49ers reach midpoint at 8-0 just 2 years after 0-8 start

SANTA CLARA, Calif. — Two years to the day that Jimmy Garoppolo arrived in San Francisco to join an 0-8 team, he played perhaps his best game with the 49ers to improve the team to 8-0.

It’s been quite a remarkable turnaround in coach Kyle Shanahan’s third year.

With Garoppolo stabilizing the quarterback position and showing signs of brilliance like in the 28-25 win at Arizona on Thursday night, a defense fortified by edge rushers Nick Bosa and Dee Ford and Shanahan’s play-calling that creates mismatches all over the field, the Niners (8-0) are a Super Bowl contender at the halfway point of the season after five years of struggles.

But they know there’s plenty of more work to do.

“Eight and 0 is not going to get you anything, but it’s a good start,” Garoppolo said. “We’ll take the weekend to heal up, get some guys back and make a run at this thing. I think we’ve got a good group here. We’ve got a long way to go, but we’re on the right track.”

The 49ers have been one of the NFL’s biggest surprises in the first half, joining defending champion New England as the league’s only unbeaten teams after winning just 17 games the previous four years, including 10 under Shanahan the past two seasons.

But he was putting a foundation in place during those years, most notably with the addition of Garoppolo, and that is paying dividends now. Shanahan has joined Tom Landry and Marvin Lewis as the third coach to start a season 8-0 for a franchise after previously losing the first eight games of the season.

“I’ve been impressed the most with the resilience of our guys in the next man up type deal,” Shanahan said. “We’ve had some guys go down in some key spots and the guys have come out there and stepped right in and just really done their job and no one’s made a big deal about it. We’ve still been finding ways to win. It’s been cool, each game has kind of been a little bit of a different story. To be able to do it a different way, I’ve been real proud of our guys and how locked in they’ve been every week and that they don’t let up at all whatever the situation is.”


WHAT’S WORKING

When you start the season 8-0, almost everything is going well. The strength of the team is a defensive line filled with former first-round picks that is putting relentless pressure on the quarterback and a powerful running game led by Matt Breida and Tevin Coleman.


WHAT NEEDS HELP

Run defense. One of the few holes in the team so far has been a run defense that has been gashed the past two weeks by Christian McCaffrey and Kenyan Drake. San Francisco had a few issues earlier in the year shutting down the run as well, but it hasn’t been a major issue yet because the Niners have been playing with the lead for most of the year, often forcing the opposition to pass.

STOCK UP

Garoppolo. Garoppolo had played fairly well the first seven games but wasn’t needed much to carry the team thanks to the running game and defense. But with the run game stopped Thursday and the defense tired on a short week, Garoppolo delivered his best game yet. He went 28 for 37 for 317 yards and four touchdowns and was at his best in key spots. He went 13 for 15 for 160 yards and all four of his TD passes on third or fourth down, with his conversion to Ross Dwelley sealing the victory.

STOCK DOWN

CB Emmanuel Moseley. Moseley had been outstanding since stepping in for the injured Ahkello Witherspoon, allowing just five catches on 15 targets for 40 yards in his first four games in the lineup, according to SportRadar. But Moseley wasn’t as effective against the Cardinals and made a bad read on a pass to Andy Isabella that led to an 88-yard touchdown.

INJURED

Linebacker Kwon Alexander will miss the rest of the season with a torn pectoral muscle. Tight end George Kittle hurt his knee in the game and was unable to play on the final drive but Shanahan is hopeful he’ll be able to practice next week. The Niners should be getting several key players back from injury soon, including starting tackles Joe Staley and Mike McGlinchey, fullback Kyle Juszczyk and Witherspoon.

KEY NUMBER

8-0. There have been 14 teams that started a season 8-0 before this year under the current eight-division format that began in 2002. Those teams averaged 13 wins and all made the playoffs with the Colts (2006) and Saints (2009) winning the Super Bowl. Four of the teams lost the Super Bowl, two lost in the conference championship game, four lost in the division round and two lost in the wild-card round.

NEXT STEPS

The 49ers start the second half of their schedule with perhaps their toughest test yet, a home game against Seattle on Nov. 11. San Francisco also hosts Green Bay and has trips to New Orleans, Baltimore and Seattle in the second half.

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