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2012-GameRelease-Divisional

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Coach Feature Story<br />

Harbaugh-led 49ers don’t just play better, they scheme better<br />

By Daniel Brown, San Francisco Chronicle<br />

There was a time not long ago when everyone in the stadium -- opposing defenses included -- could<br />

reasonably assume that a 49ers' first-down play would be a handoff to Frank Gore.<br />

But with Jim Harbaugh and his pair of savvy coordinators at the helm, the 49ers aren't just outplaying<br />

teams during their 3-1 start. They're also outsmarting them. The head coach who keeps a photo of Bill<br />

Walsh taped to his office computer has restored the art of the chess match on both sides of the ball.<br />

Far from the smash-mouth simplicity of previous regimes, the 49ers are tormenting opponents with<br />

frequent personnel substitutions, complex schemes and an offense that features more wrinkles than a<br />

retirement home.<br />

Consider the game film the Buffalo Bills (2-2) must study in advance of Sunday's game at Candlestick<br />

Park. The tape will show that against the Jets last week the 49ers unleashed backup quarterback Colin<br />

Kaepernick as a runner, passer and receiver.<br />

The 49ers ran not one but two quarterback read options, gave the ball to Mario Manningham on and end<br />

around and faked the ball on an end around to Ted Ginn Jr.<br />

And that was just in the first half. What new tricks will the 49ers have in store this week?<br />

"I don't look at them as trick plays - they're football plays," offensive coordinator Greg Roman explained<br />

Thursday. "I call 'em 'mixers.' You mix 'em in from time to time"<br />

In the least, the 49ers are mixing up their opponents.<br />

“They have different wide receivers in almost every package. It's hard to get a bead on any one thing,"<br />

Lions coach Jim Schwartz in the days leading up to a Week 2 visit to Candlestick Park. "A lot of shifts, a<br />

lot of motions. It definitely spreads your attention to different places, which I think is what it's all designed<br />

to do."<br />

Take the 49ers opening drive against Lions: As the play clock ticked down on a first-and-10 from the 21, a<br />

national television audience heard Alex Smith barking "Kill! Kill! Kill!" The quarterback was changing the<br />

play at the line of scrimmage.<br />

With just 5 seconds to go on the play clock, Smith gestured for fullback Bruce Miller to go into motion.<br />

When Miller raced to line up as a receiver split wide left, a Lions linebacker followed.<br />

Just like that, the 49ers orchestrated a ridiculous mismatch: Pro Bowl tight end Vernon Davis was isolated<br />

one-on-one against John Wendling, a backup safety who was the field only because Louis Delmas was<br />

injured.<br />

Leaving the Lions no time to adjust. Smith snapped the ball with a nanosecond to spare. Davis roared<br />

past Wendling and caught the ball in the end zone to complete a breezy four-play drive. Taking up just 1<br />

minute, 12 seconds, it was the 49ers' fastest opening drive touchdown in eight years.<br />

"That isn't something the 49ers could have done in Week 2 a year ago," marveled NBC broadcaster Cris<br />

Collinsworth marveled after the play unfolded.<br />

Indeed, a year ago, the prolonged NFL lockout prevented Harbaugh and his staff from introducing all of<br />

the complexities from his offensive playbook, a system he recently acknowledged can take a few years to<br />

learn.

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