Shanahan nos habla de como llega el equipo a la jornada inagural en Seattle, toda la actualidad de la Week 1 de 49ers, novedades de los lesionados, evolución del equipo y mucho más.
Aquí podéis leer los 10 puntos clave y la transcripción completa en español de la rueda de prensa Kyle Shanahan, el 3 de septiembre de 2025.

1️⃣ 🏥 Parte médico
Yetur Gross-Matos (rodilla) y Jordan Watkins (tobillo) no entrenan; Jauan Jennings (gemelo), Dominick Puni (rodilla) y Jordan James (dedo) están limitados.
2️⃣ 🎖️ Capitanes confirmados
Se repite el grupo del año pasado: Warner, Kittle, Purdy, Williams, McCaffrey, Bosa, Juszcyk. Se une Deommodore Lenoir.
3️⃣ 🦵 Jauan Jennings listo
Tuvo molestias en el gemelo, pero Shanahan confirma que jugará el domingo.
4️⃣ 💪 Impacto de Jennings en el vestuario
Su carácter, energía y calidad generan entusiasmo en compañeros y entrenadores. Puni lo definió como su jugador favorito del equipo.
5️⃣ 🔄 Movimientos en WR
Marquez Valdes-Scantling y Russell Gage Jr. podrían estar activos el domingo; Shanahan quiere a ambos en plantilla.
6️⃣ 🏃 Ataque de Seattle
Esquema similar al de los 49ers con Klint Kubiak y Sam Darnold. Espera un juego equilibrado y fuerte en la carrera.
7️⃣ 🔊 Ambiente hostil
Abrir en Seattle y Nueva Orleans es un reto por el ruido; el equipo ha trabajado cadencias y comunicación.
8️⃣ 🌱 Defensa joven
Muchos jugadores jóvenes (Mykel Williams, Upton Stout, C.J. West) deberán asumir protagonismo desde el inicio.
9️⃣ ⭐ McCaffrey al 100%
Shanahan asegura que está completamente recuperado y sigue siendo el motor ofensivo.
🔟 🤝 Jennings y la confianza
Shanahan asegura que la relación con él está intacta: “Nunca fue personal, solo negocio”.

Rueda de prensa del entrenador jefe Kyle Shanahan
Entrenador jefe Kyle Shanahan
Rueda de prensa – 3 de septiembre de 2025
San Francisco 49ers
Declaraciones iniciales:
“Parte médico: [DL] Yetur [Gross-Matos], rodilla, no entrenará. [WR] Jordan Watkins, tobillo, no entrenará. [WR] Jauan [Jennings], gemelo, limitado. [OL Dominick] Puni, rodilla, limitado. [RB] Jordan James, dedo, limitado. Adelante.”
¿Ha votado ya el equipo a los capitanes?
“Sí. Los mismos del año pasado con [LB] Fred [Warner], [TE] George [Kittle], [QB] Brock [Purdy], [T] Trent [Williams], [RB] Christian [McCaffrey], [DL] Nick [Bosa] y [FB Kyle Juszsczyk] Juice. [DB Deommodore Lenoir] DMO reemplazó a [WR de Washington Commanders] Deebo [Samuel Sr.], así que son ocho.”
¿Esperas que Jauan juegue el domingo?
“Sí.”
¿Todo bien físicamente con él?
“Está limitado, pero sí, el lunes se le vio bien. Volviendo poco a poco, después de tanto tiempo parado tenemos que ir con calma, así que veremos cómo va la semana. Por eso hoy estará limitado. Pero está lo suficientemente sano como para jugar y esperemos que siga así.”
¿Se le hizo una resonancia final? ¿Alguna prueba para asegurar que el gemelo está bien?
“Sí, claro. Así que está listo para jugar.”
¿Yetur ha tenido una recaída?
“No.”
¿Cómo ha sido el regreso de Jauan? El lunes parecíais contentos de tenerle de vuelta. Puni se iluminó al hablar de él diciendo que era su jugador favorito del equipo. ¿Qué aporta al vestuario ahora que está dentro cada día?
“No parece que se haya ido porque ha estado presente cada día. Así que hemos pasado tiempo con él igualmente. Tenerlo de vuelta en el campo de entrenamiento el lunes fue genial. Queremos mucho a J.J.; cuando no está, se le echa mucho de menos. Su manera de ser, la energía con la que juega y lo buen jugador que es, hace que todos estén muy ilusionados.”
Obviamente se ha hablado mucho de su contrato. ¿Puedes decir si hay alguna resolución en cuanto al tema contractual?
“No, no creo que haya una resolución definitiva. Es la parte del negocio. Como dije al inicio del campamento, tanto yo como todos aquí queremos mucho que Jauan siga a largo plazo. Queremos también que [OL] Colton McKivitz siga. Son dos jugadores que queremos mantener. Pero ambos acaban contrato este año y nunca hay nada definitivo. Veremos cómo se desarrolla. Es la parte de negocio de ambas partes, pero creo que a ambos les encantaría solucionarlo. Solo que no sabemos si será posible.”
¿Por qué se hizo el movimiento con la plantilla activa y la escuadra de prácticas, cambiando a WR Marquez Valdes-Scantling y WR Russell Gage Jr.? ¿Esperas que ambos estén activos el domingo?
“Creo que ambos tienen una buena oportunidad de estarlo. Hay muchas capas en ese movimiento, no es algo tan simple. Algunas cosas para ahora, otras para el futuro. Pero lo más importante era asegurar que ambos siguieran en el equipo. Y lo están, con tantas posibilidades de jugar el domingo.”
¿Cómo se adapta Marquez a la química con Brock Purdy y a tu esquema?
“Fue bueno tenerlo el lunes en el entrenamiento. Además, haber jugado con [coordinador ofensivo de Seattle] Klint Kubiak en Nueva Orleans medio año y luego en Seattle toda esta pretemporada, le ha dado continuidad en jugadas y terminología. Es un veterano que ha visto muchas cosas, así que parece que lo va a asimilar rápido. Lo ha hecho en los entrenamientos. Ya tiene el plan de partido. No queremos cargarle demasiado, pero necesitamos que lo aprenda sobre la marcha y que esté listo para ayudarnos el domingo si puede.”
¿Qué esperas de ese ataque de Seattle, con tu conocimiento de Kubiak y del QB Sam Darnold?
“Creo que habrá similitudes. Siempre cambia según los jugadores, pero sé que serán un equipo equilibrado que querrá poner a Sam en buenas situaciones y dar el balón a sus buenos corredores. Y luego suele decidirse en tercer down, así que se parece mucho a nosotros. El envoltorio es distinto, pero la idea de cómo quieren llevar un partido creo que es muy similar a la nuestra.”
Sé que no ves mucho vídeo ofensivo, pero Seattle no corrió bien el año pasado y este verano sí lo ha hecho. ¿Has visto algo de su juego terrestre? ¿Algo destacable?
“Sí, es un estilo distinto, muy parecido al nuestro. Klint y [entrenador de OL de Seattle] John Benton han trabajado conmigo en Houston, y John también estuvo aquí varias veces. Klint estuvo aquí hace dos años. Así que hay muchas similitudes. Lo hicieron bien en pretemporada, ya veremos en la Semana 1.”
Empiezas la temporada en dos estadios muy ruidosos, Seattle y Nueva Orleans. ¿Es problemático al inicio del año, cuando aún no todo está engrasado?
“Puede ser. Por eso lo trabajamos duro, empezamos la semana pasada y seguimos esta. Normalmente es suficiente, pero hay muchos jugadores nuevos que tienen que adaptarse a las cadencias y diferencias de movimientos. Siempre es un reto. Intentamos que durante la semana se acostumbren y que el domingo nos salga natural.”
El DL Mykel Williams se perdió algo de tiempo por la rodilla. ¿Cómo le has visto desde que llegó hasta ahora? ¿Está listo para un rol importante?
“Ha estado bien en los últimos entrenamientos. Cada día va a más. Siempre es duro perderse gran parte del campamento. Se lesionó antes del partido de Denver y no volvió hasta después del último de pretemporada. Pero físicamente está bien, está teniendo todas las repeticiones y cada vez mejora más.”
¿Dirías que la juventud en defensa es tu mayor reto esta temporada?
“Es posible. Depende de cómo se desarrolle. Tenemos veteranos que van a dar un paso adelante, así que quizá no todos los jóvenes tengan que ir de golpe. Pero sí, jugaremos mucho con jóvenes. Que vuelvan algunos ayuda, aunque perderse gran parte del campamento fue un problema, como con Mykel o [CB Upton] Stout. La semana pasada también recuperamos a [DL] C.J. West. Esperemos tener una buena semana de entrenamientos y que estén listos para un buen primer partido.”
¿Cómo va la recuperación de DL Alfred Collins?
“Ha estado genial. Perderse los OTA y la pretemporada siempre preocupa, más siendo un jugador tan grande. Pero volvió, le costó coger ritmo, y tuve miedo de que se lesionara de nuevo. Pero se mantuvo sano, trabajó duro cada día, recuperó la condición física y creo que tuvo un gran campamento. Le da la oportunidad de tener un gran año.”
¿Motiva más abrir contra un rival divisional?
“Quizá un poco. Los partidos divisionales cuentan más al final, pero para mí la motivación ya está en el primer partido. Llevas una semana esperando y cuando llega el primer kickoff te sientes normal otra vez. Siempre hay incógnitas, sea rival divisional o no, hasta que se patea el balón.”
Cuando fichasteis a RB Brian Robinson Jr. dijisteis que sería el suplente, y John Lynch comentó que esperabais que James también lo fuese, pero su lesión de dedo le frenó. ¿Significa eso que RB Isaac Guerendo ha quedado un poco apartado?
“No creo que se haya perdido. Está compitiendo. El año pasado era el tercer corredor, luego hubo lesiones y tuvo su oportunidad, lo hizo bien. Pero eso no le convertía de repente en primero o segundo. Este año tenía que competir de nuevo. Se lesionó muy pronto y perdió tiempo. Trajimos a Brian, ya lo conocíamos, y por eso le pusimos por delante. Así empezamos el año, ya veremos cómo evoluciona.”
¿Qué hace bueno a Mike Macdonald, entrenador de Seattle, como play caller defensivo?
“Más que el play calling, es cómo estructura todo su esquema. Es una defensa muy sólida, difícil de generar jugadas grandes. Suena conservador, pero también saben cómo presionarte. Llama bien las blitzes, tanto contra la carrera como contra el pase, y tiene un repertorio muy variado de coberturas. Es difícil cogerle el ritmo.”
¿Qué impacto ha tenido hasta ahora Gus Bradley como asistente defensivo?
“Gus es un crack. No había trabajado con él hasta este año. Es probablemente el más positivo del staff. Encaja genial con todos, y tiene mucha historia con [coordinador defensivo Robert] Saleh, a quien mentorizó en Jacksonville. Ahora se han reencontrado con experiencias diferentes, pero la misma base. Eso es muy valioso. Además, Gus habla con todos, no solo con la defensa. Le importa la gente, es muy accesible, y ha conectado muy rápido con todo el edificio.”
¿Habéis decidido ya los safeties titulares?
“Sí. (risas)”
Sobre S Ji’Ayir Brown, que ha tenido altibajos en su primer y segundo año, ¿cómo lo ves ahora?
“Me encanta Ji’Ayir. Cuando se lesionó [S Talanoa Hufanga], él entró en su año rookie y jugó unos siete partidos muy buenos. El año pasado tuvo problemas de lesiones, también en la offseason, y luego un contratiempo en el training camp. Pero cuanto más está en el campo, mejor y más consistente es. Lo malo son las interrupciones por lesiones.”
Habéis ganado los tres últimos partidos en Seattle. Es un sitio duro. ¿Qué habéis hecho bien en esas victorias?
“No lo pienso mucho, de hecho no lo sabía hasta que lo has dicho. Lo que sé es que para ganar en Seattle tienes que manejar la cadencia y el ruido. Es la primera manera de perder allí. Lo he vivido muchas veces. Históricamente es de los sitios más difíciles por el ruido. Si no lo controlas, a veces ni importa cómo juegues.”
Con los safeties Jason Pinnock, Ji’Ayir y Marques Sigle, ¿hay alguna ventaja en no revelar aún los dos titulares a Seattle?
“No creo que sea una gran ventaja.”
Entonces, ¿quiénes son los titulares?
“Quizá sí hay un poco de ventaja. No quiero dar ninguna ventaja.”
¿Hubo un momento en la offseason en que supiste que McCaffrey estaba completamente recuperado? ¿Qué supone eso para la confianza del equipo?
“Para mí fue cuando él mismo dijo que estaba sano. No dudábamos de que volvería. Lo importante era que desaparecieran la artritis y las molestias, y nos lo dijo temprano en la offseason. Christian no miente, así que confié. Y en los OTA ya se le veía como siempre. Y ha seguido así.”
¿Es importante para su confianza que toque balón pronto en Seattle?
“No creo que cambie su confianza, quizá sí su nivel de irritación. Christian quiere el balón en cada jugada, está siempre listo. Así que cuanto antes mejor, y normalmente pasa con los corredores.”
Más allá de Ricky Pearsall y Jauan, parece muy abierto quiénes serán los otros receptores. ¿Cómo manejas ese plan según cómo ejecuten en los entrenos?
“Muy abierto. Tenemos una idea con algunos, como Gage, que ya estuvo el año pasado, aunque se lesionó al final. Con MVS recién llegado, Robbie Chosen, Malik Turner, Skyy Moore… todos tienen oportunidad. Probablemente subamos a cinco para el partido. Necesitan estos tres días más de entreno para decidir roles.”
En el training camp dijiste que Christian no iba a cambiar como padre, que seguiría siendo un loco. ¿Lo sigue siendo?
“Sí, es su ADN. Su padre también lo es, en el buen sentido.”
El lunes se vio a Jauan abrazándote a ti y a John Lynch. ¿Sientes que la relación sigue intacta pese a lo del contrato?
“Sí, no tengo ningún problema con Jauan. No solo hubo abrazos el lunes, también sábado y martes. Jauan es puro cariño. Nunca fue algo personal, era negocio. Como entrenador quiero que todos ganen lo máximo posible, jugadores y entrenadores. Pero no siempre se puede. A veces otros no entienden eso, así que hay que comunicar mucho para que no se haga personal. Con Jauan nunca me preocupó la relación.”

Head Coach Kyle Shanahan Press Conference
Head Coach Kyle Shanahan
Press Conference – September 3, 2025
San Francisco 49ers
Opening comments:
“Injury Report: [DL] Yetur [Gross-Matos] knee, will not practice, [WR] Jordan Watkins, ankle, will not practice, [WR] Jauan [Jennings] calf, limited, [OL Dominick] Puni, knee, limited, [RB] Jordan James, finger, limited. Go ahead.”
Has the team voted on the captains yet?
“Yes. Same as last year with [LB] Fred [Warner], [TE] George [Kittle], [QB] Brock [Purdy], [T] Trent [Williams], [RB] Christian [McCaffrey], [DL] Nick [Bosa] and [FB Kyle Juszsczyk] Juice. [DB Deommodore Lenoir] DMO replaced [Washington Commanders WR] Deebo [Samuel Sr.] so there are eight.”
Are you expecting Jauan to play on Sunday?
“Yes.”
Everything’s fine physically with him?
“He’s limited, but yeah, he looked good on Monday. Getting back into it, having all that time off we’ve got to ease him in and stuff, so we’ll see how this week goes. That’s why he’ll be limited today. But he’s healthy enough to play football and hopefully that continues.”
Did he get a final MRI? Was there any final testing to make sure the calf was okay?
“Oh yeah, he did. Yep. So, he is good to go.”
Did Yetur have a setback?
“No.”
How has it been since Jauan came back? You guys looked happy to have him back out there on Monday. Puni lit up when he was asked about Jauan saying he was his favorite player on the team. What does he do for the locker room now that he’s actually in there every day?
“Yeah, I mean, it doesn’t feel like he’s been gone because he’s been around every day. So, we get to spend time with him and all that. Having him back on the practice field Monday was awesome. We love J.J., when he is not there, he is greatly missed. The way he carries himself, the energy he plays with and how good of a player he is makes everyone very excited.”
Obviously, there’s been plenty of talk about his contract situation. Can you say if there’s any sort of resolution as far as the business side of things?
“No, I don’t think there’s totally a resolution. It’s the business side. You know, I think I said at the beginning of training camp how badly myself and everyone in this building wants Jauan back in the long term. We want [OL] Colton McKivitz back. Those are two guys that we really hope to keep here. But they’re both going into their contract year, and nothing’s ever final, but we’ll see how it plays out. There’s a business side to both sides, but it’s something that I think both sides would love to get worked out. Just don’t know if we can.”
Why was that move made as far as the active roster and the practice squad switching of WR Marquez Valdes-Scantling and WR Russell Gage Jr., and would you expect both of them to be active on Sunday?
“I think they both have a shot to be, a real good shot. There’s a lot of layers to that move. It’s not as simple as just one thing. A lot of things for now, a lot of things for the future. But my biggest thing was making sure that both of them are still on our team. They both are and they both have as good of a chance to be up playing here on Sunday.”
How does Marquez get into the chemistry with Brock Purdy and fit into your scheme?
“I mean, it was nice to have him out at practice Monday. It was nice that, you know, him playing for [Seattle Seahakws offensive coordinator] Klint Kubiak in New Orleans last year for half of the year and then being in Seattle this whole offseason. There’s a lot of carryover with just plays and some terminology, and he’s a vet who’s been around a lot of stuff, so he seems like he’s going to pick it up fast. He has in the practices and got the game plan today. Don’t want to put too much on him, but we need him to learn it as he goes and be ready to help us on Sunday if he can.”
What do you expect to see from that Seahawks offense given your familiarity with Kubiak and Seahawks QB Sam Darnold?
“I think there’s some similarities. It’s always different how you adjust to your players, but I know they’re going to be a balanced team that wants to put Sam in some good situations and give that ball to their good running backs. Then it usually comes down to third down, so it’s real similar to us. There’s window dressing that’s different, but the way that they want a game to go, I think it’s going to be very similar to how we want it to go.”
I know you don’t watch a lot of offensive film, but they didn’t run it well last year, Seattle, but they’ve run it really well this summer. Have you peaked at their run game? Is there anything noticeable?
“Yeah, it’s a different style run game. It’s very similar to ours in the stuff that they do. I mean, just being with Klint and being with [Seattle Seahawks offensive line coach] John Benton for a long time, who is one of the best O-Line coaches there is. I worked with those guys back in Houston. John was here for a number of times. Klint was here two years ago. So, there’s lots of similarities in what they do. They ran it well in the preseason and we’ll see how it is Week 1.”
You open a season in two loud buildings in Seattle and New Orleans. Is that problematic early in the season before everything is totally jelled?
“It can be. I mean, that’s why we’re really working on it hard, started doing that last week. We’re going to do it all this week. Usually that’s enough, but there are a number of new guys who are just hopping in, so they’ve got to get used to the cadences and all the differences with motions and things like that. But yeah, it’s always a challenge. We challenge them throughout the week and hopefully by Sunday it will feel like second nature to us.”
Obviously DL Mykel Williams missed a little time with the knee, but how did you see him come along from when he got here to where he is now? What’s kind of his state of readiness for what I would assume is a big role?
“Well, he’s looked good in the last few practices he’s been a part of, and it’ll get more and more each day this week. I think it’s always hard when you miss a lot of camp. You know, he got hurt before the Denver preseason game and didn’t come back until after the last preseason game. So, it’s always tough to catch that up. But health-wise, he is doing good. He’s hopping in and getting all the reps and just keeps getting better the more reps he gets.”
Would you say that the youth on defense presents your biggest challenge this season?
“I think it’s possible. I mean, there’s a number of challenges, depends how they go. We also have some vets stepping up, so they might not all have to go right away. We’re going to play a lot of young guys as this year goes. We’re going to start out doing that. Getting a lot of those guys back has been nice, but those guys missing a lot of camp too has been a struggle, starting with Mykel and looking at guys like [CB Upton] Stout and things like that. Getting [DL] C.J. West back here last week too. So hopefully we have a good week of practice, get them back in the thick of things and they have a good first game.”
How is DL Alfred Collins’ progress from coming back from the injury?
“He’s been awesome. I mean, missing OTAs, missing the offseason, you never know. Especially with such a big guy when they can’t go through all the conditioning or the stuff we’re doing, it’s usually a worry because you’re rehabbing the calf so much and all the stuff that he had. But, when he came back, it took him a little bit of time to get his legs under him. That was a cool thing to watch. I was always nervous he was going to get hurt and then miss the next two weeks or something like that. But he fought through it, was able to stay healthy, kept grinding every day, eventually got his conditioning, got his legs back and thought he had a real good camp and gives him a chance to have a real good year.”
Did it add any umph or excitement to open against the division rival?
“I guess a little. I mean, usually when it’s all said and done, the division games count more. To me, the umph’s always there for the first game anyways. You’ve just got to think about it all week, you just wait till the first kickoff and then you kind of feel normal once that happens. There’s always unknowns with both teams, whether it’s a division opponent or not. You always feel that way until the ball’s kicked and then you feel pretty normal again.”
You guys were pretty clear when you got RB Brian Robinson Jr. that he was going to be the backup running back, and I think president of football operations and general manager John Lynch even said that you were kind of hoping James was, but the finger kind of slowed him down. Does that mean RB Isaac Guerendo got lost a little bit here? What has gone on with him this summer?
“I don’t think that he’s gotten lost. I just think he’s competing. I think he was the third back last year, then a couple guys got hurt and he got an opportunity, and I thought he did well in his opportunity. But that didn’t mean he was the first or second back all of a sudden. He had to come into camp and still compete with guys. He got hurt really early and missed a lot of time to compete. We brought Brian in. We’ve studied him over his career and based off of that we put him ahead of him. That’s how we are starting out and we’ll see how it goes throughout the year.”
What makes Seattle Seahawks head coach Mike Macdonald a good defensive play caller?
“Play calling’s play calling to a degree. To me it’s just how he runs his whole scheme. I mean, they’ve got a threat of everything. It’s a sound defense in how it starts out, real hard to get big plays on. When you say sound and hard to get plays on, that usually sounds real conservative, which it is in those areas, but they also know how to put pressure on you. He does a good job calling his blitzes. He times them out right, does good ones to stop the run, good ones to stop the pass, and has a rolodex of coverages. So, it’s always hard to get a beat.”
What’s the impact of assistant head coach defense Gus Bradley so far? He’s obviously a former NFL head coach. What has he added to your staff?
“Gus has been a stud. Never got a chance to work with him until this year. He’s probably like the most upbeat guy on our staff. I love having him around. He’s a great guy to hang out with and [defensive coordinator Robert] Saleh a ton. You know, Saleh, I would say Gus mentored Saleh early in his career, especially at Jacksonville. Then they’ve been separate for a while. So now for them to get back together after they started together, they see it a lot different, but they’re always from the same foundation. To have someone like that to bounce ideas off of and where he went to and where Saleh has gone to, I think is really cool for Saleh to have and just for our building to have. Gus is talking to everybody. It’s not just the defense. You see random people in his room all the time. He cares a lot about people. He is a real easy guy to talk to. He has that relationship with really everybody in our building and he has done it real fast.”
Have you guys decided on your starting safeties?
“Yes. (laughter)”
Speaking of safety, S Ji’Ayir Brown has kind of had an up-and-down first and second year. Where do you feel like he’s at this point?
“I love Ji’Ayir. He got his opportunity when [Denver Broncos S Talanoa Hufanga] Huff got hurt, and he came in I want to say it was seven games his rookie year after Huff got hurt, and I thought had a hell of a year. I thought he battled a lot of stuff last year with injuries and he battled a lot of stuff in this offseason too and then had a setback in training camp where he missed some time. But the more Tig is out there, the better he gets, the more consistent he gets. But it’s just been up and down with injuries.”
Winning your last three in Seattle, I know different regimes, you’ve had some different players too, but is there a commonality? That’s a very tough place to play, obviously, but do you know in those three wins, what you did right to get those wins?
“I really don’t even think about that, totally. I mean, I didn’t know that until you just said that. I know to win in Seattle with how loud it is, you have to be on the cadence and on the noise and all that stuff. That’s the first way to lose a game when you go up there. I’ve done that plenty of times, not just here, but other places when I’ve gone there in my career. So, historically it’s been one of the toughest places to play noise-wise and if you don’t have that handled sometimes it doesn’t even matter what happens in the game.”
With the styles that the safeties play, S Jason Pinnock, Ji’Ayir and S Marques Sigle, is there a big advantage in your mind not allowing Seattle to know quite yet who those two starters are going be?
“No, I don’t think a huge advantage.”
So, who are the two starters?
“Still could be a little advantage. I don’t want to give any advantage.”
Is there a point in this offseason where you realized that McCaffrey was all the way back and what does he mean to other guys’ confidence on the team as far as him being all the way back?
“Just having a player like him, to be the Offensive MVP one year and then really missed a whole next year, was really tough on him, tough on us. I knew Christian was back just once he told me he was healthy. It’s not like we were thinking he wouldn’t come back from it. You know, you hope that stuff, the arthritis and everything goes away. Which it usually does. He was telling us that early in the offseason, so I felt pretty good about it. Christian’s not a liar. So, I didn’t think he was. Then we saw him early in OTAs, he looked like the guy we’ve always known and he’s continued that.”
How important is it for Christian McCaffrey’s confidence to get the ball early in Seattle?
“I don’t think it changes his confidence at all. I think it might change his irritation level. Christian’s ready whenever that ball touches him, so he would prefer every play. Hopefully, it comes earlier than later, and it usually does with running backs.”
Beyond WR Ricky Pearsall and Jauan, it seems like it’s wide open who the other receivers could be. How much is this plan kind of fluid as far as how these guys execute the plays out here as you put in the game plan?
“Very fluid. It’s guys that we’ve got a hunch about. There’s guys that have been here for a bit, especially like Gage and stuff. He’s been around here since last year and had a real good offseason but finished those last two weeks hurt, which made some uncertainty about him, but I’ve got a much better idea there. Just getting MVS here, guys like [WR] Robbie [Chosen] and stuff who joined later in the deal, [WR] Malik Turner, all those guys have an opportunity to help us. We’re going to most likely get five up for the game. [WR] Skyy Moore’s another new one. All these guys have been here really the last week, and they’ve all been working, but they definitely need three more days of practice to see which ones we want to put in which role.”
You said in training camp that Christian was not going to change as a dad, that you thought he’d still be a psycho. Is he still a psycho?
“Yeah, that’s his DNA. His dad is too in an awesome way.”
It was noted on Monday Jauan gave you and John Lynch hugs. So, it’s like ‘everything’s great,’ but obviously we don’t know. Whatever was going on throughout training camp, has the relationship, do you feel like emerged intact as you begin?
“Yeah, I have no issues with Jauan and relationship. They didn’t report on the hugs Saturday, Monday, Tuesday. Jauan is all love. No, that was never personal. It’s business. And that’s a tough thing about this. I want every player to make as much money as possible. I want every coach. I want everybody to. It’s just hard in situations to always do that. But that’s something as a coach you’re always pulling for. But also, I do understand the business too. Sometimes it’s hard when other people don’t. So, you’ve got to communicate with people and stuff like that, so it doesn’t become personal. The relationship I’ve always had with Jauan, never really worried about that.”