[ad_1]
SANTA CLARA — Christian McCaffrey and Elijah Mitchell, the 49ers’ ideal rushing tandem, are not in ideal health entering Sunday’s NFC Championship Game at Philadelphia.
Coach Kyle Shanahan expects, however, both to play when the No. 2-seed 49ers (15-4) visit the No. 1-seed Eagles (15-3) for a spot in Super Bowl LVII.
McCaffrey battled through a contusion to his right calf but finished out Sunday’s 19-12 home win over the Dallas Cowboys. Mitchell surfaced on Monday’s injury briefing with a groin issue, which is new to him in a season where he’s already had two stints on the injured reserve list with knee sprains.
“We’re expecting to get them all back for Sunday, but we’ll see how it goes through the week for practice,” Shanahan said Monday on a conference call with reporters. “Hopefully it will go well and that will get them ready for Sunday.”
That also goes for defensive lineman Charles Omenihu, who returned from an oblique issue to play 15 total snaps against the Cowboys.
McCaffrey played 44 of 66 snaps, and although his calf issue was monitored, he was shuffled in for third-down and pass-game snaps later in the win, and he caught Brock Purdy’s last pass in the final minute. After McCaffrey scored a go-ahead touchdown on a 2-yard run to open the fourth quarter, he had a 6-yard, third-down conversion to set up Robbie Gould’s fourth field goal.
McCaffrey tallied just 35 rushing yards on 10 carries, including five carries for just 8 yards before halftime. He had 22 yards on six catches overall.
In just his third game back since his second knee sprain, Mitchell showed perhaps his most impressive power and burst of the season. He had just a 2-yard carry before halftime Sunday, then got 13 carries for 49 yards in the second half. His lone gaffe came on his longest run, a 13-yard effort in which he went out of bounds to stop the clock with 1:47 remaining.
PURDY’S BALL SECURITY
Ball security is no doubt the No. 1 asset that Purdy has offered the 49ers since replacing Jimmy Garoppolo eight games/wins ago.
“He’s been unbelievable with that. That’s the No. 1 thing he’s done,” Shanahan said. “To be as good with the ball as he’s been, while still making the number of plays he’s had, that’s definitely the thing I’ve been most impressed with.”
Purdy has thrown just three interceptions in 220 passes (1,854 yards, 16 touchdowns) and has not fumbled in place of Garoppolo.
“In playoff football, or any game really in the NFL, you can’t afford to throw the ball up or fumble,” Purdy said Sunday. “When so much is on the line and everyone is playing their best football, every moment matters. … I know we have one of the best if not the best defense in the league, and I just have to do my part.”
GAROPPOLO, LANCE UPDATES
Although Garoppolo returned to the practice field last week to condition on the side, Shanahan is not anticipating his return to practice this week. Garoppolo fractured his left foot Dec. 4. “He’ll have an X-ray (Tuesday) to see how things are going. I’d be very surprised if he was out there this week,” Shanahan said.
Garoppolo’s rehabilitation schedule conflicts with the 49ers’ meetings, so Purdy’s sounding board from a player perspective has come from Trey Lance, who went down in Week 2 with a fractured right-ankle that required follow-up surgery Dec. 30.
“Trey hasn’t missed one meeting,” Shanahan said. “He’s doing an awesome job helping Brock through all this stuff.”
EARLY-GAME KICKOFF
The 49ers are in a noon (PT) kickoff slot similar to the last time they’ve won a NFC Championship on the road: a 28-24 comeback victory at the Atlanta Falcons on Jan. 20, 2013. The Kansas City Chiefs will host the Cincinnati Bengals for the AFC Championship in Sunday’s later game, which starts 5:30 p.m. locally at Arrowhead Stadium (3:30 p.m. PT).
“We should be alright by 12,” said Shanahan, noting that players again enjoyed a “Victory Monday,” which means they get the day off other than reviewing game film with position coaches.
The 49ers’ previous three NFC Championship Game appearances came in that later time slot, including last season’s 20-17 loss at the Los Angeles Rams, a 37-20 home win over the Green Bay Packers in January 2020, and a 23-17 loss at Seattle in January 2014.
In road games with a 10 a.m. PT start, the 49ers are 11-10 under Shanahan. They lost 19-10 at Chicago and 28-14 at Atlanta this year, but went 4-0 last season, including a 17-11 win in Week 2 at Philadelphia, which followed a body-clock-helping layover in West Virginia after their Week 1 win at Detroit.
ALL-NFL AWARDS
Left tackle Trent Williams, defensive end Nick Bosa, linebacker Fred Warner and safety Talanoa Hufanga made the Pro Football Writers of America’s All-NFL team. Joining them on the All-NFC team were McCaffrey and tight end George Kittle.
The Eagles were represented on the All-NFL team by center Jason Kelce, right tackle Lane Johnson, outside linebacker Hasson Reddick; wide receiver A.J. Brown, defensive tackle Javon Hargrave, cornerback Darius Slay and safety C.J. Gardner-Johnson joined them on the All-NFC team.
SCOUTING EAGLES
The Eagles’ 8–0 start made them NFC favorites, and, despite losing two games last month while Jalen Hurts was out with a shoulder injury, they remain a top contender in Shanahan’s eyes.
“Just seeing them across the league throughout the year, and watching a little bit of what we’ve (scouting) since last night, there’s a reason they’ve been the best in the league so far throughout this whole year,” Shanahan said.
“Last year we were real concerned going into the game playing them,” Shanahan added of last season’s game, in which the 49ers led 17-3 with five minutes to go in an eventual 17-11 win. “They had some real talent, good schemes and that was a real tough game there. All they’ve done is play together, add some more players and have gotten a lot better since then.”
[ad_2]
Source link