The trade that sent Jimmy Garoppolo from New England to San Francisco has turned out to be one of the most important swaps in recent NFL history, with Tom Brady‘s former backup set to start in Super Bowl LIV. Despite other suitors believed to be in the mix for Garoppolo in 2017, Bill Belichick alerted Kyle Shanahan he was willing to part with the former second-round pick for a second-rounder. The 49ers quickly accepted but did so after initially being willing to offer the Patriots more for the then-fourth-year passer, Seth Wickersham of ESPN.com reports. But Belichick, despite previous refusals to trade Garoppolo, was not posturing when he indicated he would take a Round 2 pick for his contract-year quarterback.
It ended up costing the 49ers only the No. 43 overall selection in 2018 to land their starting quarterback. While this process was murkier on the Patriots’ end, it helped the 49ers construct a rebuild that has them in their seventh Super Bowl.
A week away from the 49ers’ Super Bowl matchup with the Chiefs, here is the latest out of San Francisco:
- Going back to when this rebuild began, Shanahan did not mince words about the state of the 49ers during his interview for their top coaching job. Early in the then-Falcons OC’s 2017 interview, he told team CEO Jed York the roster left over from the Trent Baalke era at that time was “horrible,” Matt Maiocco of NBC Sports Bay Area notes. This led to a gradual rebuild that did not get far off the ground before this season, with the 49ers going 10-22. But York was on board with the process, viewing 2019 as the first real season on which the Shanahan-John Lynch regime could be judged, Maiocco adds. York gave the HC-GM duo six-year contracts because of the team going through three coaches in three years from 2014-16.
- Lynch’s hire came about because he cold-called Shanahan with an offer to pair with him in San Francisco, Wickersham adds. A recommendation from Mike Shanahan, who coached Lynch in Denver, helped seal the deal for his son. Lynch had spoken at length with Kyle Shanahan on the phone in preparation for games he would call as a broadcaster, per Wickersham, and hoped for a chance to return to football. Shanahan did not have much familiarity with the other finalists for the 49ers’ GM job — Vikings assistant GM George Paton and Cardinals VP of player personnel Terry McDonough — and the decision to hire a GM out of the broadcast booth has helped the 49ers return to the Super Bowl.
- Despite dealing with a dislocated shoulder that induced pain preventing him from walking off the field last weekend, Tevin Coleman has received good news about his status for Super Bowl LIV.
So the coach picked the GM!!??
Pretty much
What exactly is so crazy about that?
Did you pick your boss?
Look around the league. The days where the GM is always the boss are long gone. Just look at the salary figures for head coaches compared to those of their GMs and that’ll tell you who’s really in charge. The GM/coach relationship is way closer to a team effort than it is a “boss/employee” relationship. It’s certainly not always the case, but it is trending in that direction.
seems now a days the Coaches select the GMs.
No it does not seem that way
I’m a bit confused. The Lions used the 43rd pick of the 2018 draft to select Kerryon Johnson, the 49ers used the 44th pick to select Dante Pettis and the Patriots used the 56th pick to acquire Duke Dawson. How did the 49ers trade the 43rd pick to the Patriots if it belonged to Detroit?
San Francisco traded it to New England who traded it to Detroit.
Jimmy G for Duke Dawson?