field they’re in,

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everyone has their path. My wife and I never saw (ours) as struggles; we were just making our way. Our family was making our way in the world and enjoying life, enjoying every bit of it.” Tomsula’s hard-working reputation didn’t just stick out in his hometown. It traveled. People outside of the country were aware of the coach’s unique blend of strong instruction and impeccable energy. Namely, former Pittsburgh Steelers wide receiver Lionel Taylor, who happened to be the head coach of the NFL’s Europa’s London Monarchs. Taylor wanted Tomsula to be his defensive line coach. At the time, however, Tomsula wasn’t buying Taylor’s interest. “I actually thought someone was messing around with me,” says Tomsula. “Apparently, he knew somebody I had coached against.” Things soon changed for Tomsula and his family, who quickly made the move across the pond. For Tomsula, coaching was no problem. He knew he could survive in a foreign nation. It was his kids, however, who he was concerned for. How would his two daughters take to such a unique experience? Thankfully for Tomsula, Julie kept the family together and his daughters enlightened and entertained. “My wife took the kids everywhere,” said Tomsula, who went on to vividly recount their trips all over London. “The kids went to international schools and my wife just made it an awesome experience for the girls.” IT WAS also a successful experience for the aspiring coach. In two seasons as the Monarchs defensive line coach, Tomsula’s teachings were in demand in the former training ground for NFL hopefuls. He went on to coach the defensive linemen for the Scottish Claymores for five seasons and later served as the Berlin Thunder’s defensive coordinator for two seasons before taking over the head coaching position with the Rhein Fire in 2006. Tomsula became the youngest coach in the league’s history by the age of 38. The international experience caused Tomsula to place an even higher value on the people around him. “The buildings, the culture, the history – that was all wonderful. But the biggest thing was the people,” says Tomsula. “The people you meet along the way. Everybody looks different, talks different, speaks different, but the bottom line is there are good people and bad people. That’s it.” Tomsula considers himself fortunate to have been around so many of the good people. Longtime Canadian Football League coach Ron Lancaster was one of those people. Lancaster offered Tomsula advice that the 49ers coach keeps with him to this day: Be an enabler. Since then, Tomsula has carried that mantra into his day-to-day activities as a football coach. “Enable people to do the jobs they’ve been hired to do,” says Tomsula. “That’s advice I took really serious.” A STRONG showing in NFL Europa enabled Tomsula to take the next step in his coaching career. In 2005, Nolan called the up-and-coming line coach to interview for a position in San Francisco. Soon after, Tomsula had the job and brought his family back to the states. Since his hiring, Tomsula has been with the club for five seasons where he’s overseen one of the best defensive lines in pro football. It was a non-traditional career path to the professional ranks, Tomsula admits, but it shaped him to appreciate the destination. Those challenging experiences aren’t forgotten either. Tomsula continues to share his stories with his players, who find parallels between their struggles to make it professionally. “He shows everybody love. I don’t care who you are, the custodian, PR people, the equipment managers – he’s going to show love to you,” says Jean Francois. “He came up hard and now he’s in a good place, but he keeps it to where he’s still humble and he wants to keep going. That’s what I appreciate.” But it’s not just life lessons Tomsula offers. He can up coach football players, especially defensive linemen. Justin Smith, the team’s sack leader of 2010 with 8.5, has made two consecutive Pro Bowls under Tomsula’s guidance. And still, Tomsula doesn’t overly take satisfaction from seeing players like Jean Francois and Smith excel. He knows strong line play won’t matter if the scoreboard doesn’t reflect victories. “We’re in a performance-based business and our objective is to win. That’s what this is,” reveals Tomsula, who’s quick to point out that his players are close to taking the next step, the playoffs. “When you talk about good people, hard-working people, guys who put their ego on the shelf and really want to win, and will pay the price to win, they’re here. It’s really exciting.”

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If asked, Tomsula could spend hours talking about his love for his players. But in reality, it’s a mutual respect. “We can start talking about the whole roster, but it’s a great group of guys,” continues Tomsula. “You love coming to work with them, you work real hard, they work real hard; everybody respects the hard work.” Tomsula also appreciates the effort of the new coaches on the 49ers staff. With a unique offseason shaping Harbaugh’s first offseason in the NFL, veteran coaches like Tomsula were leaned on to supply information on the current roster. And in constant meetings throughout the offseason the staff came together to prepare for 2011. It was an enjoyable process for Tomsula. After all, in his mind, it all goes back to people.

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Player Feature Clips Kicker David Akers brings years of accuracy to 49ers as Joe Nedney's replacement By Daniel Brown, Jose Mercury News David Akers was coaching his son's flag football team in April when he got a phone call. It was his agent telling him that the Eagles had just drafted a kicker in the fourth round. "That was the writing on the wall," Akers said. That's how Akers, Philadelphia's longest-tenured athlete, found out he would be starting over. He signed with the 49ers this weekend after 12 distinguished seasons with the Eagles. Akers will replace Joe Nedney, who told the Mercury News last week that he is hanging up his cleats because of a knee injury. The two have a long connection: Akers made his college debut against San Jose State on Sept 4, 1993 -- with Nedney as the opposing kicker. "In the kicking community, we all know each other. We've kicked against each other over a number of years," Akers said. "I'm not coming in and trying to replace Joe, because he was just spectacular here. "I want to come in and do the best of my ability, but Joe is a legend here for what he's been able to do the past six years. I wish him well. Hopefully, I can step up and be half the foot he was." The 49ers are happy to be able to swap one reliable veteran for another. Akers has made five Pro Bowls, including in each of the past two seasons. The only kickers nominated for more career Pro Bowls are Morten Andersen (seven) and Jan Stenerud (six). Akers is also the only player in NFL history to tally 130 points in four seasons. Now, he'll try to replicate that success at Candlestick Park. "It's windy, obviously," Akers said. "But I played in Philly for 12 years, and that's not a calm environment by any stretch of the imagination. (Candlestick) will take some getting used to, but I feel confident." Akers' career long is a 57-yarder against New England on Sept. 14, 2003. In fact, he owns four of the seven longest field goals in Eagles history. But his hallmark is his accuracy from closer range. He has nailed 93.3 percent of his attempts from 40 yards and in. Akers, 36, said his leg still feels strong. The 49ers gave him a three-year contract and he plans on seeing it through. As he considered potential landing spots, Akers chose San Francisco in part because of his familiarity with punter/holder Andy Lee and long-snapper Brian Jennings. They have worked together at the Pro Bowl. Nedney, in saying farewell, said that the Lee-Jennings combination is no small factor. "David is coming into a great situation," he said. "He's going to work with the best holder and the best snapper in the NFL." Another factor, Akers said, was the chance to work with Jim Harbaugh. Akers spent nine seasons with former special teams coach John Harbaugh (Jim's brother) in Philadelphia. And as a high-school player, Akers considered playing for Jack Harbaugh, who at the time was the coach at Western Kentucky. "That family has got so much football knowledge, from the dad on down," Akers said. "Their foundation is so good, they can build up anything. What John has done with the Ravens, I think Jim can do the same thing right here with the 49ers. It would be great to be a part of it."

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The All-Decade kicker for the 2000s, it's easy to forget that Akers bounced around before establishing himself with the Eagles. He was on the waiver wire three times and killed time between NFL gigs by working as a waiter at a Longhorn Steakhouse in Lawrenceville, Ga., and as substitute teacher at Westport Middle School in Louisville. Even when the Eagles signed him in 1999, it was for essentially a part-time job: Akers was the long field goal and kickoff specialist behind veteran Norm Johnson. Now, his 291 field goals and 1,312 points are the most since 2000. His 31 career postseason field goals trail only Adam Vinatieri (42) and Gary Anderson (32). The Eagles released him after one of his best seasons. Akers' 143 points last season represented the second-best output in team history. But Akers said he has no resentment toward the Eagles' front office for letting him go. "They get paid to make those decisions," he said. "I'm supposed to make field goals." ---------------------- Bowman Poised For Year Two By Taylor Price, 49ers.com Less than 24 hours removed from a season-ending win over the Arizona Cardinals, the locker room at 49ers head quarters was full of mixed emotions. As players exchanged goodbyes and packed up personal items, the physical act of moving on was tough to do. The end of the season had become a realization. The exit day scene was most frustrating for one player in particular, a rookie who just had his breakthrough moment. However, he didn’t appear as upset as his teammates that day in the locker room. Instead, he had a look of satisfaction. By the coaching staff’s count, NaVorro Bowman finished with 15 tackles, eight of which were solo stops, in his first professional start. It was almost as if his season had just begun. At that very moment, ending the year was difficult to do. “It felt good to have that success, especially against the Cardinals knowing they’re a team we’ll be facing twice a year,” the 6-foot, 242 pounder said after he called the plays from the defensive huddle in a 38-7 win. “I look at the game like it was a cheat sheet.” When needed, the linebacker selected 91st overall out of Penn State was often up to task, contributing to the 49ers in a variety of ways. As a backup at both inside linebacker positions in the team’s 3-4 defensive scheme, Bowman learned two positions in his first NFL season. It might have been a daunting task to some, but not to Bowman. “A lot of people think it’s difficult, but I’m the type of player who loves the game so much that I was determined to learn both.” Initially, he began practicing the weak-side position with the plan of serving as Patrick Willis’ backup. But after Scott McKillop suffered a season-ending knee injury in training camp, Bowman was asked to learn Takeo Spikes’ strong-side position too.

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In season, Bowman was a major contributor on special teams where he led the team with 26 special teams tackles. He also had a sub role on defense, where he gained valuable experience primarily on third downs. But throughout the year, Bowman waited for an opportunity to play an expanded role. His chance came in the season finale, when he filled in for the injured Willis, who was sidelined with a broken hand. Bowman made the most of it, putting together impressive, Willis-like results that left the four-time Pro Bowler thoroughly impressed. “Bow played well,” Willis said, smiling at his protégé’s success. “It was fun to watch him out there making plays.” It’s safe to say most rookie linebackers weren’t as fortunate as Bowman. Playing behind two of the game’s best linebackers might have been a blessing in disguise for the eager rookie, who wanted to show the world how hard he’d been preparing behind the scenes. Bowman spent an entire season watching two talented linebackers work at their craft. All the hours on the practice fields and in the meeting rooms added up. He finished the season with 35 tackles and three tackles-for-loss, which he credited to the starting duo for helping him along the way. “Having those guys to learn from was a huge advantage,” Bowman said. With Spikes set to become a free agent, its unknown what the 49ers will do long-term at the position. “Those two guys ran the defense, worked together and that’s the type of relationship I want to have with Pat later on down the road,” Bowman said. And as he finished packing up his belongings and rehashing his rookie year, Bowman truly looked like he wasn’t ready to move on. But for now, all he can do is focus on getting better and spend time with his son back home in Baltimore. “I gained a lot more confidence knowing I can play at this level,” Bowman said. “I can’t wait to get started for next year, just to start from the beginning and see what we can do.” And with Bowman’s home city being a destination for his second season in the NFL, the mere mention of playing in front of friends of family clearly has him refocused for what’s to come. “I’m coming back home,” he said with a smile. “I’ll be ready.” ---------------------- 49ers' small-school search landed Brock By Matthew Barrows, Sacramento Bee Trent Baalke, the 49ers' general manager, said this week, "There's no school that's off-limits to scouting." And he has the roster to back that up. The team found three of its undrafted rookie wide receivers this year at Bridgewater, Washburn and Monmouth. The 49ers' three seventh-round draft picks – fullback Bruce Miller, tackle Mike Person and cornerback Curtis Holcomb – played at Central Florida, Montana State and Florida A&M, respectively.

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Tramaine Brock, however, may have played at the most obscure spot of all – Belhaven, a school with slightly more than 1,000 undergraduates that was known as Belhaven College for Young Ladies when it was founded in 1894. Brock, however, quickly has gone from small school to potentially having a big role in the 49ers' defense. He started the team's first two preseason games at cornerback and will see plenty of action today against a Houston Texans team that finished fourth in passing yards last season. With seven-year veteran Shawntae Spencer out because of a hamstring injury, Brock and Tarell Brown are "in the hunt" for the starting spot opposite free-agent acquisition Carlos Rogers, defensive coordinator Vic Fangio said this week. That's not a bad position for a guy who went undrafted in 2010 and started playing cornerback only last year. "I was a safety all through college," Brock said. "So that's what I'm doing all the time now – learning everything I can about playing cornerback." Brock grew up in Long Beach, Miss., just outside of Gulfport. He played 13 games at safety at Minnesota in 2008 before leaving the school for academic reasons. That's when he transferred to Belhaven, a private Christian liberal arts college in Jackson, Miss. There he fell under the purview of 49ers area scout Justin Chabot. Most of Chabot's time is dedicated to Southeastern Conference schools such as LSU and Alabama. But he also checks the smaller schools at least once, and in 2009, he visited Belhaven. His note on Brock, the team's 5-foot-10, 197-pound safety: Do more work. The 49ers did, and the team ultimately decided Brock had enough speed and quickness to warrant a move to cornerback, an area in which the 49ers felt they needed younger bodies. Horace Fortenberry had seen that athleticism at Long Beach High, where he's an assistant football coach. Brock made plenty of plays in the secondary – "we didn't have a lot to worry about with him back there," Fortenberry said – but the most memorable occurred on the basketball court when he was a senior. After stealing the ball, Brock raced down the court to find an opponent positioned in front of the basket. No matter. Brock jumped over the opponent – legs straddling the other boy's head – and slammed the ball home. "They had to stop the game for five minutes because everyone flooded the court," Fortenberry said. "They couldn't believe what they had seen." What the 49ers didn't know about Brock when he arrived in Santa Clara was the strength of his resolve. He played a physical style of cornerback, he didn't back down from bigger or big-name receivers, and by the end of the 2010 preseason, the 49ers decided he was worth developing. They kept him on the active roster at the start of the season instead of veteran fullback Michael Robinson, a controversial move at the time. Baalke said he also was impressed with how hard Brock worked during the NFL lockout. The 23-year-old didn't have enough money to remain in the Bay Area, so he went back to Long Beach.

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One of the concerns teams had during the labor impasse was how players, especially young players, would return when it was over. They had no oversight from coaches and trainers, no teammates to push them, no meal plans and unknown facilities at which to stay in shape. Brock, however, didn't need outside motivation. He called Fortenberry to let him into the high school gym, and he worked out with the school's receivers and defensive backs during seven-on-seven drills throughout the spring and summer. The work paid off. One of Brock's achievements in training camp is that he has managed to remain on the practice field every day despite having played more snaps in the preseason than any other 49er. "He's a guy that went home and came back ready to play football. He came back hungry," Baalke said. "That's how small-school guys make it in the NFL." ---------------------- Notebook: Brooks Shows Versatility By Taylor Price, 49er.com As far as fast starts are concerned, Ahmad Brooks’ 13-yard interception return for a touchdown on the opening play from scrimmage Saturday night should go down as one of the best starts in 49ers preseason history. Nine seconds into the game, the 49ers had seven points and Brooks’ had robbed his college teammate. “I just really reacted to the play,” Brooks said of the 49ers only scoring play in a 30-7 defeat the visiting Houston Texans. It was fitting for the outside linebacker, who recorded more interceptions than any 49ers player in training camp and continues to showcase more skills than just rushing the passer. Brooks recorded the 49ers first of three takeaways after stepping in front of Matt Schaub’s screen pass intended for running back Arian Foster. Once Brooks diagnosed the play, it was easy for him to make the pick-six. “I saw that he dropped back kind of far and I recognized the offensive line, they were starting to go down the field. I recognized that it was a screen … saw him throw the ball and I caught it.” Coach Jim Harbaugh singled out Brooks’ play as one of the brightest spots on a night where the 49ers offense did not score any points. “I don’t think I’ve ever been associated with a game where I’ve seen, on the first play of the game, (someone) pick-off a screen on an interception and take it in,” Harbaugh said. The turnover was even more meaningful for the University of Virginia product. It came against a former Cavalier teammate. “I went to school with Matt Schaub, so I’m very familiar with his game play,” Brooks said. Brooks didn’t do any bragging after the game. The starting left outside linebacker continues to remain focused on what’s most important, solid play from the first-team defense. “We got a lot of work to do,” Brooks added. “We were out there on the field a little too long. … We just want to get off the field as early as possible.”

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---------------------- 49ers' Brooks matures from Bengals days By Matthew Barrows, Sacramento Bee Ask Perry Brooks Jr. about younger brother Ahmad's most athletic feat, and there's a long pause and then a long list. The stories come chronologically. There was the time Ahmad, a 9-year-old cornerback, skied above the scrum on a deep pass and returned the interception 75 yards for a score. A few years later, Ahmad, this time at running back, had a carry that would have made Barry Sanders envious. He weaved, faked and dodged defenders – two crashed into each other – for a 60-yard touchdown. In high school in Woodbridge, Va., Ahmad won a dunk contest with a thunderous 360-degree slam. While playing middle linebacker at Virginia, he recorded a sack against Virginia Tech by leaping, leopard-like, over the nose guard and center and crashing into the quarterback before he could take two steps from the line of scrimmage. Ahmad Brooks made it look easy. And that was the problem. "Ever since he was in little league, he could just get away with his raw athleticism," said Perry, who is four years older than Ahmad, 27. "It happened in middle school and then high school. They'd put him in the middle of the field and tell him to get the ballcarrier." Today, Brooks returns to the city where he started his NFL career, but in a much better position than he was as a rookie in 2006. There's a literal meaning to that. The Bengals took Brooks in the third round of the supplemental draft that year and lined him up at middle linebacker. The 49ers converted Brooks, 6-foot-3 and 265 pounds – into a 3-4 outside linebacker. The figurative meaning, however, is more critical to his recent success. Brooks talks about his two seasons in Cincinnati as if he were recalling another lifetime. "I was still a baby," he said. "Maybe not in the public's eye. I mean, we're still considered men. But at the same time, I'm fresh out of college. I'm getting money now. I never had that much money for myself. And I enjoyed that." Brooks, who ran afoul of Virginia coach Al Groh and was kicked off the squad after his junior season, said he liked to go out on Friday nights in Cincinnati. And on Thursday nights. And after games. "And that affected my play on Sundays just a little bit," he said. Still, Brooks was talented enough to start five games as a rookie. When the 2007 season began, he was the starter in the middle of Cincinnati's defense. But he suffered a groin tear in the second game. When he hadn't recovered nearly a year later, the Bengals waived him. "He's been through a little bit, but he's really grown up as a player," Cincinnati coach Marvin Lewis said. After signing with the 49ers in 2008, Brooks started acquiring skills – focus, dedication, discipline – his athleticism had made unnecessary.

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Nights at the club were replaced with appointments with the chiropractor. He immersed himself in the cold tub after practices. He got weekly massages. Fast food was out. In were home-cooked meals prepared by his girlfriend, a dietician. He also began to study. On the first play of the 49ers' third exhibition game this year, Brooks didn't bite on a Houston screen play. He followed the running back out of the backfield, intercepted the pass and returned it for a touchdown. "The old Ahmad doesn't make that play," Perry said. "The old Ahmad would have said, 'I'm a better athlete than these guys. I'm going to go after the quarterback.' " Brooks was limited to a third-down role in 2009, yet still finished with six sacks. Last offseason, he was gunning for a starting job. But at the beginning of training camp, he suffered a lacerated kidney when a blocking sled he had just thrown to the side struck the ground and sprung back up, striking him just below his ribs. Brooks missed a month, fell behind and was relegated to a backup role again. This year, however, new defensive coordinator Vic Fangio searched for pass rushers and committed to Brooks early. He's starting for the first time since 2007. And while Brooks has yet to record a sack, he had perhaps the biggest hit in last week's game against Dallas. Early in the first quarter, he burst through the offensive line and buried his shoulder beneath quarterback Tony Romo's outstretched arm. The hit cracked Romo's rib, deflated a lung and led to the most discussed NFL story line over the last week. "That's my job now," Brooks said. "I had a clean shot. I came right through the gap, right through the 'B' gap. He sat in the pocket. It was a clean shot." ---------------------- A Man Of All Seasons By Lindsay Brooke Cohen, Haute Living Magazine Vernon Davis might have been born and raised in Washington D.C. but he now calls San Francisco home. Prior to heading west for the professional gridiron of Candlestick Park, Davis began playing football in his native D.C. streets while he was still in elementary school. “I would go out everyday and play football or basketball, and my passion for the game grew on me,” says Davis. “The funny thing about it is that basketball was my dream. I was better at basketball.” Although Davis might have been a better basketball player at the time, he would soon develop his football skills during high school, and earned recognition from college scouts for his dominant play. It was while attending the University of Maryland, however, that Davis made a curious discovery—he loved art. Davis explains his transformation: “I didn’t learn I could paint or draw until I went to college. I began studying Criminal Justice, and it wasn’t until I took an art course as an elective that I just fell in love with it. I met with my academic counselor and she advised me to switch my major to art if I loved it that much.” Davis did just that, and became somewhat of a rare combination of skillful athletic prowess, and intuitive visual artist. Davis isn’t the only talent in his family. His younger brother Vontae plays professional football for the Miami Dolphins. “It’s amazing having a brother that plays professional football. I mentored him early while we were teenagers, showing him how to train properly and putting him through the paces and rigors that come with playing competitive football. I knew he was tough and could handle it.” Davis acknowledges himself as both teacher and student to his brother, however, describing Vontae as, “a little encyclopedia, always teaching me about NFL players, their positions, stats, etc. We both helped each other develop and grow within the game.” The Davis brothers also understand the value of off-field support, as both

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Vernon and Vontae look out for each other and make sure their family is taken care of, “As for our family, it’s great having him around to help step in and take care of the family when I can’t, so he can help fill that role if I’m not there,” explains Davis. Despite Davis’s hectic traveling schedule during the season, he knows his family is his top priority, and is sure to make time for them. “Every year after the season is over I go home to see my family in D.C. I also travel to Miami to spend time with my brother.” Upon moving across the country to pursue his professional football career with the San Francisco 49ers, Davis immediately noted the differences from his east coast upbringing. Besides the changes in weather, Davis confided to me that what he noticed most about San Francisco was its diverse ethnic populations, “I like San Francisco because it’s so diverse out here.” Davis continues, “There are all types of people living here—they look different, smell different. It’s just crazy. Coming from D.C., I didn’t experience many different ethnic groups living together, but out here it’s mixed.” Though the adjustment to moving out west proved an engaging learning experience for Davis, he quickly found out his truest learning experience would take place during his first few seasons with the 49ers. It’s an understatement to say that we all encounter obstacles in our personal and professional lives, but in Davis’s case, he experienced a seemingly insurmountable sequence of setbacks that could have ended his career before it even had a chance to begin. Davis states that his arrival in San Francisco as a rookie tested his playing ability and emotional maturity, as he had to acclimate to new teammates and being the lowest on the totem pole, “I was young and had to adjust to a new team, and learn to play with my teammates. I devoted extra energy and focus to improving my overall skill set and the way I play the game by training harder, eating well, and improving every aspect of my playing.” If that weren’t enough to handle, injuries quickly became a problem for Davis, “I also cracked my fibula my rookie year, and then in my second year I sprained the MCL in my knee. I had to fight through a lot of adversity to get where I am today, but in everything you do—you have to learn to get through it. The most important thing of all is that I fought through it, kept my head up, and kept pushing. That’s why I was awarded the honor of team captain for two consecutive years.” Davis is living proof of the power of persistence and ambition overpowering adversity and achieving success. Davis’s recognition for leadership and excellence in sportsmanship is not limited to the football field, however, as he was named an honorary captain of the Men’s U.S Olympic Curling team at the 2010 Vancouver Winter Olympics. “It looks a lot easier on TV than it actually is,” explains Davis. “I respect the curlers.” It was a dream come true for Davis to be in Vancouver. “All I could think about was being a kid and watching the Olympics on TV, feeling that same kind of excitement. Even when I was at the ice rink, I was thinking about athletes from the past, like Dominic Dawes, and current athletes like Shani Davis, and it was just amazing being there to share that experience.” With all of Davis’s prestige and recognition, he made a revealing statement by telling me his favorite moment of the entire trip was, “When I walked into this place they had every restaurant you could think of—McDonald’s, Subway—and it was called the USA Olympic Village. When I went inside, they said to me, ‘Everything in here, Vernon, is free.’ Just for the athletes, though. I went to McDonald’s and had two twenty-piece nuggets, all you can drink soda, cookies, and French fries. I ate so badly that day.” I guess even when you are at the pinnacle of your athletic career and surrounded by some of the finest athletes from around the world, even the temptations of comfort food can be too much to resist. The earnestness and sincerity of Davis’s fast food binge is telling of a down-to-earth character that does not presume an air of status or entitlement. Davis is a humble person who understands the rarity of his success, and wants to provide as many children who come from a similar background as he has with the options for their success. Two philanthropic organizations that Davis is heavily involved with are Pros For Africa and the Starkey Hearing Foundation. “It means a lot to give back. Anytime you can reach out to help people and change something in their life, that’s just huge for me,” Davis reveals. “I truly believe that because I grew up in a very humble home, and my grandmother worked very hard to support my six siblings and I. Her hard work shaped my spirit of gratitude as an NFL player, and to be able to give back to those who are not as fortunate means so much to me. It goes a long way.” With Pros For Africa, Davis hopes to extend his missionary zeal across the Atlantic where he feels there is much work to be done, “There is so much need in the world, especially with children in the Third World who do not have adequate access to basic things like food, medical care, and even shelter. Traveling to Africa on a

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mission of change is a great honor and a life changing moment for me. Hopefully we can make some positive changes.” Davis has an upcoming mission trip to Rwanda and Uganda in March. But the charity doesn’t end there. Following his own personal passion in the arts, Davis recently inaugurated the Vernon Davis Visual Scholarship as a way to give urban students a chance to pursue their artistic passions and provide financial support for them to do so. To qualify for the scholarship, a college-bound San Francisco-based high school senior needs to submit a statement of purpose, portfolio of his or her work, and a letter of recommendation from a teacher or art mentor. Davis explains his own frustration growing up without artistic support to nurture the talent he wasn’t truly aware he had, “I was always creative, painting and cutting my jeans when I was younger, but I didn’t have the freedom to be creative in my community.” He continues, “Growing up in a tough urban neighborhood, myself and others like me were surrounded by so many social pressures that impacted us, like drugs and crime, but we didn’t have access to the resources that would have been inspirational for us. When I went to college, though, I was free to focus on my creative side and discovered my talent.” Right now Davis is in the process of narrowing down the applicants to make a final choice for the first award. “Hopefully, the scholarship will provide a young artist with the resources to pursue his or her passion.” As if that weren’t enough, this summer Davis will be hosting a football and mentoring clinic in Washington D.C., called Sound Body, Sound Mind. It’s a two-day football academy being held at Howard University on June 23-24th. An exultant David explained the camp and his involvement, “Growing up, I was fortunate enough to have benefitted from positive role models, and now I want to make sure that kids who are just like I was will have the same opportunities. The camp is a great preparation and inspiration for about 200 young athletes to think about college and academic counseling while staying at Howard University, in addition to sports training.” Davis wants to empower the younger generation by giving them options for their future by emphasizing education and discipline, and not instilling delusions of fast-track success schemes. Davis is notorious amongst his friends and teammates as having a certain flair for style and décor, so I couldn’t help but inquire about his home. When asked to describe how he would characterize the overall style of his home, Davis gave me a good laugh (or rather I gave him one) by suggesting if it was country, modern, or eclectic, “Oh, definitely not country. Oh, no, no no [laughs]. Classic and contemporary I would say—on the modern side.” Davis was fortunate enough to be introduced to his publicist’s (Sasha Taylor) mother, a well-known interior decorator in San Francisco. “Sasha introduced me to Laura, and I thought to myself, ‘Wow, that’s convenient. Let me have her.’ She came to my house and all the ideas and samples she put in front of me were just what I was looking for. I saw some of the work she had previously done, and thought it was great.” Of course, the home of an artist is only complete with his own paintings decorating the walls. One in particular that stands out to us is entitled “Mirror Image.” It was painted by Davis in 2005 right before he departed college to enter the NFL. “I brought it along with me when I moved to San Francisco. I had to revisit the painting about two years ago to finish it.” When Davis has some down time, without a doubt we’ll find him in some of the most upscale shops and lounges San Francisco has to offer. Metro Park his favorite one-stop-shop for jeans (True Religion and Rock & Republic), watches and other accessories. To satiate his appetite we can find him at 5A5. Davis balances his time rather well; between training, practice, off-the-field endeavors and being an upstanding father to his three-year old son, Jianni. “It’s more challenging during the season, but I still get to spend a lot of time with my son and family. It’s a busy lifestyle of traveling and playing football, and it’s tough trying to balance everything, but I spend as much time with Jianni as I can. I had the chance to see him sing in his Christmas program this year, which was great, and he will be in a fashion show later this month, too.” Don’t expect to see Vernon Davis stopping any time soon. When his days on the field eventually dwindle, he explains how he would like to dabble in a little bit of everything, including (but not limited to) both the small and big screen. “Football was always my dream, but I have many different interests, like fashion and acting, and the wheels are already in motion to make brings some of these aspirations to fruition. I

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have a cameo role in the upcoming film ‘I Fell In Love With A Church Girl’, recently completed an internship at Organic, Inc., and have several television shows in development.” Even with Davis’s lengthy roster of accomplishments, there’s still one thing he’s dying to see, Michelangelo’s Sistine Chapel. I sense a trip to Rome on the horizon. ---------------------- San Francisco 49ers: Tight end Vernon Davis matures into a team-first leader By Cam Inman, San Jose Mercury News Vernon Davis caught a touchdown pass for the first time in a 49ers uniform five years ago this weekend, albeit an exhibition loss at Dallas. His playmaking career was under way, just as everyone expected out of the 2006 draft's sixth overall pick. Davis, however, is a different player and person entering the third game of this exhibition season, Saturday against the Houston Texans at Candlestick Park. "I was just trying to find myself, trying to get adjusted to this whole NFL thing," Davis said of his rookie mindset. "I was looking at guys like Terrell Owens and all those guys that were selfish in the past. I figured that was the way you were supposed to be. "But I learned throughout my career that is not the way it's supposed to be. Treat others the way you want to be treated. You should be humble. You should expect people to follow you when you're doing good things on and off the field, and good things will come." The 49ers are banking on great things from Davis in new coach Jim Harbaugh's West Coast offense. Tight ends flourished in that system at Stanford, so Harbaugh and offensive coordinator Greg Roman are looking to carry that over with Davis and Delanie Walker. Undrafted Stanford product Konrad Reuland also is in the mix. "You put them in positions of success and build your offense around that position somewhat," Harbaugh said. When Davis predicted his role would be "huge," he wasn't bragging. He was flashing his confident leadership, a trait expected from him when the 49ers made him the highest-paid tight end in NFL history last year with a five-year, $37 million contract ($23 million guaranteed). Want to test how team-oriented he is? Well, Scouts Inc. came out with a list of the NFL's top 200 players this week, and while Davis ranked a respectable 111th, six tight ends ranked ahead of him. Davis' initial reaction: He didn't appreciate it, felt disrespected and played it off as motivation. Then he said: "At the end of the day, it's just not about me. It's more about winning." He hasn't won enough in his 49ers tenure. But Davis has gained valuable life lessons, including his infamous 2008 ejection by then-coach Mike Singletary during a game against the Seattle Seahawks. Davis hailed Singletary and former position coach Pete Hoener for transforming him. Roman is now the one shadowing Davis and says he couldn't be more impressed. "I don't know if I've been around an athlete that's more explosive than him," Roman said. "Vernon is very explosive. He can go from zero to 60 when he needs to. He can rev up the engine in a hurry. Vernon is a great person, great to work with, very attentive, very much interested in the details of things, always looking for a way to get better."

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Roman remarked at the start of training camp how Davis' ream of study-session notes resembled the 1,225-page novel "War and Peace." On the practice field, Davis constantly is working on his pass-catching skills. That commitment has yielded 29 career touchdown receptions and a streak of at least one catch in 36 consecutive games (66 of his past 68 games). "He's a blue-collar guy when it comes to work on the practice field, in the weight room, in the meetings," Harbaugh said. "He's a pro, a true pro all the way." Harbaugh paired Davis with quarterback Alex Smith as roommates at the team hotel during training camp. Point of reference in 49ers lore: Steve Young roomed with tight end Brent Jones during the franchise's glory days. "We had a chance to talk football pretty much every night," Davis said. "I would rely on him to answer any question I had based on the offensive scheme. He would answer them, and we would talk about things other than football." Davis has been Smith's biggest supporter throughout the past month's "quarterback competition" with rookie Colin Kaepernick. Why? "Because I believe in him. I know he can do it. I know he has what it takes," Davis responded. "I say that because he's been through so much, and he has not yet put his head down. He's come a long way, and with him handling all this adversity, it lets me know he's a strong person who wants to succeed and be successful. That's why I have his back." The quarterback who threw that inaugural touchdown pass to Davis on Aug. 26, 2006: Alex Smith. After the game, Davis said the 15-yard connection would be: "The first of many." Five years later, many more are expected, indeed. ---------------------- The Frisco kid: Savannah's Demarcus Dobbs living a dream as 49ers rookie By Dennis Knight, Savannah Morning News When Demarcus Dobbs signed as an undrafted free agent with the San Francisco 49ers, Savannah’s Danny and Stephanie Britt tried to keep their hopes tempered. But as soon as Dobbs hit the field, he quickly proved himself. With an impressive preseason, the defensive lineman from Calvary Day and Georgia won a spot on the 49ers’ roster last week. “When he wasn’t drafted, he was so upset,” said Stephanie Britt, who considers Dobbs, who lived with her family while in high school, an adopted son. “I kept telling him ‘Don’t get your hopes up and try to be realistic.’ But he played so well, and he really loves it out there. I’m bittersweet because he is so far away, but I’m really happy for him.” Dobbs wasted no time establishing himself as a NFL player. First he excelled in practices, then he shined given a chance in exhibition games. The 6-foot-2, 275-pound rookie led all 49er linemen with nine tackles and a pair of sacks during the preseason. “He made some incredible plays and physically dominated on the line,” said Danny Britt, now the head coach at Benedictine. “The announcers for the game were carrying on about Demarcus.” With good reason. On one play against the Raiders, Dobbs drove his blocker into the quarterback — knocking him down to register the sack.

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“Demarcus earned the hype,” said Tim Ryan, an NFL analyst with Fox who called the exhibition games in his role as a commentator for KPIX-TV in San Francisco. “That kid is a rare talent. You can’t block him in the running game, and he has a knack for moving down the line and covering both gaps. “He earned opportunities and showed he is a great pass rusher. He fork-lifted that guy against the Raiders and drove him right into the quarterback. That dude is a pass rusher. He uses his hips well and cuts through the edge. He has the natural talent to finish, and he’s got some nasty to him.” Ryan, an All-American defensive lineman at Southern Cal who went on to play with the Chicago Bears in the early 1990s, knows line play and thinks Dobbs is in the NFL to stay. “I see him as the fourth-best defensive lineman on the team,” Ryan said. “He’s going to be in the rotation, not just sitting on the sideline. And he’s a nice, honest kid with a lot of humility. I can’t tell you how impressed I am with him. He is the real deal.” Dobbs had plenty of confidence in his game but knew it would be tough making the squad. Only 58 undrafted rookies made NFL Opening Day rosters this year, according to The Associated Press. “I considered myself to be on the bubble coming in as a free agent,” Dobbs said Thursday. “And there are some established players on the team. So there was a lot of competition.” But Dobbs wasn’t intimidated and quickly earned the respect of teammates. “After one of the first practices, (running back) Frank Gore came up to me and said ‘You’re looking good, keep ballin’ like you have been.’ To hear supportive words from a veteran player like that, it really inspired me and gave me a sense of belonging,” Dobbs said. “It was nerve-racking, but I just decided to play to the best of my ability and see what happened.” It’s been a whirlwind for Dobbs, who grew up in foster care before attending Bethesda Academy. He eventually met Danny Britt, then a coach at Calvary, and his family which includes daughters Southern (age 12) and Saylor (age 11). The Britts loved Dobbs from the start and he became a member of the family and a three-sport star at Calvary Day. “We were talking to him on the phone when he found out he made the team,” Danny Britt said. “He couldn’t really jump up and down at the time, but we knew he was smiling big. I’m so excited for him. How often do people actually have their dreams come true?” Stephanie Britt is flying to San Francisco to see the 49ers host Seattle in their opener Sunday. After that, she is going apartment hunting with her son. “I knew he was going to be successful whether or not he played pro football,” Stephanie Britt said. “It’s the way he relates to people. People seem to flock to him. He charms the socks off everyone he meets.” Dobbs can’t wait to play in his first regular-season game, and he’s thankful for the family that helped get him there. “I didn’t start playing football until I was in high school, but the more I played, the more I wanted to accomplish,” Dobbs said. “I had dreams and aspirations to make it here, and I’m blessed to have this opportunity. It just shows that faith in God, prayers and hard work do pay off.” ---------------------- Roster Bonus: Edwards Joins 49ers By Taylor Price, 49ers.com

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Moments after signing his one-year contract, new 49ers wide receiver Braylon Edwards was in a rush to join his teammates. The 6-foot-3, 214-pound veteran could have watched practice from the sidelines on Thursday. But he figured, why wait? So with players already on the field going through drills in the early stages of practice, Edwards laced up his cleats as fast as possible, got the necessary equipment from the 49ers locker room and made his way out to practice. “I'm trying to start now,” said the big-play wideout who caught 53 passes for 904 yards with seven touchdowns and averaged 17.1 yards per catch last season for the New York Jets. “Why sit around and be in the locker room or sit and watch? “I felt good today and it's good to learn. It's one thing to read a playbook and go through some plays on film, but it's another thing to actually get a chance to watch it live or actually go through some reps, which I actually had a chance to do today.” True to his pre-practice mentality, Edwards jumped in to the action wearing a No. 81 jersey and even caught a few passes during team periods on a windy day in Santa Clara. The uniform number isn’t permanent, but Edwards’ passion to get better remains intact. Though he admittedly was not too familiar with the 49ers roster, Edwards left the practice fields impressed by his new teammates and eager to build camaraderie. “I saw a lot of talent,” Edwards said. “There's a lot of talent on this team and there's a chance for something special happening this year.” Edwards aims on being a big part of the team’s rebuilding plans. He also gives the 49ers an even bigger target in the passing game. “We're looking for that big statured receiver,” said coach Jim Harbaugh, a fellow University of Michigan alum. “I think he's hungry and he wanted to be here and that was exciting for us.” Edwards’ interest in the 49ers began to take shape at the start of the week. On Monday, the veteran wideout began talks with the 49ers. On Wednesday, he visited team headquarters and by the middle of the following day, “here I am at the podium,” said Edwards to a gathering of local reporters and cameramen. The wide receiver, who has caught 326 passes for 5,142 yards and 39 touchdowns in his six NFL seasons, looks at his one-year contract as an opportunity to be a part of something new and fresh. His connection with coach Harbaugh also made it an easier decision. “It just seemed like a good change of scenery,” Edwards said. “I've known coach Harbaugh for pretty much my whole life, he and my father played together and I thought that was another plus. “Then I thought it would be a great change, a rebuilding team that has a lot of talent and has of lot of ability, but just hasn't crossed over yet. I think I can be a part of that and I would love to be a part of helping this team out.” ---------------------- Edwards looks for fresh start with 49ers By Matt Maiocco, CSNBayArea.com

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Receiver Braylon Edwards signed a one-year contract with the 49ers on Thursday and, after the transaction was finalized, trotted out to the field 30 minutes after practice began. The 49ers and Edwards are prepared for him to show up late for the regular season, too. Edwards faces a possible NFL suspension stemming from his recent guilty plea to a DWI arrest in September. Edwards was already serving 18 months of probation after he pleaded no contest to a misdemeanor charge. He was accused of punching a friend of LeBron James outside a Cleveland night club. He faces disciplinary action from commissioner Roger Goodell, and the 49ers are prepared for Edwards to be forced to miss a game or two, a source said. "I haven't talked to Commissioner Goodell, yet," Edwards said. "And I don't know what his ruling will be on in the situation. Obviously, myself and the team hopes there will be none. But if there is one, then I'll respect it and I'll gladly take it. And once it's over move forward and look to help this team be good this year." Coach Jim Harbaugh played at Michigan. So did Edwards' father, Stanley. And so did Edwards. Harbaugh said his newest 49ers offensive weapon needs to get back to living with the same accountability expected of him before he entered the NFL as the No. 3 overall pick of the Cleveland Browns in 2005. "He's hit some potholes here and you don't want that to spiral any further down," Harbaugh said. "It's time to start doing all the little things right. He knows that. He's a good guy. I look forward to working with him." Edwards signed a one-year contract worth $3.5 million. None of the money was guaranteed, so Edwards knows he cannot afford to make any further missteps. "We were taught to be accountable and responsible and knowing right from wrong," Edwards said. "And that's what I want to get back to, being the guy who's accountable and be respected and be put in a position to thrive here and be a responsible guy for this organization. "I put myself in some situations that I'm to blame for. I want to come out here and get a fresh start with people I trust and a team that is supporting me with what I'm going through. Edwards' off-field issues certainly did not help his ability to attract suitors on the free-agent market. Although the 49ers might not be the ideal team for a receiver looking to rebuild his career, Edwards said he needed a fresh start. "I had great talk with them on Monday and it seemed like a good change of scenery," Edwards said. "I've known Coach Harbaugh my whole life. He and my father player together. I thought it would be a great change to a rebuilding team that has a lot of talent and a lot of ability but just haven't crossed over yet. I want to be a part of helping this team out." Edwards had his best season in 2007, as he caught 80 passes for 1,289 yards and 16 touchdowns. Two years later, the Browns dealt him to the New York Jets. In 16 games with the New York Jets last season, Edwards caught 53 passes for 904 yards and seven touchdowns. In his career, he has 326 receptions for 5,142 yards and 39 touchdowns. His career average per catch is an impressive 15.8 yards. Now, Edwards comes to an organization that has not produced a 1,000-yard receiver since Terrell Owens left the club after the 2003 season. Coincidentally, Edwards was issued No. 81 for his first practice.

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"Pretty crazy in the middle of practice to see him run out and jump in there," 49ers quarterback Alex Smith said. "It's just another addition to a strange year." And in this strange year, Smith was finally able to practice Thursday on the first day of the new league year. "It's like he's been practicing for about eight practices with the command of the offense, moving the team in and out of the huddle," Harbaugh said of Smith. "He just jumped right in and started to compete." And Smith received a nice welcome-back gift. In 2005, Smith and Edwards became acquainted in the weeks leading up to the NFL draft. The 49ers publicly considered both of the players for the No. 1 overall pick. Six years later, they're teammates. "He's a big receiver, and we were looking for that big-statured receiver," Harbaugh said. "He's another experienced guy with 17 yards per catch last year. He's hungry. He wanted to be here, and that's exciting for us." As much as Edwards wants to blend into his new environment, he also said he has high expectations on the field. "I'm here to make some noise," Edwards said. ---------------------- Master of His Domain By Taylor Price, 49ers.com When Ricky Jean Francois says he wants to be like Bruce Lee, it doesn’t mean the 317-pound defensive lineman is learning martial arts. He’s talking about his craving for knowledge, specifically, mastering his craft to the point where he becomes a primary contributor on the 49ers defense. As the backup nose tackle in 2010, Jean Francois saw increased playing time, finishing the year with 23 tackles, one sack and one forced fumble. The experience was important to Jean Francois, who made the most of his limited role. He will take a similar approach to the offseason, a period of time for the young lineman to master his craft, or as he put it, “become the Bruce Lee of what I do.” Similar to the martial arts master, Jean Francois is versatile in the sense that he’s able to play all three line positions in the 49ers 3-4 defensive scheme. That resourcefulness has been a plus considering he was a seventh-round pick in 2009. Jean Francois hasn’t forgotten the disappointment from hearing his name called in the last round of the draft. But that frustration has turned to added motivation for the National Championship-winning lineman out of Louisiana State. “That was my biggest chip coming into the league,” he said. “I was going to make everybody regret not picking me in all those rounds.” Making the 49ers as a rookie was a sense of pride for Jean Francois, who noted that many of the players selected in that round didn’t last on their team’s active rosters.

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“For the coaches to give me opportunity here, it was a great thing. I had a small window to work with, but I made sure to make the most of my opportunity.” And now as he enters year three of his professional career, Jean Francois is no longer looked at as a seventh-round project, but as a building block. With the 49ers bringing in several new defensive coaches including coordinator Vic Fangio, there will be decisions to be made on the future of the unit. Several of the team’s 15 unsigned players reside on the defensive side of the ball, including starting nose tackle Aubrayo Franklin, who was franchised by the 49ers last offseason and remains an unrestricted free agent. Franklin can be tagged again if he doesn’t reach a long-term agreement with the team. Also, fifth-year defensive end Ray McDonald is up for free agency barring changes to the collective bargaining agreement. The 49ers are the only team that can negotiate with Franklin, McDonald and the other free agents up until March 4, the day the NFL’s current CBA expires. “I don’t know what’s going to happen with a lot of the guys in here,” Jean Francois said. “All the stuff I did this year and what’s on tape, I’m going to take home with me and work on it.” In understanding the uncertainly that lies around his position group as well as the unknowns of the league’s CBA negotiations with the Players Association, Jean Francois has put his sights on controlling what he can. “I’m trying to perfect my craft to the best of my ability, not half it, but to the fullest,” he said. “I can’t control the CBA and what’s going to be going on, but I know I can perfect my craft. I know I can make my game better than what it is.” Jean Francois’ personality has been on full display since he joined the 49ers. Known for his “Peanut Butter Jelly” dance which was unveiled at a rookie talent show in training camp and later aired publically on an episode of “The Joe Show,” the defensive lineman has endeared himself to fans, teammates and coaches. But as luck would have it, Jean Francois’ opportunity to show the dance on gameday went by the wayside. After unknowingly sacking Raiders quarterback Jason Campbell, Jean Francois dusted himself off and went back to the huddle with no knowledge of registering his first NFL sack. “It was supposed to be a big moment, but I didn’t know,” Jean Francois recalled. “I thought Campbell got past the line of scrimmage. When everybody told me I felt like I could stick out my chest a little bit like, ‘Yeah, I got my first NFL sack.’” If Jean Francois is able to continue his mastery of defensive line play in the NFL, there will be more chances to celebrate. Chalk it up to another aspect of his game that will develop in time. ---------------------- The payoff: Ginn returns key 49ers' victory By Matt Maiocco, CSNBayArea.com A week earlier, Ted Ginn's spot on the 49ers was nowhere near secure.

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Ginn had to accept a pay cut of more than $1 million just to remain on the 49ers' 53-man roster. Seattle Seahawks coach Pete Carroll interpreted that move as a sign Ginn would not even be in uniform to face his team in the season opener. Well, Ginn was in uniform, all right. The 49ers' fourth receiver did not catch a pass, but he had a historic day nonetheless. Ginn made a winner of Jim Harbaugh in his coaching debut with two touchdowns -- one on a kickoff return and another on a punt return -- within a 59-second stretch late in the fourth quarter of the 49ers' 33-17 victory at Candlestick Park. "Honestly, we didn't think Teddy Ginn was going to play," Carroll said. "Teddy's got a real style about him, and he didn't play much in the preseason. He got us (by) running around us." The 49ers appeared to have the game in hand with a 16-0 halftime lead. But the 49ers' conservative offensive approach -- "blue collar" is how Harbaugh described -- made sure that Seattle was able to hang around. Receiver Doug Baldwin, a rookie from Stanford, took a short pass from Seahawks quarterback Tarvaris Jackson and turned it into a 55-yard touchdown to pull Seattle to within two points, 19-17, with 3:56 remaining. That's when Ginn went work. He fielded the ensuring kickoff and blasted out of the end zone like a sprinter. "Teddy's speed kills," Harbaugh said. "He was moving." "It was the Ted Ginn show," 49ers receiver Michael Crabtree said. "He put on a show today. He was like a 200 runner hitting the turn." Ginn's kickoff return might have clinched the game. Less than a minute later, his 55-yard punt return provided a memorable finish and a 16-point winning margin. "I didn't amaze myself but I didn't think they were going to come right back and kick it to me," Ginn said. "I wanted to make them pay." A week earlier, it was the 49ers who made Ginn pay -- in the form of a salary reduction. Ginn accepted a pay cut of $1.2 million to his new 2011 base salary of $1 million. Ginn made the team as the 49ers' fourth receiver and as the return specialist. "I'm a team player," Ginn said. "It's not always about the money for me." And Harbaugh can thank Ginn for making the final minutes a lot less stressful against his old nemesis. Harbaugh and Carroll renewed their rivalry from when they coached Stanford and USC, respectively. Special teams and the 49ers' defense did the heavy-lifting while the 49ers' offense did just enough. The 49ers managed a meager 209 yards of total offense, but they did not turn the ball over. Quarterback Alex Smith completed 15 of 20 passes for 124 yards with no touchdowns and no interceptions. He also gained 22 yards rushing, and accounted for the team's only offensive touchdown with a 1-yard run with 12 seconds remaining in the half. "Offense was in a blue-collar type of mod," Harbaugh said, "but we were comfortable doing both the way Alex was throwing the ball. He was on the money with his accuracy. He was playing winning football, so we were playing to win."

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When asked if he felt like a blue-collar quarterback, Smith answered, laughing, "Running in goal-line 1-yard runs, yeah. No, you take it how you get it. Some games are like this." Ginn's day was historic. It was the first time a player had a kickoff return and a punt return for a touchdown in the same game in the opening weekend of the season in NFL history. Ginn, the 12th player in NFL history to have a kickoff return and a punt return for a touchdown in the same game, became the first 49ers player two accomplish that feat. It was the second time Ginn had two return touchdowns in the same game. In 2009, Ginn returned kickoffs of 101 and 100 yards for touchdowns while with the Miami Dolphins against the New York Jets. Coincidentally, Ginn had just been benched as a receiver when he responded with the kind of game that usually takes place with some help from computer animation. "It's great," Ginn said. "Well, you do it on a video game a lot. But you don't see it too much in real life." ---------------------- 49ers' Ginn making the most of his chance By Janie McCauley, Santa Rosa Press Democrat Running like mad, Ted Ginn Jr. almost raised the ball in the air before the goal line to start celebrating a touchdown on his 102-yard kickoff return. He thought twice, then tucked it in safely at his right side. Ginn had looked up at the big screen and saw a chasing defender. No way he was risking something going wrong. Not after his turbulent week. Ahead of the season opener, Ginn took a hefty pay cut and lost his starting job in the receiving corps to newcomer Braylon Edwards. What a tough few days for the fifth-year pro before he returned two kicks for touchdowns in a 59-second span to seal San Francisco's season-opening 33-17 victory over Seattle. The 49ers got their money's worth and then some from the veteran wideout and special teams star against the defending NFC West champion Seahawks. Ginn gave the 49ers their first game in franchise history with a kickoff return and a punt return for touchdowns. “I'm a team player. It's not always about money,” Ginn said. “You come in, you play the game, and as you play the game, good things should happen for you.” It hasn't always been that way for Ginn, however. Booed by Dolphins fans from the day he was drafted out of Ohio State, the criticism he received in South Florida was relentless. Even for a guy who scored on kickoff returns of 100 and 101 yards in the same quarter of a game against the New York Jets in November 2009. He became the first player with two kickoff returns of at least 100 yards in the same game. The 49ers got quite a glimpse — make that two — of Ginn's explosive, game-breaking ability Sunday. Even at age 26, he shows off the speed and first step that made him a national hurdle champion in high school. “Career day, record-setting day by Ted Ginn,” 49ers coach Jim Harbaugh said. “Phenomenal performance by Teddy.”

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And to think Harbaugh nearly went with somebody else back deep in the return game. The first-year coach ultimately decided to go with Ginn because of “his experience more than anything else.” “I wanted a guy back there who was going to have a cool head and make good decisions,” Harbaugh said. Ginn will be given another chance to shine on special teams this week. While Ginn has always longed to pull double duty on special teams and offense, Harbaugh seems content to stick with what worked. The 49ers entertain the Cowboys at Candlestick Park after Tony Romo & Co. blew a 14-point lead to lose 27-24 to the Jets on Sunday night. “You sure hate to take him off the field right now in those roles,” Harbaugh said of Ginn. “He means a lot to us on the offensive side of the ball as well. We weren't going to have him returning the kicks. That was close to a day-before-game decision to let him roll on the kickoff return. But glad we did it.” Ginn is giving San Francisco — after one week, at least — what he believed he had in him when he arrived in the Bay Area last year. The 49ers acquired Ginn in a trade with the Dolphins in April 2010, when then-coach Mike Singletary made upgrading the return game one of his top priorities. “I'm just going to come into the 49ers and show 'em what I got,” Ginn said after the trade. He insists he gauges his field position based on “feel.” “I've been back there for about five years now, so I can kind of get a good feel on how the kickoff team is coming down,” he said. Selected with the ninth overall pick in 2007, Ginn was considered the fastest draft bust in Dolphins history. He managed only five touchdown catches in three seasons while averaging 13.0 yards per reception. Ginn seems to have moved on from all that. He made 12 catches last season with a TD in his first year with the 49ers. On Sunday, he left Candlestick with a trio of souvenir balls — the game ball and two more from his TD runs. Ginn has been telling his teammates all along he would break free. “He said, ‘Man, all I need is a couple more blocks and I will get in the end zone.' And you saw it. Kickoff return,” special teams mate Delanie Walker said. “He just did that by himself. It was a left return, he just took it all the way to the right. He's got the speed to get around the corner, and that's what he did. The punt return everyone had a great block, he broke a couple tackles, right up the middle for a touchdown. “He says it all the time. Right when we get in our huddle when we say the play, 'Hey, one block and I'm going to do the rest and y'all can look at me score.' And that's what we did.” Harbaugh declined to address Ginn's pay cut, only praising his team-first attitude. “Ted's a stud, no doubt a heck of a football player and a great guy,” Harbaugh said. “Nobody would be disputing that. ... A real football player, courageous, talented, hardworking, great teammate.” Still, when Harbaugh was sitting at home Sunday night flipping through the sports channels for highlights, he never came across the Niners — despite Ginn's fine day. He knows respect for this franchise will take time. San Francisco has gone eight years without reaching the playoffs or posting a winning record.

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“It just kind of documents what you know, what the perception is of our team around the league and around the country,” Harbaugh said. “Some people can say that's not fair, it isn't right, but do something about it. And that's our mindset. That's our approach.” ---------------------- It's full speed ahead for rejuvenated Gore By Eric Branch, San Francisco Chronicle After talking with Jim Harbaugh in the offseason, 49ers running back Frank Gore began to believe that, finally, all that other talk would disappear. For starters, his family members would stop openly dreaming about him playing for the Colts or Patriots, teams with elite quarterbacks directing visionary offenses. And the NFL defensive players with whom he trained in Miami would stop telling him about their Gore-centered game plans from that past season: "They would come up to me and say, 'Man, that's all we talked about - you, you, you,' " he said. And, best of all, Gore never again would line up in the backfield and hear defenders yelling out the 49ers' play before the snap. Gore says that happened in last year's 31-10 loss to the Chiefs and during the ill-fated tenure of offensive coordinator Jim Hostler three years earlier. "In '07, when we had Jim Hoss," Gore said, shaking his head wearily, "yeah, that was tough." Gore is the only back in franchise history with four straight 1,000-yard seasons, and he needs 931 yards to become the Niners' all-time leading rusher. Those are particularly impressive feats considering he hasn't been surrounded by a 3,000-yard passer, a 1,000-yard receiver or an offense that has ranked higher than 23rd in the league. "Like I told (Harbaugh), it's been tough out there, man," Gore said. "It's been tough in my career here facing defenses that knew what we were going to do. That's what's made me really think - would another running back be able to do what I did? In the position I was in?" Gore, 28, is confident he'll be in a far better position this season thanks to the arrival of Harbaugh, the first offensive-minded head coach he has had. Harbaugh and offensive coordinator Greg Roman were known for their creative use of formations, motion and personnel groups at Stanford, where the Cardinal scored a school-record 524 points last year. In contrast with former offensive coordinator Jimmy Raye, who announced his intention to run on 60 percent of San Francisco's plays, Harbaugh and Roman have been tight-lipped about their West Coast offense and kept the preseason play-calling vanilla - but what Gore heard from Harbaugh in the offseason had him, in effect, salivating. Gore has said those conversations contributed to his decision to end his contract holdout after four days at the start of training camp. "Even though football should be simple, you don't have to make it look simple," Gore said. "And the coaches here now don't make it look simple. That's what I like." And after signing a three-year, $21 million contract extension last week, he can envision playing until he's 31. He believes the creative use of other personnel will add years to his career by taking the bull's-eye off his back.

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"We've got all the talent," Gore said. "And I think we have the right coaches now who can use all the talent. ... Now I can see myself playing this last contract out just because of how they get the ball to everybody. People won't be able to just come in here and be like, 'They're running power.' " For his part, Harbaugh appears to be just as taken with Gore, whom he calls one of the NFL's best running backs. Gore is fully recovered from a hairline hip fracture he sustained in November, but he has missed nine games over the past three seasons because of injuries as his 5-foot-9, 217-pound frame pays the price for 1,371 career carries. Still, Harbaugh has said he doesn't anticipate Gore, who excels as a pass-catcher and blocker, coming off the field often. Beyond his respect for Gore's on-field ability, Harbaugh loves the life story of an athlete who grew up in extreme poverty in Coral Gables, Fla., and overcame a learning disability. "Frank is a true 49er," Harbaugh said. "I've said that from when I first got here, that's how I thought I would feel about Frank Gore. Now I know how I feel about Frank Gore. The guy is awesome. Somebody should do a movie. Somebody should do 'The Frank Gore Story,' because it's an awesome story." The respect for Gore runs throughout the organization. His teammates voted him the offensive captain last week. Gore is acclaimed for his football smarts and eye for talent - former head coach Mike Nolan used to call him to get his evaluations of teammates and players around the NFL. And general manager Trent Baalke and Gore have talked, somewhat jokingly, Gore says, about him filling a similar role in his retirement. When Gore was sidelined by his hip injury last year, Baalke brought him upstairs to watch video of two Pac-10 running backs. It was an experience that might have given Gore second thoughts about getting into the talent-evaluation business. "At first, I thought you've just got to watch one game," Gore said. "But, man, I had to watch like five games with one person. I told Trent, 'Man, you should know once you've seen one game or two games of a guy, you should know what type of player he is.' But, no, he told me I had to watch like five games. That's the tough part right there." Gore was laughing. And with good reason. As a running back with a target on his back, he has experienced the toughest part of football. But his toughest days, he believes, are finally behind him. ---------------------- Rookie Niners coach Harbaugh got his man in QB Kaepernick; mailbag By Peter King, SI.com I spent a couple of days with the 49ers around the draft, and one thing became clear: Jim Harbaugh and Colin Kaepernick are going to get along very well together. This draft, particularly how quarterbacks fit with teams, was about beauty being in the eye of the beholder. Carolina got an exciting player and franchise billboard in Cam Newton. Tennessee fell in love with Jake Locker at a Seattle workout. Minnesota and the heady Christian Ponder made a good match. Jacksonville thought Blaine Gabbert's athleticism and strong arm, put in a pro-style training incubator for a couple of years, would come out pro-ready. Bengals offensive coordinator Jay Gruden viewed Andy Dalton as Brees-like in many ways, and a great fit to run his new offense. And Kaepernick, with the Niners, is a similar fit. A few days before the draft, Harbaugh, the rookie 49er coach, and GM Trent Baalke played racquetball. Baalke must lead NFL executives in fitness. He's thin, sculpted and can run his peers into the ground.

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Harbaugh's got a bum knee from his playing career, but he's as competitive as anyone. Harbaugh eked out the win, but afterward his knee wasn't the only thing aching. "We both came out of it with pulled muscles in our rear ends, but winning that match was important to us both,'' Baalke said. Harbaugh won, two games to one. Harbaugh wanted a baller out of his quarterback. He wanted a player who loves to practice, loves to learn, loves to play. As a friend of both Harbaugh and Baalke, Trent Dilfer told me in a quote I used in Sports Illustrated this week: "Kaepernick's a football junkie, and he'll be trained 24/7/365 by Jim Harbaugh to be an NFL quarterback. Every aspect of his life will be about being a quarterback. Perfect guy for Harbaugh." As another draft analyst told me Sunday: "Harbaugh drafted himself.'' When San Francisco drafted Kaepernick, it was about 3:17 p.m. in Turlock, Calif., south of Sacramento, where Kaepernick lives. That's about 90 minutes from Santa Clara, where the 49ers train. And when Harbaugh got on the phone to welcome him to the team, he told him maybe they could meet halfway in the morning, then drive together the rest of the way to Santa Clara for his welcome-to-the-49ers meeting. Harbaugh just couldn't wait to get going, and even if he wasn't going to be able to talk football much because of the lockout, he wanted to start getting to know his new quarterback. Kaepernick trumped that. "Coach, I'm only 90 minutes away,'' he said. "I can come over right now.'' And the Niners ended up taking him up on the offer. Kaepernick was in the building, grinning like a 10-year-old digging into birthday cake, by 6:30 p.m. "Whether it's checkers or the Super Bowl,'' Kaepernick told me, "I've got to win. We had such a good time when coach Harbaugh came to work me out at Nevada. His energy is what got to me. I thought, 'I'd really like to play for this guy.' The first thing we did was throw the ball to each other, and he made it a contest ... Who could throw five perfect spirals in a row? Then who can throw the ball through the goal posts from difficult angles? He just wanted to compete with me and see how I would react.'' Kaepernick threw a 94 mph fastball in high school, and he was sure to be a top-five-round baseball draft pick ... except he told major league officials he wasn't interested in being drafted. He wanted to play football. And even though Nevada was the only major college to offer him a scholarship, one school was enough for him. "Baseball just didn't do it for me,'' he said. "I liked it, but nothing like football.'' At Nevada, 2010 was a crucial year for Kaepernick, transforming him from a mid-round prospect to a strong one. He jacked up his completion percentage to 64.9, something NFL teams had to see to pick him high. Will he become a good NFL quarterback? No one knows. But he'll work at Harbaugh's pace and give it everything he has. The 49ers expect to sign Alex Smith in free agency when the market opens (the former 49er quarterback has the current 49er offensive playbook, acquired when the window between teams and players opened briefly last week), and it's likely 2011 will be a learning year for Kaepernick. If Smith plays as well as Harbaugh believes he can, they may have to fight it out for the starting job in 2012. Whatever, Harbaugh will have two quarterbacks he really wants if he gets Smith to sign. "Colin has a unique ability to think himself to win,'' Baalke said. "That's something we believe is very important for an NFL quarterback, and that's one of the things that attracted us to him.'' Now we'll see if that translates to the big leagues. ---------------------- San Francisco 49ers' Colin Kaepernick has motivation on his side By Mark Emmons, San Jose Mercury News Not long after the NFL scouting combine in February, Colin Kaepernick was pondering the obstacles he had overcome in life and the challenges that lie ahead. Kaepernick decided to define his essence with three words tattooed on his chest:

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Against All Odds. "Things always have been stacked up against me with people telling me what I can't do, like play college football or now be an NFL quarterback," said Kaepernick, the 49ers' second-round draft pick and projected signal-caller of the future. "But I'm a person who rises to the occasion and wants to prove people wrong." Talk to those who know Kaepernick best, and they tell of an almost-too-good-to-be-true guy who has traveled an unlikely path to pro football. Humble, sharp and athletic, he is described as an ideal quarterback for new coach Jim Harbaugh to groom. "The absolute best I've ever had," said Roger Theder, the one-time Cal coach and longtime Northern California QB guru. "He's a can't-miss kid. "... He strikes me as the same kind of person as Andrew Luck." But unlike Luck, Harbaugh's protégé at Stanford, Kaepernick never had golden boy prospects. And because he so often was overlooked, Kaepernick (pronounced CAP-ur-nick) carefully has cultivated every perceived slight and channeled them into an almost maniacal drive to succeed. Despite his good-natured demeanor, the 23-year-old from the Central Valley who rewrote the record book at the only college that offered him a scholarship carries a large chip on his broad shoulders. "Our family learned that when Colin's in competitive situations, he changes," said Rick Kaepernick, his father. "It's like, 'Oh, my God, the monster is coming out, and now somebody is going to pay.' " But Kaepernick makes clear that the most unusual part of his back story -- that he was adopted -- is not something he had to overcome. Living in rural Wisconsin, Rick and Teresa Kaepernick already had two kids -- son Kyle and daughter Devon. But they also had lost two boys shortly after birth to genetic-based congenital heart defects. Doctors had advised against having more children. Eager to have another child, the couple adopted an infant of mixed-race ancestry who had been given up by his teenage mother in Milwaukee. In the years that followed, the Kaepernicks got used to curious glances sometimes directed at the white family with the darker-skinned youngest son. "We didn't care about race," Rick Kaepernick said. "We never have. Colin is not our adopted son. He's just our son." And for his part, Kaepernick seems genuinely mystified when asked if his background somehow helped shaped that me-against-the-world sports mentality. Colin Kaepernick as a youth football player. (Courtesy Kaepernick family)He considers himself blessed to have grown up in a loving family with parents who made sure he was at church every Sunday and never missed one of his sporting events. "This is just my life," said Kaepernick, who has had contact with his birth mother but never met her face-to-face. Early in life he was plagued by upper-respiratory infections that twice led his concerned parents to have him tested for cystic fibrosis. But he outgrew those "... and grew into a remarkable athlete. At Pitman High in Turlock, where the family had relocated when he was 4 years old, Kaepernick was a three-sport standout. He threw two no-hitters and had a fastball clocked in the low-90s. On the basketball court, the skinny 6-foot-5 Kaepernick once dropped 34 points on the high school team of future Cal star and current Orlando Magic forward Ryan Anderson. (Then again, Anderson got 50 in that game.)

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Football, though, was Kaepernick's first love. He played in a run-oriented Wing-T offense, which meant he flew under the radar. It didn't help that he weighed just 170 pounds. The schools that did express interest asked him to walk on because they were leery of committing a scholarship to someone who had caught the attention of professional baseball scouts. "Colin sat there and told every coach: 'I'm not going to play baseball,' " Rick Kaepernick recalled. "He took those rejections as: 'They don't believe me. They don't trust me. They think I'm a liar.' The only guy who trusted him was Coach Ault." Even Nevada coach Chris Ault wondered. But Barry Sacks, a former San Jose State assistant who recruits the Central Valley for the Wolfpack, did not. He was sold after watching Kaepernick play a basketball game with a 102-degree fever. "He just tore up the court," Sacks recalled. "I called Coach Ault and said, 'This is the guy.' You could see he had all the intangibles. And he can leap tall buildings in a single bound and runs like a gazelle. Guys like this just don't come along that often." Once he got to Nevada, Ault began describing Kaepernick this way: He watches and watches, and watches some more, then, watch out. In Ault's pistol offense -- a hybrid of the shotgun -- Kaepernick put up eye-opening numbers after redshirting his first year. He became the first player in NCAA history to throw for more than 10,000 yards and run for more than 4,000. He earned a degree in business management and the respect of teammates. The Chicago Cubs, who selected him late in the 2009 draft, offered him $30,000 to pitch just one month in Arizona. Kaepernick said no thanks. "What do I tell my teammates who are back at Nevada working their tails off in July for August camp?' " Rick Kaepernick recalled his son saying. As his NFL draft stock rose this year, so did scrutiny about Kaepernick's unorthodox throwing motion -- which has a long windup. "I keep reading about his mechanics, but there's nothing wrong with his release," said Theder, who has worked with Kaepernick since he was a high school freshman. "He's got a gun for an arm. He's a great leader. He's smart. And he's tough. You can't be a wuss if you're a quarterback. Harbaugh saw all of that." Nevada's Sacks believes Harbaugh and the 49ers, who traded up to select Kaepernick with the 36th pick, also saw something else. In fact, he thinks the ultracompetitive Harbaugh -- who was hired in large part to resuscitate the 49ers' tradition of great quarterbacks -- found a kindred spirit in Kaepernick. "You'd want your son to be like Colin, but when he flips that switch, he's got a little mean streak in him on the football field," Sacks said. "And that's a good thing." At the informal 49ers workouts being organized by incumbent quarterback Alex Smith during the NFL lockout, Kaepernick is just returning to form after a post-draft "procedure" for an undisclosed lower-left-leg injury that bothered him his final four games at Nevada. While he politely declines to discuss that, Kaepernick talks at length about the meaning of elaborate tattoos on both of his upper arms. Each one is centered on Biblical passages that express the idea that God provides everything you need to be successful and, no matter what forces confront you, there is no need to be afraid. He does more than just wear his beliefs, as well as the belief in himself, on his sleeve.

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"I'm not going to be scared of any situation," he said. "I'm going to be confident, and I'm going to take it head-on." ---------------------- 49ers' Ray McDonald paying immediate dividends By Eric Branch, San Francisco Chronicle After running back Frank Gore, the biggest financial commitment the 49ers made to a player in the offseason was in re-signing defensive end Ray McDonald. And after one regular-season game, the very early returns are in on McDonald's five-year, $20 million deal: money well spent. McDonald, 27, made his first start since 2008 a memorable one Sunday as he shared team-high honors with six tackles while collecting a sack and two other tackles for a loss in a 33-17 season-opening win against Seattle. McDonald's lucrative contract might have raised some eyebrows in late July. After all, he was an off-the-bench pass-rushing specialist in 2010 who didn't record a single sack. But a closer look at the numbers revealed McDonald ranked second on the team in quarterback pressures (56) and quarterback hits (26). Niners coach Jim Harbaugh said the game film foreshadowed big things ahead for the third-round pick in the 2007 draft. We "watched the tape on Ray and we all felt that here's a guy that's just about ready to explode onto the scene," Harbaugh said. "It's kind of like there have been some tremors, some earthquake tremors have been reported and sighted on the Richter scale, and here's a guy that the big one could be coming. That's why Ray was such a high priority for us to re-sign and get back on our football team." McDonald, 6-feet-3 and 295 pounds, was among a regular group of defensive players who trained at San Jose State during the lockout. After one workout in July, McDonald repeatedly said he was driven during his training by the memory of so many quarterbacks eluding his grasp last season. With that in mind, he took particular satisfaction in his sack of Seattle quarterback Tarvaris Jackson for a 2-yard loss on the game's opening drive Sunday. It broke a 25-game streak without a sack for McDonald dating back to Nov. 1, 2009. "It felt good," McDonald said. "I put an emphasis on that this offseason - to finish plays that I didn't really finish last year. And that was my main focus coming into this season - just finishing plays. And I did that" Sunday. McDonald was part of a front seven that collected five sacks against the Seahawks, whose starting offensive line featured two rookies and had made just 27 career starts. Next up is Dallas, which is also dealing with question marks up front. The Cowboys start two rookies in right tackle Tyron Smith, the No. 9 overall pick, and left guard Bill Nagy, a seventh-round pick who missed practice Thursday with a neck injury. Center Phil Costa, 24, made his second career start last week in a 27-24 season-opening loss to the Jets in which the Cowboys allowed four sacks and averaged 2.5 yards on 26 rushing attempts. Dallas' offensive line issues could foreshadow another big game for McDonald, who, so far, looks like a wise investment.

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"He's been better than I thought he was," defensive coordinator Vic Fangio said. "He's really played well for us right from the get-go. He's defended the run well. He's given us good pass rush. He has definitely emerged and picked his game up to another level than I think it's been in the last year or two." ---------------------- Rookie Miller arrives for final day of 49ers minicamp By Matt Barrows, Sacramento Bee Seventh-round draft pick Bruce Miller is in California for the first time since the draft and is taking part in his first 49ers practice today, according to his Twitter account and reports from San Jose State. Miller, who is being converted from defensive end to fullback, was the lone offensive player who did not take part in the team's June 6-9 minicamp. Like several other 49ers rookies, including running back Kendall Hunter and cornerback Curtis Holcomb, Miller spent the first four days this week at the rookie symposium in Bradenton, Fla. that was put on by the NFLPA. After Thursday's session, he flew to the Bay Area. Miller has perhaps the most daunting task of all the 49ers players this summer. He not only is a rookie who didn't have the benefit of a normal offseason program. He also is transitioning from defense to offense. Miller (6-2, 248) will compete against veteran Moran Norris, who has attended every day of the 49ers two player-led minicamps. Shortly after he was drafted, Miller admitted to being "kind of shocked" that a team took him as a fullback. He said he played tight end -- "it was a true tight end," he said -- in high school, but was on the defensive side of the ball all four years at Central Florida. Miller said he had talked with running backs coach Tom Rathman in the run-up to the draft but still was surprised when the 49ers called. "It was kind of hard for me to believe that I was going to have a chance to play linebacker; that was a little bit more realistic than fullback," Miller said. "So, I'm pretty shocked that I got the opportunity to play as a fullback, however, they did say that, 'Come in and hopefully get comfortable at the position and maybe in a little while we can try some rush on the defensive side." General Manager Trent Baalke also has said that Miller will get a chance to show what he can do as an outside linebacker but that the team primarily is interested in him as a fullback. ---------------------- Fitness push paying off for Niners' Chilo Rachal By Eric Branch, San Francisco Chronicle Chilo Rachal's offseason dedication was partially reflected in his change in diet: from In-N-Out to tilapia-N-salmon. The Niners' right guard not only said farewell to Double-Doubles, he also bid a temporary goodbye to his home in the Bay Area. He took his wife and two young children to Southern California, rented a house in Thousand Oaks (Ventura County) and became a regular at Elite Performance Factory, a gym that has a host of other NFL players, including Reggie Bush, among its clients. The goal? Slim down and step up his performance. Rachal was dissatisfied with his 2010 season, which began when he tipped the scales at 343 pounds at the start of training camp. Rachal, 25, explained his motivation during his initial meeting at Elite Performance, which is co-owned by ex-NFL players Billy Miller and Marvel Smith, a former Pro Bowl offensive tackle whom Rachal met in 2009. Scott Mitchell, the trainer who guided Rachal's four-day-a-week personalized workouts from April to July, said his client was driven from the start.

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"He came in and basically said, 'I didn't like how I felt last year. I felt heavy. I felt slow,' " Mitchell said. "And he said when he first came in the league, he was a little lighter, he was moving faster, and he was feeling great. He wanted to get back to that. "He said, 'Scott, I want to go to the Pro Bowl. Bottom line, I want to be a guy that has a long career.' " Rachal has already met one goal: At 304 pounds, he's certainly lighter. He lost about 10 pounds during the course of the 2010 season and dropped about 30 more during the offseason, thanks to a diet loaded with fish and grilled chicken. In an effort to avoid In-N-Out runs, he paid a company to deliver his health-conscious food daily. Rachal says his extreme makeover has relieved his once-aching joints. "I feel a big difference, man," Rachal said. "I'm moving better. I'm a lot faster. I feel like I did my freshman year in college. I don't have back pain anymore. I don't have knee problems anymore." A first-team All-American at USC, Rachal was the 39th overall pick in the 2008 draft. He has started 29 games the past two years but has yet to fulfill draft-day expectations. Inconsistent play has made him a message-board target as the Niners have ranked 27th and 22nd, respectively, in sacks allowed the past two seasons. Fans haven't been alone in their frustration. Rachal says he improved after a slow start last year, but his overall body of work left him dissatisfied. "I had a couple bad games, and that's not acceptable," he said. "That's not what you should expect from me in my third year last year. But I feel like I've got things rolling. I feel like I'll be a different player than I was" last year. Niners coach Jim Harbaugh and left tackle Joe Staley share Rachal's optimism. Harbaugh, who pored over last year's video during the lockout, conceded last week that he was mildly surprised by his right guard's performance in training camp: "Chilo Rachal has been a real, (I) kind of say surprise, because the guy's a starter in this league, but he's having a heck of a camp. ... It's really important to him, this year, this season, this team." Staley contacted Rachal during the lockout and invited him to the Niners' two players-only minicamps in June at San Jose State University. Rachal told Staley about his routine and explained that he thought it would be more beneficial if he stayed in Southern California. Staley said it's clear Rachal made the right decision based on his performance in training camp. "He's slimmed down and hasn't lost any of that strength that he has," Staley said. "His biggest gift coming into the NFL was his strength and his explosiveness. He hasn't lost any of that, and he's slimmed down, so he's able to move a lot better and react a lot quicker. It's really evident on the film. ... I feel like he's going to have a big year this year." For all the positive vibes, it's only the preseason. It remains to be seen if Rachal's offseason work will translate into regular-season success. At the very least, however, Rachal's single-minded pursuit increases the odds of a Hollywood ending. "It's kind of like in 'Rocky,' " Mitchell said. "Rocky would go to Siberia or something and he would get away from everything. And Chilo kind of had an element of that. He was so focused on getting better." ----------------------

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So Far, So Good for Aldon Smith By Taylor Price, 49ers.com He knows he can do better. But if Aldon Smith keeps having days like the one he had on Wednesday, the first-round pick could soon become a valuable contributor to the 49ers defense. At least that’s the estimation of a key member of the 49ers offense. And it’s likely that similar opinions are being formed as Smith continues to turn heads in his first training camp. The No. 7 overall pick out of Missouri lined up with the first-team defense on Wednesday and sported a new jersey number while showcasing the talent that made the college defensive end a sought after outside linebacker prospect in the NFL. Earlier in the day, Smith chose the No. 99 as his NFL uniform number. Later, he made his uniform debut a memorable one. With veteran Ahmad Brooks not practicing due to an undisclosed injury, Smith took the first team reps at right outside linebacker in team periods. “I definitely enjoyed it,” the 6-foot-4, 258-pounder said. “It’s an opportunity to hopefully get me a spot on the first team.” Smith has earned the respect of his teammates by showing a strong work ethic. In practice, Smith spends a lot of time rotating around the practice fields, as do all outside linebackers. The drill versatility is crucial to Smith as he transitions to a new position. In his first week of practices with the 49ers, Smith’s work in one-on-one pass rushing drills has been impressive so far. There, he’s flashed pass-rushing moves that utilize his propeller-like, 83 and 7/8-inch wingspan. Smith also spends time in seven-on-seven periods covering tight ends in passing routes sometimes 20 yards down the field. Smith’s early practice performances have the caught the eye of one of those tight ends, jack-of-all-trades Delanie Walker. “Man, he’s doing a great job competing every day,” Walker said of his first-round teammate. “He’s trying to go with the ones and he’s going against (tackle) Joe Staley, (tight end) Vernon Davis and guys like that. He’s trying to get better with his pass rushing, block containment and the dude is a beast.” Meanwhile, Smith takes a more humble approach to his early success. “I truthfully think I didn’t do that good,” said Smith at the end of a three-hour practice. “Today was just a chance for me to get better. Every time I’m out there, I’m just trying to get better every day.” Notes and Quotes The 49ers announced the signing of four players to the roster on Wednesday. Center Jonathan Goodwin, linebacker Blake Costanzo, cornerback Carlos Rogers and safety Madieu Williams were all added to the team. Goodwin's deal is a three-year contract; the other three are signed to one-year contracts. The signees can join their new teammates out at Thursday’s practice, but were unable to practice on Wednesday. Williams said the key until then is to learn as much as possible. “You have to make up for it with film study,” he explained. “That’s pretty much what we’re relegated to do.” Offensive coordinator Greg Roman addressed the media for the first time of training camp and displayed some quality sound bites from the podium. Asked about his player’s crash-course in his offense, Roman

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said that his players were invested in the process and taking a lot of notes in their meetings. “I grabbed Vernon Davis’ notebook the other day and it looked like War and Peace, he had so much written down. Guys are really dialed in and that’s what we need.” ---------------------- 49ers Aldon Smith is volatile windmill at line of scrimmage By Matthew Barrows, Sacramento Bee At 6-foot-4 and with arms that stretch nearly three feet, the 49ers' Aldon Smith is like a volatile windmill at the line of scrimmage. So, naturally, offensive coordinators seeking open throwing lanes for their quarterbacks want to see that windmill taken to the ground. That's what the Seahawks attempted in the first half Sunday when a Seattle blocker undercut a leaping Smith at his feet, an act that would have flipped most defenders and put them on their backs. Not Smith. He merely reached down with those long arms, did a half handstand and then sprang back onto his feet. "Just reacting and trying not to get on the ground," Smith said when asked about the play. "I think that's just me reacting and being athletic." Smith, who came into the game as a defensive end in the 49ers' nickel packages, batted down a pass in San Francisco's 33-17 win over the Seahawks but wasn't credited with a tackle. He's pulling double duty this week as the 49ers prepare for the Dallas Cowboys. Smith not only is studying for his role in a pass defense that hopes to bottle up Dallas quarterback Tony Romo, he's also helping the 49ers' offense in practice by taking on the role of the Cowboys' most feared pass rusher, DeMarcus Ware. On Wednesday, coach Jim Harbaugh said Ware was "probably the best pass rusher in football." Offensive coordinator Greg Roman on Thursday agreed. "He's an elite player against the run and pass," Roman said. "You better have him factored into your game plan." While the 49ers haven't had a player finish with double-digit sacks since 2002, Ware has had 10 or more sacks for five straight seasons, including a league-high 15 1/2 sacks last year. After recording two sacks Sunday in a loss to the Jets, Ware is well on his way to continuing his streak. As if that weren't worrisome enough, the 49ers won't know exactly where Ware is lining up on a given play. He rushes from either side of the Dallas defensive line and sometimes doesn't pick a spot until the offense has come up to the line of scrimmage. Left tackle Joe Staley this week said Ware tends to prefer to rush from the free – the non-tight end – side of the opponent's offensive line. The 49ers, meanwhile, like to move their tight ends around, and a game of 'Where's Ware?' promises to be played before the ball is even snapped Sunday. "The challenge is always great," said Vernon Davis, who is one of the top blocking tight ends in the league. "May the best man win." Ware also is the prefect template for Smith, who, like Ware, was drafted in the first round and who is expected to produce big sack totals in coming years.

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Smith noted that both played in a two-point stance in college and that they have similar physiques. The Cowboys list Ware as 6-4, 260 pounds, and he had 34-inch arms coming out of college. Smith is listed at 6-4, 258 with 35 3/8-inch arms. Ware tends to get to the quarterback through a combination of tenacity, bend and balance. Smith's strength early on is his power, and he must learn how to be more flexible as a pass rusher. "I wouldn't say I idolized him, but I definitely learned from him," Smith said. "We've got a lot of things in common as far as the way that we're built. He's a great pass rusher, and any time you can learn from somebody like that, you take the chance to. ---------------------- 49ers key to success: DE Justin Smith By Craig Massei, Scout.com Justin Smith was a prototype 4-3 defensive end when he came to the 49ers in 2008, having played the position throughout his football life. Now he’s one of the most respected, productive and feared 3-4 ends in the NFL. Smith just keeps getting better as he enters a new season as the undisputed leader of the Niners’ defensive line, a unit in transition that will be counting on him to show the way. Smith has shown how it’s done since joining the 49ers, where the 285-pound iron man has adjusted to the interior pounding his position demands while steadily crafting three of the finest seasons of his career, the last two of which have landed Smith in the Pro Bowl. The Niners will be counting on him as much as ever this year as they re-tool a defense that has lost four 16-game starters from last season. One of those guys, Aubrayo Franklin, has lined up next to Smith at nose tackle since Smith’s arrival in San Francisco, helping hold up the right side of the defensive front against offensive linemen that often out-weigh Smith by 30 pounds or more. But with veteran Isaac Sopoaga sliding over from left end to replace Franklin at nose tackle, and Ray McDonald stepping in as the new left end after being retained by the Niners with a $20 million deal in free agency, Smith doesn’t expect the 49ers to miss a beat. In fact, Smith is excited about the potential of the new configuration up front, saying Sopoaga, “is built to play that position anyway, just a cinderblock of a dude down there,” and that McDonald, who was one of San Francisco’s most effective pass rushers last season, “is going to be one of the best 3-4 linemen in the league in the next few years.” Since Smith already has established himself as one of those, the 49ers might really have something going here. With young veteran Ricky Jean Francois also returning along the line, Smith envisions that the unit will continue to build on a strong foundation that has been established by fiery line coach Jim Tomsula. “One of the best parts about playing here,” Smith said, “is we all get it. We all work together and I think that’s how we’ve been able to have a little success stopping the run and getting after the passer that we’ve had. We all really know each other, we work well together, and it seems like we’re shaping up pretty good.” How well Smith shapes up in his 11th NFL season will be instrumental in the 3-4 system being installed by new defensive coordinator Vic Fangio. In a similar scheme directed by coordinator Greg Manusky the past three years, Smith was usually making more tackles and compiling more sacks than just about any

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San Francisco defender, even though part of his role is to tie up those bigger offensive linemen so that other defenders can make plays. But Smith has found a way to become a playmaker himself within the system, even though he’s undersized for his position. He led the 49ers last year with 8.5 sacks, tying his career high, and his 107 tackles were third on the team behind linebackers Patrick Willis and Takeo Spikes, two players who have benefitted from having Smith tying up attention in front of them. It was a career season for Smith at age 31. He was an indispensable component of a San Francisco unit that ranked sixth in the NFL in rushing defense, and he also keyed the Niners’ pass rush with team-leading totals of 48 quarterback hits, 73 quarterback pressures and 13 tackles for loss. Smith, who took charge as a team leader in player-organized workout sessions during the NFL lockout earlier this year, looks primed for more big things this year as he puts forth his usual top effort in summer practice. Needless to say, new head coach Jim Harbaugh has been impressed with what he has seen. “Justin Smith has been a quintessential pro, every single day,” Harbaugh said. Smith also has been a model of durability. He’ll take a streak of 155 consecutive starts into the regular season, which is almost twice as long as any other NFL defensive tackle and ranks third in the league among all defenders. Smith’s 668 official tackles since he entered the NFL in 2001 also leads all other defensive tackles during that span by a considerable margin. Smith has been adding to his numbers in a big way in recent seasons even while staying true to the role he must play within the 3-4 system. But talent and experience have allowed him to thrive as an individual standout. “The biggest difference in a 3-4 is knowing when you can take your shot to make that play,” Smith said. “On a lot of them, you are going to get doubled, you are holding up the block and keeping the linebackers free. But you’ll get your chances in there. And when you know when that opportunity is, you take advantage of it.” Nobody among the 49ers has done that much better than Justin Smith, a pillar of strength along the defensive line that once again this season will be a major key in the team’s quest for success. ---------------------- Two-way Sopoaga? By Mindi Bach, CSNBayArea.com One of the most intriguing players on the 49ers roster has to be nose tackle Isaac Sopoaga. The presence he carries easily dwarfs his 6-foot-2, 330 pound frame. He is the enforcer among his defensive teammates, though no one outside of the team will ever see. He combines the ideals of faith, family and team in nearly every response to a reporter's question. He proudly wears an 'ula, a traditional Samoan necklace, to celebrate his culture. He is the only one who plays music aloud in the locker room. And the stories about his unusual strength are reaching Paul Bunyan status, or whatever the equivalent of Paul Bunyan is in Samoan circles. During Camp Alex at San Jose State over the summer, I was chatting with the Spartans director of strength and conditioning, Chris Holder, on the sideline while the players ran drills on the field. Holder oversaw the weight room when the players came in to lift during the lockout and would help them stretch and warm up for the day's practice. During our conversation, I asked him if anything stood out to him during the weeks he had worked with the 49ers players. It took him less than three seconds to respond "Isaac Sopoaga". Holder said he had never seen a stronger player. "Ice", as his teammates call him, can push, pull or carry mind boggling amounts of weight and do so deftly, Holder explained. He had never seen anything like it, and he is not the first in his line of work to tell me this.

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As I saw fullback Moran Norris limp around the locker room on his injured leg this week, my mind started wandering as I thought about the 49ers running game. I remembered that Sopoaga, had lined up as a fullback last season during the game against the Raiders. He blocked for Frank Gore and Gore easily got the first down. Sopoaga was standing at his locker so I went over and asked him, when the 49ers are in short yardage or goal line situations, are there any plans to use him in the same or similar capacity this season? Sopoaga smiled and said, there might be. He said he is always watching when the offense is in those situations in case he is called upon. He hopes to be. Sopoaga has never played on an offensive line, but has played a lot of rugby. I can hold three or four men at a time in a scrum, Sopoaga said, I have no problem moving one or two 300 pound guys out of the way. While we talked, I had to ask him how far he can throw a football. Last October while the team was in London for the game against the Broncos, I watched Sopoaga on the field of Wembley Stadium during early warm ups effortlessly throw the ball, 40, 50 yards again and again. Just having a catch with fellow lineman Will Tukuafu. Alex Smith was injured the week before and was out. Troy Smith was going to make his first start for the 49ers, and some of my colleagues and I laughingly wondered if Sopoaga was the third quarterback. The idea may not have been so far fetched. I can throw 78 yards flat footed, Sopoaga told me. He did so in San Diego during the preseason. Add another several yards - at least - if he steps into it. And how Sopoaga came to throw so far is almost as amazing as the fact he can throw so far. As a kid growing up in Pago Pago, Sopoaga couldn't climb coconut trees to pick the fruit because they were often so slippery. Instead, he would find a one or two pound rock and heave it at the coconuts, up to 70 feet at the coconuts he said, to knock them down. His aim and arm strength improved over time to the point that he can get five or six coconuts to fall in a five minute period. Sopoaga doesn't know what his accuracy would be like in a game, but believes that if he can hit a coconut from 70 feet out with a small rock, he should be able to connect with a larger human target. I have no idea if Jim Harbaugh has any plan to use Sopoaga's unusual skills to benefit the offense, and even if I asked, he wouldn't say. But if he did, wouldn't that be another story to tell. ---------------------- Safety Donte Whitner earns praise from 49ers coach Jim Harbaugh By Cam Inman, San Jose Mercury News Safety Donte Whitner earned rave reviews from coach Jim Harbaugh after the player's first practice Saturday. It was exactly the first step Whitner had in mind to turn the 49ers' revamped secondary into one of the NFL's elite. "He looked exceptionally quick today and seemed like he had a real nose for the football," Harbaugh said. "He stood out in today's practice with quite a few plays, in my eyes. He'll be in there competing with Reggie (Smith) and the rest of our guys at the safety position, so I'm excited to watch that competition go down." An apparent left-leg injury forced Smith out of the majority of practice, and six other safeties split time, including newly acquired veteran Madieu Williams. Whitner envisions himself taking on a role similar to that of Pittsburgh Steelers safety Troy Polamalu; the 49ers' 3-4 scheme is expected to mimic the Steelers'. "They're going to have me in the sort of mode that Polamalu does in Pittsburgh," said Whitner, who was introduced to the 3-4 last season in his fifth year with the Buffalo Bills. "I'm looking forward to doing things as far as disguise and blitz and really fool with quarterbacks, and coaches are going to allow me to do that."

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A getting-to-know-you phone call with Harbaugh helped clinch Whitner's decision to join the 49ers and abandon plans of returning to his native Ohio as a Cincinnati Bengal. Whitner further sought advice from 49ers who are fellow Ohio State products: Ted Ginn Jr., Alex Boone and Larry Grant. "Yeah, the weather here is a lot better than Ohio," Whitner said. "I don't want to play in the snow anymore." Through five seasons in Buffalo, he tallied only five interceptions, and he believes he could have doubled that career total last year if it weren't for his drops. Whitner reportedly signed a three-year, $11.75 million deal with $4 million guaranteed. "I take responsibility for getting this secondary to be one of the top secondaries," Whitner said. "We're a long way from that right now, but we will be come Game 1. In this secondary, I'm going to take on a leadership role." While quarterback Alex Smith runs the first-team offense and Colin Kaepernick the second, Jeremiah Masoli took third-team reps Saturday, and the 49ers have shelved plans of converting him to a running back. Sacramento State's McLeod Bethel-Thompson is their fourth quarterback, and, like Kaepernick and Masoli, he is a rookie. Backup running back Anthony Dixon saw limited action in practice after an apparent left-ankle injury. He was tackled hard by Patrick Willis and fumbled on a goal-line drill early in practice. Wide receiver Michael Crabtree, who is on the physically-unable-to-perform list, provided his first quote of camp when asked by a fan about his injured left foot: "Getting better every day. I'm on my way." If Willis' tackle of Dixon or Willis' interception of an Alex Smith pass weren't the plays of the day, then this was: Smith calling an audible against a blitzing defense and completing a 50-yard touchdown pass to Ginn. That was Smith's final pass of the day. After that earlier interception by Willis, Smith's next pass was intercepted by Tramaine Brock on a short throw to Braylon Edwards. ---------------------- 49ers' Willis now a 4-time Pro Bowl pick By Eric Branch, Santa Rosa Press Democrat The best player on the 49ers is establishing himself as one of the best players in the franchise's storied history. ONE OF THE NINERS' GREATSLinebacker Patrick Willis has earned first-team NFL All-Pro honors on three occasions during his four-year career. Here's a look at how many first-team, All-Pro honors some Hall-of-Fame 49ers earned during their career: Jerry Rice, 10 Ronnie Lott, 6 Joe Montana, 3 Steve Young, 3 Hugh McElhenny, 2 Linebacker Patrick Willis was named to the Associated Press' NFL All-Pro first team on Monday, marking the fourth time he's earned All-Pro honors in as many seasons in the league.

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Willis is the first player in team history to be named All-Pro in each of his first four seasons. Willis is a three-time, first-team All-Pro and was named to the second team in 2008. Running back Hugh McElhenny was an All-Pro in his first three seasons (1952-54), earning first-team honors his first two years in the league. For proper perspective, consider this: Hall-of-Fame 49ers quarterbacks Joe Montana and Steve Young, like Willis, both earned first-team, All-Pro honors on three occasions during their combined 30 seasons in the NFL. Willis, who turns 26 today, ranked 10th in the NFL in tackles this past season with 128 despite missing the first game of his career with a broken right hand. Willis, who ranked second on the Niners with a career-high six sacks, played in two games with a large black cast on his hand. The 11th overall selection in 2007 draft, Willis has the most tackles in the NFL (595) since 2007, according to league statistics. Carolina linebacker Jon Beason ranks second with 540 and the Redskins' London Fletcher (539) is third. Willis has been the lone superstar on a team that's posted a 26-38 record during his career. Since 2004, Willis is one of just three Niners to earn All-Pro honors and one of two named to the first team. Running back Frank Gore was a second-team selection in 2006 and punter Andy Lee earned first-team honors in 2007 and was a second-team selection last year. The last Niners position player besides Willis to earn first-team All-Pro honors was linebacker Julian Peterson in 2003. Tight end Vernon Davis and defensive tackle Justin Smith were the only other players to earn All-Pro votes Monday after the Niners' 6-10 season. ---------------------- Willis on pace to land in Hall of Fame By Matt Maiocco, CSNBayArea.com Linebacker Patrick Willis is halfway to a Hall-of-Fame career. On Monday, Willis was named to the Associated Press All-Pro team. It's an award that carries a lot more clout than the Pro Bowl. And Willis has plenty of both honors in his short NFL career. Willis has been named to the Pro Bowl in each of his four professional seasons with the 49ers. He won't play in the upcoming game on Sunday because of a broken hand. More impressive, though, is that this is the third time Willis has been named to the first-team AP All-Pro team. In 2008, Willis was a second-team selection. This season's award was particularly impressive, considering Willis did not make a bunch of highlight-reel plays and the 49ers were generally considered as one of the league's biggest disappointments. Willis led the 49ers in tackles and also had a career-best six sacks. The Pro Bowl means Willis has been recognized as one of the best players in the NFC, according to a vote of fans, players and coaches. When Willis is selected as an All-Pro, it means he is among the best in the entire NFL. Writers from around the country vote for the All-Pro team. There are many of the same writers who also vote for the Hall of Fame, so it only stands to reason that Willis is taking some significant strides early in his career toward eventually being honored in Canton, Ohio.

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After all, the great Ronnie Lott made first-team All-Pro six times in his career -- and just once in his first five seasons in the league. ---------------------- Poll: Best defensive players in NFC West By Mike Sando, ESPN.com The San Francisco 49ers' Patrick Willis stands out as the best defensive player in the NFC West. The inside linebacker has earned four Pro Bowl trips in as many NFL seasons, and ESPN.com panelists named him the NFL's best linebacker. Basically, Willis has no weaknesses as a player. He can run, hit, tackle, blitz and cover. We should expect to see his name high on any list ranking the NFL's best defensive players. That will be the case when Kevin Seifert publishes our Power Rankings for defensive players on his NFC North blog later Tuesday. Willis, teammate Justin Smith and Arizona Cardinals defensive end Darnell Dockett were the NFC West defensive players I considered most strongly in putting together a ballot. Cardinals safety Adrian Wilson wasn't consistent enough while playing injured last season. Dockett also had injury issues, making it harder for him to defeat double-team blocking. The St. Louis Rams' Chris Long is moving into the fringes of these discussions. In the future, I would expect to see Seattle's Earl Thomas move into consideration, although my ballot favored front-seven players. The Rams' James Laurinaitis is another to watch. Willis, Smith, Dockett and Long stand out for their versatility. They can play the run or pass at a high level. They are also durable. Willis has missed only one game. Smith has started 155 consecutive games, easily the longest streak among NFL defensive linemen. Dockett has missed one game in seven seasons. Long has not missed a game in his three seasons.

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WEEK 3 / THROUGH MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 26, 2011 OFFENSE Buff. Cin. Tenn. Clev. Pitt. Hou. Det. Dal. GAMES (Won-Lost) 3-0 1-2 2-1 2-1 2-1 2-1 3-0 2-1 FIRST DOWNS 81 49 51 54 62 66 67 58 Rushing 25 13 6 16 13 25 14 8 Passing 46 31 41 33 45 40 45 47 Penalty 10 5 4 5 4 1 8 3 YDS GAINED (tot) 1293 904 1057 868 1141 1202 1200 1237 Avg per Game 431.0 301.3 352.3 289.3 380.3 400.7 400.0 412.3 RUSHING (net) 465 290 155 259 257 414 235 234 Avg per Game 155.0 96.7 51.7 86.3 85.7 138.0 78.3 78.0 Rushes 83 73 65 79 79 102 84 74 Yards per Rush 5.6 4.0 2.4 3.3 3.3 4.1 2.8 3.2 PASSING (net) 828 614 902 609 884 788 965 1003 Avg per Game 276.0 204.7 300.7 203.0 294.7 262.7 321.7 334.3 Passes Att. 112 100 112 111 109 92 119 115 Completed 72 59 78 60 70 60 80 71 Pct Completed 64.3 59.0 69.6 54.1 64.2 65.2 67.2 61.7 Yards Gained 841 662 932 634 957 823 1005 1029 Sacked 2 7 4 3 9 6 5 6 Yards Lost 13 48 30 25 73 35 40 26 Had intercepted 4 2 2 2 4 3 2 4 Yards Opp Ret 39 11 -4 5 54 44 32 38 Opp TDs on Int 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 PUNTS 12 20 14 18 10 10 17 13 Avg Yards 50.8 45.2 41.9 38.9 49.8 45.0 45.4 44.8 PUNT RETURNS 8 9 8 9 12 7 10 9 Avg Return 8.9 8.3 5.6 12.9 11.3 18.9 7.8 8.6 Returned for TD 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 KICKOFF RETURNS 2 7 0 6 4 6 5 3 Avg Return 18.5 20.9 0.0 32.3 31.5 34.3 19.0 18.7 Returned for TD 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 PENALTIES 17 16 24 22 14 15 19 21 Yards Penalized 133 131 210 206 139 162 168 178 FUMBLES BY 1 3 4 5 6 1 6 12 Fumbles Lost 0 1 2 1 6 1 0 3 Opp Fumbles 3 6 4 5 1 4 8 4 Opp Fum Lost 3 3 2 2 1 3 4 2 POSS. TIME (avg) 32:11 28:16 29:03 28:47 33:24 33:39 33:57 32:02 TOUCHDOWNS 14 5 6 7 6 9 11 6 Rushing 4 1 1 2 2 2 2 1 Passing 9 4 5 5 3 6 9 5 Returns 1 0 0 0 1 1 0 0 EXTRA-PT KICKS 14/14 4/4 6/6 7/7 6/6 9/9 11/11 6/6 2-PT CONVERSIONS 0/0 0/1 0/0 0/0 0/0 0/0 0/0 0/0 FIELD GOALS/FGA 5/6 7/7 5/7 4/4 4/6 9/9 8/8 9/10 POINTS SCORED 113 57 57 61 54 90 101 69 DEFENSE Buff. Cin. Tenn. Clev. Pitt. Hou. Det. Dal. POINTS ALLOWED 73 54 43 62 55 60 46 67 OPP FIRST DOWNS 69 52 54 58 39 60 45 53 Rushing 19 20 14 21 10 14 11 7 Passing 46 28 34 30 27 41 31 44 Penalty 4 4 6 7 2 5 3 2 OPP YARDS GAINED 1162 829 783 948 790 996 903 864 Avg per Game 387.3 276.3 261.0 316.0 263.3 332.0 301.0 288.0 OPP RUSHING(net) 347 264 267 386 298 317 339 184 Avg per Game 115.7 88.0 89.0 128.7 99.3 105.7 113.0 61.3 Rushes 74 91 87 97 65 66 68 62 Yards per Rush 4.7 2.9 3.1 4.0 4.6 4.8 5.0 3.0 OPP PASSING(net) 815 565 516 562 492 679 564 680 Avg per Game 271.7 188.3 172.0 187.3 164.0 226.3 188.0 226.7 Passes Att. 114 95 95 94 98 105 105 105 Completed 75 54 56 53 55 59 66 64 Pct Completed 65.8 56.8 58.9 56.4 56.1 56.2 62.9 61.0 Sacked 2 9 6 11 7 7 8 13 Yards Lost 14 44 29 57 44 58 46 84 INTERCEPTED BY 6 1 4 2 0 3 4 3 Yards Returned 86 0 63 32 0 31 45 66 Returned for TD 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 OPP PUNT RETURNS 6 9 7 3 2 5 6 9 Avg return 10.8 8.6 11.7 14.3 1.0 9.0 14.8 8.2 OPP KICKOFF RET 15 6 6 10 6 8 9 10 Avg return 18.7 28.8 31.2 21.8 25.2 25.5 34.1 22.1 OPP TOUCHDOWNS 10 6 4 5 6 7 4 7 Rushing 3 2 1 1 2 2 1 1 Passing 7 4 3 4 3 5 2 5 Returns 0 0 0 0 1 0 1 1

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WEEK 3 / THROUGH MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 26, 2011 OFFENSE S.F. Phil. Car. Chi. Wash. St.L. N.O. Jax GAMES (Won-Lost) 2-1 1-2 1-2 1-2 2-1 0-3 2-1 1-2 FIRST DOWNS 42 79 68 47 69 52 70 44 Rushing 13 36 18 7 16 11 15 22 Passing 23 34 45 36 46 36 51 19 Penalty 6 9 5 4 7 5 4 3 YDS GAINED (tot) 641 1226 1217 914 1085 946 1313 783 Avg per Game 213.7 408.7 405.7 304.7 361.7 315.3 437.7 261.0 RUSHING (net) 209 546 252 161 311 325 299 403 Avg per Game 69.7 182.0 84.0 53.7 103.7 108.3 99.7 134.3 Rushes 85 102 76 51 83 71 72 108 Yards per Rush 2.5 5.4 3.3 3.2 3.7 4.6 4.2 3.7 PASSING (net) 432 680 965 753 774 621 1014 380 Avg per Game 144.0 226.7 321.7 251.0 258.0 207.0 338.0 126.7 Passes Att. 74 99 117 114 114 113 130 70 Completed 51 60 70 62 68 56 89 40 Pct Completed 68.9 60.6 59.8 54.4 59.6 49.6 68.5 57.1 Yards Gained 504 712 1012 858 846 706 1059 425 Sacked 11 5 8 14 8 12 6 6 Yards Lost 72 32 47 105 72 85 45 45 Had intercepted 1 4 4 3 3 1 2 5 Yards Opp Ret 15 34 22 50 64 0 26 91 Opp TDs on Int 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 PUNTS 18 9 17 21 14 19 10 16 Avg Yards 52.8 42.0 39.5 44.6 43.4 44.9 47.5 40.9 PUNT RETURNS 12 4 10 4 11 3 5 7 Avg Return 13.0 4.8 5.8 10.0 12.9 9.7 19.6 5.1 Returned for TD 1 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 KICKOFF RETURNS 7 9 8 9 11 11 8 9 Avg Return 39.7 21.6 20.0 21.6 23.0 23.3 26.3 21.2 Returned for TD 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 PENALTIES 26 19 24 24 10 24 14 17 Yards Penalized 197 147 193 173 75 239 82 149 FUMBLES BY 4 7 1 8 2 8 3 7 Fumbles Lost 1 3 1 1 2 4 2 1 Opp Fumbles 7 2 8 4 9 4 3 1 Opp Fum Lost 3 1 2 4 2 2 1 0 POSS. TIME (avg) 31:53 32:23 31:38 26:32 33:10 28:08 31:05 32:14 TOUCHDOWNS 7 9 6 6 7 3 12 2 Rushing 3 4 2 0 1 1 2 1 Passing 2 4 4 5 5 2 9 1 Returns 2 1 0 1 1 0 1 0 EXTRA-PT KICKS 7/7 9/9 5/5 6/6 6/6 3/3 10/10 2/2 2-PT CONVERSIONS 0/0 0/0 1/1 0/0 0/1 0/0 2/2 0/0 FIELD GOALS/FGA 7/7 5/6 5/5 6/6 6/9 5/6 6/6 5/5 POINTS SCORED 70 78 60 60 66 36 104 29 DEFENSE S.F. Phil. Car. Chi. Wash. St.L. N.O. Jax POINTS ALLOWED 52 77 68 69 53 96 88 62 OPP FIRST DOWNS 52 55 44 60 48 74 63 44 Rushing 13 18 16 14 13 27 16 11 Passing 35 31 23 42 32 38 45 29 Penalty 4 6 5 4 3 9 2 4 OPP YARDS GAINED 919 987 1070 1160 1014 1279 1118 840 Avg per Game 306.3 329.0 356.7 386.7 338.0 426.3 372.7 280.0 OPP RUSHING(net) 188 394 351 328 293 523 272 251 Avg per Game 62.7 131.3 117.0 109.3 97.7 174.3 90.7 83.7 Rushes 64 80 80 72 61 96 64 73 Yards per Rush 2.9 4.9 4.4 4.6 4.8 5.4 4.3 3.4 OPP PASSING(net) 731 593 719 832 721 756 846 589 Avg per Game 243.7 197.7 239.7 277.3 240.3 252.0 282.0 196.3 Passes Att. 112 86 78 122 98 110 119 92 Completed 64 51 49 85 57 60 68 56 Pct Completed 57.1 59.3 62.8 69.7 58.2 54.5 57.1 60.9 Sacked 7 12 5 8 8 8 10 3 Yards Lost 55 65 37 54 53 43 83 14 INTERCEPTED BY 5 2 1 2 3 1 1 3 Yards Returned 29 20 15 -1 9 0 2 8 Returned for TD 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 OPP PUNT RETURNS 10 2 4 10 6 9 4 5 Avg return 9.6 9.5 24.0 5.0 11.2 8.0 1.5 7.0 OPP KICKOFF RET 9 9 7 3 4 6 8 4 Avg return 21.6 25.1 24.9 19.0 20.8 24.5 36.9 26.0 OPP TOUCHDOWNS 5 10 8 7 5 12 10 6 Rushing 0 2 2 0 3 2 2 1 Passing 5 8 5 6 2 7 7 5 Returns 0 0 1 1 0 3 1 0

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WEEK 3 / THROUGH MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 26, 2011 OFFENSE Minn. K.C. NY-G Ariz. Atl. Sea. Denv. G.B. GAMES (Won-Lost) 0-3 0-3 2-1 1-2 1-2 1-2 1-2 3-0 FIRST DOWNS 51 38 51 51 61 42 63 64 Rushing 24 11 21 15 10 13 13 21 Passing 25 23 26 33 46 24 39 40 Penalty 2 4 4 3 5 5 11 3 YDS GAINED (tot) 906 732 972 1042 1029 644 859 1210 Avg per Game 302.0 244.0 324.0 347.3 343.0 214.7 286.3 403.3 RUSHING (net) 477 340 296 282 278 217 228 327 Avg per Game 159.0 113.3 98.7 94.0 92.7 72.3 76.0 109.0 Rushes 82 74 83 68 58 65 72 77 Yards per Rush 5.8 4.6 3.6 4.1 4.8 3.3 3.2 4.2 PASSING (net) 429 392 676 760 751 427 631 883 Avg per Game 143.0 130.7 225.3 253.3 250.3 142.3 210.3 294.3 Passes Att. 81 83 85 96 122 97 110 103 Completed 47 54 53 60 74 59 63 74 Pct Completed 58.0 65.1 62.4 62.5 60.7 60.8 57.3 71.8 Yards Gained 478 428 745 812 844 527 672 917 Sacked 8 5 10 8 13 14 8 5 Yards Lost 49 36 69 52 93 100 41 34 Had intercepted 1 5 2 3 4 2 3 1 Yards Opp Ret 0 75 9 24 19 1 29 0 Opp TDs on Int 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 PUNTS 16 17 17 16 15 23 15 13 Avg Yards 45.1 41.6 44.5 44.4 35.7 47.3 49.7 39.6 PUNT RETURNS 8 3 5 8 6 7 8 6 Avg Return 13.8 17.7 8.8 18.4 7.5 7.7 21.9 7.3 Returned for TD 0 0 0 1 0 0 1 0 KICKOFF RETURNS 10 14 5 7 8 9 2 5 Avg Return 30.7 23.7 21.0 30.0 21.1 20.2 21.0 37.6 Returned for TD 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 PENALTIES 27 16 17 18 23 25 18 20 Yards Penalized 222 138 139 178 172 177 161 140 FUMBLES BY 3 6 1 7 4 4 6 2 Fumbles Lost 1 5 0 2 4 2 4 2 Opp Fumbles 2 4 8 1 6 4 5 5 Opp Fum Lost 0 0 3 0 2 0 3 2 POSS. TIME (avg) 27:43 25:17 28:15 26:51 26:55 26:07 28:55 32:36 TOUCHDOWNS 6 3 10 8 7 3 7 12 Rushing 3 0 3 2 1 1 1 3 Passing 2 3 6 5 5 2 5 8 Returns 1 0 1 1 1 0 1 1 EXTRA-PT KICKS 6/6 3/3 9/9 8/8 6/6 3/3 7/7 12/12 2-PT CONVERSIONS 0/0 0/0 1/1 0/0 0/1 0/0 0/0 0/0 FIELD GOALS/FGA 6/6 2/5 0/1 1/4 4/4 3/3 3/4 5/5 POINTS SCORED 60 27 71 59 60 30 58 99 DEFENSE Minn. K.C. NY-G Ariz. Atl. Sea. Denv. G.B. POINTS ALLOWED 74 109 60 56 77 67 62 74 OPP FIRST DOWNS 69 68 60 70 64 55 55 65 Rushing 12 20 17 24 23 14 14 12 Passing 49 42 41 38 33 33 35 49 Penalty 8 6 2 8 8 8 6 4 OPP YARDS GAINED 1100 1150 1075 1193 1119 954 1004 1243 Avg per Game 366.7 383.3 358.3 397.7 373.0 318.0 334.7 414.3 OPP RUSHING(net) 202 369 310 368 336 299 300 165 Avg per Game 67.3 123.0 103.3 122.7 112.0 99.7 100.0 55.0 Rushes 65 99 85 92 93 95 82 54 Yards per Rush 3.1 3.7 3.6 4.0 3.6 3.1 3.7 3.1 OPP PASSING(net) 898 781 765 825 783 655 704 1078 Avg per Game 299.3 260.3 255.0 275.0 261.0 218.3 234.7 359.3 Passes Att. 125 104 110 111 101 90 99 132 Completed 87 65 63 67 70 63 67 81 Pct Completed 69.6 62.5 57.3 60.4 69.3 70.0 67.7 61.4 Sacked 9 3 8 9 5 5 5 10 Yards Lost 58 15 82 59 23 34 44 75 INTERCEPTED BY 3 4 3 4 4 2 0 5 Yards Returned 49 97 32 67 79 24 0 6 Returned for TD 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 OPP PUNT RETURNS 11 7 8 11 6 15 9 6 Avg return 9.3 7.3 11.9 10.8 8.2 11.7 5.6 22.2 OPP KICKOFF RET 13 3 8 8 9 8 0 11 Avg return 21.2 21.7 22.9 22.9 21.1 35.9 0.0 23.1 OPP TOUCHDOWNS 8 13 6 6 8 7 6 8 Rushing 3 5 2 2 3 3 1 1 Passing 5 8 3 4 4 2 5 6 Returns 0 0 1 0 1 2 0 1

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WEEK 3 / THROUGH MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 26, 2011 OFFENSE N.E. Oak. Miami S.D. NY-J Balt. Ind. T.B. GAMES (Won-Lost) 2-1 2-1 0-3 2-1 2-1 2-1 0-3 2-1 FIRST DOWNS 85 69 65 82 59 57 48 56 Rushing 16 29 20 14 11 13 14 15 Passing 64 32 40 58 41 38 32 37 Penalty 5 8 5 10 7 6 2 4 YDS GAINED (tot) 1621 1126 1163 1252 1082 1167 762 945 Avg per Game 540.3 375.3 387.7 417.3 360.7 389.0 254.0 315.0 RUSHING (net) 308 555 389 292 246 383 270 276 Avg per Game 102.7 185.0 129.7 97.3 82.0 127.7 90.0 92.0 Rushes 73 101 86 81 73 74 63 71 Yards per Rush 4.2 5.5 4.5 3.6 3.4 5.2 4.3 3.9 PASSING (net) 1313 571 774 960 836 784 492 669 Avg per Game 437.7 190.3 258.0 320.0 278.7 261.3 164.0 223.0 Passes Att. 133 82 108 126 111 109 109 109 Completed 93 54 61 86 70 59 53 73 Pct Completed 69.9 65.9 56.5 68.3 63.1 54.1 48.6 67.0 Yards Gained 1327 584 841 979 886 810 541 689 Sacked 3 2 11 6 9 6 6 4 Yards Lost 14 13 67 19 50 26 49 20 Had intercepted 5 1 3 6 4 2 1 4 Yards Opp Ret 95 0 14 140 49 34 28 59 Opp TDs on Int 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 PUNTS 9 15 12 6 16 12 17 12 Avg Yards 41.9 56.2 53.3 42.8 41.4 45.8 47.1 47.8 PUNT RETURNS 8 5 8 8 7 7 1 5 Avg Return 11.3 6.8 9.9 5.6 13.3 8.4 2.0 10.8 Returned for TD 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 KICKOFF RETURNS 10 7 12 9 11 7 7 6 Avg Return 21.0 16.1 22.2 21.9 24.4 34.1 23.6 32.2 Returned for TD 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 PENALTIES 23 30 21 14 14 19 13 21 Yards Penalized 223 271 173 110 121 151 102 158 FUMBLES BY 0 3 4 5 4 5 5 4 Fumbles Lost 0 2 2 2 2 2 4 1 Opp Fumbles 3 5 0 1 3 6 7 8 Opp Fum Lost 2 3 0 0 2 5 4 3 POSS. TIME (avg) 29:35 29:31 31:46 34:19 30:55 29:17 24:55 28:39 TOUCHDOWNS 13 11 5 8 9 9 4 6 Rushing 2 8 1 4 2 1 1 3 Passing 11 3 4 4 6 7 2 2 Returns 0 0 0 0 1 1 1 1 EXTRA-PT KICKS 12/12 11/11 5/5 8/8 9/9 8/8 4/4 6/6 2-PT CONVERSIONS 1/1 0/0 0/0 0/0 0/0 1/1 0/0 0/0 FIELD GOALS/FGA 4/5 5/6 6/9 3/3 6/6 7/9 6/7 6/6 POINTS SCORED 104 92 53 65 83 85 46 60 DEFENSE N.E. Oak. Miami S.D. NY-J Balt. Ind. T.B. POINTS ALLOWED 79 82 78 69 61 40 84 60 OPP FIRST DOWNS 78 84 65 51 55 58 63 71 Rushing 15 19 18 13 18 11 24 20 Passing 55 49 43 35 32 43 36 47 Penalty 8 16 4 3 5 4 3 4 OPP YARDS GAINED 1406 1230 1247 943 976 988 1095 1154 Avg per Game 468.7 410.0 415.7 314.3 325.3 329.3 365.0 384.7 OPP RUSHING(net) 275 361 314 334 410 252 340 342 Avg per Game 91.7 120.3 104.7 111.3 136.7 84.0 113.3 114.0 Rushes 64 62 77 78 85 71 103 83 Yards per Rush 4.3 5.8 4.1 4.3 4.8 3.5 3.3 4.1 OPP PASSING(net) 1131 869 933 609 566 736 755 812 Avg per Game 377.0 289.7 311.0 203.0 188.7 245.3 251.7 270.7 Passes Att. 129 135 116 79 88 115 93 110 Completed 86 79 72 55 52 68 64 68 Pct Completed 66.7 58.5 62.1 69.6 59.1 59.1 68.8 61.8 Sacked 6 10 4 5 7 9 5 6 Yards Lost 32 68 24 29 43 68 40 51 INTERCEPTED BY 5 3 2 2 5 5 3 2 Yards Returned 72 2 44 0 96 29 67 28 Returned for TD 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 OPP PUNT RETURNS 5 11 8 3 8 5 9 9 Avg return 5.8 20.4 12.6 18.0 6.4 4.8 23.1 5.9 OPP KICKOFF RET 10 4 7 9 11 5 3 5 Avg return 20.8 22.5 28.3 31.7 16.9 30.8 42.0 15.0 OPP TOUCHDOWNS 10 10 9 8 7 4 9 6 Rushing 3 3 1 1 5 1 4 2 Passing 6 6 8 6 2 3 3 4 Returns 1 1 0 1 0 0 2 0

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WEEK 3 / THROUGH MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 26, 2011 OFFENSE NFL/Avg GAMES (Won-Lost) --- FIRST DOWNS 59.4 Rushing 16.2 Passing 38.0 Penalty 5.2 YDS GAINED (tot) 1048.1 Avg per Game 349.4 RUSHING (net) 311.8 Avg per Game 103.9 Rushes 77.8 Yards per Rush 4.0 PASSING (net) 736.3 Avg per Game 245.4 Passes Att. 105.2 Completed 65.0 Pct Completed 61.8 Yards Gained 783.9 Sacked 7.2 Yards Lost 47.7 Had intercepted 2.9 Yards Opp Ret 34.3 Opp TDs on Int 0.1 PUNTS 14.7 Avg Yards 45.0 PUNT RETURNS 7.1 Avg Return 10.7 Returned for TD 0.2 KICKOFF RETURNS 7.3 Avg Return 24.7 Returned for TD 0.1 PENALTIES 19.5 Yards Penalized 163.1 FUMBLES BY 4.4 Fumbles Lost 2.0 Opp Fumbles 4.4 Opp Fum Lost 2.0 POSS. TIME (avg) 30:00 TOUCHDOWNS 7.4 Rushing 2.0 Passing 4.8 Returns 0.6 EXTRA-PT KICKS 100% 2-PT CONVERSIONS 67% FIELD GOALS/FGA 5/6 POINTS SCORED 67.4 DEFENSE NFL/Avg POINTS ALLOWED 67.4 OPP FIRST DOWNS 59.4 Rushing 16.2 Passing 38.0 Penalty 5.2 OPP YARDS GAINED 1048.1 Avg per Game 349.4 OPP RUSHING(net) 311.8 Avg per Game 103.9 Rushes 77.8 Yards per Rush 4.0 OPP PASSING(net) 736.3 Avg per Game 245.4 Passes Att. 105.2 Completed 65.0 Pct Completed 61.8 Sacked 7.2 Yards Lost 47.7 INTERCEPTED BY 2.9 Yards Returned 34.3 Returned for TD 0.1 OPP PUNT RETURNS 7.1 Avg return 10.7 OPP KICKOFF RET 7.3 Avg return 24.7 OPP TOUCHDOWNS 7.4 Rushing 2.0 Passing 4.8 Returns 0.6

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WEEK 3 / THROUGH MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 26, 2011 TEAM RANKINGS American Football Conference Offense Defense Total Rush Pass Total Rush Pass Balt. 5 6 8 8 2 10 Buff. 2 2 6 13 12 13 Cin. 11 10 11 3 3 4 Cleve. 12 12 12 6 15 3 Denver 13 15 10 10 7 9 Hou. 4 3 7 9 9 8 Ind. 15 11 14 11 11 11 Jax 14 4 16 4 1 6 K.C. 16 7 15 12 14 12 Miami 6 5 9 15 8 15 N.E. *1 8 *1 16 5 16 Jets 9 14 5 7 16 5 Oak. 8 *1 13 14 13 14 Pitt. 7 13 4 2 6 *1 S.D. 3 9 2 5 10 7 Tenn. 10 16 3 *1 4 2 National Football Conference Offense Defense Total Rush Pass Total Rush Pass Ariz. 8 8 7 14 14 12 Atl. 9 9 9 11 10 10 Car. 4 11 3T 7 13 5 Chi. 13 16 8 13 9 13 Dallas 2 13 2 1 2 4 Det. 6 12 3T 2 11 1 G.B. 5 3 5 15 *1 16 Minn. 14 2 15 9 4 15 N.O. 1 6 1 10 5 14 Giants 10 7 11 8 8 9 Phil. 3 1 10 5 15 2 St. L. 11 4 13 16 16 8 S.F. 16 15 14 3 3 7 Sea. 15 14 16 4 7 3 T.B. 12 10 12 12 12 11 Wash. 7 5 6 6 6 6 National Football League Offense Defense Total Rush Pass Total Rush Pass Ariz. 18 18 16 27 27 25 Atl. 19 19 18 22 20 22 Balt. 11 8 13 13 6 17 Buff. 3 4 11 26 24 24 Car. 7 24 4T 17 25 14 Chi. 23 31 17 25 18 26 Cin. 25 17 24 3 7 5 Cleve. 26 22 25 9 29 3 Dallas 5 27 3 5 2 12 Denver 27 28 22 15 14 13 Det. 10 26 4T 6 21 4 G.B. 8 10 9 29 *1 31 Hou. 9 5 12 14 17 11 Ind. 29 21 27 19 22 18 Jax 28 6 32 4 5 7 K.C. 30 9 31 23 28 21 Miami 12 7 14T 30 16 30 Minn. 24 3 29 20 4 29 N.E. *1 13 *1 32 10 32 N.O. 2 14 2 21 9 27 Giants 20 15 20 18 15 20 Jets 16 25 10 11 31 6 Oak. 14 *1 26 28 26 28 Phil. 6 2 19 12 30 8 Pitt. 13 23 8 2 12 *1 St. L. 21 11 23 31 32 19 S.D. 4 16 6 8 19 9 S.F. 32 30 28 7 3 16 Sea. 31 29 30 10 13 10 T.B. 22 20 21 24 23 23 Tenn. 17 32 7 *1 8 2 Wash. 15 12 14T 16 11 15 T = Tied for position * = League Leader

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WEEK 3 / THROUGH MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 26, 2011 AFC / TEAM/OFFENSE RANK Tm (A) (B) (C) (D) (E) (F) (G) (H) (I) (J) (K) (L) (M) (N) (O) (P) (Q) BAL 5 3 6 3 8 8 5 7t 10 8 8t 10 2 7 4 5 11 BUF 2 2 2 1 6 6 10 1 3 6 5t 9 14 3 5 1 8t CIN 11 11 10 9 11 11 6 11 13 16 11t 11 13 8 9 10t 1t CLE 12 14 12 13 12 13 4 4 11 11 4 5 3 16 12 8 1t DEN 13 12 15 15 10 12 7 12 7 4 11t 1 11t 5 2 9 12 HOU 4 5 3 8 7 2 9 10 5 7 8t 2 1 9 8 4 1t IND 15 15 11 6 14 16 1 7t 14 13 11t 16 7 6 16 14 7 JAC 14 16 4 10 16 14 16 15 15 12 10 15 10 15 15 15 1t KC 16 13 7 4 15 15 15 9 16 14 1t 3 6 13 6 16 16 MIA 6 9 5 5 9 10 8 16 6 15 7 8 8 2 1 13 14t NE 1 1 8 7 1 1 13 2 1 2 5t 7 11t 11 11 2 10 NYJ 9 10 14 12 5 7 11 13 9 10 11t 4 5 14 10 6 1t OAK 8 4 1 2 13 9 2 3 4 9 1t 12 15 1 7 3 8t PIT 7 8 13 14 4 4 12 14 8 3 11t 6 4 4 3 12 14t SD 3 6 9 11 2 5 14 6 2 1 11t 13t 9 10 14 7 1t TEN 10 7 16 16 3 3 3 5 12 5 1t 13t 16 12 13 10t 13 AFC / OPPONENT/DEFENSE RANK Tm (A) (B) (C) (D) (E) (F) (G) (H) (I) (J) (K) (L) (M) (N) (O) (P) (Q) (R) (S) BAL 8 6 2 5 10 5 3 4 8t 5t 8t 2 13 12 11 1 4t 1 6 BUF 13 14 12 13 13 11 2 16 14 10 14t 10 3 4 10 11 1t 2 7 CIN 3 2 3 1 4 4 14 2 4 2t 5t 8 12 5 14 3 11t 8 9 CLE 6 4 15 8 3 3 12 1 8t 4 8t 13 6 14 13 7t 10 9t 11 DEN 10 7 7 6 9 10 15t 11 6t 5t 5t 3 1 13 2 7t 11t 11t 14 HOU 9 11 9 14 8 8 9 7 10 8 2t 9 9 16 6 5 1t 3 5 IND 11 9 11 3 11 14 8 10 11 16 14t 16 16 2 4 15 9 15 15 JAC 4 5 1 4 6 9 7 14 2 2t 1 6 10 1 1 7t 7t 14 10 KC 12 10 14 7 12 13 6 15 13 13t 13 7 5 10 8 16 11t 16 16 MIA 15 15 8 9 15 15 13 13 12 9 14t 12 11 3 7 12 7t 13 12 NE 16 16 5 11 16 16 5 12 15 12 12 4 4 15 15 13 11t 4 4 NYJ 7 8 16 15 5 6 1 3 6t 1 2t 5 2 7 3 6 4t 5 8 OAK 14 13 13 16 14 7 11 5 16 11 8t 15 7 6 5 14 3 7 13 PIT 2 3 6 12 1 1 15t 6 1 7 5t 1 8 11 9 4 11t 9t 1 SD 5 12 10 10 7 12 10 8 3 15 8t 14 15 9 16 10 4t 11t 2 TEN 1 1 4 2 2 2 4 9 5 13t 2t 11 14 8 12 2 11t 6 3 (A) Total Yards per Game (B) Yards per Play (C) Rushing Yards per Game (D) Rushing Yards per Attempt (E) Passing Net Yards per Game (F) Passing Net Yards per Play (G) Passing, Percent Had Intercepted (H) Sacks per Pass Play (I) First Downs per Game (J) Third Down Efficiency (K) Fourth Down Efficiency (L) Punt Return Average (M) Kickoff Return Average (N) Gross Punting Average (O) Net Punting Average (P) Points per Game (Q) Field Goal Percentage Combined Offense/Defense Rank (R) Points per Game Differential (S) Net Yards per Game Differential

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WEEK 3 / THROUGH MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 26, 2011 NFC / TEAM/OFFENSE RANK Tm (A) (B) (C) (D) (E) (F) (G) (H) (I) (J) (K) (L) (M) (N) (O) (P) (Q) ARI 8 4 8 7 7 6 11 9 11t 12 1t 2 5 11 13 14 15 ATL 9 9 9 3 9 12 12 12 7 5 11t 13 11 16 14 9t 1t CAR 4 5 11 12 3t 4 13 7 4 6 11t 15 14 15 15 9t 1t CHI 13 13 16 14 8 11 9t 14 14 15 11t 7 9t 9 4 9t 1t DAL 2 2 13 13 2 1 14 6 8 8 1t 10 16 8 12 7 11 DET 6 7 12 15 3t 3 6 2 5 9t 1t 11 15 5 5 2 1t GB 5 1 3 5 5 2 2 4 6 3 11t 14 2 14 16 3 1t MIN 14 10 2 1 15 15 3 10 11t 7 11t 3 4 6 7 9t 1t NO 1 3 6 6 1 5 5 3 2 1 8 1 6 3 2 1 1t NYG 10 8 7 10 11 7 8 13 11t 14 9t 9 12 10 10 5 16 PHI 3 6 1 2 10 8 16 5 1 2 9t 16 9t 13 11 4 12t STL 11 14 4 4 13 14 1 11 10 16 7 8 7 7 9 15 12t SF 16 15 15 16 14 13 4 16 15t 9t 11t 4 1 1 1 6 1t SEA 15 16 14 11 16 16 7 15 15t 13 5t 12 13 4 6 16 1t TB 12 12 10 8 12 10 15 1 9 4 5t 6 3 2 3 9t 1t WAS 7 11 5 9 6 9 9t 8 3 11 1t 5 8 12 8 8 14 NFC / OPPONENT/DEFENSE RANK Tm (A) (B) (C) (D) (E) (F) (G) (H) (I) (J) (K) (L) (M) (N) (O) (P) (Q) (R) (S) ARI 14 9 14 8 12 11 5 5 14 5 8t 10 8t 6 1 4 5t 7 10 ATL 11 8 10 6 10 14 2 16 11 10 8t 5 4 12 13 13t 11 14 8 CAR 7 16 13 11 5 16 14 12 1 6 6t 16 12 2 3 9 4 11 5 CHI 13 10 9 12 13 5 13 11 8t 11 8t 2 2 3 11 10 12t 12 13 DAL 1 1 2 2 4 2 7 2 5 12 1 6 7 13 15 7t 7t 8 1 DET 2 2 11 15 1 1 3 6 2 3t 6t 14 14 11 12 1 7t 1 2 GB 15 15 1 3 16 15 4 7 12 15 2t 15 10 7 7t 11t 12t 2 7 MIN 9 6 4 4 15 9 9 10 13 16 2t 7 5 10 9 11t 12t 13 11 NO 10 11 5 10 14 8 16 3 10 13 2t 1 16 5 2 15 12t 4 4 NYG 8 5 8 7 9 7 8 8t 8t 9 15 13 8t 9 14 5t 7t 6 9 PHI 5 7 15 14 2 3 10 1 6t 8 8t 8 13 1 4 13t 1t 9 3 STL 16 13 16 16 8 6 15 8t 16 14 8t 4 11 8 10 16 1t 16 16 SF 3 4 3 1 7 4 1 13 4 3t 16 9 6 14 6 2 5t 3 14 SEA 4 3 7 5 3 12 11 14 6t 2 8t 12 15 16 16 7t 1t 15 15 TB 12 12 12 9 11 13 12 15 15 7 8t 3 1 4 5 5t 12t 10 12 WAS 6 14 6 13 6 10 6 4 3 1 2t 11 3 15 7t 3 7t 5 6 (A) Total Yards per Game (B) Yards per Play (C) Rushing Yards per Game (D) Rushing Yards per Attempt (E) Passing Net Yards per Game (F) Passing Net Yards per Play (G) Passing, Percent Had Intercepted (H) Sacks per Pass Play (I) First Downs per Game (J) Third Down Efficiency (K) Fourth Down Efficiency (L) Punt Return Average (M) Kickoff Return Average (N) Gross Punting Average (O) Net Punting Average (P) Points per Game (Q) Field Goal Percentage Combined Offense/Defense Rank (R) Points per Game Differential (S) Net Yards per Game Differential

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WEEK 3 / THROUGH MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 26, 2011 NFL / TEAM/OFFENSE RANK Tm (A) (B) (C) (D) (E) (F) (G) (H) (I) (J) (K) (L) (M) (N) (O) (P) (Q) BAL 11 6 8 5 13 15 11 13t 18 12 15t 20 4 11 8 8 24 BUF 3 2 4 2 11 12 24 1 3 10 9t 17 30 4 9 1 19t CIN 25 24 17 16 24 22 12 18 26 32 21t 21 25 13 17 24t 1t CLE 26 28 22 25 25 25 10 4 20 18 8 10 5 31 25 16 1t DEN 27 26 28 27 22 24 17 20 13 7 21t 1 22t 6 4 23 25 HOU 9 10 5 15 12 4 20 16 10 11 15t 3 3 15 16 7 1t IND 29 29 21 10 27 31 2 13t 27 25 21t 32 13 10 29 28 18 JAC 28 30 6 19 32 27 32 24 29 19 18 30 20 28 28 31 1t KC 30 27 9 7 31 30 31 15 32 28 1t 5 12 26 13 32 30 MIA 12 16 7 9 14t 18 18 26 11 30 13 15 16 2 3 27 27t NE 1 1 13 12 1 1 28 2 1 3 9t 12 22t 24 23 2t 23 NYJ 16 17 25 22 10 14 25 21 16 15t 21t 7 11 27 22 9 1t OAK 14 7 1 3 26 16 4 3 6t 14 1t 26 31 1 15 6 19t PIT 13 14 23 26 8 8 26t 22 14 5 21t 11 7 5 7 26 27t SD 4 12 16 20 6 11 30 9 2 1 21t 28t 17 22 27 15 1t TEN 17 13 32 32 7 6 9 5 22t 9 1t 28t 32 25 26 24t 26 ARI 18 8 18 14 16 10 19 23 22t 24 1t 4 9 20 24 22 31 ATL 19 19 19 6 18 23 21 28 15 13 21t 24 21 32 30 17t 1t CAR 7 9 24 24 4t 7 22 17 8 15t 21t 27 27 30 31 17t 1t CHI 23 23 31 29 17 21 15t 30 28 29 21t 14 18t 18 6 17t 1t DAL 5 4 27 28 3 2 23 12 17 20 1t 19 29 17 21 13 17 DET 10 15 26 30 4t 5 8 7 9 21t 1t 22 28 12 10 4 1t GB 8 3 10 11 9 3 3 10 12 6 21t 25 2 29 32 5 1t MIN 24 20 3 1 29 29 5 25 22t 17 21t 6 8 14 12 17t 1t NO 2 5 14 13 2 9 7 8 5 2 15t 2 10 8 2 2t 1t NYG 20 18 15 21 20 13 14 29 22t 27 19t 18 22t 19 19 11 32 PHI 6 11 2 4 19 17 29 11 4 4 19t 31 18t 23 20 10 19t STL 21 25 11 8 23 28 1 27 21 31 14 16 14 16 18 29 19t SF 32 31 30 31 28 26 6 32 30t 21t 21t 8 1 3 1 12 1t SEA 31 32 29 23 30 32 13 31 30t 26 9t 23 26 9 11 30 1t TB 22 22 20 17 21 20 26t 6 19 8 9t 13 6 7 5 17t 1t WAS 15 21 12 18 14t 19 15t 19 6t 23 1t 9 15 21 14 14 27t Team/Offense Rank (A) Total Yards per Game (B) Yards per Play (C) Rushing Yards per Game (D) Rushing Yards per Attempt (E) Passing Net Yards per Game (F) Passing Net Yards per Play (G) Passing, Percent Had Intercepted (H) Sacks per Pass Play (I) First Downs per Game (J) Third Down Efficiency (K) Fourth Down Efficiency (L) Punt Return Average (M) Kickoff Return Average (N) Gross Punting Average (O) Net Punting Average (P) Points per Game (Q) Field Goal Percentage

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WEEK 3 / THROUGH MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 26, 2011 NFL / OPPONENT/DEFENSE RANK Tm (A) (B) (C) (D) (E) (F) (G) (H) (I) (J) (K) (L) (M) (N) (O) (P) (Q) (R) (S) BAL 13 10 6 10 17 7 4 9 15t 12t 15t 3 26 24 22 1 7t 2 10 BUF 26 28 24 25 24 24 2 32 26t 22 29t 20 4 13 21 21 1t 3 12 CIN 3 2 7 1 5 5 28 4 7t 6t 10t 14 25 14 25 6 22t 14t 14 CLE 9 4 29 15 3 4 23 3 15t 8t 15t 26 12 29 24 13t 21 19t 18 DEN 15 12 14 13 13 19 31t 26 11t 12t 10t 5 1 28 4 13t 22t 21t 23 HOU 14 18 17 26 11 11 15t 17 17t 17 3t 15 22 31 11t 9t 1t 4 8 IND 19 14 22 8 18 29 13 25 20t 32 29t 31 32 4 9 29 19t 30 30t JAC 4 7 5 9 7 13 12 30 2t 6t 1t 9 23 2 2 13t 11t 28 17 KC 23 17 28 14 21 26 8 31 25 28t 27 10 11 22 16 32 22t 32 32 MIA 30 29 16 17 30 30 25 29 23t 21 29t 25 24 10t 13 26 11t 27 19 NE 32 32 10 21 32 31 7 28 31 25 26 6 7 30 30 27 22t 5t 7 NYJ 11 13 31 28 6 8 1 8 11t 1t 3t 8 3 18 8 12 7t 7 13 OAK 28 25 26 32 28 9 21t 12 32 23t 15t 29 14 15 10 28 3t 13 22 PIT 2 3 12 24 1 1 31t 16 1 16 10t 1 21 23 20 7 22t 19t 2 SD 8 24 19 20 9 25 18 20 6 30 15t 28 28 21 31 19t 7t 21t 3 TEN 1 1 8 5 2 3 5 21 10 28t 3t 23 27 20 23 2 22t 10 5 ARI 27 20 27 16 25 21 11 7 28 8t 15t 19 15t 8 1 8 11t 14t 24 ATL 22 19 20 11 22 27 6 27 22 18 15t 12 8 19 27 24t 19t 26 20 CAR 17 31 25 22 14 32 27 19 2t 10 10t 32 19 3 5 18 7t 23 11 CHI 25 21 18 23 26 14 26 18 17t 19 15t 4 5 5 19 19t 22t 24 27 DAL 5 5 2 3 12 6 15t 2 9 20 1t 13 13 25 29 16t 15t 16 1 DET 6 6 21 30 4 2 9 10 4 4t 10t 27 29 17 26 3 15t 1 4 GB 29 30 1 4 31 28 10 11 23t 27 3t 30 17 9 14t 22t 22t 5t 16 MIN 20 15 4 6 29 18 19 15 26t 31 3t 16 9 16 17 22t 22t 25 25 NO 21 22 9 19 27 17 30 5 20t 23t 3t 2 31 7 3 30 22t 9 9 NYG 18 11 15 12 20 16 17 13t 17t 15 28 24 15t 12 28 9t 15t 12 21 PHI 12 16 30 29 8 10 20 1 11t 14 15t 17 20 1 6 24t 3t 17 6 STL 31 26 32 31 19 15 29 13t 30 26 15t 11 18 10t 18 31 3t 31 30t SF 7 9 3 2 16 12 3 22 7t 4t 29t 18 10 26 11t 4 11t 8 28 SEA 10 8 13 7 10 22 21t 23 11t 3 15t 22 30 32 32 16t 3t 29 29 TB 24 23 23 18 23 23 24 24 29 11 15t 7 2 6 7 9t 22t 18 26 WAS 16 27 11 27 15 20 14 6 5 1t 3t 21 6 27 14t 5 15t 11 15 Opponent/Defense Rank (A) Total Yards per Game (B) Yards per Play (C) Rushing Yards per Game (D) Rushing Yards per Attempt (E) Passing Net Yards per Game (F) Passing Net Yards per Play (G) Passing, Percent Had Intercepted (H) Sacks per Pass Play (I) First Downs per Game (J) Third Down Efficiency (K) Fourth Down Efficiency (L) Punt Return Average (M) Kickoff Return Average (N) Gross Punting Average (O) Net Punting Average (P) Points per Game (Q) Field Goal Percentage Combined Offense/Defense Rank (R) Points per Game Differential (S) Net Yards per Game Differential

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WEEK 3 / THROUGH MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 26, 2011 AFC / TOTAL OFFENSE Rank Team Total Rushing Passing Total Rushing Passing 1) New England 1621 308 1313 540.3 102.7 437.7 2) Buffalo 1293 465 828 431.0 155.0 276.0 3) San Diego 1252 292 960 417.3 97.3 320.0 4) Houston 1202 414 788 400.7 138.0 262.7 5) Baltimore 1167 383 784 389.0 127.7 261.3 6) Miami 1163 389 774 387.7 129.7 258.0 7) Pittsburgh 1141 257 884 380.3 85.7 294.7 8) Oakland 1126 555 571 375.3 185.0 190.3 9) New York Jets 1082 246 836 360.7 82.0 278.7 10) Tennessee 1057 155 902 352.3 51.7 300.7 11) Cincinnati 904 290 614 301.3 96.7 204.7 12) Cleveland 868 259 609 289.3 86.3 203.0 13) Denver 859 228 631 286.3 76.0 210.3 14) Jacksonville 783 403 380 261.0 134.3 126.7 15) Indianapolis 762 270 492 254.0 90.0 164.0 16) Kansas City 732 340 392 244.0 113.3 130.7 AFC / TOTAL DEFENSE Rank Team Total Rushing Passing Total Rushing Passing 1) Tennessee 783 267 516 261.0 89.0 172.0 2) Pittsburgh 790 298 492 263.3 99.3 164.0 3) Cincinnati 829 264 565 276.3 88.0 188.3 4) Jacksonville 840 251 589 280.0 83.7 196.3 5) San Diego 943 334 609 314.3 111.3 203.0 6) Cleveland 948 386 562 316.0 128.7 187.3 7) New York Jets 976 410 566 325.3 136.7 188.7 8) Baltimore 988 252 736 329.3 84.0 245.3 9) Houston 996 317 679 332.0 105.7 226.3 10) Denver 1004 300 704 334.7 100.0 234.7 11) Indianapolis 1095 340 755 365.0 113.3 251.7 12) Kansas City 1150 369 781 383.3 123.0 260.3 13) Buffalo 1162 347 815 387.3 115.7 271.7 14) Oakland 1230 361 869 410.0 120.3 289.7 15) Miami 1247 314 933 415.7 104.7 311.0 16) New England 1406 275 1131 468.7 91.7 377.0 NFC / TOTAL OFFENSE Rank Team Total Rushing Passing Total Rushing Passing 1) New Orleans 1313 299 1014 437.7 99.7 338.0 2) Dallas 1237 234 1003 412.3 78.0 334.3 3) Philadelphia 1226 546 680 408.7 182.0 226.7 4) Carolina 1217 252 965 405.7 84.0 321.7 5) Green Bay 1210 327 883 403.3 109.0 294.3 6) Detroit 1200 235 965 400.0 78.3 321.7 7) Washington 1085 311 774 361.7 103.7 258.0 8) Arizona 1042 282 760 347.3 94.0 253.3 9) Atlanta 1029 278 751 343.0 92.7 250.3 10) New York Giants 972 296 676 324.0 98.7 225.3 11) St. Louis 946 325 621 315.3 108.3 207.0 12) Tampa Bay 945 276 669 315.0 92.0 223.0 13) Chicago 914 161 753 304.7 53.7 251.0 14) Minnesota 906 477 429 302.0 159.0 143.0 15) Seattle 644 217 427 214.7 72.3 142.3 16) San Francisco 641 209 432 213.7 69.7 144.0 NFC / TOTAL DEFENSE Rank Team Total Rushing Passing Total Rushing Passing 1) Dallas 864 184 680 288.0 61.3 226.7 2) Detroit 903 339 564 301.0 113.0 188.0 3) San Francisco 919 188 731 306.3 62.7 243.7 4) Seattle 954 299 655 318.0 99.7 218.3 5) Philadelphia 987 394 593 329.0 131.3 197.7 6) Washington 1014 293 721 338.0 97.7 240.3 7) Carolina 1070 351 719 356.7 117.0 239.7 8) New York Giants 1075 310 765 358.3 103.3 255.0 9) Minnesota 1100 202 898 366.7 67.3 299.3 10) New Orleans 1118 272 846 372.7 90.7 282.0 11) Atlanta 1119 336 783 373.0 112.0 261.0 12) Tampa Bay 1154 342 812 384.7 114.0 270.7 13) Chicago 1160 328 832 386.7 109.3 277.3 14) Arizona 1193 368 825 397.7 122.7 275.0 15) Green Bay 1243 165 1078 414.3 55.0 359.3 16) St. Louis 1279 523 756 426.3 174.3 252.0

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WEEK 3 / THROUGH MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 26, 2011 NFL / TOTAL OFFENSE Rank Team Total Rushing Passing Total Rushing Passing 1) New England 1621 308 1313 540.3 102.7 437.7 2) New Orleans 1313 299 1014 437.7 99.7 338.0 3) Buffalo 1293 465 828 431.0 155.0 276.0 4) San Diego 1252 292 960 417.3 97.3 320.0 5) Dallas 1237 234 1003 412.3 78.0 334.3 6) Philadelphia 1226 546 680 408.7 182.0 226.7 7) Carolina 1217 252 965 405.7 84.0 321.7 8) Green Bay 1210 327 883 403.3 109.0 294.3 9) Houston 1202 414 788 400.7 138.0 262.7 10) Detroit 1200 235 965 400.0 78.3 321.7 11) Baltimore 1167 383 784 389.0 127.7 261.3 12) Miami 1163 389 774 387.7 129.7 258.0 13) Pittsburgh 1141 257 884 380.3 85.7 294.7 14) Oakland 1126 555 571 375.3 185.0 190.3 15) Washington 1085 311 774 361.7 103.7 258.0 16) New York Jets 1082 246 836 360.7 82.0 278.7 17) Tennessee 1057 155 902 352.3 51.7 300.7 18) Arizona 1042 282 760 347.3 94.0 253.3 19) Atlanta 1029 278 751 343.0 92.7 250.3 20) New York Giants 972 296 676 324.0 98.7 225.3 21) St. Louis 946 325 621 315.3 108.3 207.0 22) Tampa Bay 945 276 669 315.0 92.0 223.0 23) Chicago 914 161 753 304.7 53.7 251.0 24) Minnesota 906 477 429 302.0 159.0 143.0 25) Cincinnati 904 290 614 301.3 96.7 204.7 26) Cleveland 868 259 609 289.3 86.3 203.0 27) Denver 859 228 631 286.3 76.0 210.3 28) Jacksonville 783 403 380 261.0 134.3 126.7 29) Indianapolis 762 270 492 254.0 90.0 164.0 30) Kansas City 732 340 392 244.0 113.3 130.7 31) Seattle 644 217 427 214.7 72.3 142.3 32) San Francisco 641 209 432 213.7 69.7 144.0 NFL / TOTAL DEFENSE Rank Team Total Rushing Passing Total Rushing Passing 1) Tennessee 783 267 516 261.0 89.0 172.0 2) Pittsburgh 790 298 492 263.3 99.3 164.0 3) Cincinnati 829 264 565 276.3 88.0 188.3 4) Jacksonville 840 251 589 280.0 83.7 196.3 5) Dallas 864 184 680 288.0 61.3 226.7 6) Detroit 903 339 564 301.0 113.0 188.0 7) San Francisco 919 188 731 306.3 62.7 243.7 8) San Diego 943 334 609 314.3 111.3 203.0 9) Cleveland 948 386 562 316.0 128.7 187.3 10) Seattle 954 299 655 318.0 99.7 218.3 11) New York Jets 976 410 566 325.3 136.7 188.7 12) Philadelphia 987 394 593 329.0 131.3 197.7 13) Baltimore 988 252 736 329.3 84.0 245.3 14) Houston 996 317 679 332.0 105.7 226.3 15) Denver 1004 300 704 334.7 100.0 234.7 16) Washington 1014 293 721 338.0 97.7 240.3 17) Carolina 1070 351 719 356.7 117.0 239.7 18) New York Giants 1075 310 765 358.3 103.3 255.0 19) Indianapolis 1095 340 755 365.0 113.3 251.7 20) Minnesota 1100 202 898 366.7 67.3 299.3 21) New Orleans 1118 272 846 372.7 90.7 282.0 22) Atlanta 1119 336 783 373.0 112.0 261.0 23) Kansas City 1150 369 781 383.3 123.0 260.3 24) Tampa Bay 1154 342 812 384.7 114.0 270.7 25) Chicago 1160 328 832 386.7 109.3 277.3 26) Buffalo 1162 347 815 387.3 115.7 271.7 27) Arizona 1193 368 825 397.7 122.7 275.0 28) Oakland 1230 361 869 410.0 120.3 289.7 29) Green Bay 1243 165 1078 414.3 55.0 359.3 30) Miami 1247 314 933 415.7 104.7 311.0 31) St. Louis 1279 523 756 426.3 174.3 252.0 32) New England 1406 275 1131 468.7 91.7 377.0

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WEEK 3 / THROUGH MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 26, 2011 AFC / TAKE-AWAYS, GIVE-AWAYS TAKE-AWAYS GIVE-AWAYS Net Rank Team Int Fum Total Int Fum Total Diff 1) Baltimore 5 5 10 2 2 4 = +6 2) Buffalo 6 3 9 4 0 4 = +5 3) Oakland 3 3 6 1 2 3 = +3 4t) Houston 3 3 6 3 1 4 = +2 4t) Indianapolis 3 4 7 1 4 5 = +2 4t) New England 5 2 7 5 0 5 = +2 4t) Tennessee 4 2 6 2 2 4 = +2 8t) Cincinnati 1 3 4 2 1 3 = +1 8t) Cleveland 2 2 4 2 1 3 = +1 8t) New York Jets 5 2 7 4 2 6 = +1 11t) Jacksonville 3 0 3 5 1 6 = -3 11t) Miami 2 0 2 3 2 5 = -3 13) Denver 0 3 3 3 4 7 = -4 14t) Kansas City 4 0 4 5 5 10 = -6 14t) San Diego 2 0 2 6 2 8 = -6 16) Pittsburgh 0 1 1 4 6 10 = -9 Totals 48 33 81 52 35 87 = -6 NFC / TAKE-AWAYS, GIVE-AWAYS TAKE-AWAYS GIVE-AWAYS Net Rank Team Int Fum Total Int Fum Total Diff 1t) Detroit 4 4 8 2 0 2 = +6 1t) San Francisco 5 3 8 1 1 2 = +6 3t) Green Bay 5 2 7 1 2 3 = +4 3t) New York Giants 3 3 6 2 0 2 = +4 5) Chicago 2 4 6 3 1 4 = +2 6) Minnesota 3 0 3 1 1 2 = +1 7t) Tampa Bay 2 3 5 4 1 5 = 0 7t) Washington 3 2 5 3 2 5 = 0 9) Arizona 4 0 4 3 2 5 = -1 10t) Atlanta 4 2 6 4 4 8 = -2 10t) Carolina 1 2 3 4 1 5 = -2 10t) Dallas 3 2 5 4 3 7 = -2 10t) New Orleans 1 1 2 2 2 4 = -2 10t) St. Louis 1 2 3 1 4 5 = -2 10t) Seattle 2 0 2 2 2 4 = -2 16) Philadelphia 2 1 3 4 3 7 = -4 Totals 45 31 76 41 29 70 = +6 NFL / TAKE-AWAYS, GIVE-AWAYS TAKE-AWAYS GIVE-AWAYS Net Rank Team Int Fum Total Int Fum Total Diff 1t) Baltimore 5 5 10 2 2 4 = +6 1t) Detroit 4 4 8 2 0 2 = +6 1t) San Francisco 5 3 8 1 1 2 = +6 4) Buffalo 6 3 9 4 0 4 = +5 5t) Green Bay 5 2 7 1 2 3 = +4 5t) New York Giants 3 3 6 2 0 2 = +4 7) Oakland 3 3 6 1 2 3 = +3 8t) Houston 3 3 6 3 1 4 = +2 8t) Indianapolis 3 4 7 1 4 5 = +2 8t) New England 5 2 7 5 0 5 = +2 8t) Tennessee 4 2 6 2 2 4 = +2 8t) Chicago 2 4 6 3 1 4 = +2 13t) Cincinnati 1 3 4 2 1 3 = +1 13t) Cleveland 2 2 4 2 1 3 = +1 13t) New York Jets 5 2 7 4 2 6 = +1 13t) Minnesota 3 0 3 1 1 2 = +1 17t) Tampa Bay 2 3 5 4 1 5 = 0 17t) Washington 3 2 5 3 2 5 = 0 19) Arizona 4 0 4 3 2 5 = -1 20t) Atlanta 4 2 6 4 4 8 = -2 20t) Carolina 1 2 3 4 1 5 = -2 20t) Dallas 3 2 5 4 3 7 = -2 20t) New Orleans 1 1 2 2 2 4 = -2 20t) St. Louis 1 2 3 1 4 5 = -2 20t) Seattle 2 0 2 2 2 4 = -2 26t) Jacksonville 3 0 3 5 1 6 = -3 26t) Miami 2 0 2 3 2 5 = -3 28t) Denver 0 3 3 3 4 7 = -4 28t) Philadelphia 2 1 3 4 3 7 = -4 30t) Kansas City 4 0 4 5 5 10 = -6 30t) San Diego 2 0 2 6 2 8 = -6 32) Pittsburgh 0 1 1 4 6 10 = -9 Totals 93 64 157 93 64 157 = 0

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WEEK 3 / THROUGH MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 26, 2011 AFC / TEAM/OFFENSE INSIDE THE 20 Rank Team Poss Pts TD TD% FG Score Score% 1) Oakland 10 62 8 80.0 2 10 100.0 2) Buffalo 14 86 11 78.6 3 14 100.0 3) New England 16 87 11 68.8 3 14 87.5 4) New York Jets 11 58 7 63.6 3 10 90.9 5) Tennessee 9 41 5 55.6 2 7 77.8 6) San Diego 13 55 7 53.8 2 9 69.2 7t) Cleveland 8 40 4 50.0 4 8 100.0 7t) Denver 8 37 4 50.0 3 7 87.5 9) Kansas City 7 27 3 42.9 2 5 71.4 10) Miami 13 47 5 38.5 4 9 69.2 11t) Cincinnati 8 35 3 37.5 5 8 100.0 11t) Pittsburgh 8 27 3 37.5 2 5 62.5 13t) Baltimore 12 47 4 33.3 6 10 83.3 13t) Indianapolis 9 33 3 33.3 4 7 77.8 15) Houston 16 62 5 31.3 9 14 87.5 16) Jacksonville 1 3 0 0.0 1 1 100.0 AFC / OPPONENTS/DEFENSE INSIDE THE 20 Rank Team Poss Pts TD TD% FG Score Score% 1) Tennessee 6 23 2 33.3 3 5 83.3 2) Cleveland 8 36 3 37.5 5 8 100.0 3t) Houston 12 43 5 41.7 2 7 58.3 3t) Indianapolis 12 50 5 41.7 5 10 83.3 5) Pittsburgh 9 41 4 44.4 4 8 88.9 6) Miami 13 57 6 46.2 5 11 84.6 7t) Baltimore 8 34 4 50.0 2 6 75.0 7t) Cincinnati 6 30 3 50.0 3 6 100.0 9) Denver 11 53 6 54.5 4 10 90.9 10) New England 14 62 8 57.1 2 10 71.4 11) Oakland 13 68 8 61.5 4 12 92.3 12) Jacksonville 8 45 5 62.5 3 8 100.0 13) San Diego 11 59 7 63.6 3 10 90.9 14) New York Jets 6 31 4 66.7 1 5 83.3 15) Buffalo 11 59 8 72.7 1 9 81.8 16) Kansas City 14 86 11 78.6 3 14 100.0 NFC / TEAM/OFFENSE INSIDE THE 20 Rank Team Poss Pts TD TD% FG Score Score% 1) New York Giants 6 35 5 83.3 0 5 83.3 2t) Detroit 13 71 8 61.5 5 13 100.0 2t) Green Bay 13 71 8 61.5 5 13 100.0 4) Atlanta 11 51 6 54.5 3 9 81.8 5t) Arizona 6 21 3 50.0 0 3 50.0 5t) Chicago 6 30 3 50.0 3 6 100.0 5t) Seattle 4 20 2 50.0 2 4 100.0 8) Minnesota 11 50 5 45.5 5 10 90.9 9) San Francisco 9 43 4 44.4 5 9 100.0 10t) New Orleans 14 59 6 42.9 5 11 78.6 10t) Philadelphia 14 57 6 42.9 5 11 78.6 10t) Washington 14 53 6 42.9 4 10 71.4 13) Carolina 11 44 4 36.4 5 9 81.8 14) St. Louis 6 26 2 33.3 4 6 100.0 15) Dallas 10 36 3 30.0 5 8 80.0 16) Tampa Bay 11 36 3 27.3 5 8 72.7 NFC / OPPONENTS/DEFENSE INSIDE THE 20 Rank Team Poss Pts TD TD% FG Score Score% 1t) Carolina 7 23 2 28.6 3 5 71.4 1t) San Francisco 7 26 2 28.6 4 6 85.7 3) Detroit 10 36 3 30.0 5 8 80.0 4) Green Bay 13 46 4 30.8 6 10 76.9 5) Arizona 11 39 4 36.4 4 8 72.7 6) Washington 8 30 3 37.5 3 6 75.0 7) New York Giants 13 53 5 38.5 6 11 84.6 8) Seattle 10 43 4 40.0 5 9 90.0 9t) Atlanta 12 50 5 41.7 5 10 83.3 9t) Minnesota 12 47 5 41.7 4 9 75.0 9t) Tampa Bay 12 53 5 41.7 6 11 91.7 12) Chicago 11 50 5 45.5 5 10 90.9 13) St. Louis 10 44 5 50.0 3 8 80.0 14) Dallas 7 34 4 57.1 2 6 85.7 15) New Orleans 10 54 6 60.0 4 10 100.0 16) Philadelphia 7 45 6 85.7 1 7 100.0

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WEEK 3 / THROUGH MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 26, 2011 NFL / TEAM/OFFENSE INSIDE THE 20 Rank Team Poss Pts TD TD% FG Score Score% 1) New York Giants 6 35 5 83.3 0 5 83.3 2) Oakland 10 62 8 80.0 2 10 100.0 3) Buffalo 14 86 11 78.6 3 14 100.0 4) New England 16 87 11 68.8 3 14 87.5 5) New York Jets 11 58 7 63.6 3 10 90.9 6t) Detroit 13 71 8 61.5 5 13 100.0 6t) Green Bay 13 71 8 61.5 5 13 100.0 8) Tennessee 9 41 5 55.6 2 7 77.8 9) Atlanta 11 51 6 54.5 3 9 81.8 10) San Diego 13 55 7 53.8 2 9 69.2 11t) Arizona 6 21 3 50.0 0 3 50.0 11t) Chicago 6 30 3 50.0 3 6 100.0 11t) Cleveland 8 40 4 50.0 4 8 100.0 11t) Denver 8 37 4 50.0 3 7 87.5 11t) Seattle 4 20 2 50.0 2 4 100.0 16) Minnesota 11 50 5 45.5 5 10 90.9 17) San Francisco 9 43 4 44.4 5 9 100.0 18t) Kansas City 7 27 3 42.9 2 5 71.4 18t) New Orleans 14 59 6 42.9 5 11 78.6 18t) Philadelphia 14 57 6 42.9 5 11 78.6 18t) Washington 14 53 6 42.9 4 10 71.4 22) Miami 13 47 5 38.5 4 9 69.2 23t) Cincinnati 8 35 3 37.5 5 8 100.0 23t) Pittsburgh 8 27 3 37.5 2 5 62.5 25) Carolina 11 44 4 36.4 5 9 81.8 26t) Baltimore 12 47 4 33.3 6 10 83.3 26t) Indianapolis 9 33 3 33.3 4 7 77.8 26t) St. Louis 6 26 2 33.3 4 6 100.0 29) Houston 16 62 5 31.3 9 14 87.5 30) Dallas 10 36 3 30.0 5 8 80.0 31) Tampa Bay 11 36 3 27.3 5 8 72.7 32) Jacksonville 1 3 0 0.0 1 1 100.0 NFL / OPPONENTS/DEFENSE INSIDE THE 20 Rank Team Poss Pts TD TD% FG Score Score% 1t) Carolina 7 23 2 28.6 3 5 71.4 1t) San Francisco 7 26 2 28.6 4 6 85.7 3) Detroit 10 36 3 30.0 5 8 80.0 4) Green Bay 13 46 4 30.8 6 10 76.9 5) Tennessee 6 23 2 33.3 3 5 83.3 6) Arizona 11 39 4 36.4 4 8 72.7 7t) Cleveland 8 36 3 37.5 5 8 100.0 7t) Washington 8 30 3 37.5 3 6 75.0 9) New York Giants 13 53 5 38.5 6 11 84.6 10) Seattle 10 43 4 40.0 5 9 90.0 11t) Atlanta 12 50 5 41.7 5 10 83.3 11t) Houston 12 43 5 41.7 2 7 58.3 11t) Indianapolis 12 50 5 41.7 5 10 83.3 11t) Minnesota 12 47 5 41.7 4 9 75.0 11t) Tampa Bay 12 53 5 41.7 6 11 91.7 16) Pittsburgh 9 41 4 44.4 4 8 88.9 17) Chicago 11 50 5 45.5 5 10 90.9 18) Miami 13 57 6 46.2 5 11 84.6 19t) Baltimore 8 34 4 50.0 2 6 75.0 19t) Cincinnati 6 30 3 50.0 3 6 100.0 19t) St. Louis 10 44 5 50.0 3 8 80.0 22) Denver 11 53 6 54.5 4 10 90.9 23t) Dallas 7 34 4 57.1 2 6 85.7 23t) New England 14 62 8 57.1 2 10 71.4 25) New Orleans 10 54 6 60.0 4 10 100.0 26) Oakland 13 68 8 61.5 4 12 92.3 27) Jacksonville 8 45 5 62.5 3 8 100.0 28) San Diego 11 59 7 63.6 3 10 90.9 29) New York Jets 6 31 4 66.7 1 5 83.3 30) Buffalo 11 59 8 72.7 1 9 81.8 31) Kansas City 14 86 11 78.6 3 14 100.0 32) Philadelphia 7 45 6 85.7 1 7 100.0

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WEEK 3 / THROUGH MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 26, 2011 AFC / OFFENSE/TEAMS: FIRST DOWNS, THIRD DOWNS, FOURTH DOWNS FIRST DOWNS THIRD DOWNS FOURTH DOWNS Rank Team Total Rush Pass Pen Made Att Pct Made Att Pct 1) New England 85 16 64 5 18 33 54.5 2 3 66.7 2) San Diego 82 14 58 10 24 39 61.5 0 3 0.0 3) Buffalo 81 25 46 10 15 36 41.7 2 3 66.7 4) Oakland 69 29 32 8 13 34 38.2 1 1 100.0 5) Houston 66 25 40 1 16 40 40.0 1 2 50.0 6) Miami 65 20 40 5 10 39 25.6 5 8 62.5 7) Denver 63 13 39 11 19 40 47.5 0 1 0.0 8) Pittsburgh 62 13 45 4 19 39 48.7 0 2 0.0 9) New York Jets 59 11 41 7 15 40 37.5 0 2 0.0 10) Baltimore 57 13 38 6 16 41 39.0 1 2 50.0 11) Cleveland 54 16 33 5 15 42 35.7 3 4 75.0 12) Tennessee 51 6 41 4 19 43 44.2 3 3 100.0 13) Cincinnati 49 13 31 5 9 38 23.7 0 2 0.0 14) Indianapolis 48 14 32 2 12 39 30.8 0 1 0.0 15) Jacksonville 44 22 19 3 15 44 34.1 1 3 33.3 16) Kansas City 38 11 23 4 10 36 27.8 1 1 100.0 Totals 973 261 622 90 245 623 39.3 20 41 48.8 AFC / DEFENSE/OPPONENTS: FIRST DOWNS, THIRD DOWNS, FOURTH DOWNS FIRST DOWNS THIRD DOWNS FOURTH DOWNS Rank Team Total Rush Pass Pen Made Att Pct Made Att Pct 1) Pittsburgh 39 10 27 2 16 44 36.4 1 3 33.3 2) Jacksonville 44 11 29 4 13 39 33.3 0 0 --- 3) San Diego 51 13 35 3 16 34 47.1 1 2 50.0 4) Cincinnati 52 20 28 4 14 42 33.3 1 3 33.3 5) Tennessee 54 14 34 6 20 43 46.5 0 1 0.0 6t) Denver 55 14 35 6 14 40 35.0 1 3 33.3 6t) New York Jets 55 18 32 5 7 32 21.9 0 1 0.0 8t) Baltimore 58 11 43 4 14 40 35.0 2 4 50.0 8t) Cleveland 58 21 30 7 15 44 34.1 1 2 50.0 10) Houston 60 14 41 5 13 34 38.2 0 2 0.0 11) Indianapolis 63 24 36 3 21 42 50.0 1 1 100.0 12) Miami 65 18 43 4 16 39 41.0 2 2 100.0 13) Kansas City 68 20 42 6 20 43 46.5 2 3 66.7 14) Buffalo 69 19 46 4 14 34 41.2 3 3 100.0 15) New England 78 15 55 8 16 37 43.2 4 7 57.1 16) Oakland 84 19 49 16 16 38 42.1 2 4 50.0 Totals 953 261 605 87 245 625 39.2 21 41 51.2 NFC / OFFENSE/TEAMS: FIRST DOWNS, THIRD DOWNS, FOURTH DOWNS FIRST DOWNS THIRD DOWNS FOURTH DOWNS Rank Team Total Rush Pass Pen Made Att Pct Made Att Pct 1) Philadelphia 79 36 34 9 20 39 51.3 1 4 25.0 2) New Orleans 70 15 51 4 25 44 56.8 1 2 50.0 3) Washington 69 16 46 7 14 44 31.8 2 2 100.0 4) Carolina 68 18 45 5 15 40 37.5 0 2 0.0 5) Detroit 67 14 45 8 14 43 32.6 3 3 100.0 6) Green Bay 64 21 40 3 18 37 48.6 0 1 0.0 7) Atlanta 61 10 46 5 15 39 38.5 0 2 0.0 8) Dallas 58 8 47 3 13 39 33.3 1 1 100.0 9) Tampa Bay 56 15 37 4 18 40 45.0 2 3 66.7 10) St. Louis 52 11 36 5 11 43 25.6 3 5 60.0 11t) Arizona 51 15 33 3 11 35 31.4 1 1 100.0 11t) Minnesota 51 24 25 2 13 36 36.1 0 1 0.0 11t) New York Giants 51 21 26 4 11 37 29.7 1 4 25.0 14) Chicago 47 7 36 4 11 40 27.5 0 2 0.0 15t) San Francisco 42 13 23 6 14 43 32.6 0 1 0.0 15t) Seattle 42 13 24 5 13 43 30.2 2 3 66.7 Totals 928 257 594 77 236 642 36.8 17 37 45.9 NFC / DEFENSE/OPPONENTS: FIRST DOWNS, THIRD DOWNS, FOURTH DOWNS FIRST DOWNS THIRD DOWNS FOURTH DOWNS Rank Team Total Rush Pass Pen Made Att Pct Made Att Pct 1) Carolina 44 16 23 5 13 38 34.2 1 3 33.3 2) Detroit 45 11 31 3 12 39 30.8 1 3 33.3 3) Washington 48 13 32 3 7 32 21.9 0 1 0.0 4) San Francisco 52 13 35 4 12 39 30.8 2 2 100.0 5) Dallas 53 7 44 2 17 42 40.5 0 0 --- 6t) Philadelphia 55 18 31 6 13 37 35.1 2 4 50.0 6t) Seattle 55 14 33 8 12 41 29.3 1 2 50.0 8t) Chicago 60 14 42 4 17 43 39.5 1 2 50.0 8t) New York Giants 60 17 41 2 17 47 36.2 3 4 75.0 10) New Orleans 63 16 45 2 16 38 42.1 0 2 0.0 11) Atlanta 64 23 33 8 16 41 39.0 1 2 50.0 12) Green Bay 65 12 49 4 18 39 46.2 0 3 0.0 13) Minnesota 69 12 49 8 20 42 47.6 0 1 0.0 14) Arizona 70 24 38 8 15 44 34.1 1 2 50.0 15) Tampa Bay 71 20 47 4 12 35 34.3 1 2 50.0 16) St. Louis 74 27 38 9 19 43 44.2 2 4 50.0 Totals 948 257 611 80 236 640 36.9 16 37 43.2

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WEEK 3 / THROUGH MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 26, 2011 NFL / OFFENSE/TEAMS: FIRST DOWNS, THIRD DOWNS, FOURTH DOWNS FIRST DOWNS THIRD DOWNS FOURTH DOWNS Rank Team Total Rush Pass Pen Made Att Pct Made Att Pct 1) New England 85 16 64 5 18 33 54.5 2 3 66.7 2) San Diego 82 14 58 10 24 39 61.5 0 3 0.0 3) Buffalo 81 25 46 10 15 36 41.7 2 3 66.7 4) Philadelphia 79 36 34 9 20 39 51.3 1 4 25.0 5) New Orleans 70 15 51 4 25 44 56.8 1 2 50.0 6t) Oakland 69 29 32 8 13 34 38.2 1 1 100.0 6t) Washington 69 16 46 7 14 44 31.8 2 2 100.0 8) Carolina 68 18 45 5 15 40 37.5 0 2 0.0 9) Detroit 67 14 45 8 14 43 32.6 3 3 100.0 10) Houston 66 25 40 1 16 40 40.0 1 2 50.0 11) Miami 65 20 40 5 10 39 25.6 5 8 62.5 12) Green Bay 64 21 40 3 18 37 48.6 0 1 0.0 13) Denver 63 13 39 11 19 40 47.5 0 1 0.0 14) Pittsburgh 62 13 45 4 19 39 48.7 0 2 0.0 15) Atlanta 61 10 46 5 15 39 38.5 0 2 0.0 16) New York Jets 59 11 41 7 15 40 37.5 0 2 0.0 17) Dallas 58 8 47 3 13 39 33.3 1 1 100.0 18) Baltimore 57 13 38 6 16 41 39.0 1 2 50.0 19) Tampa Bay 56 15 37 4 18 40 45.0 2 3 66.7 20) Cleveland 54 16 33 5 15 42 35.7 3 4 75.0 21) St. Louis 52 11 36 5 11 43 25.6 3 5 60.0 22t) Tennessee 51 6 41 4 19 43 44.2 3 3 100.0 22t) Arizona 51 15 33 3 11 35 31.4 1 1 100.0 22t) Minnesota 51 24 25 2 13 36 36.1 0 1 0.0 22t) New York Giants 51 21 26 4 11 37 29.7 1 4 25.0 26) Cincinnati 49 13 31 5 9 38 23.7 0 2 0.0 27) Indianapolis 48 14 32 2 12 39 30.8 0 1 0.0 28) Chicago 47 7 36 4 11 40 27.5 0 2 0.0 29) Jacksonville 44 22 19 3 15 44 34.1 1 3 33.3 30t) San Francisco 42 13 23 6 14 43 32.6 0 1 0.0 30t) Seattle 42 13 24 5 13 43 30.2 2 3 66.7 32) Kansas City 38 11 23 4 10 36 27.8 1 1 100.0 Totals 1901 518 1216 167 481 1265 38.0 37 78 47.4 NFL / DEFENSE/OPPONENTS: FIRST DOWNS, THIRD DOWNS, FOURTH DOWNS FIRST DOWNS THIRD DOWNS FOURTH DOWNS Rank Team Total Rush Pass Pen Made Att Pct Made Att Pct 1) Pittsburgh 39 10 27 2 16 44 36.4 1 3 33.3 2t) Jacksonville 44 11 29 4 13 39 33.3 0 0 --- 2t) Carolina 44 16 23 5 13 38 34.2 1 3 33.3 4) Detroit 45 11 31 3 12 39 30.8 1 3 33.3 5) Washington 48 13 32 3 7 32 21.9 0 1 0.0 6) San Diego 51 13 35 3 16 34 47.1 1 2 50.0 7t) Cincinnati 52 20 28 4 14 42 33.3 1 3 33.3 7t) San Francisco 52 13 35 4 12 39 30.8 2 2 100.0 9) Dallas 53 7 44 2 17 42 40.5 0 0 --- 10) Tennessee 54 14 34 6 20 43 46.5 0 1 0.0 11t) Denver 55 14 35 6 14 40 35.0 1 3 33.3 11t) New York Jets 55 18 32 5 7 32 21.9 0 1 0.0 11t) Philadelphia 55 18 31 6 13 37 35.1 2 4 50.0 11t) Seattle 55 14 33 8 12 41 29.3 1 2 50.0 15t) Baltimore 58 11 43 4 14 40 35.0 2 4 50.0 15t) Cleveland 58 21 30 7 15 44 34.1 1 2 50.0 17t) Houston 60 14 41 5 13 34 38.2 0 2 0.0 17t) Chicago 60 14 42 4 17 43 39.5 1 2 50.0 17t) New York Giants 60 17 41 2 17 47 36.2 3 4 75.0 20t) Indianapolis 63 24 36 3 21 42 50.0 1 1 100.0 20t) New Orleans 63 16 45 2 16 38 42.1 0 2 0.0 22) Atlanta 64 23 33 8 16 41 39.0 1 2 50.0 23t) Miami 65 18 43 4 16 39 41.0 2 2 100.0 23t) Green Bay 65 12 49 4 18 39 46.2 0 3 0.0 25) Kansas City 68 20 42 6 20 43 46.5 2 3 66.7 26t) Buffalo 69 19 46 4 14 34 41.2 3 3 100.0 26t) Minnesota 69 12 49 8 20 42 47.6 0 1 0.0 28) Arizona 70 24 38 8 15 44 34.1 1 2 50.0 29) Tampa Bay 71 20 47 4 12 35 34.3 1 2 50.0 30) St. Louis 74 27 38 9 19 43 44.2 2 4 50.0 31) New England 78 15 55 8 16 37 43.2 4 7 57.1 32) Oakland 84 19 49 16 16 38 42.1 2 4 50.0 Totals 1901 518 1216 167 481 1265 38.0 37 78 47.4

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WEEK 3 / THROUGH MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 26, 2011 AFC / FIRST-DOWN PLAYS BY TEAMS Rank Team Yds/Play Plays Yards 1) Buffalo 7.96 99 788 2) New England 7.81 104 812 3) Oakland 6.73 93 626 4) Miami 6.49 92 597 5) Tennessee 6.16 77 474 6) Baltimore 6.11 83 507 7) Cleveland 5.98 84 502 8) Houston 5.86 93 545 9) San Diego 5.67 103 584 10) New York Jets 5.03 86 433 11) Indianapolis 4.99 79 394 12) Cincinnati 4.94 81 400 13) Denver 4.88 86 420 14) Pittsburgh 4.52 91 411 15) Kansas City 4.40 72 317 16) Jacksonville 4.04 78 315 TOTAL 5.80 1401 8125 AFC / FIRST-DOWN PLAYS BY OPPONENTS Rank Team Yds/Play Plays Yards 1) New York Jets 4.22 89 376 2) Indianapolis 4.67 90 420 3) Pittsburgh 4.73 66 312 4) Tennessee 4.84 82 397 5) Houston 5.18 83 430 6) Denver 5.29 86 455 7) Baltimore 5.31 89 473 8) Oakland 5.39 101 544 9) Cleveland 5.43 88 478 10) Jacksonville 5.44 71 386 11) San Diego 5.50 74 407 12) Kansas City 5.56 90 500 13) Cincinnati 5.96 85 507 14) Miami 6.85 92 630 15) Buffalo 7.24 92 666 16) New England 8.68 101 877 TOTAL 5.70 1379 7858 NFC / FIRST-DOWN PLAYS BY TEAMS Rank Team Yds/Play Plays Yards 1) Arizona 7.30 77 562 2) Green Bay 6.86 87 597 3) Chicago 6.58 81 533 4) Carolina 6.53 96 627 5) Philadelphia 6.42 99 636 6) Washington 6.03 96 579 7) Atlanta 5.98 91 544 8) Detroit 5.66 92 521 9) New Orleans 5.53 92 509 10) New York Giants 5.39 77 415 11) Dallas 5.29 89 471 12) Minnesota 5.04 77 388 13) St. Louis 4.66 83 387 14) Tampa Bay 4.60 81 373 15) San Francisco 4.20 71 298 16) Seattle 4.14 71 294 TOTAL 5.69 1360 7734 NFC / FIRST-DOWN PLAYS BY OPPONENTS Rank Team Yds/Play Plays Yards 1) Detroit 4.52 79 357 2) Seattle 4.58 81 371 3) New York Giants 5.03 88 443 4) Dallas 5.27 81 427 5) San Francisco 5.43 80 434 6) Tampa Bay 5.59 95 531 7) Minnesota 5.61 93 522 8) Chicago 5.64 92 519 9) St. Louis 5.65 94 531 10) Arizona 5.88 98 576 11) Philadelphia 5.92 78 462 12) Atlanta 6.00 92 552 13) Carolina 6.09 69 420 14) New Orleans 6.46 89 575 15) Green Bay 7.39 94 695 16) Washington 7.42 79 586 TOTAL 5.79 1382 8001

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WEEK 3 / THROUGH MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 26, 2011 NFL / FIRST-DOWN PLAYS BY TEAMS Rank Team Yds/Play Plays Yards 1) Buffalo 7.96 99 788 2) New England 7.81 104 812 3) Arizona 7.30 77 562 4) Green Bay 6.86 87 597 5) Oakland 6.73 93 626 6) Chicago 6.58 81 533 7) Carolina 6.53 96 627 8) Miami 6.49 92 597 9) Philadelphia 6.42 99 636 10) Tennessee 6.16 77 474 11) Baltimore 6.11 83 507 12) Washington 6.03 96 579 13) Atlanta 5.98 91 544 14) Cleveland 5.98 84 502 15) Houston 5.86 93 545 16) San Diego 5.67 103 584 17) Detroit 5.66 92 521 18) New Orleans 5.53 92 509 19) New York Giants 5.39 77 415 20) Dallas 5.29 89 471 21) Minnesota 5.04 77 388 22) New York Jets 5.03 86 433 23) Indianapolis 4.99 79 394 24) Cincinnati 4.94 81 400 25) Denver 4.88 86 420 26) St. Louis 4.66 83 387 27) Tampa Bay 4.60 81 373 28) Pittsburgh 4.52 91 411 29) Kansas City 4.40 72 317 30) San Francisco 4.20 71 298 31) Seattle 4.14 71 294 32) Jacksonville 4.04 78 315 TOTAL 5.74 2761 15859 NFL / FIRST-DOWN PLAYS BY OPPONENTS Rank Team Yds/Play Plays Yards 1) New York Jets 4.22 89 376 2) Detroit 4.52 79 357 3) Seattle 4.58 81 371 4) Indianapolis 4.67 90 420 5) Pittsburgh 4.73 66 312 6) Tennessee 4.84 82 397 7) New York Giants 5.03 88 443 8) Houston 5.18 83 430 9) Dallas 5.27 81 427 10) Denver 5.29 86 455 11) Baltimore 5.31 89 473 12) Oakland 5.39 101 544 13) San Francisco 5.43 80 434 14) Cleveland 5.43 88 478 15) Jacksonville 5.44 71 386 16) San Diego 5.50 74 407 17) Kansas City 5.56 90 500 18) Tampa Bay 5.59 95 531 19) Minnesota 5.61 93 522 20) Chicago 5.64 92 519 21) St. Louis 5.65 94 531 22) Arizona 5.88 98 576 23) Philadelphia 5.92 78 462 24) Cincinnati 5.96 85 507 25) Atlanta 6.00 92 552 26) Carolina 6.09 69 420 27) New Orleans 6.46 89 575 28) Miami 6.85 92 630 29) Buffalo 7.24 92 666 30) Green Bay 7.39 94 695 31) Washington 7.42 79 586 32) New England 8.68 101 877 TOTAL 5.74 2761 15859

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WEEK 3 / THROUGH MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 26, 2011 AFC / KICKOFFS (Receiving Team) Rank Team TotKO AdjKO TB TB% EZ EZ% OB I20 Avg.Start 1) Baltimore 11 11 4 36.4 10 90.9 0 3 26.6 2) New York Jets 14 13 3 23.1 10 71.4 0 2 24.8 3) Houston 13 13 7 53.8 13100.0 0 1 24.3 4) Cleveland 17 16 10 62.5 15 88.2 0 1 23.4 5) New England 15 13 4 30.8 10 66.7 1 2 23.2 6) Pittsburgh 13 13 9 69.2 13100.0 0 1 22.8 7) San Diego 14 14 5 35.7 9 64.3 0 2 22.2 8) Kansas City 22 20 7 35.0 18 81.8 0 6 21.6 9) Jacksonville 14 14 5 35.7 10 71.4 0 4 20.9 10) Tennessee 11 11 11100.0 11100.0 0 0 20.5 11) Indianapolis 19 19 12 63.2 18 94.7 0 4 20.4 12) Denver 15 15 13 86.7 15100.0 0 2 19.5 13) Miami 16 16 4 25.0 11 68.8 0 8 19.4 14) Cincinnati 14 13 7 53.8 13 92.9 0 3 19.2 15) Buffalo 14 14 12 85.7 14100.0 0 2 18.5 16) Oakland 17 17 10 58.8 14 82.4 0 6 18.2 Totals 239 232 123 53.0 204 87.9 1 47 21.4 AFC / KICKOFFS (Kicking Team) Rank Team TotKO AdjKO TB TB% EZ EZ% OB I20 Avg.Start 1) New England 19 19 9 47.4 15 78.9 0 6 18.1 2) Buffalo 21 19 6 31.6 15 71.4 0 9 18.9 3) New York Jets 18 18 7 38.9 12 66.7 0 6 19.4 4) Houston 20 20 12 60.0 19 95.0 0 4 19.7 5) Denver 13 13 13100.0 13100.0 0 0 20.0 6) Cleveland 14 14 4 28.6 11 78.6 0 6 20.6 7) Pittsburgh 13 13 7 53.8 12 92.3 0 2 21.4 8) Oakland 17 16 13 81.3 16 94.1 0 0 21.4 9) Kansas City 8 8 5 62.5 6 75.0 0 1 22.1 10) Cincinnati 15 15 9 60.0 14 93.3 0 2 22.3 11) Baltimore 17 17 12 70.6 17100.0 0 1 22.5 12) Miami 14 13 6 46.2 12 85.7 1 1 23.5 13) Tennessee 14 14 8 57.1 13 92.9 0 4 23.8 14) Indianapolis 13 12 9 75.0 12 92.3 0 0 23.9 15) Jacksonville 11 11 7 63.6 9 81.8 0 0 25.4 16) San Diego 14 14 5 35.7 11 78.6 0 1 29.4 Totals 241 236 132 55.9 207 87.7 1 43 21.7 Note: Average team drive start DOES NOT include onside kicks or kickoffs at the end of a half unless either kickoff is returned for a touchdown. All other kickoffs (returned kickoffs, fair catches, touchback and kickoffs out of bounds) are included. Kickoffs resulting in the kicking team retaining possession are not included. ADJ KO: Adjusted kickoffs are used to compute the Avg. Team Drive Start. I20: The number of drives that start inside (not including) the 20 yd line. NFC / KICKOFFS (Receiving Team) Rank Team TotKO AdjKO TB TB% EZ EZ% OB I20 Avg.Start 1) San Francisco 12 12 5 41.7 11 91.7 0 2 29.6 2) Arizona 14 13 6 46.2 9 64.3 1 0 27.8 3) Minnesota 16 15 5 33.3 13 81.3 0 4 27.5 4) Green Bay 17 14 11 78.6 14 82.4 0 0 26.4 5) Tampa Bay 15 15 9 60.0 11 73.3 0 1 25.1 6) New Orleans 18 18 10 55.6 16 88.9 0 2 22.3 7) Detroit 13 12 7 58.3 10 76.9 0 0 21.8 8) Washington 14 14 3 21.4 9 64.3 0 4 21.4 9) Seattle 16 16 7 43.8 13 81.3 0 4 21.1 10) St. Louis 18 17 7 41.2 14 77.8 0 4 20.4 11) Dallas 15 15 12 80.0 14 93.3 0 1 20.2 12) Carolina 15 15 7 46.7 14 93.3 0 4 19.9 13) Chicago 17 17 8 47.1 13 76.5 0 4 19.8 14) New York Giants 14 14 9 64.3 13 92.9 0 3 19.4 15) Philadelphia 15 15 6 40.0 13 86.7 0 5 18.5 16) Atlanta 18 18 10 55.6 16 88.9 0 6 18.1 Totals 247 240 122 50.8 203 84.6 1 44 22.2 NFC / KICKOFFS (Kicking Team) Rank Team TotKO AdjKO TB TB% EZ EZ% OB I20 Avg.Start 1) Tampa Bay 14 12 7 58.3 9 64.3 0 4 16.8 2) Chicago 14 14 11 78.6 14100.0 0 2 18.7 3) St. Louis 11 11 5 45.5 11100.0 0 4 18.8 4) Atlanta 14 14 5 35.7 10 71.4 0 4 18.9 5) Arizona 12 12 4 33.3 10 83.3 0 3 19.8 6) Philadelphia 16 15 7 46.7 15 93.8 0 4 20.3 7) New York Giants 13 13 5 38.5 8 61.5 0 3 20.8 8) Washington 15 15 10 66.7 13 86.7 1 2 21.7 9) Dallas 17 17 7 41.2 11 64.7 0 4 21.8 10) Green Bay 20 20 9 45.0 18 90.0 0 5 21.8 11) San Francisco 18 17 9 52.9 16 88.9 0 3 21.9 12) Minnesota 16 16 3 18.8 10 62.5 0 2 22.9 13) Carolina 14 11 7 63.6 10 71.4 0 0 23.6 14) Detroit 21 20 11 55.0 19 90.5 0 4 25.4 15) New Orleans 21 20 12 60.0 19 90.5 0 2 25.5 16) Seattle 9 9 1 11.1 7 77.8 0 2 32.7 Totals 245 236 113 47.9 200 84.7 1 48 22.0

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WEEK 3 / THROUGH MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 26, 2011 NFL / KICKOFFS (Receiving Team) Rank Team TotKO AdjKO TB TB% EZ EZ% OB I20 Avg.Start 1) San Francisco 12 12 5 41.7 11 91.7 0 2 29.6 2) Arizona 14 13 6 46.2 9 64.3 1 0 27.8 3) Minnesota 16 15 5 33.3 13 81.3 0 4 27.5 4) Baltimore 11 11 4 36.4 10 90.9 0 3 26.6 5) Green Bay 17 14 11 78.6 14 82.4 0 0 26.4 6) Tampa Bay 15 15 9 60.0 11 73.3 0 1 25.1 7) New York Jets 14 13 3 23.1 10 71.4 0 2 24.8 8) Houston 13 13 7 53.8 13100.0 0 1 24.3 9) Cleveland 17 16 10 62.5 15 88.2 0 1 23.4 10) New England 15 13 4 30.8 10 66.7 1 2 23.2 11) Pittsburgh 13 13 9 69.2 13100.0 0 1 22.8 12) New Orleans 18 18 10 55.6 16 88.9 0 2 22.3 13) San Diego 14 14 5 35.7 9 64.3 0 2 22.2 14) Detroit 13 12 7 58.3 10 76.9 0 0 21.8 15) Kansas City 22 20 7 35.0 18 81.8 0 6 21.6 16) Washington 14 14 3 21.4 9 64.3 0 4 21.4 17) Seattle 16 16 7 43.8 13 81.3 0 4 21.1 18) Jacksonville 14 14 5 35.7 10 71.4 0 4 20.9 19) Tennessee 11 11 11100.0 11100.0 0 0 20.5 20) Indianapolis 19 19 12 63.2 18 94.7 0 4 20.4 21) St. Louis 18 17 7 41.2 14 77.8 0 4 20.4 22) Dallas 15 15 12 80.0 14 93.3 0 1 20.2 23) Carolina 15 15 7 46.7 14 93.3 0 4 19.9 24) Chicago 17 17 8 47.1 13 76.5 0 4 19.8 25) Denver 15 15 13 86.7 15100.0 0 2 19.5 26) Miami 16 16 4 25.0 11 68.8 0 8 19.4 27) New York Giants 14 14 9 64.3 13 92.9 0 3 19.4 28) Cincinnati 14 13 7 53.8 13 92.9 0 3 19.2 29) Philadelphia 15 15 6 40.0 13 86.7 0 5 18.5 30) Buffalo 14 14 12 85.7 14100.0 0 2 18.5 31) Oakland 17 17 10 58.8 14 82.4 0 6 18.2 32) Atlanta 18 18 10 55.6 16 88.9 0 6 18.1 Totals 486 472 245 51.9 407 86.2 2 91 21.8 Note: Average opponent drive start DOES NOT include onside kicks or kickoffs at the end of a half unless either kickoff is returned for a touchdown. All other kickoffs (returned kickoffs, fair catches, touchback and kickoffs out of bounds) are included. Kickoffs resulting in the kicking team retaining possession are not included. ADJ KO: Adjusted kickoffs are used to compute the Avg. Team Drive Start. I20: The number of drives that start inside (not including) the 20 yd line. NFL / KICKOFFS (Kicking Team) Rank Team TotKO AdjKO TB TB% EZ EZ% OB I20 Avg.Start 1) Tampa Bay 14 12 7 58.3 9 64.3 0 4 16.8 2) New England 19 19 9 47.4 15 78.9 0 6 18.1 3) Chicago 14 14 11 78.6 14100.0 0 2 18.7 4) St. Louis 11 11 5 45.5 11100.0 0 4 18.8 5) Atlanta 14 14 5 35.7 10 71.4 0 4 18.9 6) Buffalo 21 19 6 31.6 15 71.4 0 9 18.9 7) New York Jets 18 18 7 38.9 12 66.7 0 6 19.4 8) Houston 20 20 12 60.0 19 95.0 0 4 19.7 9) Arizona 12 12 4 33.3 10 83.3 0 3 19.8 10) Denver 13 13 13100.0 13100.0 0 0 20.0 11) Philadelphia 16 15 7 46.7 15 93.8 0 4 20.3 12) Cleveland 14 14 4 28.6 11 78.6 0 6 20.6 13) New York Giants 13 13 5 38.5 8 61.5 0 3 20.8 14) Pittsburgh 13 13 7 53.8 12 92.3 0 2 21.4 15) Oakland 17 16 13 81.3 16 94.1 0 0 21.4 16) Washington 15 15 10 66.7 13 86.7 1 2 21.7 17) Dallas 17 17 7 41.2 11 64.7 0 4 21.8 18) Green Bay 20 20 9 45.0 18 90.0 0 5 21.8 19) San Francisco 18 17 9 52.9 16 88.9 0 3 21.9 20) Kansas City 8 8 5 62.5 6 75.0 0 1 22.1 21) Cincinnati 15 15 9 60.0 14 93.3 0 2 22.3 22) Baltimore 17 17 12 70.6 17100.0 0 1 22.5 23) Minnesota 16 16 3 18.8 10 62.5 0 2 22.9 24) Miami 14 13 6 46.2 12 85.7 1 1 23.5 25) Carolina 14 11 7 63.6 10 71.4 0 0 23.6 26) Tennessee 14 14 8 57.1 13 92.9 0 4 23.8 27) Indianapolis 13 12 9 75.0 12 92.3 0 0 23.9 28) Detroit 21 20 11 55.0 19 90.5 0 4 25.4 29) Jacksonville 11 11 7 63.6 9 81.8 0 0 25.4 30) New Orleans 21 20 12 60.0 19 90.5 0 2 25.5 31) San Diego 14 14 5 35.7 11 78.6 0 1 29.4 32) Seattle 9 9 1 11.1 7 77.8 0 2 32.7 Totals 486 472 245 51.9 407 86.2 2 91 21.8

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WEEK 3 / THROUGH MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 26, 2011 AFC / SINGLE-GAME HIGHS / PLAYERS Most Points-- 18, Tolbert, S.D. vs. Minn., 9/11, (3 td, 0 fg, 0 xp, 0 2pt) Most Points-- 18, T. Smith, Balt. at St.L., 9/25, (3 td, 0 fg, 0 xp, 0 2pt) Passing Yards-- 517, Brady, N.E. at Miami, 9/12, (32-48, 517, 4 td, 1 int) Longest Pass-- 99, Brady, N.E. at Miami, 9/12, (to Welker, Wes, td) Passing Touchdowns-- 4, (3 times in Non-Overtime Games) Rushing Yards-- 171, D. McFadden, Oak. vs. NY-J, 9/25, (19-171, 2 td) Rushing Attempts-- 28, McGahee, Denv. vs. Cin., 9/18, (28-101, 1 td) Longest Rush-- 70, D. McFadden, Oak. vs. NY-J, 9/25, td Receptions-- 16, Welker, N.E. at Buff., 9/25, (16-217, 2 td) Receiving Yards-- 217, Welker, N.E. at Buff., 9/25, (16-217, 2 td) Kickoff Return Yards-- 129, Gates, Miami vs. N.E., 9/12, (6-129, 0 td) Kickoff Returns-- 6, Gates, Miami vs. N.E., 9/12, (6-129, 0 td) Longest Kickoff Return-- 77, D. Reed, Balt. at Tenn., 9/18 Punt Return Yards-- 128, Decker, Denv. vs. Oak., 9/12, (5-128, 0 fc, 1 td) Punt Returns-- 6, Cribbs, Clev. vs. Cin., 9/11, (6-58, 0 fc, 0 td) Longest Punt Return-- 90, Decker, Denv. vs. Oak., 9/12, td Interceptions-- 2, (3 times in Non-Overtime Games) Longest Interception Return-- 50, K. Lewis, K.C. at S.D., 9/25 Sacks-- 3.0, Suggs, Balt. vs. Pitt., 9/11 Scrimmage Yards-- 236, Welker, N.E. at Buff., 9/25, (Rush 1-19, Rec 16-217) Longest Punt-- 77, Lechler, Oak. at Denv., 9/12 Punts-- 8, (3 times in Non-Overtime Games) Field Goals Made-- 4, (3 times in Non-Overtime Games) Longest Field Goal-- 63, Janikowski, Oak. at Denv., 9/12 NFC / SINGLE-GAME HIGHS / PLAYERS Most Points-- 18, Austin, Dal. at S.F., 9/18 (OT), (3 td, 0 fg, 0 xp, 0 2pt) Most Points-- 18, Finley, G.B. at Chi., 9/25, (3 td, 0 fg, 0 xp, 0 2pt) Most Points-- 18, Bailey, Dal. vs. Wash., 9/26, (0 td, 6 fg, 0 xp, 0 2pt) Passing Yards-- 432, Newton, Car. vs. G.B., 9/18, (28-46, 432, 1 td, 3 int) Longest Pass-- 84, Rodgers, G.B. at Car., 9/18, (to Nelson, Jordy, td) Passing Touchdowns-- 4, (3 times in Non-Overtime Games) Rushing Yards-- 128, McCoy, Phil. vs. NY-G, 9/25, (24-128, 1 td) Rushing Attempts-- 25, Hightower, Wash. vs. NY-G, 9/11, (25-72, 1 td) Rushing Attempts-- 25, Peterson, Minn. vs. T.B., 9/18, (25-120, 2 td) Longest Rush-- 61, Turner, Atl. vs. Phil., 9/18 Receptions-- 13, Maclin, Phil. at Atl., 9/18, (13-171, 2 td) Receiving Yards-- 178, S. Smith, Car. at Ariz., 9/11, (8-178, 2 td) Kickoff Return Yards-- 176, Ginn, S.F. vs. Sea., 9/11, (4-176, 1 td) Kickoff Returns-- 5, (3 times in Non-Overtime Games) Longest Kickoff Return-- 108, Cobb, G.B. vs. N.O., 9/8, td Punt Return Yards-- 98, Peterson, Ariz. vs. Car., 9/11, (2-98, 2 fc, 1 td) Punt Returns-- 5, (3 times in Non-Overtime Games) Longest Punt Return-- 89, Peterson, Ariz. vs. Car., 9/11, td Interceptions-- 2, (3 times in Non-Overtime Games) Longest Interception Return-- 50, Biermann, Atl. at Chi., 9/11, td Sacks-- 3.0, J. Allen, Minn. vs. Det., 9/25 (OT) Sacks-- 2.5, Campbell, Ariz. at Sea., 9/25 Scrimmage Yards-- 178, S. Smith, Car. at Ariz., 9/11, (Rush 0-0, Rec 8-178) Longest Punt-- 77, Ryan, Sea. at S.F., 9/11 Punts-- 8, (5 times in Non-Overtime Games) Field Goals Made-- 6, Bailey, Dal. vs. Wash., 9/26, (6-6, 41 lg) Longest Field Goal-- 55, Akers, S.F. vs. Dal., 9/18 (OT) Longest Field Goal-- 53, Kasay, N.O. vs. Chi., 9/18 Longest Field Goal-- 53, Akers, S.F. at Cin., 9/25

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WEEK 3 / THROUGH MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 26, 2011 NFL / SINGLE-GAME HIGHS / PLAYERS Most Points-- 18, Austin, Dal. at S.F., 9/18 (OT), (3 td, 0 fg, 0 xp, 0 2pt) Most Points-- 18, (4 times in Non-Overtime Games) Passing Yards-- 517, Brady, N.E. at Miami, 9/12, (32-48, 517, 4 td, 1 int) Longest Pass-- 99, Brady, N.E. at Miami, 9/12, (to Welker, Wes, td) Passing Touchdowns-- 4, (6 times in Non-Overtime Games) Rushing Yards-- 171, D. McFadden, Oak. vs. NY-J, 9/25, (19-171, 2 td) Rushing Attempts-- 28, McGahee, Denv. vs. Cin., 9/18, (28-101, 1 td) Longest Rush-- 70, D. McFadden, Oak. vs. NY-J, 9/25, td Receptions-- 16, Welker, N.E. at Buff., 9/25, (16-217, 2 td) Receiving Yards-- 217, Welker, N.E. at Buff., 9/25, (16-217, 2 td) Kickoff Return Yards-- 176, Ginn, S.F. vs. Sea., 9/11, (4-176, 1 td) Kickoff Returns-- 6, Gates, Miami vs. N.E., 9/12, (6-129, 0 td) Longest Kickoff Return-- 108, Cobb, G.B. vs. N.O., 9/8, td Punt Return Yards-- 128, Decker, Denv. vs. Oak., 9/12, (5-128, 0 fc, 1 td) Punt Returns-- 6, Cribbs, Clev. vs. Cin., 9/11, (6-58, 0 fc, 0 td) Longest Punt Return-- 90, Decker, Denv. vs. Oak., 9/12, td Interceptions-- 2, (6 times in Non-Overtime Games) Longest Interception Return-- 50, Biermann, Atl. at Chi., 9/11, td Longest Interception Return-- 50, K. Lewis, K.C. at S.D., 9/25 Sacks-- 3.0, J. Allen, Minn. vs. Det., 9/25 (OT) Sacks-- 3.0, Suggs, Balt. vs. Pitt., 9/11 Scrimmage Yards-- 236, Welker, N.E. at Buff., 9/25, (Rush 1-19, Rec 16-217) Longest Punt-- 77, Ryan, Sea. at S.F., 9/11 Longest Punt-- 77, Lechler, Oak. at Denv., 9/12 Punts-- 8, (8 times in Non-Overtime Games) Field Goals Made-- 6, Bailey, Dal. vs. Wash., 9/26, (6-6, 41 lg) Longest Field Goal-- 63, Janikowski, Oak. at Denv., 9/12

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WEEK 3 / THROUGH MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 26, 2011 300-Yard Passing Games 517, Brady, NE at MIA 09/12 (32-48, 4 TD) 432, Newton, CAR vs. GB 09/18 (28-46, 1 TD) 423, Brady, NE vs. SD 09/18 (31-40, 3 TD) 422, Newton, CAR at ARI 09/11 (24-37, 2 TD) 419, Brees, NO at GB 09/08 (32-49, 3 TD) 416, Henne, MIA vs. NE 09/12 (30-49, 2 TD) 389, Flacco, BAL at STL 09/25 (27-48, 3 TD) 387, Brady, NE at BUF 09/25 (30-45, 4 TD) 378, Rivers, SD at NE 09/18 (29-40, 2 TD) 378, Stafford, DET at MIN 09/25 (ot) (32-46, 2 TD) 373, Schaub, HOU at NO 09/25 (22-39, 3 TD) 370, Brees, NO vs. HOU 09/25 (31-44, 3 TD) 369, Fitzpatrick, BUF vs. NE 09/25 (27-40, 2 TD) 369, Sanchez, NYJ at OAK 09/25 (27-43, 2 TD) 364, Roethlisberger, PIT at IND 09/25 (25-37, 1 TD) 358, Hasselbeck, TEN vs. BAL 09/18 (30-42, 1 TD) 345, Romo, DAL at SF 09/18 (ot) (20-33, 2 TD) 342, Romo, DAL at NYJ 09/11 (23-36, 2 TD) 335, Sanchez, NYJ vs. DAL 09/11 (26-44, 2 TD) 335, Rivers, SD vs. MIN 09/11 (33-48, 2 TD) 332, Dalton, CIN at DEN 09/18 (27-41, 2 TD) 331, Bradford, STL at NYG 09/19 (22-46, 1 TD) 330, Ryan, ATL at TB 09/25 (26-47, 1 TD) 323, J. Campbell, OAK at BUF 09/18 (23-33, 2 TD) 319, Ryan, ATL at CHI 09/11 (31-47, 0 TD) 312, Cutler, CHI vs. ATL 09/11 (22-32, 2 TD) 312, Rodgers, GB vs. NO 09/08 (27-35, 3 TD) 311, Hasselbeck, TEN vs. DEN 09/25 (27-36, 2 TD) 309, Kolb, ARI vs. CAR 09/11 (18-27, 2 TD) 308, Rodgers, GB at CAR 09/18 (19-30, 2 TD) 305, Grossman, WAS vs. NYG 09/11 (21-34, 2 TD) 305, Stafford, DET at TB 09/11 (24-33, 3 TD) 304, K. Orton, DEN vs. OAK 09/12 (24-46, 1 TD) 302, Cutler, CHI vs. GB 09/25 (21-37, 2 TD) 100-Yard Receiving Games 217, Welker, NE at BUF 09/25 (16 rec., 2 TD) 178, S. Smith, CAR at ARI 09/11 (8 rec., 2 TD) 172, Jackson, SD at NE 09/18 (10 rec., 2 TD) 171, Maclin, PHI at ATL 09/18 (13 rec., 2 TD) 160, Welker, NE at MIA 09/12 (8 rec., 2 TD) 156, S. Smith, CAR vs. GB 09/18 (6 rec., 0 TD) 152, T. Smith, BAL at STL 09/25 (5 rec., 3 TD) 146, D. Moore, OAK at BUF 09/18 (5 rec., 1 TD) 144, Wallace, PIT at IND 09/25 (5 rec., 1 TD) 143, Austin, DAL at SF 09/18 (ot) (9 rec., 3 TD) 140, White, ATL at TB 09/25 (9 rec., 0 TD) 139, Marshall, MIA vs. NE 09/12 (7 rec., 0 TD) 136, Simpson, CIN at DEN 09/18 (4 rec., 0 TD) 136, Britt, TEN at JAX 09/11 (5 rec., 2 TD) 135, Britt, TEN vs. BAL 09/18 (9 rec., 1 TD) 133, Fitzgerald, ARI at WAS 09/18 (7 rec., 1 TD) 129, Branch, NE vs. SD 09/18 (8 rec., 0 TD) 128, A. Johnson, HOU at NO 09/25 (7 rec., 0 TD) 126, Wallace, PIT vs. SEA 09/18 (8 rec., 1 TD) 126, Casey, HOU at NO 09/25 (5 rec., 1 TD) 124, Green, CIN at DEN 09/18 (10 rec., 1 TD) 122, Alexander, STL at NYG 09/19 (3 rec., 1 TD) 122, Nicks, NYG at WAS 09/11 (7 rec., 0 TD) 119, G. Jennings, GB at CHI 09/25 (9 rec., 0 TD) 117, Forte, CHI at NO 09/18 (10 rec., 0 TD) 116, Tomlinson, NYJ at OAK 09/25 (5 rec., 1 TD) 115, Jones, ATL at TB 09/25 (6 rec., 0 TD) 114, V. Davis, SF at CIN 09/25 (8 rec., 0 TD) 113, Decker, DEN vs. CIN 09/18 (5 rec., 2 TD) 112, Pettigrew, DET at MIN 09/25 (ot) (11 rec., 0 TD) 110, Witten, DAL at NYJ 09/11 (6 rec., 0 TD) 110, Cruz, NYG at PHI 09/25 (3 rec., 2 TD) 109, R. Gronkowski, NE at BUF 09/25 (7 rec., 2 TD) 109, Rice, SEA vs. ARI 09/25 (8 rec., 0 TD) 108, C. Johnson, DET at MIN 09/25 (ot) (7 rec., 2 TD) 107, Wallace, PIT at BAL 09/11 (8 rec., 0 TD) 106, Wayne, IND at HOU 09/11 (7 rec., 1 TD) 105, F. Davis, WAS vs. NYG 09/11 (5 rec., 0 TD) 105, Doucet, ARI vs. CAR 09/11 (3 rec., 1 TD) 103, Hernandez, NE at MIA 09/12 (7 rec., 1 TD) 103, Henderson, NO vs. CHI 09/18 (3 rec., 1 TD) 102, D. Jackson, PHI at STL 09/11 (6 rec., 1 TD) 102, Witten, DAL at SF 09/18 (ot) (7 rec., 0 TD) 101, Keller, NYJ vs. JAX 09/18 (6 rec., 1 TD) 101, Jones, BUF vs. NE 09/25 (5 rec., 0 TD) 101, Bowe, KC at DET 09/18 (5 rec., 0 TD) 100, Stewart, CAR vs. GB 09/18 (8 rec., 0 TD) 100, Henderson, NO at GB 09/08 (6 rec., 1 TD) 100, Graham, NO vs. HOU 09/25 (4 rec., 1 TD) 100-Yard Rushing Games 171, D. McFadden, OAK vs. NYJ 09/25 (19 att., 2 TD) 150, D. McFadden, OAK at DEN 09/12 (22 att., 0 TD) 128, McCoy, PHI vs. NYG 09/25 (24 att., 1 TD) 122, McCoy, PHI at STL 09/11 (15 att., 1 TD) 122, Jones-Drew, JAX at CAR 09/25 (24 att., 0 TD) 121, Benson, CIN at CLE 09/11 (25 att., 1 TD) 120, Peterson, MIN vs. TB 09/18 (25 att., 2 TD) 117, Jackson, BUF vs. OAK 09/18 (15 att., 2 TD) 116, Tate, HOU vs. IND 09/11 (24 att., 1 TD) 115, Jones, DAL vs. WAS 09/26 (14 att., 0 TD) 114, Turner, ATL vs. PHI 09/18 (21 att., 1 TD) 112, Jackson, BUF at KC 09/11 (20 att., 0 TD) 107, Thomas, MIA vs. HOU 09/18 (18 att., 0 TD) 107, Rice, BAL vs. PIT 09/11 (19 att., 1 TD) 103, Tate, HOU at MIA 09/18 (23 att., 0 TD) 101, McGahee, DEN vs. CIN 09/18 (28 att., 1 TD) 100, Turner, ATL at CHI 09/11 (10 att., 0 TD)

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WEEK 3 / THROUGH MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 26, 2011 AFC / LEADING PASSERS Pct Avg Pct Pct Rating Player, Team Att Comp Comp Yds Gain TD TD Long Int Int Points Brady, N.E. 133 93 69.9 1327 9.98 11 8.3 99t 5 3.8 113.8 Fitzpatrick, Buf. 111 72 64.9 841 7.58 9 8.1 48 3 2.7 103.5 Hasselbeck, Ten. 112 78 69.6 932 8.32 5 4.5 80t 2 1.8 102.2 Schaub, Hou. 92 60 65.2 823 8.95 6 6.5 62 3 3.3 101.9 J. Campbell, Oak. 82 54 65.9 584 7.12 3 3.7 50t 1 1.2 93.8 Flacco, Bal. 109 59 54.1 810 7.43 7 6.4 74t 2 1.8 91.9 Sanchez, NY-J 111 70 63.1 886 7.98 6 5.4 74 4 3.6 90.9 Roethlisberger, Pit. 108 69 63.9 942 8.72 3 2.8 81t 4 3.7 85.5 Henne, Mia. 108 61 56.5 841 7.79 4 3.7 41 3 2.8 82.4 *Dalton, Cin. 88 54 61.4 570 6.48 3 3.4 84 2 2.3 82.1 Rivers, S.D. 126 86 68.3 979 7.77 4 3.2 37 6 4.8 82.1 K. Orton, Den. 110 63 57.3 672 6.11 5 4.5 52t 3 2.7 79.1 McCoy, Cle. 111 60 54.1 634 5.71 5 4.5 56 2 1.8 78.4 Collins, Ind. 98 48 49.0 481 4.91 2 2.0 36 1 1.0 65.9 Cassel, K.C. 82 54 65.9 428 5.22 3 3.7 45 5 6.1 65.5 McCown, Jac. 43 23 53.5 234 5.44 0 0.0 26 4 9.3 30.6 AFC / LEADING PASSERS, RANKS Pct Avg Pct Pct Rating Player, Team Att Comp Comp Yds Gain TD TD Long Int Int Points Brady, N.E. 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 14t 13 1 Fitzpatrick, Buf. 4t 4 7 6t 8 2 2 7t 7 2 Hasselbeck, Ten. 3 3 2 4 4 6t 8 3t 3 3 Schaub, Hou. 12 9t 6 8 2 4t 3 7t 10 4 J. Campbell, Oak. 14t 12t 4t 12 10 11t 10t 1t 2 5 Flacco, Bal. 8 11 13 9 9 3 4 3t 5 6 Sanchez, NY-J 4t 5 9 5 5 4t 5 11t 11 7 Roethlisberger, Pit. 9t 6 8 3 3 11t 14 11t 12 8 Henne, Mia. 9t 8 12 6t 6 9t 9 7t 9 9 *Dalton, Cin. 13 12t 10 13 11 11t 12 3t 6 10 Rivers, S.D. 2 2 3 2 7 9t 13 16 14 11 K. Orton, Den. 7 7 11 10 12 6t 6 7t 8 12 McCoy, Cle. 4t 9t 14 11 13 6t 7 3t 4 13 Collins, Ind. 11 15 16 14 16 15 15 1t 1 14 Cassel, K.C. 14t 12t 4t 15 15 11t 10t 14t 15 15 McCown, Jac. 16 16 15 16 14 18t 16 11t 16 16 NFC / LEADING PASSERS Pct Avg Pct Pct Rating Player, Team Att Comp Comp Yds Gain TD TD Long Int Int Points Rodgers, G.B. 103 74 71.8 917 8.90 8 7.8 84t 1 1.0 120.9 Stafford, Det. 118 79 66.9 977 8.28 9 7.6 60 2 1.7 110.7 Brees, N.O. 130 89 68.5 1059 8.15 9 6.9 79t 2 1.5 109.7 Manning, NY-G 85 53 62.4 745 8.76 6 7.1 74t 2 2.4 104.3 Romo, Dal. 105 65 61.9 942 8.97 4 3.8 77 2 1.9 95.8 Kolb, Ariz 96 60 62.5 812 8.46 5 5.2 73t 3 3.1 93.8 Ale. Smith, S.F. 74 51 68.9 504 6.81 2 2.7 39 1 1.4 91.3 Vick, Phi. 83 49 59.0 605 7.29 4 4.8 41 2 2.4 87.7 Grossman, Was. 114 68 59.6 846 7.42 5 4.4 40 3 2.6 86.4 *Newton, Car. 117 70 59.8 1012 8.65 4 3.4 77t 4 3.4 85.1 Cutler, Chi. 114 62 54.4 858 7.53 5 4.4 56t 3 2.6 82.4 Ryan, Atl. 122 74 60.7 844 6.92 5 4.1 49 4 3.3 81.5 McNabb, Min. 81 47 58.0 478 5.90 2 2.5 42 1 1.2 78.1 Freeman, T.B. 106 72 67.9 682 6.43 2 1.9 51 4 3.8 76.1 Jackson, Sea. 97 59 60.8 527 5.43 2 2.1 55t 2 2.1 73.7 Bradford, St.L 108 55 50.9 685 6.34 2 1.9 68 1 0.9 73.3 NFC / LEADING PASSERS, RANKS Pct Avg Pct Pct Rating Player, Team Att Comp Comp Yds Gain TD TD Long Int Int Points Rodgers, G.B. 10 3t 1 5 2 3 1 1t 2 1 Stafford, Det. 3 2 5 3 6 1t 2 5t 6 2 Brees, N.O. 1 1 3 1 7 1t 4 5t 5 3 Manning, NY-G 13 13 7 10 3 4 3 5t 9 4 Romo, Dal. 9 8 8 4 1 9t 10 5t 7 5 Kolb, Ariz 12 10 6 9 5 5t 5 11t 13 6 Ale. Smith, S.F. 16 14 2 15 12 12t 12 1t 4 7 Vick, Phi. 14 15 13 13 10 9t 6 5t 10 8 Grossman, Was. 5t 7 12 7 9 5t 7t 11t 11t 9 *Newton, Car. 4 6 11 2 4 9t 11 14t 15 10 Cutler, Chi. 5t 9 15 6 8 5t 7t 11t 11t 11 Ryan, Atl. 2 3t 10 8 11 5t 9 14t 14 12 McNabb, Min. 15 16 14 16 15 12t 13 1t 3 13 Freeman, T.B. 8 5 4 12 13 12t 15 14t 16 14 Jackson, Sea. 11 11 9 14 16 12t 14 5t 8 15 Bradford, St.L 7 12 16 11 14 12t 16 1t 1 16

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WEEK 3 / THROUGH MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 26, 2011 NFL / LEADING PASSERS Pct Avg Pct Pct Rating Player, Team Att Comp Comp Yds Gain TD TD Long Int Int Points Rodgers, G.B. 103 74 71.8 917 8.90 8 7.8 84t 1 1.0 120.9 Brady, N.E. 133 93 69.9 1327 9.98 11 8.3 99t 5 3.8 113.8 Stafford, Det. 118 79 66.9 977 8.28 9 7.6 60 2 1.7 110.7 Brees, N.O. 130 89 68.5 1059 8.15 9 6.9 79t 2 1.5 109.7 Manning, NY-G 85 53 62.4 745 8.76 6 7.1 74t 2 2.4 104.3 Fitzpatrick, Buf. 111 72 64.9 841 7.58 9 8.1 48 3 2.7 103.5 Hasselbeck, Ten. 112 78 69.6 932 8.32 5 4.5 80t 2 1.8 102.2 Schaub, Hou. 92 60 65.2 823 8.95 6 6.5 62 3 3.3 101.9 Romo, Dal. 105 65 61.9 942 8.97 4 3.8 77 2 1.9 95.8 J. Campbell, Oak. 82 54 65.9 584 7.12 3 3.7 50t 1 1.2 93.8 Kolb, Ariz 96 60 62.5 812 8.46 5 5.2 73t 3 3.1 93.8 Flacco, Bal. 109 59 54.1 810 7.43 7 6.4 74t 2 1.8 91.9 Ale. Smith, S.F. 74 51 68.9 504 6.81 2 2.7 39 1 1.4 91.3 Sanchez, NY-J 111 70 63.1 886 7.98 6 5.4 74 4 3.6 90.9 Vick, Phi. 83 49 59.0 605 7.29 4 4.8 41 2 2.4 87.7 Grossman, Was. 114 68 59.6 846 7.42 5 4.4 40 3 2.6 86.4 Roethlisberger, Pit. 108 69 63.9 942 8.72 3 2.8 81t 4 3.7 85.5 *Newton, Car. 117 70 59.8 1012 8.65 4 3.4 77t 4 3.4 85.1 Cutler, Chi. 114 62 54.4 858 7.53 5 4.4 56t 3 2.6 82.4 Henne, Mia. 108 61 56.5 841 7.79 4 3.7 41 3 2.8 82.4 *Dalton, Cin. 88 54 61.4 570 6.48 3 3.4 84 2 2.3 82.1 Rivers, S.D. 126 86 68.3 979 7.77 4 3.2 37 6 4.8 82.1 Ryan, Atl. 122 74 60.7 844 6.92 5 4.1 49 4 3.3 81.5 K. Orton, Den. 110 63 57.3 672 6.11 5 4.5 52t 3 2.7 79.1 McCoy, Cle. 111 60 54.1 634 5.71 5 4.5 56 2 1.8 78.4 McNabb, Min. 81 47 58.0 478 5.90 2 2.5 42 1 1.2 78.1 Freeman, T.B. 106 72 67.9 682 6.43 2 1.9 51 4 3.8 76.1 Jackson, Sea. 97 59 60.8 527 5.43 2 2.1 55t 2 2.1 73.7 Bradford, St.L 108 55 50.9 685 6.34 2 1.9 68 1 0.9 73.3 Collins, Ind. 98 48 49.0 481 4.91 2 2.0 36 1 1.0 65.9 Cassel, K.C. 82 54 65.9 428 5.22 3 3.7 45 5 6.1 65.5 McCown, Jac. 43 23 53.5 234 5.44 0 0.0 26 4 9.3 30.6 NFL / LEADING PASSERS, RANKS Pct Avg Pct Pct Rating Player, Team Att Comp Comp Yds Gain TD TD Long Int Int Points Rodgers, G.B. 20 6t 1 9 4 5 3 1t 2 1 Brady, N.E. 1 1 2 1 1 1 1 30t 28 2 Stafford, Det. 5 4 8 5 10 2t 4 7t 8 3 Brees, N.O. 2 2 5 2 11 2t 6 7t 7 4 Manning, NY-G 26 27 16 19 5 7t 5 7t 15 5 Fitzpatrick, Buf. 10t 8t 12 14t 15 2t 2 17t 19 6 Hasselbeck, Ten. 9 5 3 8 9 10t 14 7t 9 7 Schaub, Hou. 24 18t 11 16 3 7t 7 17t 23 8 Romo, Dal. 19 14 17 6t 2 17t 18 7t 12 9 J. Campbell, Oak. 28t 24t 9t 25 20 22t 20t 1t 4 10t Kolb, Ariz 23 18t 15 17 8 10t 10 17t 22 10t Flacco, Bal. 14 21t 28 18 17 6 8 7t 11 12 Ale. Smith, S.F. 31 28 4 28 22 26t 26 1t 6 13 Sanchez, NY-J 10t 10t 14 10 12 7t 9 24t 26 14 Vick, Phi. 27 29 23 24 19 17t 11 7t 16 15 Grossman, Was. 7t 13 22 12 18 10t 15t 17t 17t 16 Roethlisberger, Pit. 15t 12 13 6t 6 22t 25 24t 27 17 *Newton, Car. 6 10t 21 3 7 17t 22 24t 25 18 Cutler, Chi. 7t 16 27 11 16 10t 15t 17t 17t 19 Henne, Mia. 15t 17 26 14t 13 17t 19 17t 21 20 *Dalton, Cin. 25 24t 18 26 23 22t 23 7t 14 21 Rivers, S.D. 3 3 6 4 14 17t 24 32 30 22 Ryan, Atl. 4 6t 20 13 21 10t 17 24t 24 23 K. Orton, Den. 13 15 25 22 26 10t 12 17t 20 24 McCoy, Cle. 10t 18t 29 23 28 10t 13 7t 10 25 McNabb, Min. 30 31 24 30 27 26t 27 1t 5 26 Freeman, T.B. 18 8t 7 21 24 26t 30 24t 29 27 Jackson, Sea. 22 21t 19 27 30 26t 28 7t 13 28 Bradford, St.L 15t 23 31 20 25 26t 31 1t 1 29 Collins, Ind. 21 30 32 29 32 26t 29 1t 3 30 Cassel, K.C. 28t 24t 9t 31 31 22t 20t 30t 31 31 McCown, Jac. 32 32 30 32 29 35t 32 24t 32 32

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WEEK 3 / THROUGH MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 26, 2011 AFC / FOURTH-QUARTER PASSING LEADERS Rank Player, Team Att Comp Comp% Yards YPA TD TD% Int Int% Rating 1) Rivers, S.D. 30 25 83.3 262 8.73 3 10.0 0 0.0 136.4 2) J. Campbell, Oak. 17 13 76.5 221 13.00 2 11.8 1 5.9 132.6 3) Fitzpatrick, Buf. 25 18 72.0 254 10.16 2 8.0 0 0.0 131.1 4) Sanchez, NY-J 34 20 58.8 284 8.35 2 5.9 0 0.0 105.5 5) Hasselbeck, Ten. 29 20 69.0 244 8.41 2 6.9 1 3.4 103.2 6) *Gabbert, Jac. 13 10 76.9 107 8.23 0 0.0 0 0.0 100.5 7) Brady, N.E. 35 19 54.3 348 9.94 3 8.6 2 5.7 93.5 8) K. Orton, Den. 31 17 54.8 228 7.35 2 6.5 1 3.2 86.5 9) Schaub, Hou. 21 11 52.4 153 7.29 3 14.3 2 9.5 76.1 10) Collins, Ind. 29 14 48.3 168 5.79 2 6.9 1 3.4 75.1 11) Roethlisberger, Pit. 33 18 54.5 249 7.55 0 0.0 1 3.0 66.4 12) Painter, Ind. 11 5 45.5 60 5.45 0 0.0 0 0.0 62.7 13) McCoy, Cle. 39 21 53.8 165 4.23 1 2.6 1 2.6 62.4 14) *Dalton, Cin. 26 13 50.0 196 7.54 1 3.8 2 7.7 55.9 15) Cassel, K.C. 27 16 59.3 161 5.96 1 3.7 3 11.1 49.1 16) Henne, Mia. 42 18 42.9 230 5.48 1 2.4 2 4.8 48.7 17) Flacco, Bal. 17 8 47.1 120 7.06 0 0.0 1 5.9 46.2 NFC / FOURTH-QUARTER PASSING LEADERS Rank Player, Team Att Comp Comp% Yards YPA TD TD% Int Int% Rating 1) Rodgers, G.B. 16 13 81.3 196 12.25 2 12.5 1 6.3 131.3 2) Manning, NY-G 21 15 71.4 173 8.24 2 9.5 0 0.0 127.7 3) Stafford, Det. 20 14 70.0 99 4.95 2 10.0 0 0.0 114.4 4) Brees, N.O. 45 28 62.2 331 7.36 4 8.9 0 0.0 114.2 5) Ale. Smith, S.F. 11 9 81.8 114 10.36 0 0.0 0 0.0 109.8 6) Kolb, Ariz 26 15 57.7 297 11.42 2 7.7 1 3.8 107.4 7) Ryan, Atl. 40 24 60.0 321 8.03 2 5.0 0 0.0 102.2 8) Grossman, Was. 36 24 66.7 224 6.22 2 5.6 0 0.0 102.1 9) Jackson, Sea. 26 17 65.4 203 7.81 1 3.8 0 0.0 101.9 10) *Newton, Car. 41 25 61.0 374 9.12 1 2.4 0 0.0 99.0 11) Freeman, T.B. 43 30 69.8 291 6.77 2 4.7 1 2.3 94.2 12) Romo, Dal. 38 22 57.9 339 8.92 1 2.6 1 2.6 85.3 13) McNabb, Min. 25 15 60.0 162 6.48 0 0.0 0 0.0 79.1 14) Bradford, St.L 23 12 52.2 118 5.13 0 0.0 0 0.0 66.9 15) Cutler, Chi. 30 18 60.0 208 6.93 1 3.3 2 6.7 64.3 16) Kafka, Phi. 16 11 68.8 107 6.69 0 0.0 2 12.5 47.7 NFL / FOURTH-QUARTER PASSING LEADERS Rank Player, Team Att Comp Comp% Yards YPA TD TD% Int Int% Rating 1) Rivers, S.D. 30 25 83.3 262 8.73 3 10.0 0 0.0 136.4 2) J. Campbell, Oak. 17 13 76.5 221 13.00 2 11.8 1 5.9 132.6 3) Rodgers, G.B. 16 13 81.3 196 12.25 2 12.5 1 6.3 131.3 4) Fitzpatrick, Buf. 25 18 72.0 254 10.16 2 8.0 0 0.0 131.1 5) Manning, NY-G 21 15 71.4 173 8.24 2 9.5 0 0.0 127.7 6) Stafford, Det. 20 14 70.0 99 4.95 2 10.0 0 0.0 114.4 7) Brees, N.O. 45 28 62.2 331 7.36 4 8.9 0 0.0 114.2 8) Ale. Smith, S.F. 11 9 81.8 114 10.36 0 0.0 0 0.0 109.8 9) Kolb, Ariz 26 15 57.7 297 11.42 2 7.7 1 3.8 107.4 10) Sanchez, NY-J 34 20 58.8 284 8.35 2 5.9 0 0.0 105.5 11) Hasselbeck, Ten. 29 20 69.0 244 8.41 2 6.9 1 3.4 103.2 12) Ryan, Atl. 40 24 60.0 321 8.03 2 5.0 0 0.0 102.2 13) Grossman, Was. 36 24 66.7 224 6.22 2 5.6 0 0.0 102.1 14) Jackson, Sea. 26 17 65.4 203 7.81 1 3.8 0 0.0 101.9 15) *Gabbert, Jac. 13 10 76.9 107 8.23 0 0.0 0 0.0 100.5 16) *Newton, Car. 41 25 61.0 374 9.12 1 2.4 0 0.0 99.0 17) Freeman, T.B. 43 30 69.8 291 6.77 2 4.7 1 2.3 94.2 18) Brady, N.E. 35 19 54.3 348 9.94 3 8.6 2 5.7 93.5 19) K. Orton, Den. 31 17 54.8 228 7.35 2 6.5 1 3.2 86.5 20) Romo, Dal. 38 22 57.9 339 8.92 1 2.6 1 2.6 85.3 21) McNabb, Min. 25 15 60.0 162 6.48 0 0.0 0 0.0 79.1 22) Schaub, Hou. 21 11 52.4 153 7.29 3 14.3 2 9.5 76.1 23) Collins, Ind. 29 14 48.3 168 5.79 2 6.9 1 3.4 75.1 24) Bradford, St.L 23 12 52.2 118 5.13 0 0.0 0 0.0 66.9 25) Roethlisberger, Pit. 33 18 54.5 249 7.55 0 0.0 1 3.0 66.4 26) Cutler, Chi. 30 18 60.0 208 6.93 1 3.3 2 6.7 64.3 27) Painter, Ind. 11 5 45.5 60 5.45 0 0.0 0 0.0 62.7 28) McCoy, Cle. 39 21 53.8 165 4.23 1 2.6 1 2.6 62.4 29) *Dalton, Cin. 26 13 50.0 196 7.54 1 3.8 2 7.7 55.9 30) Cassel, K.C. 27 16 59.3 161 5.96 1 3.7 3 11.1 49.1 31) Henne, Mia. 42 18 42.9 230 5.48 1 2.4 2 4.8 48.7 32) Kafka, Phi. 16 11 68.8 107 6.69 0 0.0 2 12.5 47.7 33) Flacco, Bal. 17 8 47.1 120 7.06 0 0.0 1 5.9 46.2

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WEEK 3 / THROUGH MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 26, 2011 AFC / THIRD-DOWN PASSING LEADERS Rank Player, Team Att Comp Comp% Yards YPA TD TD% Int Int% Rating 1) Hasselbeck, Ten. 37 30 81.1 332 8.97 2 5.4 0 0.0 122.1 2) Brady, N.E. 28 16 57.1 204 7.29 2 7.1 0 0.0 103.9 3) Roethlisberger, Pit. 31 18 58.1 304 9.81 1 3.2 0 0.0 102.1 4) K. Orton, Den. 29 19 65.5 170 5.86 3 10.3 1 3.4 101.2 5) Fitzpatrick, Buf. 27 17 63.0 118 4.37 4 14.8 1 3.7 96.9 6) Rivers, S.D. 33 23 69.7 281 8.52 2 6.1 2 6.1 90.6 7) Sanchez, NY-J 32 20 62.5 215 6.72 2 6.3 1 3.1 90.0 8) J. Campbell, Oak. 24 13 54.2 134 5.58 1 4.2 0 0.0 84.4 9) Schaub, Hou. 27 15 55.6 271 10.04 1 3.7 2 7.4 71.7 10) Henne, Mia. 28 15 53.6 154 5.50 0 0.0 0 0.0 69.6 11) McCoy, Cle. 32 14 43.8 151 4.72 2 6.3 1 3.1 66.0 12) *Dalton, Cin. 24 10 41.7 46 1.92 1 4.2 0 0.0 63.2 13) Flacco, Bal. 28 12 42.9 160 5.71 1 3.6 1 3.6 58.6 14) Cassel, K.C. 25 15 60.0 129 5.16 1 4.0 2 8.0 53.6 15) McCown, Jac. 17 9 52.9 121 7.12 0 0.0 1 5.9 51.3 16) Collins, Ind. 30 13 43.3 124 4.13 0 0.0 1 3.3 41.5 NFC / THIRD-DOWN PASSING LEADERS Rank Player, Team Att Comp Comp% Yards YPA TD TD% Int Int% Rating 1) Brees, N.O. 33 26 78.8 394 11.94 6 18.2 0 0.0 156.0 2) Rodgers, G.B. 30 22 73.3 254 8.47 3 10.0 0 0.0 131.8 3) Freeman, T.B. 28 25 89.3 256 9.14 0 0.0 0 0.0 104.8 4) Manning, NY-G 24 13 54.2 247 10.29 2 8.3 1 4.2 100.5 5) Ryan, Atl. 27 17 63.0 166 6.15 2 7.4 1 3.7 89.4 6) Romo, Dal. 28 15 53.6 213 7.61 2 7.1 1 3.6 87.4 7) *Newton, Car. 28 14 50.0 226 8.07 2 7.1 1 3.6 86.3 8) Vick, Phi. 19 12 63.2 137 7.21 1 5.3 1 5.3 80.4 9) Kolb, Ariz 27 15 55.6 211 7.81 1 3.7 1 3.7 77.9 10) Ale. Smith, S.F. 22 14 63.6 125 5.68 1 4.5 1 4.5 75.0 11) Bradford, St.L 33 13 39.4 221 6.70 1 3.0 0 0.0 72.9 12) Stafford, Det. 34 16 47.1 229 6.74 1 2.9 1 2.9 66.9 13) McNabb, Min. 24 9 37.5 111 4.63 1 4.2 0 0.0 66.5 14) Cutler, Chi. 34 17 50.0 192 5.65 1 2.9 1 2.9 64.8 15) Jackson, Sea. 26 12 46.2 106 4.08 0 0.0 0 0.0 57.5 16) Grossman, Was. 36 14 38.9 184 5.11 1 2.8 2 5.6 41.9 NFL / THIRD-DOWN PASSING LEADERS Rank Player, Team Att Comp Comp% Yards YPA TD TD% Int Int% Rating 1) Brees, N.O. 33 26 78.8 394 11.94 6 18.2 0 0.0 156.0 2) Rodgers, G.B. 30 22 73.3 254 8.47 3 10.0 0 0.0 131.8 3) Hasselbeck, Ten. 37 30 81.1 332 8.97 2 5.4 0 0.0 122.1 4) Freeman, T.B. 28 25 89.3 256 9.14 0 0.0 0 0.0 104.8 5) Brady, N.E. 28 16 57.1 204 7.29 2 7.1 0 0.0 103.9 6) Roethlisberger, Pit. 31 18 58.1 304 9.81 1 3.2 0 0.0 102.1 7) K. Orton, Den. 29 19 65.5 170 5.86 3 10.3 1 3.4 101.2 8) Manning, NY-G 24 13 54.2 247 10.29 2 8.3 1 4.2 100.5 9) Fitzpatrick, Buf. 27 17 63.0 118 4.37 4 14.8 1 3.7 96.9 10) Rivers, S.D. 33 23 69.7 281 8.52 2 6.1 2 6.1 90.6 11) Sanchez, NY-J 32 20 62.5 215 6.72 2 6.3 1 3.1 90.0 12) Ryan, Atl. 27 17 63.0 166 6.15 2 7.4 1 3.7 89.4 13) Romo, Dal. 28 15 53.6 213 7.61 2 7.1 1 3.6 87.4 14) *Newton, Car. 28 14 50.0 226 8.07 2 7.1 1 3.6 86.3 15) J. Campbell, Oak. 24 13 54.2 134 5.58 1 4.2 0 0.0 84.4 16) Vick, Phi. 19 12 63.2 137 7.21 1 5.3 1 5.3 80.4 17) Kolb, Ariz 27 15 55.6 211 7.81 1 3.7 1 3.7 77.9 18) Ale. Smith, S.F. 22 14 63.6 125 5.68 1 4.5 1 4.5 75.0 19) Bradford, St.L 33 13 39.4 221 6.70 1 3.0 0 0.0 72.9 20) Schaub, Hou. 27 15 55.6 271 10.04 1 3.7 2 7.4 71.7 21) Henne, Mia. 28 15 53.6 154 5.50 0 0.0 0 0.0 69.6 22) Stafford, Det. 34 16 47.1 229 6.74 1 2.9 1 2.9 66.9 23) McNabb, Min. 24 9 37.5 111 4.63 1 4.2 0 0.0 66.5 24) McCoy, Cle. 32 14 43.8 151 4.72 2 6.3 1 3.1 66.0 25) Cutler, Chi. 34 17 50.0 192 5.65 1 2.9 1 2.9 64.8 26) *Dalton, Cin. 24 10 41.7 46 1.92 1 4.2 0 0.0 63.2 27) Flacco, Bal. 28 12 42.9 160 5.71 1 3.6 1 3.6 58.6 28) Jackson, Sea. 26 12 46.2 106 4.08 0 0.0 0 0.0 57.5 29) Cassel, K.C. 25 15 60.0 129 5.16 1 4.0 2 8.0 53.6 30) McCown, Jac. 17 9 52.9 121 7.12 0 0.0 1 5.9 51.3 31) Grossman, Was. 36 14 38.9 184 5.11 1 2.8 2 5.6 41.9 32) Collins, Ind. 30 13 43.3 124 4.13 0 0.0 1 3.3 41.5

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WEEK 3 / THROUGH MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 26, 2011 AFC / LEADING RUSHERS Rank Player, Team Att Yards Avg Long TD 1) D. McFadden, Oak. 61 393 6.4 70t 3 2) Jones-Drew, Jac. 66 307 4.7 39 1 3) Jackson, Buf. 47 303 6.4 43t 3 4) Tate, Hou. 66 301 4.6 19 1 5) Benson, Cin. 58 244 4.2 39t 1 6) Rice, Bal. 41 231 5.6 53 1 7) Mathews, S.D. 45 207 4.6 21 3 8) *Thomas, Mia. 41 202 4.9 14 0 9) Addai, Ind. 39 189 4.8 15 1 10) McGahee, Den. 54 156 2.9 12 1 11) Hillis, Cle. 44 151 3.4 24t 2 12) Mendenhall, Pit. 49 148 3.0 23 1 13) McCluster, K.C. (WR) 21 138 6.6 24 0 14) Greene, NY-J 41 134 3.3 15 1 15) Green-Ellis, N.E. 34 122 3.6 16t 2 16) Henne, Mia. (QB) 14 111 7.9 20 1 17) R. Williams, Bal. 21 107 5.1 28 0 18) Woodhead, N.E. 24 102 4.3 10 0 19) C. Johnson, Ten. 46 98 2.1 9 0 20) Hardesty, Cle. 22 86 3.9 19 0 21) Charles, K.C. 12 83 6.9 24 0 22t) *Carter, Ind. 22 82 3.7 18 0 22t) Spiller, Buf. 10 82 8.2 26 1 24) Bush, Oak. 21 75 3.6 22 2 25) Jones, K.C. 28 74 2.6 12 0 26) Bush, Mia. 27 69 2.6 13 0 27) Redman, Pit. 16 67 4.2 20t 1 28) Tolbert, S.D. 25 64 2.6 13 1 29) Tomlinson, NY-J 17 62 3.6 20 0 30) Karim, Jac. 25 52 2.1 9 0 31) *Ridley, N.E. 8 51 6.4 16 0 32) *D. Moore, Oak. (WR) 2 48 24.0 25 1 33) Ward, Hou. 11 39 3.5 9 1 34) Ball, Den. 7 35 5.0 17 0 35) Sanchez, NY-J (QB) 6 34 5.7 17 1 36) Foster, Hou. 10 33 3.3 14 0 37t) Roethlisberger, Pit. (QB) 11 32 2.9 11 0 37t) B. Smith, Buf. (WR) 7 32 4.6 11 0 39) Flacco, Bal. (QB) 8 27 3.4 9 0 40) *J. White, Buf. 8 26 3.3 13 0 41) Scott, Cin. 8 23 2.9 9 0 42) Moreno, Den. 8 22 2.8 9 0 43) Kern, Ten. (P) 1 21 21.0 21 0 44t) Fitzpatrick, Buf. (QB) 10 20 2.0 13 0 44t) Slaton, Hou. 7 20 2.9 13 0 46t) McCoy, Cle. (QB) 8 19 2.4 9 0 46t) Welker, N.E. (WR) 1 19 19.0 19 0 48t) McClain, K.C. 6 17 2.8 12 0 48t) Owens, Jac. 3 17 5.7 7 0 50t) Battle, K.C. 5 15 3.0 4 0 50t) J. Campbell, Oak. (QB) 12 15 1.3 10 2 50t) Leonard, Cin. 2 15 7.5 11 0 50t) Reece, Oak. 2 15 7.5 11 0 50t) Ringer, Ten. 11 15 1.4 12 1

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WEEK 3 / THROUGH MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 26, 2011 NFC / LEADING RUSHERS Rank Player, Team Att Yards Avg Long TD 1) McCoy, Phi. 57 345 6.1 49t 4 2) Peterson, Min. 58 296 5.1 46 3 3) Turner, Atl. 42 234 5.6 61 1 4) Hightower, Was. 59 209 3.5 22 1 5) C. Williams, St.L 50 202 4.0 16 0 6) Bradshaw, NY-G 43 189 4.4 37 1 7) Jones, Dal. 40 184 4.6 40 1 8) Wells, Ariz 32 183 5.7 25 2 9) Blount, T.B. 42 167 4.0 27t 2 10) Grant, G.B. 32 157 4.9 14 0 11) Vick, Phi. (QB) 24 153 6.4 19 0 12) Gore, S.F. 59 148 2.5 16 1 13) Starks, G.B. 32 147 4.6 40 1 14) Best, Det. 49 143 2.9 12 1 15) *M. Ingram, N.O. 36 129 3.6 17 1 16) Forte, Chi. 35 119 3.4 42 0 17) Lynch, Sea. 38 117 3.1 23 0 18) P. Thomas, N.O. 21 100 4.8 21 0 19t) Jacobs, NY-G 29 98 3.4 14 1 19t) *Newton, Car. (QB) 25 98 3.9 12 2 21) *Helu, Was. 16 91 5.7 18 0 22) Stewart, Car. 23 90 3.9 20 0 23) Jackson, St.L 6 79 13.2 47t 1 24) Freeman, T.B. (QB) 17 77 4.5 15 1 25) Harvin, Min. (WR) 8 74 9.3 39 0 26) D. Williams, Car. 27 61 2.3 8 0 27) Sproles, N.O. 8 59 7.4 30t 1 28) McNabb, Min. (QB) 9 55 6.1 23 0 29t) Gerhart, Min. 6 54 9.0 31 0 29t) A. Smith, Ariz 17 54 3.2 9 0 31) Jackson, Sea. (QB) 11 45 4.1 11t 1 32) Ale. Smith, S.F. (QB) 10 43 4.3 12 1 33) Harrison, Det. 14 41 2.9 9 0 34t) Graham, T.B. 11 30 2.7 9 0 34t) *Hunter, S.F. 11 30 2.7 11 1 36) K. Williams, Det. 11 28 2.5 14 1 37t) *Murray, Dal. 10 27 2.7 8 0 37t) Washington, Sea. 4 27 6.8 21 0 39) *Rodgers, Atl. 7 24 3.4 10 0 40t) Bell, Chi. 11 23 2.1 6 0 40t) Brown, Phi. 10 23 2.3 11 0 40t) Cutler, Chi. (QB) 4 23 5.8 12 0 43t) Bradford, St.L (QB) 7 22 3.1 17 0 43t) Ware, NY-G 3 22 7.3 12 0 45t) Burleson, Det. (WR) 1 20 20.0 20 0 45t) Taylor, Ariz 9 20 2.2 8 0 47t) Norwood, St.L 6 18 3.0 7 0 47t) Ryan, Atl. (QB) 5 18 3.6 12 0 49) Rodgers, G.B. (QB) 10 17 1.7 8 0 50) Kolb, Ariz (QB) 7 15 2.1 7 0

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WEEK 3 / THROUGH MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 26, 2011 NFL / LEADING RUSHERS Rank Player, Team Att Yards Avg Long TD 1) D. McFadden, Oak. 61 393 6.4 70t 3 2) McCoy, Phi. 57 345 6.1 49t 4 3) Jones-Drew, Jac. 66 307 4.7 39 1 4) Jackson, Buf. 47 303 6.4 43t 3 5) Tate, Hou. 66 301 4.6 19 1 6) Peterson, Min. 58 296 5.1 46 3 7) Benson, Cin. 58 244 4.2 39t 1 8) Turner, Atl. 42 234 5.6 61 1 9) Rice, Bal. 41 231 5.6 53 1 10) Hightower, Was. 59 209 3.5 22 1 11) Mathews, S.D. 45 207 4.6 21 3 12t) *Thomas, Mia. 41 202 4.9 14 0 12t) C. Williams, St.L 50 202 4.0 16 0 14t) Addai, Ind. 39 189 4.8 15 1 14t) Bradshaw, NY-G 43 189 4.4 37 1 16) Jones, Dal. 40 184 4.6 40 1 17) Wells, Ariz 32 183 5.7 25 2 18) Blount, T.B. 42 167 4.0 27t 2 19) Grant, G.B. 32 157 4.9 14 0 20) McGahee, Den. 54 156 2.9 12 1 21) Vick, Phi. (QB) 24 153 6.4 19 0 22) Hillis, Cle. 44 151 3.4 24t 2 23t) Gore, S.F. 59 148 2.5 16 1 23t) Mendenhall, Pit. 49 148 3.0 23 1 25) Starks, G.B. 32 147 4.6 40 1 26) Best, Det. 49 143 2.9 12 1 27) McCluster, K.C. (WR) 21 138 6.6 24 0 28) Greene, NY-J 41 134 3.3 15 1 29) *M. Ingram, N.O. 36 129 3.6 17 1 30) Green-Ellis, N.E. 34 122 3.6 16t 2 31) Forte, Chi. 35 119 3.4 42 0 32) Lynch, Sea. 38 117 3.1 23 0 33) Henne, Mia. (QB) 14 111 7.9 20 1 34) R. Williams, Bal. 21 107 5.1 28 0 35) Woodhead, N.E. 24 102 4.3 10 0 36) P. Thomas, N.O. 21 100 4.8 21 0 37t) Jacobs, NY-G 29 98 3.4 14 1 37t) C. Johnson, Ten. 46 98 2.1 9 0 37t) *Newton, Car. (QB) 25 98 3.9 12 2 40) *Helu, Was. 16 91 5.7 18 0 41) Stewart, Car. 23 90 3.9 20 0 42) Hardesty, Cle. 22 86 3.9 19 0 43) Charles, K.C. 12 83 6.9 24 0 44t) *Carter, Ind. 22 82 3.7 18 0 44t) Spiller, Buf. 10 82 8.2 26 1 46) Jackson, St.L 6 79 13.2 47t 1 47) Freeman, T.B. (QB) 17 77 4.5 15 1 48) Bush, Oak. 21 75 3.6 22 2 49t) Harvin, Min. (WR) 8 74 9.3 39 0 49t) Jones, K.C. 28 74 2.6 12 0

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WEEK 3 / THROUGH MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 26, 2011 AFC / THIRD-AND-ONE RUSHING LEADERS Rank Player, Team Att FD Pct 1t) Fitzpatrick, Buf. 2 2 100.0 1t) Flacco, Bal. 2 2 100.0 1t) Redman, Pit. 2 2 100.0 1t) B. Smith, Buf. 2 2 100.0 1t) Tate, Hou. 2 2 100.0 1t) Brady, N.E. 1 1 100.0 1t) Green-Ellis, N.E. 1 1 100.0 1t) Hester, S.D. 1 1 100.0 1t) Hilliard, Mia. 1 1 100.0 1t) Jackson, Buf. 1 1 100.0 1t) Karim, Jac. 1 1 100.0 1t) McGahee, Den. 1 1 100.0 1t) Roethlisberger, Pit. 1 1 100.0 1t) Tolbert, S.D. 1 1 100.0 1t) Ward, Hou. 1 1 100.0 1t) Woodhead, N.E. 1 1 100.0 17) Rice, Bal. 4 3 75.0 18t) J. Campbell, Oak. 3 2 66.7 18t) McCown, Jac. 3 2 66.7 20t) Bush, Oak. 2 1 50.0 20t) *Carter, Ind. 2 1 50.0 20t) Hillis, Cle. 2 1 50.0 23) Jones-Drew, Jac. 5 2 40.0 24) Benson, Cin. 3 1 33.3 NFC / THIRD-AND-ONE RUSHING LEADERS Rank Player, Team Att FD Pct 1t) Gore, S.F. 2 2 100.0 1t) Lynch, Sea. 2 2 100.0 1t) Peterson, Min. 2 2 100.0 1t) Wells, Ariz 2 2 100.0 1t) Dixon, S.F. 1 1 100.0 1t) Forte, Chi. 1 1 100.0 1t) Freeman, T.B. 1 1 100.0 1t) Gerhart, Min. 1 1 100.0 1t) D. Jackson, Phi. 1 1 100.0 1t) Kuhn, G.B. 1 1 100.0 1t) *Newton, Car. 1 1 100.0 1t) Turner, Atl. 1 1 100.0 1t) Vick, Phi. 1 1 100.0 1t) C. Williams, St.L 1 1 100.0 1t) E. Williams, Cle.-Sea. 1 1 100.0 1t) Young, Was. 1 1 100.0 17) McCoy, Phi. 4 3 75.0 18) *M. Ingram, N.O. 6 4 66.7 19t) Bradshaw, NY-G 2 1 50.0 19t) Choice, Dal. 2 1 50.0 19t) Cooley, Was. 2 1 50.0 19t) Starks, G.B. 2 1 50.0 19t) K. Williams, Det. 2 1 50.0

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WEEK 3 / THROUGH MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 26, 2011 NFL / THIRD-AND-ONE RUSHING LEADERS Rank Player, Team Att FD Pct 1t) Fitzpatrick, Buf. 2 2 100.0 1t) Flacco, Bal. 2 2 100.0 1t) Gore, S.F. 2 2 100.0 1t) Lynch, Sea. 2 2 100.0 1t) Peterson, Min. 2 2 100.0 1t) Redman, Pit. 2 2 100.0 1t) B. Smith, Buf. 2 2 100.0 1t) Tate, Hou. 2 2 100.0 1t) Wells, Ariz 2 2 100.0 1t) Brady, N.E. 1 1 100.0 1t) Dixon, S.F. 1 1 100.0 1t) Forte, Chi. 1 1 100.0 1t) Freeman, T.B. 1 1 100.0 1t) Gerhart, Min. 1 1 100.0 1t) Green-Ellis, N.E. 1 1 100.0 1t) Hester, S.D. 1 1 100.0 1t) Hilliard, Mia. 1 1 100.0 1t) D. Jackson, Phi. 1 1 100.0 1t) Jackson, Buf. 1 1 100.0 1t) Karim, Jac. 1 1 100.0 1t) Kuhn, G.B. 1 1 100.0 1t) McGahee, Den. 1 1 100.0 1t) *Newton, Car. 1 1 100.0 1t) Roethlisberger, Pit. 1 1 100.0 1t) Tolbert, S.D. 1 1 100.0 1t) Turner, Atl. 1 1 100.0 1t) Vick, Phi. 1 1 100.0 1t) Ward, Hou. 1 1 100.0 1t) C. Williams, St.L 1 1 100.0 1t) E. Williams, Cle.-Sea. 1 1 100.0 1t) Woodhead, N.E. 1 1 100.0 1t) Young, Was. 1 1 100.0 33t) McCoy, Phi. 4 3 75.0 33t) Rice, Bal. 4 3 75.0 35t) *M. Ingram, N.O. 6 4 66.7 35t) J. Campbell, Oak. 3 2 66.7 35t) McCown, Jac. 3 2 66.7 38t) Bradshaw, NY-G 2 1 50.0 38t) Bush, Oak. 2 1 50.0 38t) *Carter, Ind. 2 1 50.0 38t) Choice, Dal. 2 1 50.0 38t) Cooley, Was. 2 1 50.0 38t) Hillis, Cle. 2 1 50.0 38t) Starks, G.B. 2 1 50.0 38t) K. Williams, Det. 2 1 50.0 46) Jones-Drew, Jac. 5 2 40.0 47) Benson, Cin. 3 1 33.3

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WEEK 3 / THROUGH MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 26, 2011 AFC / LEADERS IN RECEPTIONS Rank Player, Team Rec Yards Avg Long TD 1) Welker, N.E. 31 458 14.8 99t 4 2t) Wallace, Pit. 21 377 18.0 81t 2 2t) A. Johnson, Hou. 21 316 15.0 48 2 2t) Washington, Ten. 21 258 12.3 42 1 5t) St. Johnson, Buf. 20 256 12.8 33 3 5t) Nelson, Buf. 20 233 11.7 35 1 5t) Tolbert, S.D. (RB) 20 155 7.8 21 2 8t) Britt, Ten. 17 289 17.0 80t 3 8t) R. Gronkowski, N.E. (TE) 17 281 16.5 30 5 8t) Jackson, S.D. 17 266 15.6 29 2 8t) Marshall, Mia. 17 261 15.4 31 1 12) Keller, NY-J (TE) 16 249 15.6 37 2 13t) Branch, N.E. 15 222 14.8 33 0 13t) Decker, Den. 15 214 14.3 52t 2 13t) *Green, Cin. 15 194 12.9 41t 2 13t) Thomas, Jac. 15 139 9.3 36t 1 17t) Wayne, Ind. 14 196 14.0 36 1 17t) Boldin, Bal. 14 194 13.9 27t 1 17t) Mathews, S.D. (RB) 14 186 13.3 37 0 17t) Rice, Bal. (RB) 14 178 12.7 31t 2 17t) Hernandez, N.E. (TE) 14 165 11.8 30 2 17t) McCluster, K.C. 14 40 2.9 10 0 23) C. Johnson, Ten. (RB) 13 91 7.0 34 0 24t) Tomlinson, NY-J (RB) 12 196 16.3 74 1 24t) Bess, Mia. 12 186 15.5 41 0 24t) Garcon, Ind. 12 149 12.4 29 0 24t) Dickson, Bal. (TE) 12 135 11.3 19 1 24t) Gresham, Cin. (TE) 12 117 9.8 22 1 24t) Ward, Pit. 12 117 9.8 31 0 30t) Bowe, K.C. 11 185 16.8 45 1 30t) Jones, Buf. 11 128 11.6 48 1 30t) D. McFadden, Oak. (RB) 11 84 7.6 16 1 30t) Bush, Mia. (RB) 11 71 6.5 16 1 34t) Hartline, Mia. 10 170 17.0 38 1 34t) A. Brown, Pit. 10 156 15.6 21 0 34t) Holmes, NY-J 10 131 13.1 28 1 34t) Lloyd, Den. 10 127 12.7 20 0 34t) Watson, Cle. (TE) 10 125 12.5 34t 1 34t) Clark, Ind. (TE) 10 83 8.3 17 1 34t) Mason, NY-J 10 71 7.1 13 0 34t) Greene, NY-J (RB) 10 60 6.0 15 0 34t) Hillis, Cle. (RB) 10 53 5.3 19 0 43t) Simpson, Cin. 9 186 20.7 84 0 43t) *D. Moore, Oak. 9 180 20.0 50t 1 43t) H. Miller, Pit. (TE) 9 129 14.3 30 0 43t) Daniels, Hou. (TE) 9 113 12.6 23 2 43t) Chandler, Buf. (TE) 9 89 9.9 19 4 43t) Caldwell, Cin. 9 80 8.9 14 1 43t) McGahee, Den. (RB) 9 39 4.3 12 1 50t) Casey, Hou. (TE) 8 155 19.4 62 1 50t) Massaquoi, Cle. 8 148 18.5 56 1 50t) Jackson, Buf. (RB) 8 115 14.4 38 0 50t) McMichael, S.D. (TE) 8 77 9.6 26 0 50t) Gates, S.D. (TE) 8 74 9.3 15 0 50t) *Little, Cle. 8 74 9.3 18 0 50t) Pope, K.C. (TE) 8 65 8.1 23 1 50t) Collie, Ind. 8 53 6.6 13 0

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WEEK 3 / THROUGH MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 26, 2011 NFC / LEADERS IN RECEPTIONS Rank Player, Team Rec Yards Avg Long TD 1) Forte, Chi. (RB) 22 287 13.0 56t 1 2) Sproles, N.O. (RB) 21 168 8.0 36 1 3t) White, Atl. 20 224 11.2 30 1 3t) Graham, T.B. (RB) 20 116 5.8 16 0 5t) Witten, Dal. (TE) 19 272 14.3 64 0 5t) Maclin, Phi. 19 260 13.7 43 2 7) G. Jennings, G.B. 18 263 14.6 49t 2 8t) S. Smith, Car. 16 349 21.8 77t 2 8t) C. Johnson, Det. 16 225 14.1 40 6 8t) Moss, Was. 16 207 12.9 36 1 8t) Pettigrew, Det. (TE) 16 176 11.0 27 0 12t) Fitzgerald, Ariz 15 259 17.3 73t 2 12t) Finley, G.B. (TE) 15 206 13.7 39 3 12t) Best, Det. (RB) 15 182 12.1 60 1 12t) V. Davis, S.F. (TE) 15 179 11.9 39 0 12t) Jenkins, Min. 15 143 9.5 24 1 17t) Graham, N.O. (TE) 14 235 16.8 32 2 17t) Austin, Dal. 14 233 16.6 53t 4 17t) Nicks, NY-G 14 185 13.2 68 1 17t) Gonzalez, Atl. (TE) 14 173 12.4 30 3 17t) Burleson, Det. 14 165 11.8 29 0 17t) Meachem, N.O. 14 131 9.4 31t 3 23t) *Jones, Atl. 13 215 16.5 49 0 23t) Gaffney, Was. 13 176 13.5 39 1 23t) Stewart, Car. (RB) 13 140 10.8 21 0 26t) Henderson, N.O. 12 265 22.1 79t 2 26t) F. Davis, Was. (TE) 12 214 17.8 40 1 26t) Olsen, Car. (TE) 12 169 14.1 43 1 26t) B. Gibson, St.L 12 157 13.1 34t 1 26t) Harvin, Min. 12 130 10.8 21 0 26t) Winslow, T.B. (TE) 12 130 10.8 22 0 32t) Parker, T.B. 11 153 13.9 51 0 32t) Bradshaw, NY-G (RB) 11 108 9.8 26 1 34t) Nelson, G.B. 10 201 20.1 84t 2 34t) Doucet, Ariz 10 175 17.5 70t 1 34t) D. Jackson, Phi. 10 153 15.3 41 1 34t) Sims-Walker, St.L 10 133 13.3 33 0 34t) Moore, N.O. 10 94 9.4 16t 1 34t) M. Williams, T.B. 10 89 8.9 18 1 40t) Knox, Chi. 9 189 21.0 40 0 40t) *T. Young, Det. 9 140 15.6 43 0 40t) Shockey, Car. (TE) 9 137 15.2 23 0 40t) Heap, Ariz (TE) 9 109 12.1 28 0 40t) Roberts, Ariz 9 89 9.9 17 0 40t) Hightower, Was. (RB) 9 74 8.2 19 1 40t) *Sanzenbacher, Chi. 9 66 7.3 17 2 40t) Douglas, Atl. 9 64 7.1 16 0 40t) C. Williams, St.L (RB) 9 57 6.3 16 0 40t) McCoy, Phi. (RB) 9 49 5.4 10 1 50t) LaFell, Car. 8 119 14.9 32 1 50t) Rice, Sea. 8 109 13.6 32 0 50t) Avant, Phi. 8 102 12.8 29 0 50t) Benn, T.B. 8 71 8.9 25t 1 50t) Obomanu, Sea. 8 59 7.4 11 0 50t) Peterson, Min. (RB) 8 46 5.8 10 0 50t) Snelling, Atl. (RB) 8 43 5.4 10 0

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WEEK 3 / THROUGH MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 26, 2011 NFL / LEADERS IN RECEPTIONS Rank Player, Team Rec Yards Avg Long TD 1) Welker, N.E. 31 458 14.8 99t 4 2) Forte, Chi. (RB) 22 287 13.0 56t 1 3t) Wallace, Pit. 21 377 18.0 81t 2 3t) A. Johnson, Hou. 21 316 15.0 48 2 3t) Washington, Ten. 21 258 12.3 42 1 3t) Sproles, N.O. (RB) 21 168 8.0 36 1 7t) St. Johnson, Buf. 20 256 12.8 33 3 7t) Nelson, Buf. 20 233 11.7 35 1 7t) White, Atl. 20 224 11.2 30 1 7t) Tolbert, S.D. (RB) 20 155 7.8 21 2 7t) Graham, T.B. (RB) 20 116 5.8 16 0 12t) Witten, Dal. (TE) 19 272 14.3 64 0 12t) Maclin, Phi. 19 260 13.7 43 2 14) G. Jennings, G.B. 18 263 14.6 49t 2 15t) Britt, Ten. 17 289 17.0 80t 3 15t) R. Gronkowski, N.E. (TE) 17 281 16.5 30 5 15t) Jackson, S.D. 17 266 15.6 29 2 15t) Marshall, Mia. 17 261 15.4 31 1 19t) S. Smith, Car. 16 349 21.8 77t 2 19t) Keller, NY-J (TE) 16 249 15.6 37 2 19t) C. Johnson, Det. 16 225 14.1 40 6 19t) Moss, Was. 16 207 12.9 36 1 19t) Pettigrew, Det. (TE) 16 176 11.0 27 0 24t) Fitzgerald, Ariz 15 259 17.3 73t 2 24t) Branch, N.E. 15 222 14.8 33 0 24t) Decker, Den. 15 214 14.3 52t 2 24t) Finley, G.B. (TE) 15 206 13.7 39 3 24t) *Green, Cin. 15 194 12.9 41t 2 24t) Best, Det. (RB) 15 182 12.1 60 1 24t) V. Davis, S.F. (TE) 15 179 11.9 39 0 24t) Jenkins, Min. 15 143 9.5 24 1 24t) Thomas, Jac. 15 139 9.3 36t 1 33t) Graham, N.O. (TE) 14 235 16.8 32 2 33t) Austin, Dal. 14 233 16.6 53t 4 33t) Wayne, Ind. 14 196 14.0 36 1 33t) Boldin, Bal. 14 194 13.9 27t 1 33t) Mathews, S.D. (RB) 14 186 13.3 37 0 33t) Nicks, NY-G 14 185 13.2 68 1 33t) Rice, Bal. (RB) 14 178 12.7 31t 2 33t) Gonzalez, Atl. (TE) 14 173 12.4 30 3 33t) Burleson, Det. 14 165 11.8 29 0 33t) Hernandez, N.E. (TE) 14 165 11.8 30 2 33t) Meachem, N.O. 14 131 9.4 31t 3 33t) McCluster, K.C. 14 40 2.9 10 0 45t) *Jones, Atl. 13 215 16.5 49 0 45t) Gaffney, Was. 13 176 13.5 39 1 45t) Stewart, Car. (RB) 13 140 10.8 21 0 45t) C. Johnson, Ten. (RB) 13 91 7.0 34 0 49t) Henderson, N.O. 12 265 22.1 79t 2 49t) F. Davis, Was. (TE) 12 214 17.8 40 1 49t) Tomlinson, NY-J (RB) 12 196 16.3 74 1 49t) Bess, Mia. 12 186 15.5 41 0 49t) Olsen, Car. (TE) 12 169 14.1 43 1 49t) B. Gibson, St.L 12 157 13.1 34t 1 49t) Garcon, Ind. 12 149 12.4 29 0 49t) Dickson, Bal. (TE) 12 135 11.3 19 1 49t) Harvin, Min. 12 130 10.8 21 0 49t) Winslow, T.B. (TE) 12 130 10.8 22 0 49t) Gresham, Cin. (TE) 12 117 9.8 22 1 49t) Ward, Pit. 12 117 9.8 31 0

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WEEK 3 / THROUGH MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 26, 2011 AFC / RECEIVING YARDAGE LEADERS Rank Player, Team Yards Rec Avg Long TD 1) Welker, N.E. 458 31 14.8 99t 4 2) Wallace, Pit. 377 21 18.0 81t 2 3) A. Johnson, Hou. 316 21 15.0 48 2 4) Britt, Ten. 289 17 17.0 80t 3 5) R. Gronkowski, N.E. (TE) 281 17 16.5 30 5 6) Jackson, S.D. 266 17 15.6 29 2 7) Marshall, Mia. 261 17 15.4 31 1 8) Washington, Ten. 258 21 12.3 42 1 9) St. Johnson, Buf. 256 20 12.8 33 3 10) Keller, NY-J (TE) 249 16 15.6 37 2 11) Nelson, Buf. 233 20 11.7 35 1 12) Branch, N.E. 222 15 14.8 33 0 13) Decker, Den. 214 15 14.3 52t 2 14t) Tomlinson, NY-J (RB) 196 12 16.3 74 1 14t) Wayne, Ind. 196 14 14.0 36 1 16t) Boldin, Bal. 194 14 13.9 27t 1 16t) *Green, Cin. 194 15 12.9 41t 2 18t) Bess, Mia. 186 12 15.5 41 0 18t) Mathews, S.D. (RB) 186 14 13.3 37 0 18t) Simpson, Cin. 186 9 20.7 84 0 21) Bowe, K.C. 185 11 16.8 45 1 22) *D. Moore, Oak. 180 9 20.0 50t 1 23) Rice, Bal. (RB) 178 14 12.7 31t 2 24) Hartline, Mia. 170 10 17.0 38 1 25) Hernandez, N.E. (TE) 165 14 11.8 30 2 26) A. Brown, Pit. 156 10 15.6 21 0 27t) Casey, Hou. (TE) 155 8 19.4 62 1 27t) Tolbert, S.D. (RB) 155 20 7.8 21 2 29) *T. Smith, Bal. 152 5 30.4 74t 3 30) Garcon, Ind. 149 12 12.4 29 0 31) Massaquoi, Cle. 148 8 18.5 56 1 32) Thomas, Jac. 139 15 9.3 36t 1 33) Dickson, Bal. (TE) 135 12 11.3 19 1 34) Floyd, S.D. 132 7 18.9 36 0 35) Holmes, NY-J 131 10 13.1 28 1 36) H. Miller, Pit. (TE) 129 9 14.3 30 0 37) Jones, Buf. 128 11 11.6 48 1 38t) Burress, NY-J 127 7 18.1 26t 2 38t) Lloyd, Den. 127 10 12.7 20 0 40) Watson, Cle. (TE) 125 10 12.5 34t 1 41t) Gresham, Cin. (TE) 117 12 9.8 22 1 41t) Ward, Pit. 117 12 9.8 31 0 43) Jackson, Buf. (RB) 115 8 14.4 38 0 44) Daniels, Hou. (TE) 113 9 12.6 23 2 45) Fasano, Mia. (TE) 108 6 18.0 26 0 46) Cribbs, Cle. 103 7 14.7 33t 1 47t) C. Johnson, Ten. (RB) 91 13 7.0 34 0 47t) Jones, Hou. 91 7 13.0 31 0 49) Chandler, Buf. (TE) 89 9 9.9 19 4 50) Breaston, K.C. 88 6 14.7 43 0

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WEEK 3 / THROUGH MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 26, 2011 NFC / RECEIVING YARDAGE LEADERS Rank Player, Team Yards Rec Avg Long TD 1) S. Smith, Car. 349 16 21.8 77t 2 2) Forte, Chi. (RB) 287 22 13.0 56t 1 3) Witten, Dal. (TE) 272 19 14.3 64 0 4) Henderson, N.O. 265 12 22.1 79t 2 5) G. Jennings, G.B. 263 18 14.6 49t 2 6) Maclin, Phi. 260 19 13.7 43 2 7) Fitzgerald, Ariz 259 15 17.3 73t 2 8) Graham, N.O. (TE) 235 14 16.8 32 2 9) Austin, Dal. 233 14 16.6 53t 4 10) C. Johnson, Det. 225 16 14.1 40 6 11) White, Atl. 224 20 11.2 30 1 12) *Jones, Atl. 215 13 16.5 49 0 13) F. Davis, Was. (TE) 214 12 17.8 40 1 14) Moss, Was. 207 16 12.9 36 1 15) Finley, G.B. (TE) 206 15 13.7 39 3 16) Nelson, G.B. 201 10 20.1 84t 2 17) Knox, Chi. 189 9 21.0 40 0 18) Nicks, NY-G 185 14 13.2 68 1 19) Best, Det. (RB) 182 15 12.1 60 1 20) V. Davis, S.F. (TE) 179 15 11.9 39 0 21t) Gaffney, Was. 176 13 13.5 39 1 21t) Pettigrew, Det. (TE) 176 16 11.0 27 0 23) Doucet, Ariz 175 10 17.5 70t 1 24) Gonzalez, Atl. (TE) 173 14 12.4 30 3 25) Olsen, Car. (TE) 169 12 14.1 43 1 26) Sproles, N.O. (RB) 168 21 8.0 36 1 27) Burleson, Det. 165 14 11.8 29 0 28) B. Gibson, St.L 157 12 13.1 34t 1 29t) D. Jackson, Phi. 153 10 15.3 41 1 29t) Parker, T.B. 153 11 13.9 51 0 31) Alexander, St.L 150 5 30.0 68 1 32) Jenkins, Min. 143 15 9.5 24 1 33t) Stewart, Car. (RB) 140 13 10.8 21 0 33t) *T. Young, Det. 140 9 15.6 43 0 35) Hester, Chi. 139 7 19.9 53 0 36) Shockey, Car. (TE) 137 9 15.2 23 0 37) Bryant, Dal. 134 7 19.1 42 1 38) Sims-Walker, St.L 133 10 13.3 33 0 39) Meachem, N.O. 131 14 9.4 31t 3 40t) Harvin, Min. 130 12 10.8 21 0 40t) Winslow, T.B. (TE) 130 12 10.8 22 0 42) Cruz, NY-G 127 5 25.4 74t 2 43) LaFell, Car. 119 8 14.9 32 1 44) Graham, T.B. (RB) 116 20 5.8 16 0 45) *Baldwin, Sea. 110 7 15.7 55t 1 46t) Heap, Ariz (TE) 109 9 12.1 28 0 46t) Rice, Sea. 109 8 13.6 32 0 48) Bradshaw, NY-G (RB) 108 11 9.8 26 1 49) Manningham, NY-G 105 7 15.0 31 0 50) Avant, Phi. 102 8 12.8 29 0

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WEEK 3 / THROUGH MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 26, 2011 NFL / RECEIVING YARDAGE LEADERS Rank Player, Team Yards Rec Avg Long TD 1) Welker, N.E. 458 31 14.8 99t 4 2) Wallace, Pit. 377 21 18.0 81t 2 3) S. Smith, Car. 349 16 21.8 77t 2 4) A. Johnson, Hou. 316 21 15.0 48 2 5) Britt, Ten. 289 17 17.0 80t 3 6) Forte, Chi. (RB) 287 22 13.0 56t 1 7) R. Gronkowski, N.E. (TE) 281 17 16.5 30 5 8) Witten, Dal. (TE) 272 19 14.3 64 0 9) Jackson, S.D. 266 17 15.6 29 2 10) Henderson, N.O. 265 12 22.1 79t 2 11) G. Jennings, G.B. 263 18 14.6 49t 2 12) Marshall, Mia. 261 17 15.4 31 1 13) Maclin, Phi. 260 19 13.7 43 2 14) Fitzgerald, Ariz 259 15 17.3 73t 2 15) Washington, Ten. 258 21 12.3 42 1 16) St. Johnson, Buf. 256 20 12.8 33 3 17) Keller, NY-J (TE) 249 16 15.6 37 2 18) Graham, N.O. (TE) 235 14 16.8 32 2 19t) Austin, Dal. 233 14 16.6 53t 4 19t) Nelson, Buf. 233 20 11.7 35 1 21) C. Johnson, Det. 225 16 14.1 40 6 22) White, Atl. 224 20 11.2 30 1 23) Branch, N.E. 222 15 14.8 33 0 24) *Jones, Atl. 215 13 16.5 49 0 25t) F. Davis, Was. (TE) 214 12 17.8 40 1 25t) Decker, Den. 214 15 14.3 52t 2 27) Moss, Was. 207 16 12.9 36 1 28) Finley, G.B. (TE) 206 15 13.7 39 3 29) Nelson, G.B. 201 10 20.1 84t 2 30t) Tomlinson, NY-J (RB) 196 12 16.3 74 1 30t) Wayne, Ind. 196 14 14.0 36 1 32t) Boldin, Bal. 194 14 13.9 27t 1 32t) *Green, Cin. 194 15 12.9 41t 2 34) Knox, Chi. 189 9 21.0 40 0 35t) Bess, Mia. 186 12 15.5 41 0 35t) Mathews, S.D. (RB) 186 14 13.3 37 0 35t) Simpson, Cin. 186 9 20.7 84 0 38t) Bowe, K.C. 185 11 16.8 45 1 38t) Nicks, NY-G 185 14 13.2 68 1 40) Best, Det. (RB) 182 15 12.1 60 1 41) *D. Moore, Oak. 180 9 20.0 50t 1 42) V. Davis, S.F. (TE) 179 15 11.9 39 0 43) Rice, Bal. (RB) 178 14 12.7 31t 2 44t) Gaffney, Was. 176 13 13.5 39 1 44t) Pettigrew, Det. (TE) 176 16 11.0 27 0 46) Doucet, Ariz 175 10 17.5 70t 1 47) Gonzalez, Atl. (TE) 173 14 12.4 30 3 48) Hartline, Mia. 170 10 17.0 38 1 49) Olsen, Car. (TE) 169 12 14.1 43 1 50) Sproles, N.O. (RB) 168 21 8.0 36 1

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WEEK 3 / THROUGH MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 26, 2011 AFC / THIRD-DOWN RECEIVING LEADERS Rank Player, Team Rec Yards Avg Long TD 1) Washington, Ten. 8 115 14.4 42 0 2) Britt, Ten. 7 73 10.4 28 2 3t) A. Brown, Pit. 6 106 17.7 21 0 3t) A. Johnson, Hou. 6 94 15.7 43 0 3t) Jackson, S.D. 6 73 12.2 28 1 3t) Thomas, Jac. 6 63 10.5 26 0 3t) Bess, Mia. 6 58 9.7 16 0 8t) Casey, Hou. (TE) 5 123 24.6 62 1 8t) Bowe, K.C. 5 85 17.0 23 0 8t) Rice, Bal. (RB) 5 84 16.8 25 1 8t) St. Johnson, Buf. 5 49 9.8 15 1 8t) Tolbert, S.D. (RB) 5 47 9.4 21 1 8t) Dickson, Bal. (TE) 5 46 9.2 14 0 8t) Collie, Ind. 5 43 8.6 13 0 8t) Tomlinson, NY-J (RB) 5 42 8.4 12 0 8t) Nelson, Buf. 5 36 7.2 9 0 8t) Decker, Den. 5 33 6.6 9 0 18t) Sanders, Pit. 4 68 17.0 30 1 18t) Welker, N.E. 4 62 15.5 23 1 18t) R. Gronkowski, N.E. (TE) 4 60 15.0 21 1 18t) Branch, N.E. 4 54 13.5 24 0 18t) C. Johnson, Ten. (RB) 4 49 12.3 34 0 18t) Moore, Cle. (TE) 4 42 10.5 16t 2 18t) Karim, Jac. (RB) 4 41 10.3 14 0 18t) Holmes, NY-J 4 40 10.0 19 0 18t) Mason, NY-J 4 30 7.5 12 0 18t) Bush, Mia. (RB) 4 20 5.0 11 0 28t) Wallace, Pit. 3 68 22.7 53 0 28t) Marshall, Mia. 3 52 17.3 29 0 28t) Keller, NY-J (TE) 3 49 16.3 19 0 28t) Lloyd, Den. 3 43 14.3 20 0 28t) D. McFadden, Oak. (RB) 3 33 11.0 12t 1 28t) Gates, S.D. (TE) 3 32 10.7 13 0 28t) Watson, Cle. (TE) 3 31 10.3 15 0 28t) McGahee, Den. (RB) 3 27 9.0 12 1 28t) Myers, Oak. (TE) 3 23 7.7 8 0 28t) Crayton, S.D. 3 22 7.3 11 0 28t) L. Hawkins, Ten. 3 19 6.3 7 0 28t) Chandler, Buf. (TE) 3 18 6.0 11t 3 28t) Addai, Ind. (RB) 3 15 5.0 10 0 28t) Gresham, Cin. (TE) 3 14 4.7 9 1 28t) Leonard, Cin. (RB) 3 12 4.0 9 0 28t) Charles, K.C. (RB) 3 9 3.0 9 1 28t) McCluster, K.C. 3 5 1.7 3 0 45t) Floyd, S.D. 2 59 29.5 36 0 45t) *Green, Cin. 2 45 22.5 41t 1 45t) Burress, NY-J 2 42 21.0 26t 2 45t) H. Miller, Pit. (TE) 2 36 18.0 24 0 45t) Garcon, Ind. 2 35 17.5 29 0 45t) Boldin, Bal. 2 30 15.0 20 0 45t) Fells, Den. (TE) 2 25 12.5 16 0 45t) Wayne, Ind. 2 24 12.0 20 0 45t) Williams, Ten. 2 24 12.0 19 0 45t) *Little, Cle. 2 23 11.5 12 0 45t) Schilens, Oak. 2 22 11.0 13 0 45t) Heyward-Bey, Oak. 2 19 9.5 14 0 45t) J. Hill, Jac. 2 19 9.5 15 0 45t) Royal, Den. 2 19 9.5 15 0 45t) Massaquoi, Cle. 2 17 8.5 9 0 45t) Ball, Den. (RB) 2 16 8.0 9t 1 45t) Jones, Buf. 2 16 8.0 8 0 45t) McMichael, S.D. (TE) 2 16 8.0 9 0 45t) Ringer, Ten. (RB) 2 16 8.0 12 0 45t) Simpson, Cin. 2 11 5.5 6 0 45t) Woodhead, N.E. (RB) 2 11 5.5 9 0 45t) Clark, Ind. (TE) 2 10 5.0 8 0 45t) Cook, Ten. (TE) 2 10 5.0 6 0

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WEEK 3 / THROUGH MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 26, 2011 NFC / THIRD-DOWN RECEIVING LEADERS Rank Player, Team Rec Yards Avg Long TD 1) Sproles, N.O. (RB) 9 88 9.8 36 1 2) Graham, T.B. (RB) 8 41 5.1 12 0 3t) Doucet, Ariz 6 134 22.3 70t 1 3t) Finley, G.B. (TE) 6 114 19.0 39 1 3t) Parker, T.B. 6 112 18.7 51 0 3t) White, Atl. 6 78 13.0 30 1 7t) F. Davis, Was. (TE) 5 83 16.6 28 0 7t) Graham, N.O. (TE) 5 71 14.2 28 1 7t) Bradshaw, NY-G (RB) 5 65 13.0 23 1 7t) Witten, Dal. (TE) 5 64 12.8 25 0 7t) Best, Det. (RB) 5 60 12.0 35 1 7t) Forte, Chi. (RB) 5 59 11.8 23 0 7t) Olsen, Car. (TE) 5 46 9.2 16t 1 7t) Maclin, Phi. 5 39 7.8 20 0 15t) Henderson, N.O. 4 118 29.5 79t 1 15t) Bryant, Dal. 4 79 19.8 30 1 15t) G. Jennings, G.B. 4 56 14.0 25 1 15t) Winslow, T.B. (TE) 4 55 13.8 22 0 15t) *Baldwin, Sea. 4 47 11.8 20 0 15t) Jenkins, Min. 4 40 10.0 12 0 15t) *Jones, Atl. 4 39 9.8 15 0 15t) Gaffney, Was. 4 36 9.0 20 1 15t) Gonzalez, Atl. (TE) 4 32 8.0 13 1 15t) V. Davis, S.F. (TE) 4 15 3.8 9 0 25t) *T. Young, Det. 3 88 29.3 43 0 25t) Austin, Dal. 3 68 22.7 53t 1 25t) Avant, Phi. 3 51 17.0 29 0 25t) Meachem, N.O. 3 51 17.0 31t 2 25t) Edwards, S.F. 3 40 13.3 21 0 25t) Moss, Was. 3 40 13.3 19 0 25t) *Salas, St.L 3 40 13.3 21 0 25t) Knox, Chi. 3 38 12.7 18 0 25t) Moore, N.O. 3 37 12.3 16t 1 25t) Pettigrew, Det. (TE) 3 31 10.3 14 0 25t) C. Johnson, Det. 3 24 8.0 10 0 25t) Roberts, Ariz 3 24 8.0 16 0 25t) Ogletree, Dal. 3 19 6.3 7 0 25t) Starks, G.B. (RB) 3 9 3.0 5 0 25t) Wells, Ariz (RB) 3 9 3.0 10 0 40t) Alexander, St.L 2 87 43.5 68 1 40t) Cruz, NY-G 2 84 42.0 74t 1 40t) Nicks, NY-G 2 75 37.5 68 0 40t) LaFell, Car. 2 45 22.5 32 0 40t) Fitzgerald, Ariz 2 39 19.5 34 0 40t) R. Williams, Chi. 2 38 19.0 23 0 40t) Amendola, St.L 2 34 17.0 18 0 40t) Sims-Walker, St.L 2 29 14.5 15 0 40t) Driver, G.B. 2 26 13.0 16 0 40t) M. Morris, Det. (RB) 2 25 12.5 16 0 40t) Shockey, Car. (TE) 2 24 12.0 18 0 40t) K. Davis, Chi. (TE) 2 23 11.5 12 0 40t) Morgan, S.F. 2 22 11.0 12 0 40t) Nelson, G.B. 2 21 10.5 18 1 40t) Douglas, Atl. 2 20 10.0 16 0 40t) Naanee, Car. 2 19 9.5 13 0 40t) Ginn, S.F. 2 18 9.0 14 0 40t) Ja. Jones, G.B. 2 16 8.0 15 0 40t) M. Williams, T.B. 2 16 8.0 13 0 40t) Stewart, Car. (RB) 2 15 7.5 12 0 40t) Benn, T.B. 2 14 7.0 8 0 40t) Briscoe, T.B. 2 14 7.0 9 0 40t) *Sanzenbacher, Chi. 2 14 7.0 10 1 40t) B. Gibson, St.L 2 13 6.5 7 0 40t) Choice, Dal. (RB) 2 11 5.5 6 0 40t) Obomanu, Sea. 2 11 5.5 6 0 40t) Hester, Chi. 2 10 5.0 10 0 40t) Peterson, Min. (RB) 2 10 5.0 6 0 40t) Forsett, Sea. (RB) 2 3 1.5 2 0

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WEEK 3 / THROUGH MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 26, 2011 NFL / THIRD-DOWN RECEIVING LEADERS Rank Player, Team Rec Yards Avg Long TD 1) Sproles, N.O. (RB) 9 88 9.8 36 1 2t) Washington, Ten. 8 115 14.4 42 0 2t) Graham, T.B. (RB) 8 41 5.1 12 0 4) Britt, Ten. 7 73 10.4 28 2 5t) Doucet, Ariz 6 134 22.3 70t 1 5t) Finley, G.B. (TE) 6 114 19.0 39 1 5t) Parker, T.B. 6 112 18.7 51 0 5t) A. Brown, Pit. 6 106 17.7 21 0 5t) A. Johnson, Hou. 6 94 15.7 43 0 5t) White, Atl. 6 78 13.0 30 1 5t) Jackson, S.D. 6 73 12.2 28 1 5t) Thomas, Jac. 6 63 10.5 26 0 5t) Bess, Mia. 6 58 9.7 16 0 14t) Casey, Hou. (TE) 5 123 24.6 62 1 14t) Bowe, K.C. 5 85 17.0 23 0 14t) Rice, Bal. (RB) 5 84 16.8 25 1 14t) F. Davis, Was. (TE) 5 83 16.6 28 0 14t) Graham, N.O. (TE) 5 71 14.2 28 1 14t) Bradshaw, NY-G (RB) 5 65 13.0 23 1 14t) Witten, Dal. (TE) 5 64 12.8 25 0 14t) Best, Det. (RB) 5 60 12.0 35 1 14t) Forte, Chi. (RB) 5 59 11.8 23 0 14t) St. Johnson, Buf. 5 49 9.8 15 1 14t) Tolbert, S.D. (RB) 5 47 9.4 21 1 14t) Dickson, Bal. (TE) 5 46 9.2 14 0 14t) Olsen, Car. (TE) 5 46 9.2 16t 1 14t) Collie, Ind. 5 43 8.6 13 0 14t) Tomlinson, NY-J (RB) 5 42 8.4 12 0 14t) Maclin, Phi. 5 39 7.8 20 0 14t) Nelson, Buf. 5 36 7.2 9 0 14t) Decker, Den. 5 33 6.6 9 0 32t) Henderson, N.O. 4 118 29.5 79t 1 32t) Bryant, Dal. 4 79 19.8 30 1 32t) Sanders, Pit. 4 68 17.0 30 1 32t) Welker, N.E. 4 62 15.5 23 1 32t) R. Gronkowski, N.E. (TE) 4 60 15.0 21 1 32t) G. Jennings, G.B. 4 56 14.0 25 1 32t) Winslow, T.B. (TE) 4 55 13.8 22 0 32t) Branch, N.E. 4 54 13.5 24 0 32t) C. Johnson, Ten. (RB) 4 49 12.3 34 0 32t) *Baldwin, Sea. 4 47 11.8 20 0 32t) Moore, Cle. (TE) 4 42 10.5 16t 2 32t) Karim, Jac. (RB) 4 41 10.3 14 0 32t) Holmes, NY-J 4 40 10.0 19 0 32t) Jenkins, Min. 4 40 10.0 12 0 32t) *Jones, Atl. 4 39 9.8 15 0 32t) Gaffney, Was. 4 36 9.0 20 1 32t) Gonzalez, Atl. (TE) 4 32 8.0 13 1 32t) Mason, NY-J 4 30 7.5 12 0 32t) Bush, Mia. (RB) 4 20 5.0 11 0 32t) V. Davis, S.F. (TE) 4 15 3.8 9 0

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WEEK 3 / THROUGH MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 26, 2011 AFC / LEADING SCORERS, NONKICKERS Rank Player, Team TD Rush Rec Ret X2 Pts 1) R. Gronkowski, N.E. (TE) 5 0 5 0 0 30 2t) Chandler, Buf. (TE) 4 0 4 0 0 24 2t) D. McFadden, Oak. (RB) 4 3 1 0 0 24 2t) Welker, N.E. (WR) 4 0 4 0 0 24 5t) Britt, Ten. (WR) 3 0 3 0 0 18 5t) Decker, Den. (WR) 3 0 2 1 0 18 5t) Jackson, Buf. (RB) 3 3 0 0 0 18 5t) St. Johnson, Buf. (WR) 3 0 3 0 0 18 5t) Mathews, S.D. (RB) 3 3 0 0 0 18 5t) Rice, Bal. (RB) 3 1 2 0 0 18 5t) *T. Smith, Bal. (WR) 3 0 3 0 0 18 5t) Tolbert, S.D. (RB) 3 1 2 0 0 18 13t) Burress, NY-J (WR) 2 0 2 0 0 12 13t) Bush, Oak. (RB) 2 2 0 0 0 12 13t) J. Campbell, Oak. (QB) 2 2 0 0 0 12 13t) Daniels, Hou. (TE) 2 0 2 0 0 12 13t) *Green, Cin. (WR) 2 0 2 0 0 12 13t) Green-Ellis, N.E. (RB) 2 2 0 0 0 12 13t) Hernandez, N.E. (TE) 2 0 2 0 0 12 13t) Hillis, Cle. (RB) 2 2 0 0 0 12 13t) Jackson, S.D. (WR) 2 0 2 0 0 12 13t) A. Johnson, Hou. (WR) 2 0 2 0 0 12 13t) Keller, NY-J (TE) 2 0 2 0 0 12 13t) McGahee, Den. (RB) 2 1 1 0 0 12 13t) *D. Moore, Oak. (WR) 2 1 1 0 0 12 13t) Moore, Cle. (TE) 2 0 2 0 0 12 13t) Wallace, Pit. (WR) 2 0 2 0 0 12 28t) Addai, Ind. (RB) 1 1 0 0 0 6 28t) Anderson, Ind. (DE) 1 0 0 1 0 6 28t) Ball, Den. (RB) 1 0 1 0 0 6 28t) Benson, Cin. (RB) 1 1 0 0 0 6 28t) Boldin, Bal. (WR) 1 0 1 0 0 6 28t) Bowe, K.C. (WR) 1 0 1 0 0 6 28t) Bush, Mia. (RB) 1 0 1 0 0 6 28t) Caldwell, Cin. (WR) 1 0 1 0 0 6 28t) Casey, Hou. (TE) 1 0 1 0 0 6 28t) Charles, K.C. (RB) 1 0 1 0 0 6 28t) Clark, Ind. (TE) 1 0 1 0 0 6 28t) Cribbs, Cle. (WR) 1 0 1 0 0 6 28t) Dickson, Bal. (TE) 1 0 1 0 0 6 28t) Florence, Buf. (DB) 1 0 0 1 0 6 28t) D. Graham, Ten. (TE) 1 0 1 0 0 6 28t) Greene, NY-J (RB) 1 1 0 0 0 6 28t) Gresham, Cin. (TE) 1 0 1 0 0 6 28t) Hartline, Mia. (WR) 1 0 1 0 0 6 28t) Henne, Mia. (QB) 1 1 0 0 0 6 28t) Holmes, NY-J (WR) 1 0 1 0 0 6 28t) Jones, Buf. (WR) 1 0 1 0 0 6 28t) Jones, Hou. (WR) 1 0 0 1 0 6 28t) Jones-Drew, Jac. (RB) 1 1 0 0 0 6 28t) Marshall, Mia. (WR) 1 0 1 0 0 6 28t) Massaquoi, Cle. (WR) 1 0 1 0 0 6 28t) Mendenhall, Pit. (RB) 1 1 0 0 0 6 28t) Nelson, Buf. (WR) 1 0 1 0 0 6 28t) Ngata, Bal. (DE) 1 0 0 1 0 6 28t) Polamalu, Pit. (DB) 1 0 0 1 0 6 28t) Pope, K.C. (TE) 1 0 1 0 0 6 28t) Redman, Pit. (RB) 1 1 0 0 0 6 28t) Reece, Oak. (RB) 1 0 1 0 0 6 28t) Ringer, Ten. (RB) 1 1 0 0 0 6 28t) Sanchez, NY-J (QB) 1 1 0 0 0 6 28t) Sanders, Pit. (WR) 1 0 1 0 0 6 28t) Spiller, Buf. (RB) 1 1 0 0 0 6 28t) Tate, Hou. (RB) 1 1 0 0 0 6 28t) *Thomas, Mia. (RB) 1 0 1 0 0 6 28t) Thomas, Jac. (WR) 1 0 1 0 0 6 28t) Tomlinson, NY-J (RB) 1 0 1 0 0 6 28t) Trufant, NY-J (DB) 1 0 0 1 0 6 28t) Walter, Hou. (WR) 1 0 1 0 0 6 28t) Ward, Hou. (RB) 1 1 0 0 0 6 28t) Washington, Ten. (WR) 1 0 1 0 0 6 28t) Watson, Cle. (TE) 1 0 1 0 0 6 28t) Wayne, Ind. (WR) 1 0 1 0 0 6 28t) Willis, Den. (WR) 1 0 1 0 0 6

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WEEK 3 / THROUGH MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 26, 2011 NFC / LEADING SCORERS, NONKICKERS Rank Player, Team TD Rush Rec Ret X2 Pts 1) C. Johnson, Det. (WR) 6 0 6 0 0 36 2) McCoy, Phi. (RB) 5 4 1 0 0 30 3) Austin, Dal. (WR) 4 0 4 0 0 24 4t) Finley, G.B. (TE) 3 0 3 0 0 18 4t) Gonzalez, Atl. (TE) 3 0 3 0 0 18 4t) Meachem, N.O. (WR) 3 0 3 0 0 18 4t) Peterson, Min. (RB) 3 3 0 0 0 18 4t) Sproles, N.O. (RB) 3 1 1 1 0 18 9) Jacobs, NY-G (RB) 2 1 1 0 1 14 10t) Best, Det. (RB) 2 1 1 0 0 12 10t) Blount, T.B. (RB) 2 2 0 0 0 12 10t) Bradshaw, NY-G (RB) 2 1 1 0 0 12 10t) *Cobb, G.B. (WR) 2 0 1 1 0 12 10t) Cruz, NY-G (WR) 2 0 2 0 0 12 10t) Fitzgerald, Ariz (WR) 2 0 2 0 0 12 10t) Ginn, S.F. (WR) 2 0 0 2 0 12 10t) Graham, N.O. (TE) 2 0 2 0 0 12 10t) Henderson, N.O. (WR) 2 0 2 0 0 12 10t) Hightower, Was. (RB) 2 1 1 0 0 12 10t) G. Jennings, G.B. (WR) 2 0 2 0 0 12 10t) King, Ariz (TE) 2 0 2 0 0 12 10t) Kuhn, G.B. (RB) 2 2 0 0 0 12 10t) Maclin, Phi. (WR) 2 0 2 0 0 12 10t) Nelson, G.B. (WR) 2 0 2 0 0 12 10t) *Newton, Car. (QB) 2 2 0 0 0 12 10t) *Sanzenbacher, Chi. (WR) 2 0 2 0 0 12 10t) Scheffler, Det. (TE) 2 0 2 0 0 12 10t) S. Smith, Car. (WR) 2 0 2 0 0 12 10t) Wells, Ariz (RB) 2 2 0 0 0 12 30) Moore, N.O. (WR) 1 0 1 0 2 10 31) Olsen, Car. (TE) 1 0 1 0 1 8 32t) Alexander, St.L (WR) 1 0 1 0 0 6 32t) Armstrong, Was. (WR) 1 0 1 0 0 6 32t) *Baldwin, Sea. (WR) 1 0 1 0 0 6 32t) Benn, T.B. (WR) 1 0 1 0 0 6 32t) Biermann, Atl. (DE) 1 0 0 1 0 6 32t) Boley, NY-G (LB) 1 0 0 1 0 6 32t) Bryant, Dal. (WR) 1 0 1 0 0 6 32t) F. Davis, Was. (TE) 1 0 1 0 0 6 32t) K. Davis, Chi. (TE) 1 0 1 0 0 6 32t) Doucet, Ariz (WR) 1 0 1 0 0 6 32t) Forte, Chi. (RB) 1 0 1 0 0 6 32t) Freeman, T.B. (QB) 1 1 0 0 0 6 32t) Gaffney, Was. (WR) 1 0 1 0 0 6 32t) B. Gibson, St.L (WR) 1 0 1 0 0 6 32t) Gore, S.F. (RB) 1 1 0 0 0 6 32t) Harvin, Min. (WR) 1 0 0 1 0 6 32t) Hixon, NY-G (WR) 1 0 1 0 0 6 32t) *Hunter, S.F. (RB) 1 1 0 0 0 6 32t) *M. Ingram, N.O. (RB) 1 1 0 0 0 6 32t) D. Jackson, Phi. (WR) 1 0 1 0 0 6 32t) Jackson, St.L (RB) 1 1 0 0 0 6 32t) Jackson, Sea. (QB) 1 1 0 0 0 6 32t) Jenkins, Min. (WR) 1 0 1 0 0 6 32t) Jones, Dal. (RB) 1 1 0 0 0 6 32t) *Kerrigan, Was. (LB) 1 0 0 1 0 6 32t) LaFell, Car. (WR) 1 0 1 0 0 6 32t) Manning, NY-G (QB) 1 1 0 0 0 6 32t) Moss, Was. (WR) 1 0 1 0 0 6 32t) Mughelli, Atl. (RB) 1 0 1 0 0 6 32t) Nicks, NY-G (WR) 1 0 1 0 0 6 32t) Parker, Phi. (DE) 1 0 0 1 0 6 32t) *Peterson, Ariz (DB) 1 0 0 1 0 6 32t) Shiancoe, Min. (TE) 1 0 1 0 0 6 32t) Ale. Smith, S.F. (QB) 1 1 0 0 0 6 32t) Spaeth, Chi. (TE) 1 0 1 0 0 6 32t) Starks, G.B. (RB) 1 1 0 0 0 6 32t) Talib, T.B. (DB) 1 0 0 1 0 6 32t) Tate, Sea. (WR) 1 0 1 0 0 6 32t) Turner, Atl. (RB) 1 1 0 0 0 6 32t) Urlacher, Chi. (LB) 1 0 0 1 0 6 32t) Walker, S.F. (TE) 1 0 1 0 0 6 32t) White, Atl. (WR) 1 0 1 0 0 6 32t) K. Williams, Det. (RB) 1 1 0 0 0 6 32t) K. Williams, S.F. (WR) 1 0 1 0 0 6 32t) M. Williams, T.B. (WR) 1 0 1 0 0 6

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WEEK 3 / THROUGH MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 26, 2011 NFL / LEADING SCORERS, NONKICKERS Rank Player, Team TD Rush Rec Ret X2 Pts 1) C. Johnson, Det. (WR) 6 0 6 0 0 36 2t) R. Gronkowski, N.E. (TE) 5 0 5 0 0 30 2t) McCoy, Phi. (RB) 5 4 1 0 0 30 4t) Austin, Dal. (WR) 4 0 4 0 0 24 4t) Chandler, Buf. (TE) 4 0 4 0 0 24 4t) D. McFadden, Oak. (RB) 4 3 1 0 0 24 4t) Welker, N.E. (WR) 4 0 4 0 0 24 8t) Britt, Ten. (WR) 3 0 3 0 0 18 8t) Decker, Den. (WR) 3 0 2 1 0 18 8t) Finley, G.B. (TE) 3 0 3 0 0 18 8t) Gonzalez, Atl. (TE) 3 0 3 0 0 18 8t) Jackson, Buf. (RB) 3 3 0 0 0 18 8t) St. Johnson, Buf. (WR) 3 0 3 0 0 18 8t) Mathews, S.D. (RB) 3 3 0 0 0 18 8t) Meachem, N.O. (WR) 3 0 3 0 0 18 8t) Peterson, Min. (RB) 3 3 0 0 0 18 8t) Rice, Bal. (RB) 3 1 2 0 0 18 8t) *T. Smith, Bal. (WR) 3 0 3 0 0 18 8t) Sproles, N.O. (RB) 3 1 1 1 0 18 8t) Tolbert, S.D. (RB) 3 1 2 0 0 18 21) Jacobs, NY-G (RB) 2 1 1 0 1 14 22t) Best, Det. (RB) 2 1 1 0 0 12 22t) Blount, T.B. (RB) 2 2 0 0 0 12 22t) Bradshaw, NY-G (RB) 2 1 1 0 0 12 22t) Burress, NY-J (WR) 2 0 2 0 0 12 22t) Bush, Oak. (RB) 2 2 0 0 0 12 22t) J. Campbell, Oak. (QB) 2 2 0 0 0 12 22t) *Cobb, G.B. (WR) 2 0 1 1 0 12 22t) Cruz, NY-G (WR) 2 0 2 0 0 12 22t) Daniels, Hou. (TE) 2 0 2 0 0 12 22t) Fitzgerald, Ariz (WR) 2 0 2 0 0 12 22t) Ginn, S.F. (WR) 2 0 0 2 0 12 22t) Graham, N.O. (TE) 2 0 2 0 0 12 22t) *Green, Cin. (WR) 2 0 2 0 0 12 22t) Green-Ellis, N.E. (RB) 2 2 0 0 0 12 22t) Henderson, N.O. (WR) 2 0 2 0 0 12 22t) Hernandez, N.E. (TE) 2 0 2 0 0 12 22t) Hightower, Was. (RB) 2 1 1 0 0 12 22t) Hillis, Cle. (RB) 2 2 0 0 0 12 22t) Jackson, S.D. (WR) 2 0 2 0 0 12 22t) G. Jennings, G.B. (WR) 2 0 2 0 0 12 22t) A. Johnson, Hou. (WR) 2 0 2 0 0 12 22t) Keller, NY-J (TE) 2 0 2 0 0 12 22t) King, Ariz (TE) 2 0 2 0 0 12 22t) Kuhn, G.B. (RB) 2 2 0 0 0 12 22t) Maclin, Phi. (WR) 2 0 2 0 0 12 22t) McGahee, Den. (RB) 2 1 1 0 0 12 22t) *D. Moore, Oak. (WR) 2 1 1 0 0 12 22t) Moore, Cle. (TE) 2 0 2 0 0 12 22t) Nelson, G.B. (WR) 2 0 2 0 0 12 22t) *Newton, Car. (QB) 2 2 0 0 0 12 22t) *Sanzenbacher, Chi. (WR) 2 0 2 0 0 12 22t) Scheffler, Det. (TE) 2 0 2 0 0 12 22t) S. Smith, Car. (WR) 2 0 2 0 0 12 22t) Wallace, Pit. (WR) 2 0 2 0 0 12 22t) Wells, Ariz (RB) 2 2 0 0 0 12

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WEEK 3 / THROUGH MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 26, 2011 AFC / LEADING SCORERS, KICKERS Rank Player, Team PAT FG Pct Long Pts 1) Rackers, Hou. 9/ 9 9/ 9 1.000 36 36 2t) Cundiff, Bal. 8/ 8 7/ 9 .778 41 29 2t) Lindell, Buf. 14/14 5/ 6 .833 42 29 4) Folk, NY-J 9/ 9 6/ 6 1.000 50 27 5) Janikowski, Oak. 11/11 5/ 6 .833 63 26 6) Nugent, Cin. 4/ 4 7/ 7 1.000 47 25 7) Gostkowski, N.E. 12/12 4/ 5 .800 47 24 8) Carpenter, Mia. 5/ 5 6/ 9 .667 42 23 9) Vinatieri, Ind. 4/ 4 6/ 7 .857 52 22 10) Bironas, Ten. 6/ 6 5/ 7 .714 46 21 11) Dawson, Cle. 7/ 7 4/ 4 1.000 30 19 12) Suisham, Pit. 6/ 6 4/ 6 .667 48 18 13) Scobee, Jac. 2/ 2 5/ 5 1.000 55 17 14) Prater, Den. 7/ 7 3/ 4 .750 34 16 15) Novak, S.D. 5/ 5 2/ 2 1.000 41 11 16) Succop, K.C. 3/ 3 2/ 5 .400 33 9 17) Scifres, S.D. 3/ 3 1/ 1 1.000 40 6 NFC / LEADING SCORERS, KICKERS Rank Player, Team PAT FG Pct Long Pts 1) Hanson, Det. 11/11 8/ 8 1.000 51 35 2) *Bailey, Dal. 6/ 6 9/10 .900 48 33 3t) Akers, S.F. 7/ 7 7/ 7 1.000 55 28 3t) Kasay, N.O. 10/10 6/ 6 1.000 53 28 5) Crosby, G.B. 12/12 5/ 5 1.000 37 27 6t) Barth, T.B. 6/ 6 6/ 6 1.000 49 24 6t) Gano, Was. 6/ 6 6/ 9 .667 50 24 6t) Gould, Chi. 6/ 6 6/ 6 1.000 42 24 6t) *Henery, Phi. 9/ 9 5/ 6 .833 38 24 6t) Longwell, Min. 6/ 6 6/ 6 1.000 49 24 11) Mare, Car. 5/ 5 5/ 5 1.000 35 20 12t) Jo. Brown, St.L 3/ 3 5/ 6 .833 49 18 12t) Bryant, Atl. 6/ 6 4/ 4 1.000 48 18 14) Hauschka, Sea. 3/ 3 3/ 3 1.000 52 12 15) Feely, Ariz 8/ 8 1/ 4 .250 44 11 16) Tynes, NY-G 9/ 9 0/ 1 .000 -- 9 NFL / LEADING SCORERS, KICKERS Rank Player, Team PAT FG Pct Long Pts 1) Rackers, Hou. 9/ 9 9/ 9 1.000 36 36 2) Hanson, Det. 11/11 8/ 8 1.000 51 35 3) *Bailey, Dal. 6/ 6 9/10 .900 48 33 4t) Cundiff, Bal. 8/ 8 7/ 9 .778 41 29 4t) Lindell, Buf. 14/14 5/ 6 .833 42 29 6t) Akers, S.F. 7/ 7 7/ 7 1.000 55 28 6t) Kasay, N.O. 10/10 6/ 6 1.000 53 28 8t) Crosby, G.B. 12/12 5/ 5 1.000 37 27 8t) Folk, NY-J 9/ 9 6/ 6 1.000 50 27 10) Janikowski, Oak. 11/11 5/ 6 .833 63 26 11) Nugent, Cin. 4/ 4 7/ 7 1.000 47 25 12t) Barth, T.B. 6/ 6 6/ 6 1.000 49 24 12t) Gano, Was. 6/ 6 6/ 9 .667 50 24 12t) Gostkowski, N.E. 12/12 4/ 5 .800 47 24 12t) Gould, Chi. 6/ 6 6/ 6 1.000 42 24 12t) *Henery, Phi. 9/ 9 5/ 6 .833 38 24 12t) Longwell, Min. 6/ 6 6/ 6 1.000 49 24 18) Carpenter, Mia. 5/ 5 6/ 9 .667 42 23 19) Vinatieri, Ind. 4/ 4 6/ 7 .857 52 22 20) Bironas, Ten. 6/ 6 5/ 7 .714 46 21 21) Mare, Car. 5/ 5 5/ 5 1.000 35 20 22) Dawson, Cle. 7/ 7 4/ 4 1.000 30 19 23t) Jo. Brown, St.L 3/ 3 5/ 6 .833 49 18 23t) Bryant, Atl. 6/ 6 4/ 4 1.000 48 18 23t) Suisham, Pit. 6/ 6 4/ 6 .667 48 18 26) Scobee, Jac. 2/ 2 5/ 5 1.000 55 17 27) Prater, Den. 7/ 7 3/ 4 .750 34 16 28) Hauschka, Sea. 3/ 3 3/ 3 1.000 52 12 29t) Feely, Ariz 8/ 8 1/ 4 .250 44 11 29t) Novak, S.D. 5/ 5 2/ 2 1.000 41 11 31t) Succop, K.C. 3/ 3 2/ 5 .400 33 9 31t) Tynes, NY-G 9/ 9 0/ 1 .000 -- 9 33) Scifres, S.D. 3/ 3 1/ 1 1.000 40 6

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WEEK 3 / THROUGH MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 26, 2011 AFC / TOUCHBACKS ON KICKOFFS Rank Player, Team TB 1t) Janikowski, Oak. 13 1t) Prater, Den. 13 3t) Cundiff, Bal. 12 3t) *Hartmann, Hou. 12 5t) Gostkowski, N.E. 9 5t) McAfee, Ind. 9 5t) Nugent, Cin. 9 8) Bironas, Ten. 8 9t) Folk, NY-J 7 9t) Scobee, Jac. 7 9t) Suisham, Pit. 7 12t) Carpenter, Mia. 6 12t) Lindell, Buf. 6 14) Succop, K.C. 5 15) Dawson, Cle. 4 16) Novak, S.D. 3 17) Scifres, S.D. 2 NFC / TOUCHBACKS ON KICKOFFS Rank Player, Team TB 1) Morstead, N.O. 12 2t) Gould, Chi. 11 2t) Hanson, Det. 11 4) Gano, Was. 10 5t) Akers, S.F. 9 5t) Crosby, G.B. 9 7t) *Henery, Phi. 7 7t) Koenen, T.B. 7 7t) Mare, Car. 7 10t) *Bosher, Atl. 5 10t) Jo. Brown, St.L 5 10t) Buehler, Dal. 5 10t) Tynes, NY-G 5 14) Feely, Ariz 4 15) Longwell, Min. 3 16) *Bailey, Dal. 2 17) Hauschka, Sea. 1 NFL / TOUCHBACKS ON KICKOFFS Rank Player, Team TB 1t) Janikowski, Oak. 13 1t) Prater, Den. 13 3t) Cundiff, Bal. 12 3t) *Hartmann, Hou. 12 3t) Morstead, N.O. 12 6t) Gould, Chi. 11 6t) Hanson, Det. 11 8) Gano, Was. 10 9t) Akers, S.F. 9 9t) Crosby, G.B. 9 9t) Gostkowski, N.E. 9 9t) McAfee, Ind. 9 9t) Nugent, Cin. 9 14) Bironas, Ten. 8 15t) Folk, NY-J 7 15t) *Henery, Phi. 7 15t) Koenen, T.B. 7 15t) Mare, Car. 7 15t) Scobee, Jac. 7 15t) Suisham, Pit. 7 21t) Carpenter, Mia. 6 21t) Lindell, Buf. 6 23t) *Bosher, Atl. 5 23t) Jo. Brown, St.L 5 23t) Buehler, Dal. 5 23t) Succop, K.C. 5 23t) Tynes, NY-G 5 28t) Dawson, Cle. 4 28t) Feely, Ariz 4 30t) Longwell, Min. 3 30t) Novak, S.D. 3 32t) *Bailey, Dal. 2 32t) Scifres, S.D. 2 34) Hauschka, Sea. 1

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WEEK 3 / THROUGH MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 26, 2011 AFC / MOST YARDS FROM SCRIMMAGE Total Rushing Receiving Rank Player, Team Yards Att+Rec Avg Yards Att Avg Yards Rec Avg 1t) D. McFadden, Oak. (RB) 477 72 6.6 393 61 6.4 84 11 7.6 1t) Welker, N.E. (WR) 477 32 14.9 19 1 19.0 458 31 14.8 3) Jackson, Buf. (RB) 418 55 7.6 303 47 6.4 115 8 14.4 4) Rice, Bal. (RB) 409 55 7.4 231 41 5.6 178 14 12.7 5) Mathews, S.D. (RB) 393 59 6.7 207 45 4.6 186 14 13.3 6) Wallace, Pit. (WR) 377 21 18.0 0 0 --- 377 21 18.0 7) Jones-Drew, Jac. (RB) 371 72 5.2 307 66 4.7 64 6 10.7 8) Tate, Hou. (RB) 341 71 4.8 301 66 4.6 40 5 8.0 9) A. Johnson, Hou. (WR) 324 22 14.7 8 1 8.0 316 21 15.0 10) Britt, Ten. (WR) 289 17 17.0 0 0 --- 289 17 17.0 11) R. Gronkowski, N.E. (TE) 281 17 16.5 0 0 --- 281 17 16.5 12) Jackson, S.D. (WR) 267 18 14.8 1 1 1.0 266 17 15.6 13) Benson, Cin. (RB) 263 62 4.2 244 58 4.2 19 4 4.8 14) Marshall, Mia. (WR) 261 17 15.4 0 0 --- 261 17 15.4 15t) Tomlinson, NY-J (RB) 258 29 8.9 62 17 3.6 196 12 16.3 15t) Washington, Ten. (WR) 258 21 12.3 0 0 --- 258 21 12.3 17) St. Johnson, Buf. (WR) 256 20 12.8 0 0 --- 256 20 12.8 18) Keller, NY-J (TE) 249 16 15.6 0 0 --- 249 16 15.6 19) Addai, Ind. (RB) 241 46 5.2 189 39 4.8 52 7 7.4 20) *Thomas, Mia. (RB) 239 45 5.3 202 41 4.9 37 4 9.3 21) Nelson, Buf. (WR) 233 20 11.7 0 0 --- 233 20 11.7 22) *D. Moore, Oak. (WR) 228 11 20.7 48 2 24.0 180 9 20.0 23) Branch, N.E. (WR) 222 15 14.8 0 0 --- 222 15 14.8 24) Tolbert, S.D. (RB) 219 45 4.9 64 25 2.6 155 20 7.8 25) Decker, Den. (WR) 214 15 14.3 0 0 --- 214 15 14.3 26) Hillis, Cle. (RB) 204 54 3.8 151 44 3.4 53 10 5.3 27) Bowe, K.C. (WR) 197 12 16.4 12 1 12.0 185 11 16.8 28) Wayne, Ind. (WR) 196 14 14.0 0 0 --- 196 14 14.0 29) McGahee, Den. (RB) 195 63 3.1 156 54 2.9 39 9 4.3 30t) Boldin, Bal. (WR) 194 14 13.9 0 0 --- 194 14 13.9 30t) *Green, Cin. (WR) 194 15 12.9 0 0 --- 194 15 12.9 30t) Greene, NY-J (RB) 194 51 3.8 134 41 3.3 60 10 6.0 33) C. Johnson, Ten. (RB) 189 59 3.2 98 46 2.1 91 13 7.0 34t) Bess, Mia. (WR) 186 12 15.5 0 0 --- 186 12 15.5 34t) Simpson, Cin. (WR) 186 9 20.7 0 0 --- 186 9 20.7 36) McCluster, K.C. (WR) 178 35 5.1 138 21 6.6 40 14 2.9 37) Hartline, Mia. (WR) 170 10 17.0 0 0 --- 170 10 17.0 38) Mendenhall, Pit. (RB) 169 54 3.1 148 49 3.0 21 5 4.2 39) Casey, Hou. (TE) 166 9 18.4 11 1 11.0 155 8 19.4 40) Hernandez, N.E. (TE) 165 14 11.8 0 0 --- 165 14 11.8 41) *T. Smith, Bal. (WR) 162 6 27.0 10 1 10.0 152 5 30.4 42) A. Brown, Pit. (WR) 157 11 14.3 1 1 1.0 156 10 15.6 43) Garcon, Ind. (WR) 149 12 12.4 0 0 --- 149 12 12.4 44) Massaquoi, Cle. (WR) 148 8 18.5 0 0 --- 148 8 18.5 45) Woodhead, N.E. (RB) 143 30 4.8 102 24 4.3 41 6 6.8 46) Bush, Mia. (RB) 140 38 3.7 69 27 2.6 71 11 6.5 47) Thomas, Jac. (WR) 139 15 9.3 0 0 --- 139 15 9.3 48) Dickson, Bal. (TE) 135 12 11.3 0 0 --- 135 12 11.3 49) Floyd, S.D. (WR) 132 7 18.9 0 0 --- 132 7 18.9 50) Holmes, NY-J (WR) 131 10 13.1 0 0 --- 131 10 13.1

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WEEK 3 / THROUGH MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 26, 2011 NFC / MOST YARDS FROM SCRIMMAGE Total Rushing Receiving Rank Player, Team Yards Att+Rec Avg Yards Att Avg Yards Rec Avg 1) Forte, Chi. (RB) 406 57 7.1 119 35 3.4 287 22 13.0 2) McCoy, Phi. (RB) 394 66 6.0 345 57 6.1 49 9 5.4 3) S. Smith, Car. (WR) 349 16 21.8 0 0 --- 349 16 21.8 4) Peterson, Min. (RB) 342 66 5.2 296 58 5.1 46 8 5.8 5) Best, Det. (RB) 325 64 5.1 143 49 2.9 182 15 12.1 6) Turner, Atl. (RB) 306 46 6.7 234 42 5.6 72 4 18.0 7) Bradshaw, NY-G (RB) 297 54 5.5 189 43 4.4 108 11 9.8 8) Hightower, Was. (RB) 283 68 4.2 209 59 3.5 74 9 8.2 9) Witten, Dal. (TE) 272 19 14.3 0 0 --- 272 19 14.3 10) Henderson, N.O. (WR) 265 12 22.1 0 0 --- 265 12 22.1 11) G. Jennings, G.B. (WR) 263 18 14.6 0 0 --- 263 18 14.6 12) Maclin, Phi. (WR) 261 20 13.1 1 1 1.0 260 19 13.7 13t) Fitzgerald, Ariz (WR) 259 15 17.3 0 0 --- 259 15 17.3 13t) C. Williams, St.L (RB) 259 59 4.4 202 50 4.0 57 9 6.3 15) Jones, Dal. (RB) 251 47 5.3 184 40 4.6 67 7 9.6 16) Graham, N.O. (TE) 235 14 16.8 0 0 --- 235 14 16.8 17) Austin, Dal. (WR) 231 15 15.4 -2 1 -2.0 233 14 16.6 18) Stewart, Car. (RB) 230 36 6.4 90 23 3.9 140 13 10.8 19) Sproles, N.O. (RB) 227 29 7.8 59 8 7.4 168 21 8.0 20) C. Johnson, Det. (WR) 225 16 14.1 0 0 --- 225 16 14.1 21) White, Atl. (WR) 224 20 11.2 0 0 --- 224 20 11.2 22) F. Davis, Was. (TE) 214 12 17.8 0 0 --- 214 12 17.8 23) Moss, Was. (WR) 207 16 12.9 0 0 --- 207 16 12.9 24t) Finley, G.B. (TE) 206 15 13.7 0 0 --- 206 15 13.7 24t) *Jones, Atl. (WR) 206 14 14.7 -9 1 -9.0 215 13 16.5 26) Harvin, Min. (WR) 204 20 10.2 74 8 9.3 130 12 10.8 27) Nelson, G.B. (WR) 201 10 20.1 0 0 --- 201 10 20.1 28) Wells, Ariz (RB) 195 36 5.4 183 32 5.7 12 4 3.0 29) Knox, Chi. (WR) 189 9 21.0 0 0 --- 189 9 21.0 30) Starks, G.B. (RB) 186 38 4.9 147 32 4.6 39 6 6.5 31t) Burleson, Det. (WR) 185 15 12.3 20 1 20.0 165 14 11.8 31t) Nicks, NY-G (WR) 185 14 13.2 0 0 --- 185 14 13.2 33) Gore, S.F. (RB) 184 65 2.8 148 59 2.5 36 6 6.0 34) Blount, T.B. (RB) 180 43 4.2 167 42 4.0 13 1 13.0 35) V. Davis, S.F. (TE) 177 16 11.1 -2 1 -2.0 179 15 11.9 36t) Gaffney, Was. (WR) 176 13 13.5 0 0 --- 176 13 13.5 36t) Grant, G.B. (RB) 176 36 4.9 157 32 4.9 19 4 4.8 36t) Pettigrew, Det. (TE) 176 16 11.0 0 0 --- 176 16 11.0 39) Doucet, Ariz (WR) 175 10 17.5 0 0 --- 175 10 17.5 40) Gonzalez, Atl. (TE) 173 14 12.4 0 0 --- 173 14 12.4 41) Olsen, Car. (TE) 169 12 14.1 0 0 --- 169 12 14.1 42) P. Thomas, N.O. (RB) 166 28 5.9 100 21 4.8 66 7 9.4 43t) B. Gibson, St.L (WR) 157 12 13.1 0 0 --- 157 12 13.1 43t) Jacobs, NY-G (RB) 157 32 4.9 98 29 3.4 59 3 19.7 45) D. Jackson, Phi. (WR) 156 12 13.0 3 2 1.5 153 10 15.3 46t) Parker, T.B. (WR) 153 11 13.9 0 0 --- 153 11 13.9 46t) Vick, Phi. (QB) 153 24 6.4 153 24 6.4 0 0 --- 48) Alexander, St.L (WR) 150 5 30.0 0 0 --- 150 5 30.0 49t) Graham, T.B. (RB) 146 31 4.7 30 11 2.7 116 20 5.8 49t) *Helu, Was. (RB) 146 21 7.0 91 16 5.7 55 5 11.0

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WEEK 3 / THROUGH MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 26, 2011 NFL / MOST YARDS FROM SCRIMMAGE Total Rushing Receiving Rank Player, Team Yards Att+Rec Avg Yards Att Avg Yards Rec Avg 1t) D. McFadden, Oak. (RB) 477 72 6.6 393 61 6.4 84 11 7.6 1t) Welker, N.E. (WR) 477 32 14.9 19 1 19.0 458 31 14.8 3) Jackson, Buf. (RB) 418 55 7.6 303 47 6.4 115 8 14.4 4) Rice, Bal. (RB) 409 55 7.4 231 41 5.6 178 14 12.7 5) Forte, Chi. (RB) 406 57 7.1 119 35 3.4 287 22 13.0 6) McCoy, Phi. (RB) 394 66 6.0 345 57 6.1 49 9 5.4 7) Mathews, S.D. (RB) 393 59 6.7 207 45 4.6 186 14 13.3 8) Wallace, Pit. (WR) 377 21 18.0 0 0 --- 377 21 18.0 9) Jones-Drew, Jac. (RB) 371 72 5.2 307 66 4.7 64 6 10.7 10) S. Smith, Car. (WR) 349 16 21.8 0 0 --- 349 16 21.8 11) Peterson, Min. (RB) 342 66 5.2 296 58 5.1 46 8 5.8 12) Tate, Hou. (RB) 341 71 4.8 301 66 4.6 40 5 8.0 13) Best, Det. (RB) 325 64 5.1 143 49 2.9 182 15 12.1 14) A. Johnson, Hou. (WR) 324 22 14.7 8 1 8.0 316 21 15.0 15) Turner, Atl. (RB) 306 46 6.7 234 42 5.6 72 4 18.0 16) Bradshaw, NY-G (RB) 297 54 5.5 189 43 4.4 108 11 9.8 17) Britt, Ten. (WR) 289 17 17.0 0 0 --- 289 17 17.0 18) Hightower, Was. (RB) 283 68 4.2 209 59 3.5 74 9 8.2 19) R. Gronkowski, N.E. (TE) 281 17 16.5 0 0 --- 281 17 16.5 20) Witten, Dal. (TE) 272 19 14.3 0 0 --- 272 19 14.3 21) Jackson, S.D. (WR) 267 18 14.8 1 1 1.0 266 17 15.6 22) Henderson, N.O. (WR) 265 12 22.1 0 0 --- 265 12 22.1 23t) Benson, Cin. (RB) 263 62 4.2 244 58 4.2 19 4 4.8 23t) G. Jennings, G.B. (WR) 263 18 14.6 0 0 --- 263 18 14.6 25t) Maclin, Phi. (WR) 261 20 13.1 1 1 1.0 260 19 13.7 25t) Marshall, Mia. (WR) 261 17 15.4 0 0 --- 261 17 15.4 27t) Fitzgerald, Ariz (WR) 259 15 17.3 0 0 --- 259 15 17.3 27t) C. Williams, St.L (RB) 259 59 4.4 202 50 4.0 57 9 6.3 29t) Tomlinson, NY-J (RB) 258 29 8.9 62 17 3.6 196 12 16.3 29t) Washington, Ten. (WR) 258 21 12.3 0 0 --- 258 21 12.3 31) St. Johnson, Buf. (WR) 256 20 12.8 0 0 --- 256 20 12.8 32) Jones, Dal. (RB) 251 47 5.3 184 40 4.6 67 7 9.6 33) Keller, NY-J (TE) 249 16 15.6 0 0 --- 249 16 15.6 34) Addai, Ind. (RB) 241 46 5.2 189 39 4.8 52 7 7.4 35) *Thomas, Mia. (RB) 239 45 5.3 202 41 4.9 37 4 9.3 36) Graham, N.O. (TE) 235 14 16.8 0 0 --- 235 14 16.8 37) Nelson, Buf. (WR) 233 20 11.7 0 0 --- 233 20 11.7 38) Austin, Dal. (WR) 231 15 15.4 -2 1 -2.0 233 14 16.6 39) Stewart, Car. (RB) 230 36 6.4 90 23 3.9 140 13 10.8 40) *D. Moore, Oak. (WR) 228 11 20.7 48 2 24.0 180 9 20.0 41) Sproles, N.O. (RB) 227 29 7.8 59 8 7.4 168 21 8.0 42) C. Johnson, Det. (WR) 225 16 14.1 0 0 --- 225 16 14.1 43) White, Atl. (WR) 224 20 11.2 0 0 --- 224 20 11.2 44) Branch, N.E. (WR) 222 15 14.8 0 0 --- 222 15 14.8 45) Tolbert, S.D. (RB) 219 45 4.9 64 25 2.6 155 20 7.8 46t) F. Davis, Was. (TE) 214 12 17.8 0 0 --- 214 12 17.8 46t) Decker, Den. (WR) 214 15 14.3 0 0 --- 214 15 14.3 48) Moss, Was. (WR) 207 16 12.9 0 0 --- 207 16 12.9 49t) Finley, G.B. (TE) 206 15 13.7 0 0 --- 206 15 13.7 49t) *Jones, Atl. (WR) 206 14 14.7 -9 1 -9.0 215 13 16.5

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WEEK 3 / THROUGH MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 26, 2011 AFC / LEADERS IN FIRST DOWNS Rank Player, Team Rush Rec Tot 1) Welker, N.E. (WR) 1 23 24 2) Tate, Hou. (RB) 19 2 21 3) Jones-Drew, Jac. (RB) 16 3 19 4t) Jackson, Buf. (RB) 13 5 18 4t) D. McFadden, Oak. (RB) 14 4 18 4t) Wallace, Pit. (WR) 0 18 18 7) Jackson, S.D. (WR) 0 17 17 8t) Mathews, S.D. (RB) 8 8 16 8t) Rice, Bal. (RB) 6 10 16 10t) R. Gronkowski, N.E. (TE) 0 15 15 10t) St. Johnson, Buf. (WR) 0 15 15 10t) Tolbert, S.D. (RB) 4 11 15 13t) Britt, Ten. (WR) 0 14 14 13t) A. Johnson, Hou. (WR) 0 14 14 13t) Marshall, Mia. (WR) 0 14 14 16t) Benson, Cin. (RB) 12 1 13 16t) Keller, NY-J (TE) 0 13 13 18t) Addai, Ind. (RB) 10 2 12 18t) *Thomas, Mia. (RB) 9 3 12 18t) Washington, Ten. (WR) 0 12 12 21t) Boldin, Bal. (WR) 0 11 11 21t) Decker, Den. (WR) 0 11 11 21t) Hillis, Cle. (RB) 8 3 11 21t) Wayne, Ind. (WR) 0 11 11 25t) Bowe, K.C. (WR) 0 10 10 25t) Branch, N.E. (WR) 0 10 10 25t) *Green, Cin. (WR) 0 10 10 25t) McGahee, Den. (RB) 8 2 10 25t) *D. Moore, Oak. (WR) 2 8 10 30t) Chandler, Buf. (TE) 0 9 9 30t) Hartline, Mia. (WR) 0 9 9 30t) Hernandez, N.E. (TE) 0 9 9 30t) Nelson, Buf. (WR) 0 9 9 34t) Daniels, Hou. (TE) 0 8 8 34t) Garcon, Ind. (WR) 0 8 8 34t) Massaquoi, Cle. (WR) 0 8 8 34t) Thomas, Jac. (WR) 0 8 8 34t) Tomlinson, NY-J (RB) 1 7 8 39t) A. Brown, Pit. (WR) 0 7 7 39t) Bush, Oak. (RB) 6 1 7 39t) Casey, Hou. (TE) 1 6 7 39t) Dickson, Bal. (TE) 0 7 7 39t) Floyd, S.D. (WR) 0 7 7 39t) Greene, NY-J (RB) 5 2 7 39t) Henne, Mia. (QB) 7 0 7 39t) Lloyd, Den. (WR) 0 7 7 39t) McCluster, K.C. (WR) 6 1 7 39t) Mendenhall, Pit. (RB) 7 0 7 39t) H. Miller, Pit. (TE) 0 7 7 50t) Burress, NY-J (WR) 0 6 6 50t) Bush, Mia. (RB) 2 4 6 50t) Caldwell, Cin. (WR) 0 6 6 50t) J. Campbell, Oak. (QB) 6 0 6 50t) Green-Ellis, N.E. (RB) 6 0 6 50t) Gresham, Cin. (TE) 0 6 6 50t) Hardesty, Cle. (RB) 4 2 6 50t) Holmes, NY-J (WR) 0 6 6 50t) C. Johnson, Ten. (RB) 3 3 6 50t) Jones, Buf. (WR) 0 6 6 50t) Simpson, Cin. (WR) 0 6 6 50t) Woodhead, N.E. (RB) 4 2 6

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WEEK 3 / THROUGH MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 26, 2011 NFC / LEADERS IN FIRST DOWNS Rank Player, Team Rush Rec Tot 1) McCoy, Phi. (RB) 23 3 26 2) Forte, Chi. (RB) 5 11 16 3t) Bradshaw, NY-G (RB) 12 3 15 3t) Peterson, Min. (RB) 14 1 15 3t) White, Atl. (WR) 0 15 15 6t) Best, Det. (RB) 7 7 14 6t) Hightower, Was. (RB) 8 6 14 8t) G. Jennings, G.B. (WR) 0 13 13 8t) C. Johnson, Det. (WR) 0 13 13 8t) Moss, Was. (WR) 0 13 13 8t) Stewart, Car. (RB) 7 6 13 8t) C. Williams, St.L (RB) 9 4 13 13t) Finley, G.B. (TE) 0 12 12 13t) Gonzalez, Atl. (TE) 0 12 12 13t) Graham, N.O. (TE) 0 12 12 13t) Witten, Dal. (TE) 0 12 12 17t) Austin, Dal. (WR) 0 11 11 17t) Grant, G.B. (RB) 9 2 11 17t) Maclin, Phi. (WR) 0 11 11 17t) S. Smith, Car. (WR) 0 11 11 21t) F. Davis, Was. (TE) 0 10 10 21t) Fitzgerald, Ariz (WR) 0 10 10 21t) Gaffney, Was. (WR) 0 10 10 21t) Harvin, Min. (WR) 3 7 10 21t) D. Jackson, Phi. (WR) 1 9 10 21t) Jenkins, Min. (WR) 0 10 10 21t) *Jones, Atl. (WR) 0 10 10 21t) Meachem, N.O. (WR) 1 9 10 21t) Starks, G.B. (RB) 9 1 10 21t) Wells, Ariz (RB) 10 0 10 31t) B. Gibson, St.L (WR) 0 9 9 31t) Henderson, N.O. (WR) 0 9 9 31t) *M. Ingram, N.O. (RB) 9 0 9 31t) Olsen, Car. (TE) 0 9 9 31t) Pettigrew, Det. (TE) 0 9 9 31t) Sproles, N.O. (RB) 2 7 9 31t) Turner, Atl. (RB) 6 3 9 31t) Vick, Phi. (QB) 9 0 9 39t) Freeman, T.B. (QB) 8 0 8 39t) *Helu, Was. (RB) 6 2 8 39t) Jacobs, NY-G (RB) 6 2 8 39t) Jones, Dal. (RB) 4 4 8 39t) Knox, Chi. (WR) 0 8 8 39t) Shockey, Car. (TE) 0 8 8 39t) Winslow, T.B. (TE) 0 8 8 46t) Blount, T.B. (RB) 7 0 7 46t) Burleson, Det. (WR) 1 6 7 46t) V. Davis, S.F. (TE) 0 7 7 46t) Doucet, Ariz (WR) 0 7 7 46t) Graham, T.B. (RB) 0 7 7 46t) Lynch, Sea. (RB) 7 0 7 46t) *Newton, Car. (QB) 7 0 7 46t) Nicks, NY-G (WR) 0 7 7 46t) Sims-Walker, St.L (WR) 0 7 7 46t) P. Thomas, N.O. (RB) 3 4 7 46t) M. Williams, T.B. (WR) 0 7 7

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WEEK 3 / THROUGH MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 26, 2011 NFL / LEADERS IN FIRST DOWNS Rank Player, Team Rush Rec Tot 1) McCoy, Phi. (RB) 23 3 26 2) Welker, N.E. (WR) 1 23 24 3) Tate, Hou. (RB) 19 2 21 4) Jones-Drew, Jac. (RB) 16 3 19 5t) Jackson, Buf. (RB) 13 5 18 5t) D. McFadden, Oak. (RB) 14 4 18 5t) Wallace, Pit. (WR) 0 18 18 8) Jackson, S.D. (WR) 0 17 17 9t) Forte, Chi. (RB) 5 11 16 9t) Mathews, S.D. (RB) 8 8 16 9t) Rice, Bal. (RB) 6 10 16 12t) Bradshaw, NY-G (RB) 12 3 15 12t) R. Gronkowski, N.E. (TE) 0 15 15 12t) St. Johnson, Buf. (WR) 0 15 15 12t) Peterson, Min. (RB) 14 1 15 12t) Tolbert, S.D. (RB) 4 11 15 12t) White, Atl. (WR) 0 15 15 18t) Best, Det. (RB) 7 7 14 18t) Britt, Ten. (WR) 0 14 14 18t) Hightower, Was. (RB) 8 6 14 18t) A. Johnson, Hou. (WR) 0 14 14 18t) Marshall, Mia. (WR) 0 14 14 23t) Benson, Cin. (RB) 12 1 13 23t) G. Jennings, G.B. (WR) 0 13 13 23t) C. Johnson, Det. (WR) 0 13 13 23t) Keller, NY-J (TE) 0 13 13 23t) Moss, Was. (WR) 0 13 13 23t) Stewart, Car. (RB) 7 6 13 23t) C. Williams, St.L (RB) 9 4 13 30t) Addai, Ind. (RB) 10 2 12 30t) Finley, G.B. (TE) 0 12 12 30t) Gonzalez, Atl. (TE) 0 12 12 30t) Graham, N.O. (TE) 0 12 12 30t) *Thomas, Mia. (RB) 9 3 12 30t) Washington, Ten. (WR) 0 12 12 30t) Witten, Dal. (TE) 0 12 12 37t) Austin, Dal. (WR) 0 11 11 37t) Boldin, Bal. (WR) 0 11 11 37t) Decker, Den. (WR) 0 11 11 37t) Grant, G.B. (RB) 9 2 11 37t) Hillis, Cle. (RB) 8 3 11 37t) Maclin, Phi. (WR) 0 11 11 37t) S. Smith, Car. (WR) 0 11 11 37t) Wayne, Ind. (WR) 0 11 11 45t) Bowe, K.C. (WR) 0 10 10 45t) Branch, N.E. (WR) 0 10 10 45t) F. Davis, Was. (TE) 0 10 10 45t) Fitzgerald, Ariz (WR) 0 10 10 45t) Gaffney, Was. (WR) 0 10 10 45t) *Green, Cin. (WR) 0 10 10 45t) Harvin, Min. (WR) 3 7 10 45t) D. Jackson, Phi. (WR) 1 9 10 45t) Jenkins, Min. (WR) 0 10 10 45t) *Jones, Atl. (WR) 0 10 10 45t) McGahee, Den. (RB) 8 2 10 45t) Meachem, N.O. (WR) 1 9 10 45t) *D. Moore, Oak. (WR) 2 8 10 45t) Starks, G.B. (RB) 9 1 10 45t) Wells, Ariz (RB) 10 0 10

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WEEK 3 / THROUGH MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 26, 2011 AFC / LEADING PUNTERS Opp Ret In Net Rank Player, Team No Yards Lg Avg TB Blk Dwn OB Ret Yds 20 Avg 1) Lechler, Oak. 15 843 77 56.2 2 0 1 0 11 224 3 38.6 2) B. Fields, Mia. 12 639 70 53.3 0 0 3 0 8 101 6 44.8 3) Moorman, Buf. 12 609 63 50.8 3 0 2 0 6 65 3 40.3 4) Sepulveda, Pit. 10 498 66 49.8 4 0 2 0 2 2 3 41.6 5) Colquitt, Den. 15 746 65 49.7 2 0 2 0 9 50 6 43.7 6) McAfee, Ind. 17 800 58 47.1 2 0 4 0 9 208 4 32.5 7) Koch, Bal. 12 550 62 45.8 2 0 3 0 5 24 2 40.5 8) Huber, Cin. 20 904 60 45.2 3 0 4 0 9 77 7 38.4 9) *Hartmann, Hou. 10 450 69 45.0 1 0 1 0 5 45 2 38.5 10) Mesko, N.E. 9 377 57 41.9 1 0 2 0 5 29 4 36.4 11) Kern, Ten. 14 586 62 41.9 1 0 4 0 7 82 4 34.6 12) Colquitt, K.C. 17 708 58 41.6 0 0 3 0 7 51 3 38.6 13) Conley, NY-J 16 663 60 41.4 1 0 1 0 8 51 5 37.0 14) Maynard, Cle. 10 412 53 41.2 0 0 6 0 2 28 3 38.4 15) Turk, Jac. 16 655 65 40.9 5 0 6 0 5 35 3 32.5 16) McGee, Cle. 8 288 48 36.0 1 0 3 0 1 15 0 31.6 NFC / LEADING PUNTERS Opp Ret In Net Rank Player, Team No Yards Lg Avg TB Blk Dwn OB Ret Yds 20 Avg 1) Lee, S.F. 18 950 64 52.8 1 0 3 0 10 96 4 46.3 2) McBriar, Dal. 12 582 65 48.5 1 1 0 0 9 74 4 37.5 3) Koenen, T.B. 12 573 58 47.8 0 0 0 0 9 53 3 43.3 4) Morstead, N.O. 10 475 59 47.5 1 0 4 0 4 6 2 44.9 5) Ryan, Sea. 23 1087 77 47.3 1 0 5 0 15 175 7 38.8 6) *Donahue, Det. 17 772 60 45.4 1 0 6 0 6 89 6 39.0 7) Kluwe, Min. 16 721 56 45.1 0 0 1 0 11 102 5 38.7 8) Jones, St.L 19 854 61 44.9 3 0 3 0 9 72 2 38.0 9) Podlesh, Chi. 21 936 57 44.6 0 0 3 0 10 50 3 42.2 10) Weatherford, NY-G 17 757 61 44.5 1 0 4 0 8 95 3 37.8 11) Zastudil, Ariz 16 710 53 44.4 1 0 4 0 11 119 3 35.7 12) Rocca, Was. 14 608 58 43.4 0 0 2 0 6 67 9 38.6 13) *Henry, Phi. 9 378 52 42.0 1 0 4 0 2 19 3 37.7 14) Masthay, G.B. 13 515 52 39.6 1 0 4 0 6 133 2 27.8 15) Baker, Car. 17 671 56 39.5 4 0 3 0 4 96 5 29.1 16) *Bosher, Atl. 15 535 49 35.7 0 0 4 0 6 49 4 32.4 NFL / LEADING PUNTERS Opp Ret In Net Rank Player, Team No Yards Lg Avg TB Blk Dwn OB Ret Yds 20 Avg 1) Lechler, Oak. 15 843 77 56.2 2 0 1 0 11 224 3 38.6 2) B. Fields, Mia. 12 639 70 53.3 0 0 3 0 8 101 6 44.8 3) Lee, S.F. 18 950 64 52.8 1 0 3 0 10 96 4 46.3 4) Moorman, Buf. 12 609 63 50.8 3 0 2 0 6 65 3 40.3 5) Sepulveda, Pit. 10 498 66 49.8 4 0 2 0 2 2 3 41.6 6) Colquitt, Den. 15 746 65 49.7 2 0 2 0 9 50 6 43.7 7) McBriar, Dal. 12 582 65 48.5 1 1 0 0 9 74 4 37.5 8) Koenen, T.B. 12 573 58 47.8 0 0 0 0 9 53 3 43.3 9) Morstead, N.O. 10 475 59 47.5 1 0 4 0 4 6 2 44.9 10) Ryan, Sea. 23 1087 77 47.3 1 0 5 0 15 175 7 38.8 11) McAfee, Ind. 17 800 58 47.1 2 0 4 0 9 208 4 32.5 12) Koch, Bal. 12 550 62 45.8 2 0 3 0 5 24 2 40.5 13) *Donahue, Det. 17 772 60 45.4 1 0 6 0 6 89 6 39.0 14) Huber, Cin. 20 904 60 45.2 3 0 4 0 9 77 7 38.4 15) Kluwe, Min. 16 721 56 45.1 0 0 1 0 11 102 5 38.7 16) *Hartmann, Hou. 10 450 69 45.0 1 0 1 0 5 45 2 38.5 17) Jones, St.L 19 854 61 44.9 3 0 3 0 9 72 2 38.0 18) Podlesh, Chi. 21 936 57 44.6 0 0 3 0 10 50 3 42.2 19) Weatherford, NY-G 17 757 61 44.5 1 0 4 0 8 95 3 37.8 20) Zastudil, Ariz 16 710 53 44.4 1 0 4 0 11 119 3 35.7 21) Rocca, Was. 14 608 58 43.4 0 0 2 0 6 67 9 38.6 22) *Henry, Phi. 9 378 52 42.0 1 0 4 0 2 19 3 37.7 23) Mesko, N.E. 9 377 57 41.9 1 0 2 0 5 29 4 36.4 24) Kern, Ten. 14 586 62 41.9 1 0 4 0 7 82 4 34.6 25) Colquitt, K.C. 17 708 58 41.6 0 0 3 0 7 51 3 38.6 26) Conley, NY-J 16 663 60 41.4 1 0 1 0 8 51 5 37.0 27) Maynard, Cle. 10 412 53 41.2 0 0 6 0 2 28 3 38.4 28) Turk, Jac. 16 655 65 40.9 5 0 6 0 5 35 3 32.5 29) Masthay, G.B. 13 515 52 39.6 1 0 4 0 6 133 2 27.8 30) Baker, Car. 17 671 56 39.5 4 0 3 0 4 96 5 29.1 31) McGee, Cle. 8 288 48 36.0 1 0 3 0 1 15 0 31.6

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WEEK 3 / THROUGH MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 26, 2011 AFC / LEADING PUNTERS, NET AVERAGE Opp Ret In Net Rank Player, Team No Yards Lg Avg TB Blk Dwn OB Ret Yds 20 Avg 1) B. Fields, Mia. 12 639 70 53.3 0 0 3 0 8 101 6 44.8 2) Colquitt, Den. 15 746 65 49.7 2 0 2 0 9 50 6 43.7 3) Sepulveda, Pit. 10 498 66 49.8 4 0 2 0 2 2 3 41.6 4) Koch, Bal. 12 550 62 45.8 2 0 3 0 5 24 2 40.5 5) Moorman, Buf. 12 609 63 50.8 3 0 2 0 6 65 3 40.3 6) Colquitt, K.C. 17 708 58 41.6 0 0 3 0 7 51 3 38.6 7) Lechler, Oak. 15 843 77 56.2 2 0 1 0 11 224 3 38.6 8) *Hartmann, Hou. 10 450 69 45.0 1 0 1 0 5 45 2 38.5 9) Maynard, Cle. 10 412 53 41.2 0 0 6 0 2 28 3 38.4 10) Huber, Cin. 20 904 60 45.2 3 0 4 0 9 77 7 38.4 11) Conley, NY-J 16 663 60 41.4 1 0 1 0 8 51 5 37.0 12) Mesko, N.E. 9 377 57 41.9 1 0 2 0 5 29 4 36.4 13) Kern, Ten. 14 586 62 41.9 1 0 4 0 7 82 4 34.6 14) Turk, Jac. 16 655 65 40.9 5 0 6 0 5 35 3 32.5 15) McAfee, Ind. 17 800 58 47.1 2 0 4 0 9 208 4 32.5 16) McGee, Cle. 8 288 48 36.0 1 0 3 0 1 15 0 31.6 NFC / LEADING PUNTERS, NET AVERAGE Opp Ret In Net Rank Player, Team No Yards Lg Avg TB Blk Dwn OB Ret Yds 20 Avg 1) Lee, S.F. 18 950 64 52.8 1 0 3 0 10 96 4 46.3 2) Morstead, N.O. 10 475 59 47.5 1 0 4 0 4 6 2 44.9 3) Koenen, T.B. 12 573 58 47.8 0 0 0 0 9 53 3 43.3 4) Podlesh, Chi. 21 936 57 44.6 0 0 3 0 10 50 3 42.2 5) *Donahue, Det. 17 772 60 45.4 1 0 6 0 6 89 6 39.0 6) Ryan, Sea. 23 1087 77 47.3 1 0 5 0 15 175 7 38.8 7) Kluwe, Min. 16 721 56 45.1 0 0 1 0 11 102 5 38.7 8) Rocca, Was. 14 608 58 43.4 0 0 2 0 6 67 9 38.6 9) Jones, St.L 19 854 61 44.9 3 0 3 0 9 72 2 38.0 10) Weatherford, NY-G 17 757 61 44.5 1 0 4 0 8 95 3 37.8 11) *Henry, Phi. 9 378 52 42.0 1 0 4 0 2 19 3 37.7 12) McBriar, Dal. 12 582 65 48.5 1 1 0 0 9 74 4 37.5 13) Zastudil, Ariz 16 710 53 44.4 1 0 4 0 11 119 3 35.7 14) *Bosher, Atl. 15 535 49 35.7 0 0 4 0 6 49 4 32.4 15) Baker, Car. 17 671 56 39.5 4 0 3 0 4 96 5 29.1 16) Masthay, G.B. 13 515 52 39.6 1 0 4 0 6 133 2 27.8 NFL / LEADING PUNTERS, NET AVERAGE Opp Ret In Net Rank Player, Team No Yards Lg Avg TB Blk Dwn OB Ret Yds 20 Avg 1) Lee, S.F. 18 950 64 52.8 1 0 3 0 10 96 4 46.3 2) Morstead, N.O. 10 475 59 47.5 1 0 4 0 4 6 2 44.9 3) B. Fields, Mia. 12 639 70 53.3 0 0 3 0 8 101 6 44.8 4) Colquitt, Den. 15 746 65 49.7 2 0 2 0 9 50 6 43.7 5) Koenen, T.B. 12 573 58 47.8 0 0 0 0 9 53 3 43.3 6) Podlesh, Chi. 21 936 57 44.6 0 0 3 0 10 50 3 42.2 7) Sepulveda, Pit. 10 498 66 49.8 4 0 2 0 2 2 3 41.6 8) Koch, Bal. 12 550 62 45.8 2 0 3 0 5 24 2 40.5 9) Moorman, Buf. 12 609 63 50.8 3 0 2 0 6 65 3 40.3 10) *Donahue, Det. 17 772 60 45.4 1 0 6 0 6 89 6 39.0 11) Ryan, Sea. 23 1087 77 47.3 1 0 5 0 15 175 7 38.8 12) Kluwe, Min. 16 721 56 45.1 0 0 1 0 11 102 5 38.7 13) Colquitt, K.C. 17 708 58 41.6 0 0 3 0 7 51 3 38.6 14) Rocca, Was. 14 608 58 43.4 0 0 2 0 6 67 9 38.6 15) Lechler, Oak. 15 843 77 56.2 2 0 1 0 11 224 3 38.6 16) *Hartmann, Hou. 10 450 69 45.0 1 0 1 0 5 45 2 38.5 17) Maynard, Cle. 10 412 53 41.2 0 0 6 0 2 28 3 38.4 18) Huber, Cin. 20 904 60 45.2 3 0 4 0 9 77 7 38.4 19) Jones, St.L 19 854 61 44.9 3 0 3 0 9 72 2 38.0 20) Weatherford, NY-G 17 757 61 44.5 1 0 4 0 8 95 3 37.8 21) *Henry, Phi. 9 378 52 42.0 1 0 4 0 2 19 3 37.7 22) McBriar, Dal. 12 582 65 48.5 1 1 0 0 9 74 4 37.5 23) Conley, NY-J 16 663 60 41.4 1 0 1 0 8 51 5 37.0 24) Mesko, N.E. 9 377 57 41.9 1 0 2 0 5 29 4 36.4 25) Zastudil, Ariz 16 710 53 44.4 1 0 4 0 11 119 3 35.7 26) Kern, Ten. 14 586 62 41.9 1 0 4 0 7 82 4 34.6 27) Turk, Jac. 16 655 65 40.9 5 0 6 0 5 35 3 32.5 28) McAfee, Ind. 17 800 58 47.1 2 0 4 0 9 208 4 32.5 29) *Bosher, Atl. 15 535 49 35.7 0 0 4 0 6 49 4 32.4 30) McGee, Cle. 8 288 48 36.0 1 0 3 0 1 15 0 31.6 31) Baker, Car. 17 671 56 39.5 4 0 3 0 4 96 5 29.1

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WEEK 3 / THROUGH MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 26, 2011 AFC / PUNT RETURN LEADERS Rank Player, Team Ret FC Yards Avg Long TD 1) Decker, Den. 5 1 128 25.6 90t 1 2) Jones, Hou. 7 0 132 18.9 79t 1 3) Cribbs, Cle. 8 1 110 13.8 43 0 4) *Kerley, NY-J 7 1 93 13.3 53 0 5) A. Brown, Pit. 10 2 128 12.8 41 0 6) Edelman, N.E. 8 1 90 11.3 18 0 7) Webb, Bal. 6 3 59 9.8 29 0 8) Parrish, Buf. 5 2 46 9.2 28 0 9) Bess, Mia. 4 2 35 8.8 16 0 10) Tate, Cin. 9 7 75 8.3 16 0 11t) Mariani, Ten. 8 1 45 5.6 12 0 11t) Walters, S.D. 8 3 45 5.6 13 0 13) *Shorts, Jac. 7 5 36 5.1 27 0 NFC / PUNT RETURN LEADERS Rank Player, Team Ret FC Yards Avg Long TD 1) Sproles, N.O. 5 5 98 19.6 72t 1 2) *Peterson, Ariz 8 4 147 18.4 89t 1 3) Banks, Was. 10 1 142 14.2 35 0 4) Parker, T.B. 4 2 56 14.0 23 0 5) Sherels, Min. 8 6 110 13.8 53 0 6) Ginn, S.F. 12 3 156 13.0 55t 1 7) *Harris, Dal. 6 6 52 8.7 14 0 8) Logan, Det. 10 6 78 7.8 20 0 9) Washington, Sea. 7 0 54 7.7 14 0 10) Weems, Atl. 6 3 45 7.5 19 0 11) *Cobb, G.B. 6 4 44 7.3 17 0 12) A. Edwards, Car. 10 1 58 5.8 14 0 13) D. Jackson, Phi. 4 3 19 4.8 13 0 NFL / PUNT RETURN LEADERS Rank Player, Team Ret FC Yards Avg Long TD 1) Decker, Den. 5 1 128 25.6 90t 1 2) Sproles, N.O. 5 5 98 19.6 72t 1 3) Jones, Hou. 7 0 132 18.9 79t 1 4) *Peterson, Ariz 8 4 147 18.4 89t 1 5) Banks, Was. 10 1 142 14.2 35 0 6) Parker, T.B. 4 2 56 14.0 23 0 7t) Cribbs, Cle. 8 1 110 13.8 43 0 7t) Sherels, Min. 8 6 110 13.8 53 0 9) *Kerley, NY-J 7 1 93 13.3 53 0 10) Ginn, S.F. 12 3 156 13.0 55t 1 11) A. Brown, Pit. 10 2 128 12.8 41 0 12) Edelman, N.E. 8 1 90 11.3 18 0 13) Webb, Bal. 6 3 59 9.8 29 0 14) Parrish, Buf. 5 2 46 9.2 28 0 15) Bess, Mia. 4 2 35 8.8 16 0 16) *Harris, Dal. 6 6 52 8.7 14 0 17) Tate, Cin. 9 7 75 8.3 16 0 18) Logan, Det. 10 6 78 7.8 20 0 19) Washington, Sea. 7 0 54 7.7 14 0 20) Weems, Atl. 6 3 45 7.5 19 0 21) *Cobb, G.B. 6 4 44 7.3 17 0 22) A. Edwards, Car. 10 1 58 5.8 14 0 23t) Mariani, Ten. 8 1 45 5.6 12 0 23t) Walters, S.D. 8 3 45 5.6 13 0 25) *Shorts, Jac. 7 5 36 5.1 27 0 26) D. Jackson, Phi. 4 3 19 4.8 13 0

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WEEK 3 / THROUGH MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 26, 2011 AFC / KICKOFF RETURN LEADERS Rank Player, Team Ret Yards Avg Long TD 1) Manning, Hou. 6 206 34.3 46 0 2) Cribbs, Cle. 5 171 34.2 52 0 3) A. Brown, Pit. 4 126 31.5 41 0 4) Edelman, N.E. 7 167 23.9 37 0 5) McCluster, K.C. 8 190 23.8 35 0 6t) Arenas, K.C. 6 142 23.7 35 0 6t) Tate, Cin. 6 142 23.7 35 0 8t) Cromartie, NY-J 7 165 23.6 46 0 8t) *Lefeged, Ind. 7 165 23.6 32 0 10) Goodman, S.D. 6 136 22.7 27 0 11) Karim, Jac. 8 178 22.3 37 0 12) *Gates, Mia. 12 266 22.2 39 0 13) N. Miller, Oak. 4 61 15.3 18 0 NFC / KICKOFF RETURN LEADERS Rank Player, Team Ret Yards Avg Long TD 1) *Cobb, G.B. 4 183 45.8 108t 1 2) Ginn, S.F. 6 235 39.2 102t 1 3) Harvin, Min. 4 152 38.0 103t 1 4) Jefferson, Ariz 5 150 30.0 51 0 5) Booker, Min. 5 148 29.6 68 0 6) Sproles, N.O. 7 203 29.0 57 0 7) D. Thomas, NY-G 4 105 26.3 33 0 8) Norwood, St.L 6 156 26.0 31 0 9) Parker, T.B. 4 94 23.5 30 0 10) Banks, Was. 11 253 23.0 31 0 11) Porter, Cle.-St.L 4 90 22.5 32 0 12) Goodson, Car. 7 156 22.3 31 0 13) *Lewis, Phi. 9 194 21.6 30 0 14) Washington, Sea. 8 172 21.5 29 0 15) Weems, Atl. 8 169 21.1 36 0 16) Hester, Chi. 6 124 20.7 29 0 NFL / KICKOFF RETURN LEADERS Rank Player, Team Ret Yards Avg Long TD 1) *Cobb, G.B. 4 183 45.8 108t 1 2) Ginn, S.F. 6 235 39.2 102t 1 3) Harvin, Min. 4 152 38.0 103t 1 4) Manning, Hou. 6 206 34.3 46 0 5) Cribbs, Cle. 5 171 34.2 52 0 6) A. Brown, Pit. 4 126 31.5 41 0 7) Jefferson, Ariz 5 150 30.0 51 0 8) Booker, Min. 5 148 29.6 68 0 9) Sproles, N.O. 7 203 29.0 57 0 10) D. Thomas, NY-G 4 105 26.3 33 0 11) Norwood, St.L 6 156 26.0 31 0 12) Edelman, N.E. 7 167 23.9 37 0 13) McCluster, K.C. 8 190 23.8 35 0 14t) Arenas, K.C. 6 142 23.7 35 0 14t) Tate, Cin. 6 142 23.7 35 0 16t) Cromartie, NY-J 7 165 23.6 46 0 16t) *Lefeged, Ind. 7 165 23.6 32 0 18) Parker, T.B. 4 94 23.5 30 0 19) Banks, Was. 11 253 23.0 31 0 20) Goodman, S.D. 6 136 22.7 27 0 21) Porter, Cle.-St.L 4 90 22.5 32 0 22) Goodson, Car. 7 156 22.3 31 0 23) Karim, Jac. 8 178 22.3 37 0 24) *Gates, Mia. 12 266 22.2 39 0 25) *Lewis, Phi. 9 194 21.6 30 0 26) Washington, Sea. 8 172 21.5 29 0 27) Weems, Atl. 8 169 21.1 36 0 28) Hester, Chi. 6 124 20.7 29 0 29) N. Miller, Oak. 4 61 15.3 18 0

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WEEK 3 / THROUGH MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 26, 2011 AFC / LEADERS IN INTERCEPTIONS Rank Player, Team Int Yards Avg Long TD 1) Arrington, N.E. 3 42 14.0 27 0 2t) Cromartie, NY-J 2 63 31.5 37 0 2t) Florence, Buf. 2 57 28.5 30 1 2t) McCourty, Ten. 2 52 26.0 30 0 2t) Flowers, K.C. 2 43 21.5 43 0 2t) E. Reed, Bal. 2 25 12.5 16 0 2t) Joseph, Hou. 2 9 4.5 5 0 8t) K. Lewis, K.C. 1 50 50.0 50 0 8t) Odrick, Mia. 1 39 39.0 39 0 8t) Wilfork, N.E. 1 28 28.0 28 0 8t) Young, Cle. 1 28 28.0 28 0 8t) Brackett, Ind. 1 27 27.0 27 0 8t) *Lefeged, Ind. 1 25 25.0 25 0 8t) Manning, Hou. 1 22 22.0 22 0 8t) McKelvin, Buf. 1 21 21.0 21 0 8t) Revis, NY-J 1 20 20.0 20 0 8t) Bullitt, Ind. 1 15 15.0 15 0 8t) Mauga, NY-J 1 11 11.0 11 0 8t) Middleton, Jac. 1 11 11.0 11 0 8t) Wilson, Buf. 1 8 8.0 8 0 8t) Witherspoon, Ten. 1 7 7.0 7 0 8t) *Wilson, Mia. 1 5 5.0 5 0 8t) Adams, Cle. 1 4 4.0 4 0 8t) Lewis, Bal. 1 4 4.0 4 0 8t) Lowery, Jac. 1 -4 -4.0 -4 0 8t) McGraw, K.C. 1 4 4.0 4 0 8t) Verner, Ten. 1 4 4.0 4 0 8t) Brown, N.E. 1 2 2.0 2 0 8t) Routt, Oak. 1 2 2.0 2 0 8t) Smith, NY-J 1 2 2.0 2 0 8t) Mathis, Jac. 1 1 1.0 1 0 8t) Branch, Oak. 1 0 0.0 0 0 8t) Giordano, Oak. 1 0 0.0 0 0 8t) M. Johnson, Cin. 1 0 0.0 0 0 8t) Phillips, S.D. 1 0 0.0 0 0 8t) Scott, Buf. 1 0 0.0 0 0 8t) *Searcy, Buf. 1 0 0.0 0 0 8t) Suggs, Bal. 1 0 0.0 0 0 8t) Webb, Bal. 1 0 0.0 0 0 8t) Weddle, S.D. 1 0 0.0 0 0

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WEEK 3 / THROUGH MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 26, 2011 NFC / LEADERS IN INTERCEPTIONS Rank Player, Team Int Yards Avg Long TD 1) Burnett, G.B. 3 0 0.0 0 0 2t) Lee, Dal. 2 51 25.5 37 0 2t) Houston, Det. 2 26 13.0 26 0 2t) Ross, NY-G 2 19 9.5 19 0 2t) Brock, S.F. 2 18 9.0 18 0 2t) Woodson, G.B. 2 6 3.0 5 0 2t) Urlacher, Chi. 2 -1 -0.5 0 0 8t) Biermann, Atl. 1 50 50.0 50t 1 8t) Marshall, Ariz 1 33 33.0 33 0 8t) Abdullah, Min. 1 32 32.0 32 0 8t) Talib, T.B. 1 28 28.0 28t 1 8t) Moore, Atl. 1 27 27.0 27 0 8t) Wilson, Ariz 1 17 17.0 17 0 8t) Washington, Ariz 1 16 16.0 16 0 8t) Ball, Dal. 1 15 15.0 15 0 8t) Martin, Car. 1 15 15.0 15 0 8t) Spievey, Det. 1 15 15.0 15 0 8t) Trufant, Sea. 1 15 15.0 15 0 8t) J. Allen, Min. 1 14 14.0 14 0 8t) Samuel, Phi. 1 14 14.0 14 0 8t) Phillips, NY-G 1 13 13.0 13 0 8t) R. Smith, S.F. 1 11 11.0 11 0 8t) Chancellor, Sea. 1 9 9.0 9 0 8t) *Kerrigan, Was. 1 9 9.0 9t 1 8t) Asomugha, Phi. 1 6 6.0 6 0 8t) Wright, Det. 1 4 4.0 4 0 8t) Winfield, Min. 1 3 3.0 3 0 8t) Greer, N.O. 1 2 2.0 2 0 8t) Hayden, Atl. 1 2 2.0 2 0 8t) *Peterson, Ariz 1 1 1.0 1 0 8t) Barber, T.B. 1 0 0.0 0 0 8t) K. Barnes, Was. 1 0 0.0 0 0 8t) DeCoud, Atl. 1 0 0.0 0 0 8t) Fletcher, Was. 1 0 0.0 0 0 8t) Mikell, St.L 1 0 0.0 0 0 8t) Rogers, S.F. 1 0 0.0 0 0 8t) Whitner, S.F. 1 0 0.0 0 0

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WEEK 3 / THROUGH MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 26, 2011 NFL / LEADERS IN INTERCEPTIONS Rank Player, Team Int Yards Avg Long TD 1t) Arrington, N.E. 3 42 14.0 27 0 1t) Burnett, G.B. 3 0 0.0 0 0 3t) Cromartie, NY-J 2 63 31.5 37 0 3t) Florence, Buf. 2 57 28.5 30 1 3t) McCourty, Ten. 2 52 26.0 30 0 3t) Lee, Dal. 2 51 25.5 37 0 3t) Flowers, K.C. 2 43 21.5 43 0 3t) Houston, Det. 2 26 13.0 26 0 3t) E. Reed, Bal. 2 25 12.5 16 0 3t) Ross, NY-G 2 19 9.5 19 0 3t) Brock, S.F. 2 18 9.0 18 0 3t) Joseph, Hou. 2 9 4.5 5 0 3t) Woodson, G.B. 2 6 3.0 5 0 3t) Urlacher, Chi. 2 -1 -0.5 0 0 15t) Biermann, Atl. 1 50 50.0 50t 1 15t) K. Lewis, K.C. 1 50 50.0 50 0 15t) Odrick, Mia. 1 39 39.0 39 0 15t) Marshall, Ariz 1 33 33.0 33 0 15t) Abdullah, Min. 1 32 32.0 32 0 15t) Talib, T.B. 1 28 28.0 28t 1 15t) Wilfork, N.E. 1 28 28.0 28 0 15t) Young, Cle. 1 28 28.0 28 0 15t) Brackett, Ind. 1 27 27.0 27 0 15t) Moore, Atl. 1 27 27.0 27 0 15t) *Lefeged, Ind. 1 25 25.0 25 0 15t) Manning, Hou. 1 22 22.0 22 0 15t) McKelvin, Buf. 1 21 21.0 21 0 15t) Revis, NY-J 1 20 20.0 20 0 15t) Wilson, Ariz 1 17 17.0 17 0 15t) Washington, Ariz 1 16 16.0 16 0 15t) Ball, Dal. 1 15 15.0 15 0 15t) Bullitt, Ind. 1 15 15.0 15 0 15t) Martin, Car. 1 15 15.0 15 0 15t) Spievey, Det. 1 15 15.0 15 0 15t) Trufant, Sea. 1 15 15.0 15 0 15t) J. Allen, Min. 1 14 14.0 14 0 15t) Samuel, Phi. 1 14 14.0 14 0 15t) Phillips, NY-G 1 13 13.0 13 0 15t) Mauga, NY-J 1 11 11.0 11 0 15t) Middleton, Jac. 1 11 11.0 11 0 15t) R. Smith, S.F. 1 11 11.0 11 0 15t) Chancellor, Sea. 1 9 9.0 9 0 15t) *Kerrigan, Was. 1 9 9.0 9t 1 15t) Wilson, Buf. 1 8 8.0 8 0 15t) Witherspoon, Ten. 1 7 7.0 7 0 15t) Asomugha, Phi. 1 6 6.0 6 0 15t) *Wilson, Mia. 1 5 5.0 5 0 15t) Adams, Cle. 1 4 4.0 4 0 15t) Lewis, Bal. 1 4 4.0 4 0 15t) Lowery, Jac. 1 -4 -4.0 -4 0 15t) McGraw, K.C. 1 4 4.0 4 0 15t) Verner, Ten. 1 4 4.0 4 0 15t) Wright, Det. 1 4 4.0 4 0 15t) Winfield, Min. 1 3 3.0 3 0 15t) Brown, N.E. 1 2 2.0 2 0 15t) Greer, N.O. 1 2 2.0 2 0 15t) Hayden, Atl. 1 2 2.0 2 0 15t) Routt, Oak. 1 2 2.0 2 0 15t) Smith, NY-J 1 2 2.0 2 0 15t) Mathis, Jac. 1 1 1.0 1 0 15t) *Peterson, Ariz 1 1 1.0 1 0 15t) Barber, T.B. 1 0 0.0 0 0 15t) K. Barnes, Was. 1 0 0.0 0 0 15t) Branch, Oak. 1 0 0.0 0 0 15t) DeCoud, Atl. 1 0 0.0 0 0 15t) Fletcher, Was. 1 0 0.0 0 0 15t) Giordano, Oak. 1 0 0.0 0 0 15t) M. Johnson, Cin. 1 0 0.0 0 0 15t) Mikell, St.L 1 0 0.0 0 0 15t) Phillips, S.D. 1 0 0.0 0 0 15t) Rogers, S.F. 1 0 0.0 0 0 15t) Scott, Buf. 1 0 0.0 0 0 15t) *Searcy, Buf. 1 0 0.0 0 0 15t) Suggs, Bal. 1 0 0.0 0 0 15t) Webb, Bal. 1 0 0.0 0 0 15t) Weddle, S.D. 1 0 0.0 0 0 15t) Whitner, S.F. 1 0 0.0 0 0

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WEEK 3 / THROUGH MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 26, 2011 AFC / LEADERS IN SACKS Rank Player, Team Sacks 1) Suggs, Bal. (LB) 4.0 2t) Freeney, Ind. (DE) 3.0 2t) A. Smith, Hou. (DE) 3.0 4t) D. Jackson, Cle. (LB) 2.5 4t) Rubin, Cle. (DT) 2.5 4t) Seymour, Oak. (DT) 2.5 7t) Anderson, N.E. (DE) 2.0 7t) Atkins, Cin. (DT) 2.0 7t) Barnes, S.D. (LB) 2.0 7t) Fanene, Cin. (DE) 2.0 7t) Hali, K.C. (LB) 2.0 7t) Harrison, Pit. (LB) 2.0 7t) Mathis, Ind. (DE) 2.0 7t) *Miller, Den. (LB) 2.0 7t) Moss, Oak. (DE) 2.0 7t) Roth, Jac. (DE) 2.0 7t) Scott, NY-J (LB) 2.0 7t) Wake, Mia. (LB) 2.0 7t) Wilhite, Den. (DB) 2.0 7t) Williams, Hou. (LB) 2.0 21t) Crocker, Cin. (DB) 1.5 21t) T. Kelly, Oak. (DT) 1.5 21t) J. Mitchell, Cle. (DE) 1.5 21t) Woodley, Pit. (LB) 1.5 25t) Ball, Ten. (DE) 1.0 25t) Barwin, Hou. (LB) 1.0 25t) Butler, S.D. (LB) 1.0 25t) Chung, N.E. (DB) 1.0 25t) Coleman, Jac. (DB) 1.0 25t) DeVito, NY-J (DE) 1.0 25t) Farrior, Pit. (LB) 1.0 25t) Foote, Pit. (LB) 1.0 25t) Garay, S.D. (NT) 1.0 25t) Gilberry, K.C. (DE) 1.0 25t) Haden, Cle. (DB) 1.0 25t) Harris, NY-J (LB) 1.0 25t) Hayes, Ten. (DE) 1.0 25t) Hunter, Den. (DE) 1.0 25t) M. Johnson, Cin. (DE) 1.0 25t) Sp. Johnson, Buf. (DE) 1.0 25t) R. Jones, Mia. (DB) 1.0 25t) *Klug, Ten. (DT) 1.0 25t) Lewis, Bal. (LB) 1.0 25t) McClain, Bal. (LB) 1.0 25t) McClain, Oak. (LB) 1.0 25t) McCourty, Ten. (DB) 1.0 25t) *McPhee, Bal. (DE) 1.0 25t) Morgan, Ten. (DE) 1.0 25t) Nelson, Cin. (DB) 1.0 25t) Ninkovich, N.E. (LB) 1.0 25t) Pace, NY-J (LB) 1.0 25t) Phillips, S.D. (LB) 1.0 25t) Polamalu, Pit. (DB) 1.0 25t) Redding, Bal. (DE) 1.0 25t) Rucker, Cin. (DE) 1.0 25t) Scott, Buf. (DB) 1.0 25t) Shaughnessy, Oak. (DE) 1.0 25t) *Sheard, Cle. (DE) 1.0 25t) Smith, NY-J (DB) 1.0 25t) Taylor, Mia. (LB) 1.0 25t) *Taylor, Cle. (DT) 1.0 25t) *Watt, Hou. (DE) 1.0 25t) *Wilkerson, NY-J (DE) 1.0 25t) Wimbley, Oak. (LB) 1.0 25t) Witherspoon, Ten. (LB) 1.0

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WEEK 3 / THROUGH MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 26, 2011 NFC / LEADERS IN SACKS Rank Player, Team Sacks 1) Ware, Dal. (LB) 5.0 2t) J. Allen, Min. (DE) 4.5 2t) Pierre-Paul, NY-G (DE) 4.5 4t) Babin, Phi. (DE) 4.0 4t) Jenkins, Phi. (DT) 4.0 6t) T. Cole, Phi. (DE) 3.0 6t) C. Johnson, Car. (DE) 3.0 6t) Long, St.L (DE) 3.0 6t) Melton, Chi. (DT) 3.0 6t) Spencer, Dal. (LB) 3.0 6t) Vanden Bosch, Det. (DE) 3.0 6t) Wynn, G.B. (DE) 3.0 13t) Campbell, Ariz (DE) 2.5 13t) Galette, N.O. (DE) 2.5 13t) Harper, N.O. (DB) 2.5 13t) Robison, Min. (DE) 2.5 17t) Abraham, Atl. (DE) 2.0 17t) Casillas, N.O. (LB) 2.0 17t) Clemons, Sea. (DE) 2.0 17t) *Foster, T.B. (LB) 2.0 17t) Haralson, S.F. (LB) 2.0 17t) Hardy, Car. (DE) 2.0 17t) Hatcher, Dal. (DE) 2.0 17t) *Kerrigan, Was. (LB) 2.0 17t) Tu. McBride, N.O. (DE) 2.0 17t) McDonald, S.F. (DE) 2.0 17t) *Neild, Was. (NT) 2.0 17t) Peppers, Chi. (DE) 2.0 17t) Rhodes, Ariz (DB) 2.0 17t) J. Smith, S.F. (DE) 2.0 17t) Suh, Det. (DT) 2.0 32t) Bush, G.B. (DB) 1.5 32t) Tuck, NY-G (DE) 1.5 34t) Avril, Det. (DE) 1.0 34t) Biermann, Atl. (DE) 1.0 34t) Bigby, Sea. (DB) 1.0 34t) Bishop, G.B. (LB) 1.0 34t) Bowen, Was. (DE) 1.0 34t) Brock, Sea. (DE) 1.0 34t) Brooks, S.F. (LB) 1.0 34t) Burnett, G.B. (DB) 1.0 34t) V. Butler, Dal. (LB) 1.0 34t) Canty, NY-G (DT) 1.0 34t) Carriker, Was. (DE) 1.0 34t) Chamberlain, St.L (LB) 1.0 34t) *Clayborn, T.B. (DE) 1.0 34t) Griffen, Min. (DE) 1.0 34t) Hall, St.L (DE) 1.0 34t) Er. Henderson, Min. (LB) 1.0 34t) Hill, Sea. (LB) 1.0 34t) Idonije, Chi. (DE) 1.0 34t) Jones, T.B. (DB) 1.0 34t) King, St.L (DB) 1.0 34t) Marshall, Ariz (DB) 1.0 34t) Matthews, G.B. (LB) 1.0 34t) McCray, Dal. (DB) 1.0 34t) McIntosh, Was. (LB) 1.0 34t) Mikell, St.L (DB) 1.0 34t) Okoye, Chi. (DT) 1.0 34t) Orakpo, Was. (LB) 1.0 34t) Porter, Ariz (LB) 1.0 34t) B. Price, T.B. (DT) 1.0 34t) *Quinn, St.L (DE) 1.0 34t) Raji, G.B. (NT) 1.0 34t) Ratliff, Dal. (NT) 1.0 34t) Sidbury, Atl. (DE) 1.0 34t) Spievey, Det. (DB) 1.0 34t) Tapp, Phi. (DE) 1.0 34t) Tollefson, NY-G (DE) 1.0 34t) Torrence, N.O. (DB) 1.0 34t) Tulloch, Det. (LB) 1.0 34t) Walden, G.B. (LB) 1.0 34t) Washington, Ariz (LB) 1.0 34t) Watson, T.B. (LB) 1.0

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WEEK 3 / THROUGH MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 26, 2011 NFL / LEADERS IN SACKS Rank Player, Team Sacks 1) Ware, Dal. (LB) 5.0 2t) J. Allen, Min. (DE) 4.5 2t) Pierre-Paul, NY-G (DE) 4.5 4t) Babin, Phi. (DE) 4.0 4t) Jenkins, Phi. (DT) 4.0 4t) Suggs, Bal. (LB) 4.0 7t) T. Cole, Phi. (DE) 3.0 7t) Freeney, Ind. (DE) 3.0 7t) C. Johnson, Car. (DE) 3.0 7t) Long, St.L (DE) 3.0 7t) Melton, Chi. (DT) 3.0 7t) A. Smith, Hou. (DE) 3.0 7t) Spencer, Dal. (LB) 3.0 7t) Vanden Bosch, Det. (DE) 3.0 7t) Wynn, G.B. (DE) 3.0 16t) Campbell, Ariz (DE) 2.5 16t) Galette, N.O. (DE) 2.5 16t) Harper, N.O. (DB) 2.5 16t) D. Jackson, Cle. (LB) 2.5 16t) Robison, Min. (DE) 2.5 16t) Rubin, Cle. (DT) 2.5 16t) Seymour, Oak. (DT) 2.5 23t) Abraham, Atl. (DE) 2.0 23t) Anderson, N.E. (DE) 2.0 23t) Atkins, Cin. (DT) 2.0 23t) Barnes, S.D. (LB) 2.0 23t) Casillas, N.O. (LB) 2.0 23t) Clemons, Sea. (DE) 2.0 23t) Fanene, Cin. (DE) 2.0 23t) *Foster, T.B. (LB) 2.0 23t) Hali, K.C. (LB) 2.0 23t) Haralson, S.F. (LB) 2.0 23t) Hardy, Car. (DE) 2.0 23t) Harrison, Pit. (LB) 2.0 23t) Hatcher, Dal. (DE) 2.0 23t) *Kerrigan, Was. (LB) 2.0 23t) Mathis, Ind. (DE) 2.0 23t) Tu. McBride, N.O. (DE) 2.0 23t) McDonald, S.F. (DE) 2.0 23t) *Miller, Den. (LB) 2.0 23t) Moss, Oak. (DE) 2.0 23t) *Neild, Was. (NT) 2.0 23t) Peppers, Chi. (DE) 2.0 23t) Rhodes, Ariz (DB) 2.0 23t) Roth, Jac. (DE) 2.0 23t) Scott, NY-J (LB) 2.0 23t) J. Smith, S.F. (DE) 2.0 23t) Suh, Det. (DT) 2.0 23t) Wake, Mia. (LB) 2.0 23t) Wilhite, Den. (DB) 2.0 23t) Williams, Hou. (LB) 2.0

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WEEK 3 / THROUGH MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 26, 2011 AFC / FUMBLE RECOVERIES Rank Player, Team TotRec OffRec DefRec 1) Ngata, Bal. 3 0 3 2t) Bush, Mia. 2 2 0 2t) Flacco, Bal. 2 2 0 2t) Thomas, Cle. 2 2 0 5t) Anderson, Ind. 1 0 1 5t) Angerer, Ind. 1 0 1 5t) Ayers, Den. 1 0 1 5t) Babineaux, Ten. 1 0 1 5t) Batten, Buf. 1 0 1 5t) Bethea, Ind. 1 0 1 5t) Branch, Oak. 1 0 1 5t) Cody, Hou. 1 0 1 5t) Crayton, S.D. 1 1 0 5t) Fanene, Cin. 1 0 1 5t) Fitzpatrick, Buf. 1 1 0 5t) *Gabbert, Jac. 1 1 0 5t) Hall, Cin. 1 0 1 5t) Hardwick, S.D. 1 1 0 5t) Harvey, Den. 1 0 1 5t) Houston, Oak. 1 0 1 5t) D. Jackson, Cle. 1 0 1 5t) *T. Jones, Oak. 1 0 1 5t) Kern, Ten. 1 1 0 5t) M. Lewis, Jac. 1 1 0 5t) Lloyd, Den. 1 1 0 5t) Love, N.E. 1 0 1 5t) *Marecic, Cle. 1 1 0 5t) Mathis, Ind. 1 0 1 5t) McCoy, Cle. 1 1 0 5t) D. McFadden, Oak. 1 1 0 5t) McGahee, Den. 1 1 0 5t) McKelvin, Buf. 1 0 1 5t) *McPhee, Bal. 1 0 1 5t) Monroe, Jac. 1 1 0 5t) *Moore, Den. 1 0 1 5t) Mulligan, NY-J 1 1 0 5t) Ninkovich, N.E. 1 0 1 5t) Nwaneri, Jac. 1 1 0 5t) Peko, Cin. 1 0 1 5t) Polamalu, Pit. 1 0 1 5t) Pouha, NY-J 1 0 1 5t) Quin, Hou. 1 0 1 5t) Redding, Bal. 1 0 1 5t) Saturday, Ind. 1 1 0 5t) Scott, Ten. 1 1 0 5t) *Sheard, Cle. 1 0 1 5t) *Sheppard, Buf. 1 0 1 5t) Smith, Cin. 1 1 0 5t) Turk, Jac. 1 1 0 5t) *Watt, Hou. 1 0 1 5t) Westerman, NY-J 1 0 1 5t) Wiegmann, K.C. 1 1 0 5t) *L. Williams, Bal. 1 1 0 5t) Witherspoon, Ten. 1 0 1

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WEEK 3 / THROUGH MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 26, 2011 NFC / FUMBLE RECOVERIES Rank Player, Team TotRec OffRec DefRec 1) Romo, Dal. 6 6 0 2t) Cutler, Chi. 3 3 0 2t) Graham, T.B. 3 3 0 4t) Boley, NY-G 2 0 2 4t) Hester, Chi. 2 2 0 4t) Lee, Dal. 2 0 2 4t) Peppers, Chi. 2 0 2 4t) Vick, Phi. 2 2 0 4t) Walker, S.F. 2 1 1 10t) Amendola, St.L 1 1 0 10t) Avril, Det. 1 0 1 10t) Barber, T.B. 1 0 1 10t) Bennett, T.B. 1 0 1 10t) Best, Det. 1 1 0 10t) Bradford, St.L 1 1 0 10t) Colledge, Ariz 1 1 0 10t) Considine, Car. 1 0 1 10t) Davis, Car. 1 0 1 10t) Delmas, Det. 1 0 1 10t) Doughty, Was. 1 0 1 10t) Edwards, Atl. 1 0 1 10t) Free, Dal. 1 1 0 10t) Gandy, Det. 1 1 0 10t) Herrera, Min. 1 1 0 10t) Jackson, Sea. 1 1 0 10t) Jefferson, Ariz 1 1 0 10t) Jones, Dal. 1 1 0 10t) Jones, T.B. 1 0 1 10t) Keith, Ariz 1 1 0 10t) Kosier, Dal. 1 1 0 10t) Laurinaitis, St.L 1 0 1 10t) Loadholt, Min. 1 1 0 10t) Logan, Det. 1 1 0 10t) Manning, NY-G 1 1 0 10t) A. McCoy, Sea. 1 1 0 10t) Mikell, St.L 1 0 1 10t) Nicholas, Atl. 1 0 1 10t) Parker, Phi. 1 0 1 10t) Peters, Phi. 1 1 0 10t) Porter, Cle.-St.L 1 1 0 10t) Roberts, Ariz 1 1 0 10t) Scheffler, Det. 1 0 1 10t) Sendlein, Ariz 1 1 0 10t) Sims, Det. 1 1 0 10t) Ale. Smith, S.F. 1 1 0 10t) Stafford, Det. 1 1 0 10t) Tillman, Chi. 1 0 1 10t) Tollefson, NY-G 1 0 1 10t) Tukuafu, S.F. 1 0 1 10t) Tulloch, Det. 1 0 1 10t) Urlacher, Chi. 1 0 1 10t) Vilma, N.O. 1 0 1 10t) T. Williams, G.B. 1 0 1 10t) Willis, S.F. 1 0 1 10t) Wilson, Was. 1 0 1 10t) Woodson, G.B. 1 0 1 NFL / FUMBLE RECOVERIES Rank Player, Team TotRec OffRec DefRec 1) Romo, Dal. 6 6 0 2t) Cutler, Chi. 3 3 0 2t) Graham, T.B. 3 3 0 2t) Ngata, Bal. 3 0 3 5t) Boley, NY-G 2 0 2 5t) Bush, Mia. 2 2 0 5t) Flacco, Bal. 2 2 0 5t) Hester, Chi. 2 2 0 5t) Lee, Dal. 2 0 2 5t) Peppers, Chi. 2 0 2 5t) Thomas, Cle. 2 2 0 5t) Vick, Phi. 2 2 0 5t) Walker, S.F. 2 1 1

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WEEK 3 / THROUGH MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 26, 2011 AFC / OFFENSIVE FUMBLE RECOVERIES Rank Player, Team Ret Yards Avg Long TD 1t) Bush, Mia. 2 0 0.0 0 0 1t) Flacco, Bal. 2 0 0.0 0 0 1t) Thomas, Cle. 2 0 0.0 0 0 4t) Crayton, S.D. 1 0 0.0 0 0 4t) Fitzpatrick, Buf. 1 0 0.0 0 0 4t) *Gabbert, Jac. 1 0 0.0 0 0 4t) Hardwick, S.D. 1 0 0.0 0 0 4t) Kern, Ten. 1 0 0.0 0 0 4t) M. Lewis, Jac. 1 0 0.0 0 0 4t) Lloyd, Den. 1 0 0.0 0 0 4t) *Marecic, Cle. 1 0 0.0 0 0 4t) McCoy, Cle. 1 0 0.0 0 0 4t) D. McFadden, Oak. 1 0 0.0 0 0 4t) McGahee, Den. 1 0 0.0 0 0 4t) Monroe, Jac. 1 0 0.0 0 0 4t) Mulligan, NY-J 1 0 0.0 0 0 4t) Nwaneri, Jac. 1 0 0.0 0 0 4t) Saturday, Ind. 1 0 0.0 0 0 4t) Scott, Ten. 1 0 0.0 0 0 4t) Smith, Cin. 1 0 0.0 0 0 4t) Turk, Jac. 1 0 0.0 0 0 4t) Wiegmann, K.C. 1 0 0.0 0 0 4t) *L. Williams, Bal. 1 0 0.0 0 0 NFC / OFFENSIVE FUMBLE RECOVERIES Rank Player, Team Ret Yards Avg Long TD 1) Romo, Dal. 6 0 0.0 0 0 2t) Cutler, Chi. 3 0 0.0 0 0 2t) Graham, T.B. 3 -2 -0.7 0 0 4t) Hester, Chi. 2 0 0.0 0 0 4t) Vick, Phi. 2 0 0.0 0 0 6t) Jefferson, Ariz 1 17 17.0 17 0 6t) Peters, Phi. 1 7 7.0 7 0 6t) Amendola, St.L 1 0 0.0 0 0 6t) Best, Det. 1 0 0.0 0 0 6t) Bradford, St.L 1 0 0.0 0 0 6t) Colledge, Ariz 1 0 0.0 0 0 6t) Free, Dal. 1 0 0.0 0 0 6t) Gandy, Det. 1 0 0.0 0 0 6t) Herrera, Min. 1 0 0.0 0 0 6t) Jackson, Sea. 1 0 0.0 0 0 6t) Jones, Dal. 1 0 0.0 0 0 6t) Keith, Ariz 1 0 0.0 0 0 6t) Kosier, Dal. 1 0 0.0 0 0 6t) Loadholt, Min. 1 0 0.0 0 0 6t) Logan, Det. 1 0 0.0 0 0 6t) Manning, NY-G 1 0 0.0 0 0 6t) A. McCoy, Sea. 1 0 0.0 0 0 6t) Porter, Cle.-St.L 1 0 0.0 0 0 6t) Roberts, Ariz 1 0 0.0 0 0 6t) Sendlein, Ariz 1 0 0.0 0 0 6t) Sims, Det. 1 0 0.0 0 0 6t) Ale. Smith, S.F. 1 0 0.0 0 0 6t) Stafford, Det. 1 0 0.0 0 0 6t) Walker, S.F. 1 0 0.0 0 0

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WEEK 3 / THROUGH MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 26, 2011 NFL / OFFENSIVE FUMBLE RECOVERIES Rank Player, Team Ret Yards Avg Long TD 1) Romo, Dal. 6 0 0.0 0 0 2t) Cutler, Chi. 3 0 0.0 0 0 2t) Graham, T.B. 3 -2 -0.7 0 0 4t) Bush, Mia. 2 0 0.0 0 0 4t) Flacco, Bal. 2 0 0.0 0 0 4t) Hester, Chi. 2 0 0.0 0 0 4t) Thomas, Cle. 2 0 0.0 0 0 4t) Vick, Phi. 2 0 0.0 0 0 9t) Jefferson, Ariz 1 17 17.0 17 0 9t) Peters, Phi. 1 7 7.0 7 0 9t) Amendola, St.L 1 0 0.0 0 0 9t) Best, Det. 1 0 0.0 0 0 9t) Bradford, St.L 1 0 0.0 0 0 9t) Colledge, Ariz 1 0 0.0 0 0 9t) Crayton, S.D. 1 0 0.0 0 0 9t) Fitzpatrick, Buf. 1 0 0.0 0 0 9t) Free, Dal. 1 0 0.0 0 0 9t) *Gabbert, Jac. 1 0 0.0 0 0 9t) Gandy, Det. 1 0 0.0 0 0 9t) Hardwick, S.D. 1 0 0.0 0 0 9t) Herrera, Min. 1 0 0.0 0 0 9t) Jackson, Sea. 1 0 0.0 0 0 9t) Jones, Dal. 1 0 0.0 0 0 9t) Keith, Ariz 1 0 0.0 0 0 9t) Kern, Ten. 1 0 0.0 0 0 9t) Kosier, Dal. 1 0 0.0 0 0 9t) M. Lewis, Jac. 1 0 0.0 0 0 9t) Lloyd, Den. 1 0 0.0 0 0 9t) Loadholt, Min. 1 0 0.0 0 0 9t) Logan, Det. 1 0 0.0 0 0 9t) Manning, NY-G 1 0 0.0 0 0 9t) *Marecic, Cle. 1 0 0.0 0 0 9t) McCoy, Cle. 1 0 0.0 0 0 9t) A. McCoy, Sea. 1 0 0.0 0 0 9t) D. McFadden, Oak. 1 0 0.0 0 0 9t) McGahee, Den. 1 0 0.0 0 0 9t) Monroe, Jac. 1 0 0.0 0 0 9t) Mulligan, NY-J 1 0 0.0 0 0 9t) Nwaneri, Jac. 1 0 0.0 0 0 9t) Porter, Cle.-St.L 1 0 0.0 0 0 9t) Roberts, Ariz 1 0 0.0 0 0 9t) Saturday, Ind. 1 0 0.0 0 0 9t) Scott, Ten. 1 0 0.0 0 0 9t) Sendlein, Ariz 1 0 0.0 0 0 9t) Sims, Det. 1 0 0.0 0 0 9t) Ale. Smith, S.F. 1 0 0.0 0 0 9t) Smith, Cin. 1 0 0.0 0 0 9t) Stafford, Det. 1 0 0.0 0 0 9t) Turk, Jac. 1 0 0.0 0 0 9t) Walker, S.F. 1 0 0.0 0 0 9t) Wiegmann, K.C. 1 0 0.0 0 0 9t) *L. Williams, Bal. 1 0 0.0 0 0

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WEEK 3 / THROUGH MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 26, 2011 AFC / DEFENSIVE FUMBLE RECOVERIES Rank Player, Team Ret Yards Avg Long TD 1) Ngata, Bal. 3 28 9.3 28t 1 2t) Anderson, Ind. 1 47 47.0 47t 1 2t) Polamalu, Pit. 1 16 16.0 16t 1 2t) Angerer, Ind. 1 10 10.0 10 0 2t) Hall, Cin. 1 10 10.0 10 0 2t) *Sheard, Cle. 1 5 5.0 5 0 2t) *Watt, Hou. 1 2 2.0 2 0 2t) Ayers, Den. 1 0 0.0 0 0 2t) Babineaux, Ten. 1 0 0.0 0 0 2t) Batten, Buf. 1 0 0.0 0 0 2t) Bethea, Ind. 1 0 0.0 0 0 2t) Branch, Oak. 1 0 0.0 0 0 2t) Cody, Hou. 1 0 0.0 0 0 2t) Fanene, Cin. 1 0 0.0 0 0 2t) Harvey, Den. 1 0 0.0 0 0 2t) Houston, Oak. 1 0 0.0 0 0 2t) D. Jackson, Cle. 1 0 0.0 0 0 2t) *T. Jones, Oak. 1 0 0.0 0 0 2t) Love, N.E. 1 0 0.0 0 0 2t) Mathis, Ind. 1 0 0.0 0 0 2t) McKelvin, Buf. 1 0 0.0 0 0 2t) *McPhee, Bal. 1 0 0.0 0 0 2t) *Moore, Den. 1 0 0.0 0 0 2t) Ninkovich, N.E. 1 0 0.0 0 0 2t) Peko, Cin. 1 0 0.0 0 0 2t) Pouha, NY-J 1 0 0.0 0 0 2t) Quin, Hou. 1 0 0.0 0 0 2t) Redding, Bal. 1 0 0.0 0 0 2t) *Sheppard, Buf. 1 0 0.0 0 0 2t) Westerman, NY-J 1 0 0.0 0 0 2t) Witherspoon, Ten. 1 0 0.0 0 0 NFC / DEFENSIVE FUMBLE RECOVERIES Rank Player, Team Ret Yards Avg Long TD 1t) Boley, NY-G 2 78 39.0 65t 1 1t) Lee, Dal. 2 0 0.0 0 0 1t) Peppers, Chi. 2 0 0.0 0 0 4t) Edwards, Atl. 1 64 64.0 64 0 4t) Parker, Phi. 1 56 56.0 56t 1 4t) Mikell, St.L 1 14 14.0 14 0 4t) Tukuafu, S.F. 1 12 12.0 12 0 4t) Urlacher, Chi. 1 12 12.0 12t 1 4t) Tulloch, Det. 1 4 4.0 4 0 4t) Wilson, Was. 1 4 4.0 4 0 4t) Nicholas, Atl. 1 2 2.0 2 0 4t) Tillman, Chi. 1 1 1.0 1 0 4t) Avril, Det. 1 0 0.0 0 0 4t) Barber, T.B. 1 0 0.0 0 0 4t) Bennett, T.B. 1 0 0.0 0 0 4t) Considine, Car. 1 0 0.0 0 0 4t) Davis, Car. 1 0 0.0 0 0 4t) Delmas, Det. 1 0 0.0 0 0 4t) Doughty, Was. 1 0 0.0 0 0 4t) Jones, T.B. 1 0 0.0 0 0 4t) Laurinaitis, St.L 1 0 0.0 0 0 4t) Scheffler, Det. 1 0 0.0 0 0 4t) Tollefson, NY-G 1 0 0.0 0 0 4t) Vilma, N.O. 1 0 0.0 0 0 4t) Walker, S.F. 1 0 0.0 0 0 4t) T. Williams, G.B. 1 0 0.0 0 0 4t) Willis, S.F. 1 0 0.0 0 0 4t) Woodson, G.B. 1 -1 -1.0 -1 0

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WEEK 3 / THROUGH MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 26, 2011 NFL / DEFENSIVE FUMBLE RECOVERIES Rank Player, Team Ret Yards Avg Long TD 1) Ngata, Bal. 3 28 9.3 28t 1 2t) Boley, NY-G 2 78 39.0 65t 1 2t) Lee, Dal. 2 0 0.0 0 0 2t) Peppers, Chi. 2 0 0.0 0 0 5t) Edwards, Atl. 1 64 64.0 64 0 5t) Parker, Phi. 1 56 56.0 56t 1 5t) Anderson, Ind. 1 47 47.0 47t 1 5t) Polamalu, Pit. 1 16 16.0 16t 1 5t) Mikell, St.L 1 14 14.0 14 0 5t) Tukuafu, S.F. 1 12 12.0 12 0 5t) Urlacher, Chi. 1 12 12.0 12t 1 5t) Angerer, Ind. 1 10 10.0 10 0 5t) Hall, Cin. 1 10 10.0 10 0 5t) *Sheard, Cle. 1 5 5.0 5 0 5t) Tulloch, Det. 1 4 4.0 4 0 5t) Wilson, Was. 1 4 4.0 4 0 5t) Nicholas, Atl. 1 2 2.0 2 0 5t) *Watt, Hou. 1 2 2.0 2 0 5t) Tillman, Chi. 1 1 1.0 1 0 5t) Avril, Det. 1 0 0.0 0 0 5t) Ayers, Den. 1 0 0.0 0 0 5t) Babineaux, Ten. 1 0 0.0 0 0 5t) Barber, T.B. 1 0 0.0 0 0 5t) Batten, Buf. 1 0 0.0 0 0 5t) Bennett, T.B. 1 0 0.0 0 0 5t) Bethea, Ind. 1 0 0.0 0 0 5t) Branch, Oak. 1 0 0.0 0 0 5t) Cody, Hou. 1 0 0.0 0 0 5t) Considine, Car. 1 0 0.0 0 0 5t) Davis, Car. 1 0 0.0 0 0 5t) Delmas, Det. 1 0 0.0 0 0 5t) Doughty, Was. 1 0 0.0 0 0 5t) Fanene, Cin. 1 0 0.0 0 0 5t) Harvey, Den. 1 0 0.0 0 0 5t) Houston, Oak. 1 0 0.0 0 0 5t) D. Jackson, Cle. 1 0 0.0 0 0 5t) Jones, T.B. 1 0 0.0 0 0 5t) *T. Jones, Oak. 1 0 0.0 0 0 5t) Laurinaitis, St.L 1 0 0.0 0 0 5t) Love, N.E. 1 0 0.0 0 0 5t) Mathis, Ind. 1 0 0.0 0 0 5t) McKelvin, Buf. 1 0 0.0 0 0 5t) *McPhee, Bal. 1 0 0.0 0 0 5t) *Moore, Den. 1 0 0.0 0 0 5t) Ninkovich, N.E. 1 0 0.0 0 0 5t) Peko, Cin. 1 0 0.0 0 0 5t) Pouha, NY-J 1 0 0.0 0 0 5t) Quin, Hou. 1 0 0.0 0 0 5t) Redding, Bal. 1 0 0.0 0 0 5t) Scheffler, Det. 1 0 0.0 0 0 5t) *Sheppard, Buf. 1 0 0.0 0 0 5t) Tollefson, NY-G 1 0 0.0 0 0 5t) Vilma, N.O. 1 0 0.0 0 0 5t) Walker, S.F. 1 0 0.0 0 0 5t) Westerman, NY-J 1 0 0.0 0 0 5t) T. Williams, G.B. 1 0 0.0 0 0 5t) Willis, S.F. 1 0 0.0 0 0 5t) Witherspoon, Ten. 1 0 0.0 0 0 5t) Woodson, G.B. 1 -1 -1.0 -1 0

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/ THROUGH MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 26, 2011 Team/Offense Rank (Within League)

CIN CLE DEN HOU IND JAX KC MIA NE NYJ OAK PIT SD TEN ARI ATL CAR CHI DAL DET GB MIN NO NYG PHI STL SF SEA T25 26 27 9 29 28 30 12 1 16 14 13 4 17 TYds/G 18 19 7 23 5 10 8 24 2 20 6 21 32 31 224 28 26 10 29 30 27 16 1 17 7 14 12 13 TYds/P 8 19 9 23 4 15 3 20 5 18 11 25 31 32 217 22 28 5 21 6 9 7 13 25 1 23 16 32 RYds/G 18 19 24 31 27 26 10 3 14 15 2 11 30 29 216 25 27 15 10 19 7 9 12 22 3 26 20 32 RshAvg 14 6 24 29 28 30 11 1 13 21 4 8 31 23 124 25 22 12 27 32 31 14t 1 10 26 8 6 7 PsYd/G 16 18 4t 17 3 4t 9 29 2 20 19 23 28 30 222 25 24 4 31 27 30 18 1 14 16 8 11 6 PasAvg 10 23 7 21 2 5 3 29 9 13 17 28 26 32 212 10 17 20 2 32 31 18 28 25 4 26t 30 9 %HdInt 19 21 22 15t 23 8 3 5 7 14 29 1 6 13 218 4 20 16 13t 24 15 26 2 21 3 22 9 5 Sac/PP 23 28 17 30 12 7 10 25 8 29 11 27 32 31 26 20 13 10 27 29 32 11 1 16 6t 14 2 22t 1D/Gm 22t 15 8 28 17 9 12 22t 5 22t 4 21 30t 30t 132 18 7 11 25 19 28 30 3 15t 14 5 1 9 3D Eff 24 13 15t 29 20 21t 6 17 2 27 4 31 21t 26 21t 8 21t 15t 21t 18 1t 13 9t 21t 1t 21t 21t 1t 4D Eff 1t 21t 21t 21t 1t 1t 21t 21t 15t 19t 19t 14 21t 9t 21 10 1 3 32 30 5 15 12 7 26 11 28t 28t PR Avg 4 24 27 14 19 22 25 6 2 18 31 16 8 23 125 5 22t 3 13 20 12 16 22t 11 31 7 17 32 KR Avg 9 21 27 18t 29 28 2 8 10 22t 18t 14 1 26 13 31 6 15 10 28 26 2 24 27 1 5 22 25 GPntAv 20 32 30 18 17 12 29 14 8 19 23 16 3 9 17 25 4 16 29 28 13 3 23 22 15 7 27 26 NPntAv 24 30 31 6 21 10 32 12 2 19 20 18 1 11 24t 16 23 7 28 31 32 27 2t 9 6 26 15 24t Pts/Gm 22 17t 17t 17t 13 4 5 17t 2t 11 10 29 12 30 1 1t 1t 25 1t 18 1t 30 27t 23 1t 19t 27t 1t 26 FG% 31 1t 1t 1t 17 1t 1t 1t 1t 32 19t 19t 1t 1t

Opponent/Defense Rank (Within League)

CIN CLE DEN HOU IND JAX KC MIA NE NYJ OAK PIT SD TEN ARI ATL CAR CHI DAL DET GB MIN NO NYG PHI STL SF SEA T 3 9 15 14 19 4 23 30 32 11 28 2 8 1 TYds/G 27 22 17 25 5 6 29 20 21 18 12 31 7 10 2 2 4 12 18 14 7 17 29 32 13 25 3 24 1 TYds/P 20 19 31 21 5 6 30 15 22 11 16 26 9 8 2 7 29 14 17 22 5 28 16 10 31 26 12 19 8 RYds/G 27 20 25 18 2 21 1 4 9 15 30 32 3 13 2 1 15 13 26 8 9 14 17 21 28 32 24 20 5 RshAvg 16 11 22 23 3 30 4 6 19 12 29 31 2 7 1 5 3 13 11 18 7 21 30 32 6 28 1 9 2 PsYd/G 25 22 14 26 12 4 31 29 27 20 8 19 16 10 2 5 4 19 11 29 13 26 30 31 8 9 1 25 3 PasAvg 21 27 32 14 6 2 28 18 17 16 10 15 12 22 228 23 31t 15t 13 12 8 25 7 1 21t 31t 18 5 %HdInt 11 6 27 26 15t 9 10 19 30 17 20 29 3 21t 2 4 3 26 17 25 30 31 29 28 8 12 16 20 21 Sac/PP 7 27 19 18 2 10 11 15 5 13t 1 13t 22 23 2 7t 15t 11t 17t 20t 2t 25 23t 31 11t 32 1 6 10 1D/Gm 28 22 2t 17t 9 4 23t 26t 20t 17t 11t 30 7t 11t 2 6t 8t 12t 17 32 6t 28t 21 25 1t 23t 16 30 28t 3D Eff 8t 18 10 19 20 4t 27 31 23t 15 14 26 4t 3 110t 15t 10t 3t 29t 1t 27 29t 26 3t 15t 10t 15t 3t 4D Eff 15t 15t 10t 15t 1t 10t 3t 3t 3t 28 15t 15t 29t 15t 114 26 5 15 31 9 10 25 6 8 29 1 28 23 PR Avg 19 12 32 4 13 27 30 16 2 24 17 11 18 22 25 12 1 22 32 23 11 24 7 3 14 21 28 27 KR Avg 15t 8 19 5 13 29 17 9 31 15t 20 18 10 30 14 29 28 31 4 2 22 10t 30 18 15 23 21 20 GPntAv 8 19 3 5 25 17 9 16 7 12 1 10t 26 32 25 24 4 11t 9 2 16 13 30 8 10 20 31 23 NPntAv 1 27 5 19 29 26 14t 17 3 28 6 18 11t 32 6 13t 13t 9t 29 13t 32 26 27 12 28 7 19t 2 Pts/Gm 8 24t 18 19t 16t 3 22t 22t 30 9t 24t 31 4 16t 22t 21 22t 1t 19t 11t 22t 11t 22t 7t 3t 22t 7t 22t FG% 11t 19t 7t 22t 15t 15t 22t 22t 22t 15t 3t 3t 11t 3t 2