2010 San Francisco 49ers season | |
---|---|
Head Coach | Mike Singletary (15 games) Jim Tomsula (interim) |
Home Field | Candlestick Park Wembley Stadium (1 game) |
Results | |
Record | 6–10 |
Place | 3rd NFC West |
Playoff Finish | did not qualify |
Pro Bowlers | Patrick Willis Justin Smith |
Uniform | |
Timeline | |
Previous Season | Next Season |
← 2009 | 2011 → |
The 2010 San Francisco 49ers season was the franchise's 65th season, and the second full year with Mike Singletary as the head coach. The 49ers were looking to build upon their 8–8 season in 2009 that ended their streak of seven consecutive non-winning seasons and to get into the postseason for the first time since the 2002 season.
However the 49ers began the season with a disastrous 0-5 start and would end up with a losing record of 6-10 as their postseason jinx continued. The 49ers originally retained Jimmy Raye as the offensive coordinator, marking the first time since Greg Knapp in 2003 that the 49ers had the same offensive coordinator for more than one season. However, after starting the season with three straight losses, the 49ers fired Jimmy Raye and promoted Quarterbacks coach Mike Johnson to offensive coordinator.[1] In any event, the end result to their regular season was the firing of coach Singletary.
Offseason[]
Coaching changes[]
The first major coaching change in the offseason was the firing of Al Everest as special teams coordinator. The 49ers interviewed several candidates and by mid-January settled on Kurt Schottenheimer as special teams coordinator.[2] One week later, another assistant coaching change was made when incumbent offensive line coach Chris Foerster was permitted to accept an offer to coach the same position with new Washington Redskins head coach Mike Shanahan. To replace Foerster, the 49ers immediately hired outgoing Seahawks offensive line coach Mike Solari, who had previously been an assistant line coach with the 49ers.[3]
Roster changes[]
Free Agency[]
Position | Player | Status* | 2009 Team | 2010 Team |
---|---|---|---|---|
K | Shane Andrus | RFA | 49ers | 49ers |
G | David Baas | RFA | 49ers | 49ers |
WR | Arnaz Battle | UFA | 49ers | Pittsburgh |
CB | Dre' Bly | UFA | 49ers | Detroit |
LB | Ahmad Brooks | RFA | 49ers | 49ers |
QB | David Carr | UFA | NY Giants | 49ers |
RB | Thomas Clayton | RFA | 49ers | New England |
NT | Aubrayo Franklin | Franchise | 49ers | 49ers |
CB | Walt Harris | UFA | 49ers | Baltimore |
DB | Marcus Hudson | RFA | 49ers | Carolina |
CB | William James | UFA | Detroit | 49ers |
OT | Tony Pashos | UFA | 49ers | Cleveland |
CB | Karl Paymah | UFA | Minnesota | 49ers |
SS | Mark Roman | UFA | 49ers | TBD |
K | Ricky Schmitt | RFA | 49ers | Tennessee |
OT | Barry Sims | UFA | 49ers | 49ers |
LB | Jeff Ulbrich | UFA | 49ers | Retired (Now Coach) |
RB | Brian Westbrook | UFA | Philadelphia | 49ers |
WR | Brandon Jones | UFA | 49ers | Seattle |
*RFA: Restricted free agent, UFA: Unrestricted free agent, ERFA: Exclusive rights free agent, Franchise: Franchise tag
Trades[]
Trading team | 49ers Receive | 49ers Give |
---|---|---|
Detroit Lions | 2011 7th-round draft pick | QB Shaun Hill |
Miami Dolphins | WR Ted Ginn | 2010 5th-round draft pick |
Denver Broncos | 2010 1st-round draft pick (11) | 2010 1st-round draft pick (13) 2010 4th-round draft pick (113) |
San Diego Chargers | 2010 3rd-round draft pick (91) 2010 6th-round draft pick (197) 2011 4th-round draft pick |
2010 3rd-round draft pick (79) |
Seattle Seahawks | 2011 6th-round draft pick | DE Kentwan Balmer |
2010 NFL Draft[]
- Main article: 2010 NFL Draft
After finishing the 2009 season with a record of 8–8, the 49ers held the 13th overall pick in the 2010 NFL Draft. They also obtained the 17th overall pick as a result of a trade in the 2009 NFL Draft that gave their second and fourth round picks in 2009 to the Carolina Panthers for the Panthers' first round pick in 2010. The 49ers traded their fifth round pick in 2010 to Miami for wide receiver Ted Ginn. In the first round of the 2010 draft the 49ers moved up two picks by trading their #13 pick and 4th Round pick to the Denver Broncos to move up to pick #11, with which they selected offensive tackle Anthony Davis from Rutgers. Six picks later, the 49ers again chose to solidify their offensive line by selecting top-rated Guard Mike Iupati out of Idaho.
Draft order | Player name | Position | Height | Weight | College | Contract | Notes | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Round | Choice | Overall | |||||||
1 | 11 | 11 | Anthony Davis | T | 6 ft 5 in | 323 lb | Rutgers | From Denver | |
13 | 13 | Traded to Denver | |||||||
17 | 17 | Mike Iupati | G | 6 ft 5 in | 331 lb | Idaho | From Carolina | ||
2 | 17 | 49 | Taylor Mays | S | 6 ft 3 in | 230 lb | USC | ||
3 | 15 | 79 | Traded to San Diego | ||||||
27 | 91 | Navorro Bowman | LB | 6 ft 0 in | 242 lb | Penn State | from San Diego | ||
4 | 15 | 113 | Traded to Denver | ||||||
5 | 14 | 145 | Traded to Miami | ||||||
6 | 4 | 173 | Anthony Dixon | RB | 6 ft 1 in | 233 lb | Mississippi State | From San Diego | |
13 | 182 | Nate Byham | TE | 6 ft 4 in | 268 lb | Pittsburgh | |||
37 | 206 | Kyle Williams | WR | 5 ft 10 in | 188 lb | Arizona State | Compensatory pick | ||
7 | 17 | 224 | Phillip Adams | CB | 5 ft 10 in | 192 lb | South Carolina State |
Staff[]
San Francisco 49ers 2010 staff | ||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Front Office
Head Coaches
Offensive Coaches
|
Defensive Coaches
Special Teams Coaches
Strength and Conditioning
|
Roster[]
2010 San Francisco 49ers final roster | |||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Quarterbacks
Running backs
Wide receivers
Tight ends
|
Offensive linemen
Defensive linemen
|
Linebackers
Defensive backs
Special teams
|
Reserve lists
|
Schedule[]
Preseason[]
The 49ers preseason schedule was announced on March 31, 2010.[6]
Week | Date | Opponent | Results | Game site | NFL.com recap | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Result | Record | ||||||
1 | August 15 | at Indianapolis | W | 37–17 | 1–0 | Lucas Oil Stadium | Recap |
2 | August 22 | Minnesota | W | 15–10 | 2–0 | Candlestick Park | Recap |
3 | August 28 | at Oakland | W | 28–24 | 3–0 | Oakland Coliseum | Recap |
4 | September 2 | San Diego | W | 17–14 | 4–0 | Candlestick Park | Recap |
Regular season[]
On January 15, 2010, the NFL announced that the 49ers will play the Denver Broncos in the International Series at Wembley Stadium in London, England.[7] The game occurred during Week 8 on Sunday, October 31, at 10:00 a.m. PDT (5:00 p.m. GMT), and was aired by CBS in the United States.[8] The 49ers were the designated home team for this game.
Week | Date | Opponent | Results | Game site | NFL.com recap | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Result | Score | Record | |||||
1 | September 12 | at Seattle | L | 31-6 | 0–1 | Qwest Field | Recap |
2 | September 20 (Mon) | New Orleans | L | 25–22 | 0–2 | Candlestick Park | Recap |
3 | September 26 | at Kansas City | L | 31-10 | 0–3 | Arrowhead Stadium | Recap |
4 | October 3 | at Atlanta | L | 16–14 | 0–4 | Georgia Dome | Recap |
5 | October 10 | Philadelphia | L | 27–24 | 0–5 | Candlestick Park | Recap |
6 | October 17 | Oakland | W | 17–9 | 1–5 | Candlestick Park | Recap |
7 | October 24 | at Carolina | L | 23–20 | 1–6 | B of A Stadium | Recap |
8 | October 31 | Denver | W | 24–16 | 2–6 | Wembley Stadium | Recap |
9 | Bye week | ||||||
10 | November 14 | St. Louis | W | 23–20 (OT) | 3–6 | Candlestick Park | Recap |
11 | November 21 | Tampa Bay | L | 21-0 | 3–7 | Candlestick Park | Recap |
12 | November 29 | at Arizona | W | 27–6 | 4–7 | U of Phoenix Stadium | Recap |
13 | December 5 | at Green Bay | L | 34-16 | 4–8 | Lambeau Field | Recap |
14 | December 12 | Seattle | W | 40–21 | 5–8 | Candlestick Park | Recap |
15 | December 16 (Thu) | at San Diego | L | 34-7 | 5–9 | Qualcomm Stadium | Recap |
16 | December 26 | at St. Louis | L | 25-17 | 5–10 | Edward Jones Dome | Recap |
17 | January 2 | Arizona | W | 38-7 | 6-10 | Candlestick Park | Recap |
COLOR KEY:
- ^ Blue/Red indicates the International Series game in London.
Standings[]
Template:2010 NFC West standings
Regular season results[]
Week 1: at Seattle Seahawks[]
1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | Total | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
49ers | 3 | 3 | 0 | 0 | 6 |
Seahawks | 0 | 14 | 14 | 3 | 31 |
- stadium=Qwest Field
- attendance=67,044
- weather=64°F (Sunny)
- referee= Mike Carey
- TV=FOX
- TVAnnouncers=Sam Rosen, Tim Ryan, and Chris Myers
- reference=Recap
Scoring
- First quarter
- SF - Joe Nedney 23 yard field goal, 49ers 3-0, Drive: 8 plays, 24 yards, 4:35.
- Second quarter
- SF - Joe Nedney 23 yard field goal, 49ers 6-0, Drive: 9 plays, 31 yards, 5:48.
- SEA - Matt Hasselbeck 1 yard run (Olindo Mare kick), Seahawks 7-6, Drive: 7 plays, 64 yards, 3:57.
- SEA - Deon Butler 13 yard pass from Matt Hasselbeck (Olindo Mare kick), Seahawks 14-6, Drive:1 plays, 13 yards, 0:06.
- Third quarter
- SEA - Marcus Trufant 32 yard interception return (Olindo Mare kick), Seahawks 21-6.
- SEA - Deion Branch 3 yard pass from Matt Hasselbeck (Olindo Mare kick), Seahawks 28-6, Drive: 7 plays, 60 yards, 2:56.
- Fourth quarter
- SEA - Olindo Mare 35 yard field goal, Seahawks 31-6, Drive: 10 plays, 57 yards, 6:32.
- stats=
- Top passers
- SF - Alex Smith - 26/45, 22 yards, 2 interceptions
- SEA - Matt Hasselbeck - 18/23, 170 yards, 2 touchdowns, 1 interception
- Top rushers
- SF - Frank Gore - 17 rushes, 38 yards
- SEA - Justin Forsett - 7 rushes, 43 yards
- Top receivers
- SF - Vernon Davis - 8 receptions, 73 yards
- SEA - Mike Williams - 4 receptions, 64 yards
- Top tacklers
- SF - Patrick Willis - 10 tackles
- SEA - Lofa Tatupu - 5 tackles, 3 assists
The 49ers began their season at Qwest Field for an NFC West match against the Seattle Seahawks. In the first quarter, the Niners had the early lead when kicker Joe Nedney made a 23-yard field goal, which was extended in the second quarter when Nedney made another 23-yard field goal. Then, San Francisco failed to maintain it and then fell behind when Seahawks quarterback Matt Hasselbeck got a 1-yard touchdown run, followed by him making a 13-yard touchdown pass to wide receiver Deon Butler. In the third quarter, the 49ers struggled further when quarterback Alex Smith threw an interception to cornerback Marcus Trufant, which was returned 32 yards for a touchdown. This was followed by Hasselbeck's 3-yard touchdown pass to wide receiver Deion Branch. In the fourth quarter, the Niners continued to struggle when kicker Olindo Mare made a 35-yard field goal.
With the loss, the 49ers began their season at 0–1.
Week 2: vs. New Orleans Saints[]
1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | Total | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Saints | 9 | 0 | 7 | 9 | 25 |
49ers | 0 | 7 | 7 | 8 | 22 |
- stadium=Candlestick Park
- attendance=69,732
- weather=65°F (Clear)
- referee= Alberto Riveron
- TV=ESPN
- TVAnnouncers= Mike Tirico, Jon Gruden, Ron Jaworski, Suzy Kolber and Michele Tafoya
- reference=Recap
Scoring
- First quarter
- NO - David Baas fumble out of bounds in end zone for a safety, Saints 2-0.
- NO - Reggie Bush 6 yard pass from Drew Brees (Garrett Hartley kick), Saints 9-0, Drive: 7 plays, 46 yards, 3:55.
- Second quarter
- SF - Frank Gore 12 yard pass from Alex Smith (Joe Nedney kick), Saints 9-7, Drive: 12 plays, 85 yards, 5:43.
- Third quarter
- SF - Anthony Dixon 2 yard run (Joe Nedney kick), 49ers 14-9, Drive: 6 plays, 86 yards, 3:36.
- NO - David Thomas 3 yard pass from Drew Brees (Garrett Hartley kick), Saints 16-14, Drive: 10 plays, 61 yards, 5:08.
- Fourth quarter
- NO - Garrett Hartley 46 yard field goal, Saints 19-14, Drive: 4 plays, 7 yards, 1:29.
- NO - Garrett Hartley 19 yard field goal, Saints 22-14, Drive: 6 plays, 13 yards, 3:15.
- SF - Frank Gore 7 yard run (Alex Smith - Vernon Davis pass), Tied 22-22, Drive: 8 plays, 82 yards, 0:53.
- NO - Garrett Hartley 37 yard field goal, Saints 25-22, Drive: 7 plays, 51 yards, 1:19.
|stats=
- Top passers
- NO - Drew Brees - 28/38, 254 yards, 2 touchdowns
- SF - Alex Smith - 23/32, 275 yards, 1 touchdown, 2 interceptions
- Top rushers
- NO - Pierre Thomas - 18 rushes, 46 yards
- SF - Frank Gore - 20 rushes, 112 yards, 1 touchdown
- Top receivers
- NO - Marques Colston - 5 receptions, 67 yards
- SF - Vernon Davis - 4 receptions, 78 yards
- Top tacklers
- NO - Jonathan Vilma - 7 tackles, 3 assists, 1 forced fumble
- SF - Patrick Willis - 8 tackles, 1 assist, 1.0 sack
Hoping to rebound from their divisional road loss to the Seahawks, the 49ers played their Week 2 home opener against the defending Super Bowl champion New Orleans Saints on Monday night.
San Francisco trailed early in the first quarter as center David Baas' high snap deep within Niner territory resulted in a safety. The Saints would add onto their lead as quarterback Drew Brees completed a 6-yard touchdown pass to running back Reggie Bush. The 49ers would respond in the second quarter with quarterback Alex Smith finding running back Frank Gore on a 12-yard touchdown pass.
The Niners would take the lead in the third quarter as rookie running back Anthony Dixon got a 2-yard touchdown run, but New Orleans would answer with Brees' 3-yard touchdown pass to tight end David Thomas. In the fourth quarter, the Saints would add onto their lead as kicker Garrett Hartley got a 46-yard and a 19-yard field goal. San Francisco would tie the game with Gore's 7-yard touchdown run, followed by Smith's 2-point conversion pass to tight end Vernon Davis. However, New Orleans would get the last laugh as Hartley made the game-winning 37-yard field goal.
With the tough loss, the 49ers fell to 0–2.
Week 3: at Kansas City Chiefs[]
1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | Total | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
49ers | 0 | 3 | 0 | 7 | 10 |
Chiefs | 0 | 10 | 14 | 7 | 31 |
- stadium=Arrowhead Stadium
- attendance=68,188
- weather=55°F (Sunny)
- referee= Clete Blakeman
- TV=FOX
- TVAnnouncers=Sam Rosen, Tim Ryan and Chris Myers
- reference=Recap
Scoring
- First quarter
- No scoring
- Second quarter
- KC - Dexter McCluster 31 yard pass from Matt Cassel (Ryan Succop kick), Chiefs 7-0, Drive: 1 plays, 31 yards, 0:10.
- SF - Joe Nedney 51 yard field goal, Chiefs 7-3, Drive: 8 plays, 45 yards, 3:22.
- KC - Ryan Succop 32 yard field goal, Chiefs 10-3, Drive: 7 plays, 44 yards, 1:05.
- Third quarter
- KC - Dwayne Bowe 45 yard pass from Matt Cassel (Ryan Succop kick), Chiefs 17-3, Drive: 2 plays, 45 yards, 0:16.
- KC - Tony Moeaki 18 yard pass from Matt Cassel (Ryan Succop kick), Chiefs 24-3, Drive: 8 plays, 61 yards, 5:05.
- Fourth quarter
- KC - Thomas Jones 3 yard run (Ryan Succop kick), Chiefs 31-3, Drive: 7 plays, 57 yards, 4:26.
- SF - Josh Morgan 12 yard pass from Alex Smith (Joe Nedney kick), Chiefs 31-10, Drive: 7 plays, 71 yards, 1:23.
| stats=
- Top passers
- SF - Alex Smith - 23/42, 232 yards, 1 touchdown, 1 interception
- KC - Matt Cassel - 16/27, 250 yards, 3 touchdowns, 1 interception
- Top rushers
- SF - Frank Gore - 15 rushes, 43 yards
- KC - Jamaal Charles - 12 rushes, 97 yards
- Top receivers
- SF - Frank Gore - 9 receptions, 102 yards
- KC - Dexter McCluster - 3 receptions, 69 yards, 1 touchdown
- Top tacklers
- SF - Nate Clements - 9 tackles
- KC - Jovan Belcher - 7 tackles, 3 assists
Looking for their first win the 49ers flew to Arrowhead Stadium for an Interconference duel with the Chiefs. In the 2nd quarter the 49ers trailed early as QB Matt Cassel completed a 31-yard TD pass to WR Dexter McCluster. The 49ers replied with kicker Joe Nedney getting a 51-yard field goal. Then the 49ers fell further behind when kicker Ryan Succop hit a 32-yard field goal, followed in the third quarter by Cassel finding WR Dwayne Bowe and TE Tony Moeaki on 45 and 18-yard TD passes respectively. This was followed by RB Thomas Jones getting a 3-yard TD run. The 49ers scored to try and cut the lead when QB Alex Smith made a 12-yard TD pass to WR Josh Morgan.
With the loss, the 49ers fell to 0–3.
Week 4: at Atlanta Falcons[]
1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | Total | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
49ers | 14 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 14 |
Falcons | 0 | 10 | 3 | 3 | 16 |
- stadium=Georgia Dome
- attendance=66,874
- weather=None (dome stadium)
- referee=Tony Corrente
- TV=FOX
- TVAnnouncers=Dick Stockton, Charles Davis, Jim Mora & Laura Okmin
- reference=Recap
Scoring
- First quarter
- SF - Vernon Davis 12 yard pass from Alex Smith (Joe Nedney kick), 49ers 7-0, Drive: 10 plays, 88 yards, 6:16.
- SF - Taylor Mays blocked punt recovery in end zone (Joe Nedney kick), 49ers 14-0.
- Second quarter
- ATL - Harry Douglas 8 yard pass from Matt Ryan (Matt Bryant kick), 49ers 14-7, Drive: 12 plays, 71 yards, 6:17.
- ATL - Matt Bryant 37 yard field goal, 49ers 14-10, Drive: 11 plays, 49 yards, 1:13.
- Third quarter
- ATL - Matt Bryant 31 yard field goal, 49ers 14-13, Drive: 7 plays, 41 yards, 3:27.
- Fourth quarter
- ATL - Matt Bryant 43 yard field goal, Falcons 16-14, Drive: 12 plays, 68 yards, 1:20.
|stats=
- Top passers
- SF - Alex Smith - 21/32, 188 yards, 1 touchdown, 2 interceptions
- ATL - Matt Ryan - 26/43, 273 yards, 1 touchdown, 2 interceptions
- Top rushers
- SF - Frank Gore - 21 rushes, 77 yards
- ATL - Michael Turner - 16 rushes, 50 yards
- Top receivers
- SF - Frank Gore - 7 receptions, 60 yards
- ATL - Roddy White - 7 receptions, 104 yards
- Top tacklers
- SF - Taylor Mays - 9 tackles, 2 assists
- ATL - Stephen Nicholas - 12 tackles, 1 assist
Still looking for a win the 49ers flew to Georgia Dome for an NFC duel with the Falcons. In the first quarter the 49ers took the early lead with QB Alex Smith making a 12-yard TD pass to TE Vernon Davis. Then DB Taylor Mays recovered a blocked punt in the endzone for a touchdown. Then the Falcons rallied with QB Matt Ryan completing an 8-yard TD pass to WR Harry Douglas. Then the Falcons took the lead with three field goals from kicker Matt Bryant. He made a 37-yard field goal near the end of the 2nd quarter, a 31-yard field goad in the 3rd. Late in the 4th quarter, CB Nate Clements intercepted Matt Ryan's pass which should have sealed the game for the 49ers who were then up 14 - 13. However, instead of going down, Clements continued down the left sideline attempting to score. He would return the interception 39 yards before Falcons WR Roddy White was able to strip the ball from him and the Falcons recovered the fumble.[9] After regaining possession, the Falcons drove down the field again and this time was able to win the game on a 43-yard field goal by Matt Bryant, giving the 49ers another loss.
With the close loss, the 49ers fell to 0–4.
Week 5: vs. Philadelphia Eagles[]
1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | Total | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Eagles | 7 | 10 | 0 | 10 | 27 |
49ers | 7 | 3 | 0 | 14 | 24 |
- stadium=Candlestick Park
- attendance=69,732
- weather=71 F, clear skies, sunny
- referee= Walt Anderson
- TV=NBC
- TVAnnouncers= Al Michaels, Cris Collinsworth, & Andrea Kramer
- reference=Recap
Scoring
- First quarter
- SF - Michael Crabtree 7 yard pass from Alex Smith (Joe Nedney kick), 49ers 7-0, Drive: 11 plays, 51 yards, 7:07.
- PHI - Brent Celek 8 yard pass from Kevin Kolb (David Akers kick), Tied 7-7, Drive: 10 plays, 75 yards, 5:30.
- Second quarter
- PHI - David Akers 33 yard field goal, Eagles 10-7, Drive: 7 plays, 31 yards, 3:31.
- PHI - LeSean McCoy 29 yard run, (David Akers kick), Eagles 17-7, Drive: 3 plays, 53 yards, 1:10.
- SF - Joe Nedney 50 yard field goal, Eagles 17-10, Drive: 7 plays, 48 yards, 1:10.
- Third quarter
- No scoring
- Fourth quarter
- PHI - Quintin Mikell 52 yard fumble return (David Akers kick), Eagles 24-10.
- SF - Vernon Davis 7 yard pass from Alex Smith (Joe Nedney kick), Eagles 24-17, Drive: 6 plays, 69 yards, 3:35.
- PHI - David Akers 45 yard field goal, Eagles 27-17, Drive: 6 plays, 37 yards, 3:00.
- SF - Frank Gore 1 yard pass from Alex Smith (Joe Nedney kick), Eagles 27-24, Drive: 7 plays, 36 yards, 2:33.
|stats=
- Top passers
- PHI - Kevin Kolb - 21/31, 253 yards, 1 touchdown
- SF - Alex Smith - 25/39, 309 yards, 3 touchdowns, 2 interceptions
- Top rushers
- PHI - LeSean McCoy - 18 rushes, 92 yards, 1 touchdown
- SF - Frank Gore - 18 rushes, 52 yards
- Top receivers
- PHI - Jeremy Maclin - 6 receptions, 95 yards
- SF - Michael Crabtree - 9 receptions, 105 yards, 1 touchdown
- Top tacklers
- PHI - Quintin Mikell - 8 tackles
- SF - Takeo Spikes - 8 tackles
Hoping to get their first win of the season, the 49ers went home for a Week 5 Sunday night duel with the Philadelphia Eagles. The Niners delivered the game's opening strike in the first quarter as quarterback Alex Smith hooked up with wide receiver Michael Crabtree on a 7-yard touchdown pass, but the Eagles would answer with quarterback Kevin Kolb completing an 8-yard touchdown pass to tight end Brent Celek. Philadelphia took the lead in the second quarter as kicker David Akers made a 33-yard field goal, followed by running back LeSean McCoy's 29-yard touchdown run. Afterwards, San Francisco closed out the half with kicker Joe Nedney booting a 50-yard field goal. After a scoreless third quarter, the Eagles would add onto their lead in the fourth quarter as safety Quintin Mikell returned a fumble 52 yards for a touchdown. The Niners began to rally as Smith found tight end Vernon Davis on a 7-yard touchdown pass, yet Philadelphia answered with a 45-yard field goal from Akers. San Francisco tried to rally as Smith found running back Frank Gore on a 1-yard touchdown pass, but Philadelphia's defense would hold on for the win.
With the loss, the 49ers fell to their first 0–5 start since 1979.
Week 6: vs. Oakland Raiders[]
1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | Total | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Raiders | 3 | 3 | 0 | 3 | 9 |
49ers | 0 | 3 | 7 | 7 | 17 |
- stadium=Candlestick Park
- attendance=69,732
- weather=53°F (Rain)
- referee= Carl Cheffers
- TV=CBS
- TVAnnouncers=Bill Macatee and Rich Gannon
- reference=Recap
Scoring
- First quarter
- OAK - Sebastian Janikowski 27 yard field goal, Raiders 3-0, Drive: 13 plays, 79 yards, 7:82.
- Second quarter
- OAK - Sebastian Janikowski 24 yard field goal, Raiders 6-0, Drive: 12 plays, 85 yards, 6:22.
- SF - Joe Nedney 25 yard field goal, Raiders 6-3, Drive: 10 plays, 77 yards, 2:10.
- Third quarter
- SF - Michael Crabtree 32 yard pass from Alex Smith (Joe Nedney kick), 49ers 10-6, Drive: 13 plays, 91 yards, 8:11.
- Fourth quarter
- OAK - Sebastian Janikowski 40 yard field goal, 49ers 10-9, Drive: 8 plays, 55 yards, 2:53.
- SF - Vernon Davis 17 yard pass from Alex Smith (Joe Nedney kick), 49ers 17-9, Drive: 3 plays, 80 yards, 1:07.
|stats=
- Top passers
- OAK - Jason Campbell - 8/21, 83 yards, 2 interceptions
- SF - Alex Smith - 16/33, 196 yards, 2 touchdowns
- Top rushers
- OAK - Michael Bush - 20 rushes, 47 yards
- SF - Frank Gore - 25 rushes, 149 yards
- Top receivers
- OAK - Zach Miller - 2 receptions, 48 yards
- SF - Michael Crabtree - 4 receptions, 57 yards, 1 touchdown
- Top tacklers
- OAK - Tyvon Branch - 7 tackles, 2 assists
- SF - Takeo Spikes - 6 tackles, 1 assist, 1 interception
Raiders | 49ers | |
---|---|---|
First downs | 10 | 17 |
Third down efficiency | 5/15 | 7/17 |
Fourth down efficiency | 0/0 | 0/0 |
Total yards | 179 | 349 |
Passing yards | 69 | 191 |
Passing – completions/attempts | 8/21 | 16/33 |
Rushing yards | 110 | 158 |
Rushing attempts | 30 | 31 |
Yards per rush | 3.7 | 5.1 |
Penalties–yards | 8–60 | 11–143 |
Sacks against–yards | 1–7 | 0–0 |
Fumbles–lost | 2–0 | 0–0 |
Interceptions thrown | 2 | 0 |
Time of possession | 26:39 | 33:21 |
Individual leaders[]
49ers Passing | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|
C/ATT* | Yds | TD | INT | |
Alex Smith | 16/33 | 196 | 2 | 0 |
49ers Rushing | ||||
Cara | Yds | TD | LGb | |
Frank Gore | 25 | 149 | 0 | 64 |
Anthony Dixon | 1 | 9 | 0 | 9 |
Ted Ginn, Jr. | 1 | 2 | 0 | 2 |
Alex Smith | 4 | −2 | 0 | 1 |
49ers Receiving | ||||
Recc | Yds | TD | LGb | |
Michael Crabtree | 4 | 57 | 1 | 32 |
Josh Morgan | 3 | 49 | 0 | 35 |
Vernon Davis | 4 | 35 | 1 | 17 |
Ted Ginn, Jr. | 2 | 23 | 0 | 19 |
Brian Westbrook | 1 | 19 | 0 | 19 |
Nate Byham | 1 | 7 | 0 | 7 |
Dominique Zeigler | 1 | 6 | 0 | 6 |
49ers Defense | ||||
Tak/Ast/Tott | Sck | Int | Ffg | |
Takeo Spikes | 6/1/7 | 0.0 | 0 | 0 |
Justin Smith | 4/1/5 | 0.0 | 0 | 0 |
Nate Clements | 3/0/3 | 0.0 | 0 | 1 |
Patrick Willis | 3/3/6 | 0.0 | 0 | 0 |
Aubrayo Franklin | 3/0/3 | 0.0 | 0 | 0 |
Ricky Jean-Francois | 2/1/3 | 1.0 | 0 | 1 |
Taylor Mays | 2/0/2 | 0.0 | 0 | 0 |
Demetric Evans | 2/0/0 | 0.0 | 0 | 0 |
Parys Haralson | 1/0/1 | 1.0 | 0 | 0 |
Manny Lawson | 1/0/1 | 0.0 | 1 | 0 |
Raiders Passing | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|
C/ATT* | Yds | TD | INT | |
Jason Campbell | 8/21 | 83 | 0 | 2 |
Raiders Rushing | ||||
Cara | Yds | TD | LGb | |
Michael Bush | 20 | 47 | 0 | 5 |
Louis Murphy | 1 | 43 | 0 | 43 |
Jason Campbell | 7 | 21 | 0 | 9 |
Marcel Reece | 1 | 2 | 0 | 2 |
Rock Cartwright | 1 | -3 | 0 | -3 |
Raiders Receiving | ||||
Recc | Yds | TD | LGb | |
Zach Miller | 2 | 48 | 0 | 26 |
Darrius Heyward-Bey | 3 | 19 | 0 | 8 |
Michael Bush | 2 | 12 | 0 | 7 |
Louis Murphy | 1 | 4 | 0 | 4 |
Raiders Defense | ||||
Tak/Ast/Tott | Int | Ffg | Sck | |
Tyvon Branch | 7/2/9 | 0.0 | 0 | 0 |
Michael Huff | 6/1/7 | 0.0 | 0 | 0 |
Tommy Kelly | 5/1/6 | 1.0 | 0 | 0 |
Matt Shaughnessy | 4/0/4 | 1.0 | 0 | 0 |
Stanford Routt | 4/0/4 | 0.0 | 0 | 0 |
Kamerion Wimbley | 3/0/3 | 0.0 | 0 | 0 |
Nnamdi Asomugha | 1/0/1 | 0.0 | 0 | 0 |
Mike Mitchell | 1/2/3 | 0.0 | 0 | 0 |
Trevor Scott | 1/2/3 | 0.0 | 0 | 0 |
Hiram Eugene | 1/0/1 | 0.0 | 0 | 0 |
*Completions/Attempts
aCarries
bLong play
cReceptions
tTackles
gForced Fumble
Still looking for a win the 49ers played on home ground where they played their local rivals, the Oakland Raiders. In the first quarter, the 49ers trailed early as kicker Sebastian Janikowski got a 27-yard field goal. Then he made a 24-yard field goal in the 2nd quarter. The 49ers replied with kicker Joe Nedney making a 25-yard field goal. They took the lead in the third quarter with QB Alex Smith making a 32-yard TD pass to WR Michael Crabtree. The Raiders cut the lead with Janikowski making a 40-yard field goal. The 49ers pulled away after Smith found TE Vernon Davis on a 17-yard TD pass.
With the win, the 49ers improved to 1–5.
Week 7: at Carolina Panthers[]
1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | Total | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
49ers | 7 | 3 | 0 | 10 | 20 |
Panthers | 3 | 7 | 3 | 10 | 23 |
- stadium=Bank of America Stadium
- attendance=72,741
- weather=75°F (Sunny)
- referee= Ron Winter
- TV=Fox
- TV Announcers=Sam Rosen and Tim Ryan
- reference=Recap
Scoring
- First quarter
- SF - Vernon Davis 1 yard pass from Alex Smith (Joe Nedney kick), 49ers 7-0, Drive: 4 plays, 74 yards, 1:42.
- CAR - John Kasay 47 yard field goal, 49ers 7-3, Drive: 10 plays, 36 yards, 4:46.
- Second quarter
- SF - Joe Nedney 24 yard field goal, 49ers 10-3, Drive: 8 plays, 50 yards, 3:49.
- CAR - David Gettis 18 yard pass from Matt Moore (John Kasay kick), Tied 10-10, Drive: 10 plays, 80 yards, 6:16.
- Third quarter
- CAR - John Kasay 55 yard field goal, Panthers 13-10, Drive: 8 plays, 20 yards, 3:58.
- Fourth quarter
- SF - Joe Nedney 38 yard field goal, Tied 13-13, Drive: 8 plays, 39 yards, 4:14.
- SF - Ray McDonald 31 yard interception return (Joe Nedney kick), 49ers 20-13.
- CAR - David Gettis 23 yad pass from Matt Moore (John Kasay kick), Tied 20-20, Drive: 8 plays, 63 yards, 2:37.
- CAR - John Kasay 37 yard field goal, Panthers 23-20, Drive: 5 plays, 38 yards, 0:29.
|stats=
- Top passers
- SF - Alex Smith - 9/19, 129 yards, 1 touchdown
- CAR - Matt Moore - 28/41, 308 yards, 2 touchdowns, 1 interception
- Top rushers
- SF - Frank Gore - 19 rushes, 102 yards
- CAR - DeAngelo Williams - 19 rushes, 44 yards
- Top receivers
- SF - Vernon Davis - 4 receptions, 74 yards
- CAR - David Gettis - 8 receptions, 125 yards, 2 touchdowns
- Top tacklers
- SF - Patrick Willis - 8 tackles, 3 assists
- CAR - James Anderson - 6 tackles, 1 assist
Coming off their win over the Raiders the 49ers flew to Bank of America Stadium for an NFC duel with the Panthers. In the first quarter the 49ers took the lead as QB Alex Smith got a 1-yard TD pass to TE Vernon Davis. The lead was cut when kicker John Kasay nailed a 47-yard field goal. The 49ers scored with kicker Joe Nedney making a 24-yard field goal. The Panthers tied the game with QB Matt Moore completing an 18-yard TD pass to WR David Gettis. The 49ers fell behind in the third quarter with Kasay booting a 55-yard field goal. They eventually got the lead back in the fourth quarter with Nedney hitting a 38-yard field goal, and with DE Ray McDonald returning an interception 31 yards for a touchdown. However the Panthers tied the game with Moore finding Gettis again on a 23-yarrd TD pass. After the game was tied Kasay successfully put away a 37-yard field goal to give the 49ers the loss.
With the loss, the 49ers fell to 1–6.
Week 8: vs. Denver Broncos (International Series)[]
1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | Total | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Broncos | 0 | 0 | 7 | 9 | 16 |
49ers | 3 | 0 | 0 | 21 | 24 |
- stadium=Wembley Stadium, London, England
- attendance=83,941
- weather=54°F (Mostly Cloudy)
- referee= Scott Green
- TV=CBS
- TVAnnouncers= Greg Gumbel and Dan Dierdorf
- reference=Recap
Scoring
- First quarter
- SF - Joe Nedney 34 yard field goal, 49ers 3-0, Drive: 13 plays, 65 yards, 7:31.
- Second quarter
- No scoring
- Third quarter
- DEN - Tim Tebow 1 yard run (Matt Prater kick), Broncos 7-3, Drive: 5 plays, 89 yards, 2:15.
- Fourth quarter
- DEN - Matt Prater 32 yard field goal, Broncos 10-3, Drive: 7 plays, 44 yards, 2:11.
- SF - Troy Smith 1 yard run (Joe Nedney kick), Tied 10-10, Drive: 5 plays, 56 yards, 2:22.
- SF - Michael Crabtree 28 yard pass from Troy Smith (Joe Nedney kick), 49ers 17-10, Drive: 4 plays, 48 yards, 2:11.
- SF - Frank Gore 3 yard run (Joe Nedney kick), 49ers 24-10, Drive: 6 plays, 18 yards, 3:20.
- DEN - Brandon Lloyd 1 yard pass from Kyle Orton (kick failed, wl), 49ers 24-16, Drive: 7 plays, 78 yards, 1:28.
|stats=
- Top passers
- DEN - Kyle Orton - 28/40, 370 yards, 1 touchdown, 1 interception
- SF - Troy Smith - 12/19, 196 yards, 1 touchdown
- Top rushers
- DEN - Knowshon Moreno - 11 rushes, 40 yards
- SF - Frank Gore - 29 rushes, 118 yards, 1 touchdown
- Top receivers
- DEN - Brandon Lloyd - 7 receptions, 169 yards, 1 touchdown
- SF - Delanie Walker - 5 receptions, 85 yards
- Top tacklers
- DEN - D.J. Williams - 9 tackles
- SF - Patrick Willis - 8 tackles, 1 assist
The 49ers' 8th match was an Interconference duel with the Broncos at Wembley Stadium. In the first quarter the 49ers took the lead as kicker Joe Nedney got a 34-yard field goal. They soon trailed in the third quarter when QB Tim Tebow scrambled 1 yard for a touchdown; followed in the fourth quarter by kicker Matt Prater hitting a 32-yard field goal. They soon went on a scoring rally to take the lead with QB Troy Smith scrambling a yard for a touchdown, followed by his 28-yard TD pass to WR Michael Crabtree. Then RB Frank Gore got a 3-yard TD run to put the 49ers up 24-10. The lead was narrowed when QB Kyle Orton made a 1-yard TD pass to WR Brandon Lloyd (with a failed PAT).
With the win, the 49ers went into their bye week at 2–6.
Week 9: BYE[]
Week 10: vs. St. Louis Rams[]
1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | Total | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Rams | 3 | 7 | 7 | 3 | 20 |
49ers | 7 | 3 | 0 | 10 | 23 |
- stadium=Candlestick Park
- attendance=69,732
- weather=74°F (Sunny)
- referee= Ed Hochuli
- TV=Fox
- TVAnnouncers=Sam Rosen, Tim Ryan and Chris Myers
- reference=Recap
Scoring
- First quarter
- STL - Josh Brown 42 yard field goal, Rams 3-0, Drive: 8 plays, 54 yards, 5:25.
- SF - Frank Gore 1 yard run (Joe Nedney kick), 49ers 7-3, Drive: 3 plays, 66 yards, 1:39.
- Second quarter
- SF - Joe Nedney 26 yard field goal, 49ers 10-3, Drive: 8 plays, 75 yards, 2:57.
- STL - Danny Amendola 5 yard pass from Sam Bradford (Josh Brown kick), Tied 10-10, Drive: 6 plays, 67 yards, 2:56.
- Third quarter
- STL - Steven Jackson 13 yard run (Josh Brown kick), Rams 17-10, Drive: 7 plays, 64 yards, 3:22.
- Fourth quarter
- SF - Joe Nedney 47 yard field goal, Rams 17-13, Drive: 7 plays, 44 yards, 2:45.
- SF - Michael Crabtree 16 yard pass from Troy Smith (Joe Nedney kick), 49ers 20-17, Drive: 6 plays, 76 yards, 2:02.
- STL - Josh Brown 33 yard field goal, Tied 20-20, Drive: 11 plays, 70 yards, 2:10.
- Overtime
- SF - Joe Nedney 29 yard field goal, 49ers 23-20, Drive: 6 plays, 55 yards, 3:18.
|stats=
- Top passers
- STL - Sam Bradford - 30/42, 251 yards, 1 touchdown
- SF - Troy Smith - 17/28, 356 yards, 1 touchdown
- Top rushers
- STL - Steven Jackson - 20 rushes, 81 yards, 1 touchdown
- SF - Frank Gore - 22 rushes, 87 yards, 1 touchdown
- Top receivers
- STL - Brandon Gibson - 8 receptions, 72 yards
- SF - Delanie Walker - 4 receptions, 80 yards
- Top tacklers
- STL - Craig Dahl - 10 tackles, 3 assists
- SF - Patrick Willis - 8 tackles, 3 assists, 1.0 sack, 1 forced fumble
The 49ers' ninth game was rivalry match against the Rams at home. In the first quarter the 49ers trailed early with kicker Josh Brown making a 42-yard field goal. They took the lead with RB Frank Gore getting a 1-yard TD run. This was followed in the second quarter by kicker Joe Nedney nailing a 26-yard field goal. The Rams fought back with QB Sam Bradford completing a 5-yard TD pass to WR Danny Amendola. Followed in the third quarter by RB Steven Jackson getting a 13-yard TD run. The 49ers got the lead back with Nedney getting a 47-yard field goal, followed by QB Troy Smith making a 16-yard TD pass to WR Michael Crabtree. The Rams tied the game with Brown making a 33-yard field goal. The decision was made at overtime when Nedney successfully put away a 29-yard field goal to give the 49ers their third win of the season, bringing their record up to 3–6.
Week 11: vs. Tampa Bay Buccaneers[]
1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | Total | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Buccaneers | 0 | 7 | 7 | 7 | 21 |
49ers | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
- stadium=Candlestick Park
- attendance=69,732
- weather=54°F (Cloudy)
- referee= John Parry
- TV=Fox
- TVAnnouncers=Chris Myers and Kurt Warner
- reference=Recap
Scoring
- First quarter
- No scoring
- Second quarter
- TB - Cadillac Williams 6 yard run (Connor Barth kick), Buccaneers 7-0, Drive: 14 plays, 80 yards, 7:31.
- Third quarter
- TB - Mike Williams 8 yard pass from Josh Freeman (Connor Barth kick), Buccaneers 14-0, Drive: 5 plays, 66 yards, 2:55.
- Fourth quarter
- TB - Donald Penn 1 yard pass from Josh Freeman (Connor Barth kick), Buccaneers 21-0, Drive: 4 plays, 7 yards, 2:17.
|stats=
- Top passers
- TB - Josh Freeman - 13/20, 136 yards, 2 touchdowns
- SF - Troy Smith - 16/31, 148 yards, 1 interception
- Top rushers
- TB - LeGarrette Blount - 26 rushes, 82 yards
- SF - Troy Smith - 5 rushes, 45 yards
- Top receivers
- TB - Mike Williams - 3 receptions, 54 yards, 1 touchdown
- SF - Josh Morgan - 4 receptions, 51 yards
- Top tacklers
- TB - Cody Grimm - 5 tackles, 2 assists
- SF - Patrick Willis - 9 tackles, 4 assists, 2.0 sacks
Coming off their win over the Rams the 49ers played on home ground for an NFC duel with the Buccaneers. In the second quarter the 49ers trailed after RB Cadillac Williams made a 6-yard TD run. This was followed in the third quarter by QB Josh Freeman completing an 8-yard TD pass to WR Mike Williams; and in the fourth quarter by Freeman throwing a 1-yard TD pass to Donald Penn.
With the loss, the 49ers fell to 3–7. This marked the 49ers' first shutout loss at home since 1977, when they were defeated by the Atlanta Falcons 7–0.
Week 12: at Arizona Cardinals[]
1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | Total | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
49ers | 14 | 7 | 3 | 3 | 27 |
Cardinals | 3 | 3 | 0 | 0 | 6 |
- stadium=University of Phoenix Stadium
- attendance=62,308
- weather=None (Dome Closed)
- referee= Gene Steratore
- TV=ESPN
- TVAnnouncers=Mike Tirico, Ron Jaworski, Jon Gruden, Suzy Kolber, & Michele Tafoya
- reference=Recap
Scoring
- First quarter
- SF - Michael Crabtree 38 yard pass from Troy Smith (Shane Andrus kick), 49ers 7-0, Drive: 1 plays, 38 yards, 0:07.
- ARI - Jay Feely 31 yard field goal, 49ers 7-3, Drive: 7 plays, 55 yards, 3:39.
- SF - Anthony Dixon 1 yard run (Shane Andrus kick), 49ers 14-3, Drive: 10 plays, 55 yards, 5:27.
- Second quarter
- SF - Brian Westbrook 8 yard run (Shane Andrus kick), 49ers 21-3, Drive: 6 plays, 42 yards, 2:44.
- ARI - Jay Feely 39 yard field goal, 49ers 21-6, Drive: 10 plays, 40 yards, 5:07.
- Third quarter
- SF - Shane Andrus 39 yard field goal, 49ers 24-6, Drive: 7 plays, 44 yards, 3:53.
- Fourth quarter
- SF - Shane Andrus 26 yard field goal, 49ers 27-6, Drive: 11 plays, 42 yards, 4:03.
|stats=
- Top passers
- SF - Troy Smith - 11/23, 129 yards, 1 touchdowns, 1 interception
- ARI - Derek Anderson - 16/35, 196 yards, 1 interceptions
- Top rushers
- SF - Brian Westbrook - 23 rushes, 136 yards, 1 touchdown
- ARI - Beanie Wells - 5 rushes, 13 yards
- Top receivers
- SF - Michael Crabtree - 2 receptions, 48 yards, 1 touchdown
- ARI - Early Doucet - 5 receptions, 60 yards
- Top tacklers
- SF - Patrick Willis - 4 tackles, 1 assist, 1.0 sack
- ARI - Paris Lenon - 7 tackles, 3 assists
Hoping to rebound from their shutout loss to the Buccaneers, the 49ers flew to the University of Phoenix Stadium for a Week 12 NFC West duel with the Arizona Cardinals on Monday night. San Francisco made the opening strike in the first quarter as quarterback Troy Smith found wide receiver Michael Crabtree on a 38-yard touchdown pass. The Cardinals answered with kicker Jay Feely getting a 31-yard field goal, yet the 49ers responded with a 1-yard touchdown run from rookie running back Anthony Dixon. San Francisco added onto their lead in the second quarter with an 8-yard touchdown pass from running back Brian Westbrook. Arizona would hang on with Feely's 39-yard field goal. Afterwards, the 49ers pulled away with a 38-yard field goal in the third quarter and a 26-yard field goal in the fourth quarter from kicker Shane Andrus.
With the win, San Francisco improved to 4–7.
Week 13: at Green Bay Packers[]
1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | Total | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
49ers | 3 | 10 | 3 | 0 | 16 |
Packers | 0 | 14 | 14 | 6 | 34 |
- stadium=Lambeau Field
- attendance=70,575
- weather=26°F (-3.3°C), Cloudy
- referee= Bill Leavy
- TV=Fox
- TV Announcers=Thom Brennaman and Brian Billick
- reference=Recap
Scoring
- First Quarter
- SF - Jeff Reed 44 yd. FG (SF 3–0)
- Second Quarter
- SF - Jeff Reed 26 yd. FG (SF 6–0)
- GB - Greg Jennings 57 yd. TD reception from Aaron Rodgers, M. Crosby XP good (GB 7–6)
- GB - John Kuhn 1 yd. TD run, M. Crosby XP good (GB 14–6)
- SF - Vernon Davis 66 yd. TD reception from Troy Smith, J. Reed XP good (GB 14–13)
- Third Quarter
- GB - Donald Driver 61 yd. TD reception from Aaron Rodgers, M. Crosby XP good (GB 21–13)
- SF - Jeff Reed 23 yd. FG (GB 21–16)
- GB - Greg Jennings 1 yd. TD reception from Aaron Rodgers, M. Crosby XP good (GB 28–16)
- Fourth Quarter
- GB - Mason Crosby 43 yd. FG (GB 31–16)
- SF - Mason Crosby 24 yd. FG (GB 34–16)
|stats=;Leading Passers
- SF - Troy Smith - 10/25, 194 yards, 1 TD, 1 INT
- GB - Aaron Rodgers - 21/30, 298 yards, 3 TDs
- Leading Rushers
- SF - Anthony Dixon - 9 carries, 33 yards
- GB - James Starks - 18 carries, 73 yards
- Leading Receivers
- SF - Vernon Davis - 4 receptions, 126 yards, 1 TD
- GB - Greg Jennings - 6 receptions, 122 yards, 2 TDs
- Leading Tacklers
- SF - Takeo Spikes - 13 tackles, 4 assists
- GB - Clay Matthews - 6 tackles
Coming off their win over the Cardinals the 49ers flew to Lambeau Field for an NFC duel with the Packers. The 49ers took the lead after kicker Jeff Reed hit a 44 and a 26-yard field goal. The lead didn't last long after QB Aaron Rodgers completed a 57-yard TD pass to WR Greg Jennings, followed by FB John Kuhn getting a 1-yard TD run. The 49ers cut the lead down with QB Troy Smith making a 66-yard TD pass to TE Vernon Davis, but in the third quarter, the Packers replied with Rodgers getting a 61-yard TD pass to WR Donald Driver. The 49ers scored again with Reed nailing a 23-yard field goal. They struggled further after Rodgers found Jennings again on a 1-yard TD pass. Followed in the fourth quarter by kicker Mason Crosby making a 43 and a 24-yard field goal.
With the loss, the 49ers fell to 4–8.
Week 14: vs. Seattle Seahawks[]
1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | Total | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Seahawks | 7 | 0 | 7 | 7 | 21 |
49ers | 10 | 20 | 10 | 0 | 40 |
- stadium=Candlestick Park
- attendance=69,732
- weather=55°F (Overcast)
- referee= Carl Cheffers
- TV=Fox
- TV Announcers=Thom Brennaman and Brian Billick
- reference=Recap
Scoring
- First quarter
- SF - Vernon Davis 42 yard pass from Alex Smith (Jeff Reed kick), 49ers 7-0, Drive: 6 plays, 74 yards, 2:27.
- SEA - Ruvell Martin 11 yard pass from Matt Hasselbeck (Olindo Mare kick), Tied 7-7, Drive: 7 plays, 52 yards, 3:47.
- SF - Jeff Reed 33 yard field goal, 49ers 10-7, Drive: 9 plays, 59 yards, 4:14.
- Second quarter
- SF - Jeff Reed 44 yard field goal, 49ers 13-7, Drive: 7 plays, 19 yards, 2:52.
- SF - Josh Morgan 15 yard pass from Alex Smith (Jeff Reed kick), 49ers 20-7, Drive: 3 plays, 17 yards, 0:55.
- SF - Brian Westbrook 62 yard pass from Alex Smith (Jeff Reed kick), 49ers 27-7, Drive: 3 plays, 68 yards, 1:14.
- SF - Jeff Reed 22 yard field goal, 49ers 30-7, Drive: 4 plays, 7 yards, 1:26.
- Third quarter
- SF - Dashon Goldson 39 yard interception return (Jeff Reed kick), 49ers 37-7.
- SF - Jeff Reed 36 yard field goal, 49ers 40-7, Drive: 7 plays, 51 yards, 3:41.
- SEA - Leon Washington 92 yard kickoff return (Olindo Mare kick), 49ers 40-14, Drive: 0 plays, 0 yards, 0:14.
- Fourth quarter
- SEA - Deon Butler 2 yard pass from Matt Hasselbeck (Olindo Mare kick), 49ers 40-21, Drive: 9 plays, 80 yards, 3:11.
|stats=
- Top passers
- SEA - Matt Hasselbeck - 27/42, 285 yards, 2 touchdowns, 4 interceptions
- SF - Alex Smith - 17/27, 255 yards, 3 touchdowns
- Top rushers
- SEA - Michael Robinson - 3 rushes, 33 yards
- SF - Anthony Dixon - 14 rushes, 60 yards
- Top receivers
- SEA - Ruvell Martin - 4 receptions, 73 yards, 1 touchdown
- SF - Brian Westbrook - 6 receptions, 87 yards, 1 touchdown
- Top tacklers
- SEA - Aaron Curry - 6 tackles, 2 assists, 0.5 sack
- SF - Takeo Spikes - 6 tackles, 3 assists, 1 interception
Hoping to rebound from their loss to the Packers the 49ers played on home ground for an NFC West rivalry match against the Seahawks. The 49ers took the lead first with QB Alex Smith completing a 42-yard TD pass to TE Vernon Davis, but the Seahawks replied with QB Matt Hasselbeck throwing an 11-yard TD pass to WR Ruvell Martin. The 49ers made a large scoring rally to increase their lead when kicker Jeff Reed hit a 33 and a 44-yard field goal, followed by Smith completing a 15 and a 62-yard TD pass to Josh Morgan and Brian Westbrook respectively. This was followed by Reed making a 22-yard field goal, and in the third quarter with FS Dashon Goldson returning an interception 39 yards for a touchdown. After that, Reed nailed a 36-yard field goal to put the 49ers up 40-7. The lead was broken down with RB Leon Washington returning the kickoff 92 yards for a touchdown, followed in the 4th quarter by QB Matt Hasselbeck getting a 2-yard TD pass to WR Deon Butler.
With the win, the 49ers improved to 5–8.
Week 15: at San Diego Chargers[]
1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | Total | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
49ers | 0 | 0 | 0 | 7 | 7 |
Chargers | 7 | 10 | 7 | 10 | 34 |
- stadium=Qualcomm Stadium
- attendance=67,820
- weather=56°F (Partly Cloudy)
- referee= Clete Blakeman
- TV=NFLN
- TV Announcers=Bob Papa, Matt Millen and Joe Theismann
- reference=Recap
Scoring
- First quarter
- SD - Vincent Jackson 58 yard pass from Philip Rivers (Nate Kaeding kick), Chargers 7-0, Drive: 4 plays, 74 yards, 2:07.
- Second quarter
- SD - Nate Kaeding 25 yard field goal, Chargers 10-0, Drive: 13 plays, 90 yards, 7:00.
- SD - Vincent Jackson 11 yard pass from Philip Rivers (Nate Kaeding kick), Chargers 17-0, Drive: 7 plays, 87 yards, 2:49.
- Third quarter
- SD - Mike Tolbert 1 yard run (Nate Kaeding kick), Chargers 24-0, Drive: 14 plays, 58 yards, 8:12.
- Fourth quarter
- SD - Vincent Jackson 21 yard pass from Philip Rivers (Nate Kaeding kick), Chargers 31-0, Drive: 10 plays, 69 yards, 6:16.
- SD - Nate Kaeding 39 yard field goal, Chargers 34-0, Drive: 5 plays, 14 yards, 1:56.
- SF - Brian Westbrook 3 yard run (Jeff Reed kick), Chargers 34-7, Drive: 6 plays, 70 yards, 3:12.
|stats=
- Top passers
- SF - Alex Smith - 19/29, 165 yards, 1 interception
- SD - Philip Rivers - 19/25, 273 yards, 3 touchdowns
- Top rushers
- SF - Anthony Dixon - 6 rushes, 33 yards
- SD - Ryan Mathews - 17 rushes, 56 yards
- Top receivers
- SF - Josh Morgan - 7 receptions, 106 yards
- SD - Vincent Jackson - 5 receptions, 112 yards, 3 touchdowns
- Top tacklers
- SF - Takeo Spikes - 7 tackles, 5 assists
- SD - Kevin Burnett - 8 tackles, 1 sack
Coming off their win over the Seahawks the 49ers played against the Chargers at Qualcomm Stadium on Thursday Night. The 49ers fell behind 2 minutes into the game with QB Philip Rivers throwing a 58-yard TD pass to WR Vincent Jackson, followed in the second quarter by kicker Nate Kaeding nailing a 25-yard field goal, then with Rivers finding Jackson on an 11-yard touchdown pass. In the third quarter the 49ers had a touchdown from the second-half kickoff return, but was called back because of a face-mask penalty called on them. Following that, they struggled further with FB Mike Tolbert getting a 1-yard TD run, followed by Rivers connecting to Jackson on a 48-yard TD pass, then with Kaeding hitting a 39-yard field goal. The 49ers made their only score of the game with RB Brian Westbrook getting a 1-yard TD run.
With the loss, the 49ers fell to 5-9.
Week 16: at St. Louis Rams[]
1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | Total | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
49ers | 0 | 14 | 0 | 3 | 17 |
Rams | 9 | 3 | 3 | 10 | 25 |
- stadium=Edward Jones Dome
- attendance=52,820
- weather=None (dome stadium)
- referee= Pete Morelli
- TV=Fox
- TVAnnouncers=Kenny Albert, Daryl Johnston and Tony Siragusa
- reference=Recap
Scoring
- First quarter
- STL - Steven Jackson 1 yard run (Josh Brown kick), Rams 7-0, Drive: 7 plays, 71 yards, 3:39.
- STL - Troy Smith tackled in end zone by James Hall for a Safety, Rams 9-0
- Second quarter
- SF - Ted Ginn 78 yard punt return (Jeff Reed kick), Rams 9-7.
- STL - Josh Brown 43 yard field goal, Rams 12-7, Drive: 8 plays, 36 yards, 3:44.
- SF - Mike Crabtree 60 yard pass from Troy Smith (Jeff Reed kick), 49ers 14-12, Drive: 6 plays, 80 yards, 3:10.
- Third quarter
- STL - Josh Brown 30 yard field goal, Rams 15-14, Drive: 8 plays, 29 yards, 2:51.
- Fourth quarter
- STL - Laurent Robinson 3 yard pass from Sam Bradford (Josh Brown kick), Rams 22-14, Drive: 4 plays, 68 yards, 1:47.
- SF - Jeff Reed 47 yard field goal, Rams 22-17, Drive: 7 plays, 52 yards, 3:55.
- STL - Josh Brown 28 yard field goal, Rams 25-17, Drive: 4 plays, 2 yards, 1:50.
|stats=
- Top passers
- SF - Troy Smith - 7/19, 153 yards, 1 touchdown, 1 interception
- STL - Sam Bradford - 28/37, 292 yards, 1 touchdown
- Top rushers
- SF - Brian Westbrook - 10 rushes, 40 yards
- STL - Steven Jackson - 24 rushes, 48 yards, 1 touchdown
- Top receivers
- SF - Michael Crabtree - 6 receptions, 122 yards, 1 touchdown
- STL - Danario Alexander - 6 receptions, 99 yards
- Top tacklers
- SF - Patrick Willis - 12 tackles, 1.0 sack, 1 forced fumble
- STL - James Hall - 6 tackles, 2 assists, 1.5 sack, 2 forced fumbles
}}
The 49ers' fifteenth game was an NFC West rivalry rematch against the Rams at Edward Jones Dome. The 49ers struggled in the first quarter when Steven Jackson got a 1-yard TD run, followed by QB Troy Smith getting sacked in the endzone by DE James Hall for a safety. They got back in the game after Ted Ginn returned a punt 78 yards for a touchdown, but fell further behind after kicker Josh Brown nailed a 43-yard field goal. They took the lead with Smith completing a 60-yard TD pass to WR Michael Crabtree, but fell behind again as Brown got a 30-yard field goal, followed by QB Sam Bradford throwing a 3-yard TD pass to WR Laurent Robinson. The 49ers tried to cut this lead with kicker Jeff Reed making a 47-yard field goal, but the Rams pulled away with Brown hitting a 28-yard field goal.
With the loss, the 49ers fell to 5-10, eliminating them from post-season contention for the eighth consecutive season. As a result of this and a sideline argument during the game, Singletary was fired as head coach later that night.
Week 17: vs. Arizona Cardinals[]
1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | Total | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Cardinals | 0 | 7 | 0 | 0 | 7 |
49ers | 7 | 3 | 21 | 7 | 38 |
- stadium=Candlestick Park
- attendance=69,732
- weather=49°F (Cloudy)
- referee=
- TV=Fox
- TVAnnouncers=Chris Myers and Jim Mora
- reference=
Scoring
- First quarter
- SF - Ted Ginn 37 yard pass from Alex Smith (Jeff Reed kick), 49ers 7-0, Drive: 1 play, 37 yards, 0:07
- Second quarter
- SF - Jeff Reed 39 yard field goal, 49ers 10-0, Drive: 8 plays, 36 yards, 3:46
- ARZ - Larry Fitzgerald 10 yard pass from John Skelton (Jeff Feely kick), 49ers 10-7, Drive: 7 plays, 37 yards, 2:45
- Third quarter
- SF - Vernon Davis 59 yard pass from Alex Smith (Jeff Reed kick), 49ers 17-7, Drive: 5 plays, 75 yards, 1:58
- SF - Brian Westbrook 6 yard run (Jeff Reed kick), 49ers 24-7, Drive: 6 plays, 78 yards, 3:08
- SF - Brian Westbrook 6 yard run (Jeff Reed kick), 49ers 31-7, Drive: 2 plays, 8 yards, 0:40
- Fourth quarter
- SF - Tarell Brown 62 yard interception return (Jeff Reed kick), 49ers 38-7
|stats=
- Top passers
- ARI -
- SF -
- Top rushers
- ARI -
- SF -
- Top receivers
- ARI -
- SF -
- Top tacklers
- ARI -
- SF -
The 49ers' final game was an NFC West rematch against the Cardinals. The 49ers took the lead as QB Alex Smith completed a 37-yard TD pass to WR Ted Ginn, followed in the 2nd quarter by kicker Jeff Reed making a 39-yard field goal. The Cardinals narrowed the lead as QB John Skelton completed a 10-yard TD pass to WR Larry Fitzgerald, but the 49ers extended their lead after Smith completed a 59-yard TD pass to TE Vernon Davis, followed by RB Brian Westbrook running 6 yards to the endzone for a touchdown twice in succession. This was followed by CB Tarell Brown returning an interception 62 yards for a touchdown.
With the win, the 49ers finished with a 6-10 record.
References[]
- ↑ Matt Maiocco. 49ers Fire Offensive Coordinator Jimmy Raye. CSN Bay Area. Retrieved on 2010-09-27.
- ↑ Matt Maiocco. Kurt Schottenheimer named 49ers' special-teams coordinator. Press Democrat. Retrieved on 2010-02-07.
- ↑ Daniel Brown. 49ers hire McKittick disciple Mike Solari as offensive line coach. San Jose Mercury News. Retrieved on 2010-05-14.
- ↑ San Francisco 2010 Free Agency. NFL.com. Retrieved on July 9, 2010.
- ↑ Niners sign QB Carr, agree to trade QB Hill to Lions for pick. NFL.com. Retrieved on March 16, 2010.
- ↑ 49ers Announce Preseason Opponents (March 31, 2010). Retrieved on April 24, 2010.
- ↑ 49ers to play Broncos in London in 2010 (January 2010). Retrieved on April 25, 2010.
- ↑ London Calling: 49ers vs. Broncos on Oct 31 (January 15, 2010). Retrieved on April 25, 2010.
- ↑ "White's heads-up strip gives Ryan, Falcons second chance to beat Niners". Retrieved on 2010-12-07.