Yadahell
New Member
Right! It's killing me I can't concentrate at work!
Me too! At least Monday is MLK day (and day off) which will help with a possible celebration hangover from Sunday
Right! It's killing me I can't concentrate at work!
10 reasons Falcons can beat Niners
Play of Matt Ryan, slumping Aldon Smith will aid Atlanta
Just in case you want to see more of SportsHoopla people's opinions on this.
http://www.sportshoopla.com/forums/san-francisco-49ers/89350-espn-article.html
I agree. Unless Matt Ryan plays an absolutely perfect game- I don't see the 49ers losing. 5-0 all-time in NFC Championship games.....
This quote is incorrect. We have won the NFC Championship 5 times.
5-0 when favored or what?
We lost last year's... to dallas... to nyg of the past i believe...
que?
we're 5-0 in the Super Bowl if that's what you meant?
My bad. 5-8 historically in NFC Championship games. 5-0 in the Super Bowl.
Good Read right here on Kaep or is it Kap?
Just in case you want to see more of SportsHoopla people's opinions on this.
http://www.sportshoopla.com/forums/san-francisco-49ers/89350-espn-article.html
Subtle. You could have just slapped a on him, but since he's my bro he gets a pass!
A little something to keep our fans/players at even keeled. I'm worried that some of us feel that this would be a cake walk. Not agreeing with this article at all, because I think it's full of crap (not everything but a few issues raised). But I hope somehow if possible if Aldon and the team can read some of this shit:
10 reasons Falcons can beat Niners
Play of Matt Ryan, slumping Aldon Smith will aid Atlanta
Originally Published: January 17, 2013
By KC Joyner | ESPN Insider
Matt Ryan and the Falcons can handle the 49ers.
Matty Ice is more than just a cool nickname
The general takeaway from that Seahawks-Falcons game is Seattle's comeback grit, but it should be remembered just as much for Matt Ryan's moxie in driving his team 41 yards in only 23 seconds to set up a game-winning field goal.
This type of occurrence has become second nature for Ryan as, according to pro-football-reference.com, during the regular season he led the Falcons on a game-winning drive (defined as an offensive score in the fourth quarter or overtime that puts the winning team ahead for the last time) on seven occasions this season, a number that ties him with Andrew Luck for best in the league.
The Falcons' ability to dominate top-level secondaries
To get a true sense of just how strong the Falcons' passing offense is, consider that last week Ryan posted an incredibly high 85.4 Total QBR mark against a secondary that has a Pro Bowl free safety (Earl Thomas), a rare shutdown cornerback who has terrific ball hawking skills (eight interceptions) and should have made the Pro Bowl (Richard Sherman), a very good cornerback who has nine picks over the past two seasons (Brandon Browner) and one of the most feared hitters in the NFL (Kam Chancellor). If the Falcons could post great numbers against this group, there isn't a secondary in the NFL that Atlanta should fear.
Atlanta's receivers decimated a talented Seattle secondary.
The 49ers' pass defense may not be as good as is generally thought
San Francisco finished second in the league in passing yards per attempt (6.1) and placed six defensive players on the 2013 Pro Bowl squad, and yet this group ended up finishing 15th in Total QBR allowed to opposing teams. That number indicates this platoon does not fare as well in the area of situational football as their overall numbers indicate.
The game is likely to be a shootout
Atlanta scored 20 or more points in all but two of its games this year and San Francisco allowed 31 or more points in three of its past four games.
That trend points toward this game potentially being a shootout. A game of that nature would favor the Falcons, as they are 6-3 this year in contests in which the other team scores 20 or more points. By contrast, the 49ers are 4-3-1 in games in which the opponent scores 20 or more points. In addition, it should be noted that San Francisco scored fewer than 20 points in five games this year, including two of its past six in total and two of its past three on the road.
Colin Kaepernick tends to struggle when forced to throw the ball often
A shootout doesn't look to favor Kaepernick. He has thrown the ball 30 or more times on three occasions this year and two of those games resulted in his lowest YPA totals of his season.
This is not merely a pro-level trend for Kaepernick, as he had a solid but not spectacular 131.6 passer rating in the 13 games in college in which he threw 30 or more passes. Those mediocre figures were also skewed by a couple of games against creampuff opponents and thus indicate Kaepernick has had very little consistent collegiate/pro success when forced to be a high-volume passer.
Home/road splits
In roughly half a season as an NFL starter and his last two years as a college starter, Kaepernick has been appreciably better at home than on the road.
For proof, check out his home/road splits in that time frame:
Kaepernick Home/Road Splits
Season Home/Away Pass Comp Pass Att Pass Yds YPA TD Int Rush att Rush Yds YPC TD
2012 NFL Home 83 130 1173 9.0 6 1 44 359 8.2 5
2012 NFL Away 70 119 904 7.6 6 3 35 237 6.8 2
2009-10 CFB Home 199 306 2628 8.6 20 2 163 1402 8.6 23
2009-10 CFB Away 165 273 2077 7.6 19 10 173 984 5.7 13
All home -- 282 436 3801 8.7 26 3 207 1761 8.5 28
All away -- 235 392 2981 7.6 25 13 208 1221 5.9 15
That's more than a yard of drop-off in yards per attempt (YPA), a huge increase in interceptions and more than 2 yards of difference in rush yards per carry (YPC).
Those numbers might partially explain why, over the course of his football career, Kaepernick is 21-5 at home and 16-11 on the road. That doesn't bode well for a 49ers club that lost two of its last three road games this season.
Read-option runs are not likely to win this game for San Francisco
The Falcons faced four read-option quarterbacks this year (Cam Newton twice, Robert Griffin III and Russell Wilson) and they allowed that trio to gain 269 yards on 26 rush attempts, numbers that would seem to suggest that the read-option will be a huge problem for Atlanta.
The issue with that assessment is those numbers were mostly compiled via two long gains by Newton (a 32-yard read-option run in Week 4 and a 72-yard read-option touchdown run in Week 14). Take those plays out of the equation and Atlanta gave up 165 rush yards on 24 carries in four games to read-option quarterbacks, so for the most part the Falcons were able to keep this type of running in check.
It should also be noted that prior to his record-setting performance against Green Bay (which was assisted by the Packers' odd defensive game plan and lack of in-game adjustments), Kaepernick's best rushing total of the season was an 84-yard mark against the Rams in Week 13 that was bolstered by a 50-yard scramble. San Francisco's offense has not revolved around Kaepernick's read-option running for most of the year and Atlanta should be able to make sure that doesn't happen this week.
San Francisco gives up a lot of sacks
John Abraham's injury will hurt Atlanta's pass rush but let's not forget that San Francisco ended the year with the third highest sack-allowed percentage in the NFL (8.7). Some of that had to do with the frequent use of single-read plays where Alex Smith didn't have the first receiver open and then couldn't make a play with his feet, but Kaepernick also has a fairly high sack percentage this year. Joe Staley's injury could also impact this matchup and help the Falcons tally a couple of big plays in this category.
Aldon Smith isn't the same without a fully healthy Justin Smith
From Week 4 of the 2011 season through Week 14 of the 2012 season, Aldon Smith had at least one sack in 21 out of 28 games and never went more than two games in a row without a sack.
Over the past four games, he has not posted a single sack and that streak perfectly dovetails with Justin Smith's injury. This pass rush simply isn't the same without these two being able to work together at full speed and Atlanta's pass protection should benefit accordingly.
Atlanta has a significant edge at kicker
This could very well be a close game that comes down to which team can convert a higher percentage of field goals. That factor favors Atlanta since David Akers, San Francisco's specialist in this area, had the second worst field goal percentage among qualifying kickers this year.
Put all 10 of these advantages together and it should be enough to see Atlanta win a game that is just as much a battle for respect as it is for a berth in Super Bowl XLVII.
KC Joyner
NFL Insider
Not to say I'm feeling too relaxed but I was very cautious and anxious last year only to see KW fucked it up.
I'm going into this with heart of hearts, going to enjoy it and remain anxious, but going to enjoy it though. Perhaps positive karama... plus reading the falcons' fans posts about trashing us and making it look easy, it gets me fired up and a bit happy cuz the last group of fans that thought this way was the Saints and close enuff them packers and WHERE ARE THEY NOW???
but to comment on the acutal post, I do agree we need to avoid a close gamge as possible and really jump ahead with a good 3 score lead... I rather not go through a Falcons hurry up or 2 minute drill to possibly win the game... they've done it so much so this season that the odds are in their favor.
Aldon needs to pick and fucking takeover. I want sacks but just TAKEOVER at the LOS... do what you can do, but TAKEOVER....
Just in case you want to see more of SportsHoopla people's opinions on this.
http://www.sportshoopla.com/forums/san-francisco-49ers/89350-espn-article.html
Could friendly crowd greet 49ers? | CSN Bay Area
Obviously the playoffs are a different beast. But are there any road stadiums where the 49ers routinely have a good turnout? Just wondering.
As soon as I typed that in two teams popped into mind - Oakland and San Diego. I would guess a fair amount of 49ers fans make the trip to those two teams for obvious reasons. Are there any others that we know of?