The San Francisco 49ers: They Resemble a Jim Harbaugh Quarterbacked-Team, and a Team He Beat in the Playoffs
Let’s set aside the statistical analysis for a minute. I love the San Francisco 49ers under Jim Harbaugh. Now, a lot of this probably has to do with coming of age with the Marty Schottenheimer Chiefs with great defenses led by Derrick Thomas and ball control offenses that avoided turnovers. So the emotional part of me loves these type of teams like San Francisco that maximize what they have, play hard- hitting defense, and are well coached. I also am a huge fan of Patrick Willis, who along with Navarro Bowman, is forming the most formidable inside backer pairing in the league. Teams have ZERO rushing touchdowns against the 49ers this year. That’s pretty amazing.
The intellectual part of me knows that these kind of teams tend to have little margin of error, that they maximize what they have in the regular season and sometimes, often times, come up short in the playoffs when an idiot kicker misses field goals, the bounces stop going their way, or they just run up against a dominant offense that peaks.
So, I took a look at teams since 1990 most similar to this 49er bunch through 9 games. I looked at teams with a similar point differential, then settled on all those with a point difference within 14 of the 49ers, and with 7 or more wins. I then cooked up a similarity score using points for and against, point difference, turnover margin, and offensive and defensive yards per play passing and running. Here are the 10 most similar teams to the 2011 San Francisco 49ers:
- 1995 Oakland Raiders (8-8) [no playoffs]
- 1992 Buffalo Bills (11-5) [lost Super Bowl vs. Dallas]
- 1996 San Francisco 49ers (12-4) [lost Divisional Round at Green Bay]
- 2008 Tennessee Titans (13-3) [lost Divisional Round at home vs. Ravens]
- 1995 Kansas City Chiefs (13-3) [lost Divisional Round at home vs. Colts]
- 1990 Chicago Bears (11-5) [lost Divisional Round at NY Giants]
- 2004 Philadelphia Eagles (13-3) [lost Super Bowl to New England]
- 2000 Oakland Raiders (12-4) [lost Championship Game vs. Ravens]
- 2004 New England Patriots (14-2) [won Super Bowl]
- 2007 Green Bay Packers (13-3) [lost Championship Game vs. NY Giants]
The interesting thing is that Jim Harbaugh has a direct connection to two of those teams. In 1995, the Chiefs went 13-3 with an excellent turnover margin, an offense that was not explosive with Steve Bono at quarterback, and were good in close games. Jim Harbaugh’s wildcard Indianapolis Colts came in on a cold day in January and won a heartbreaker when Lin Elliott forever went down in infamy. Sixth on the list is a team quarterbacked by a guy named Jim Harbaugh, who was in his first full season as a starter and got off to an 8-1 start with the Bears that year.
Having the 1995 Raiders, easily the worst team of the 29 I looked at, and the only one to not make the playoffs, show up as most similar probably says something. Teams with low net yards per attempt on offense and very little difference in their pass efficiency allowed don’t project forward as well. The turnover margin is great, but doesn’t tend to be a reliable indicator going forward.
I’m rooting for the San Francisco 49ers. I’m also a Chiefs fan. I know what it feels like when things go right in the regular season, only to go bad in the playoffs. I know what that feels like at the hands of Jim Harbaugh. Hopefully for San Francisco 49ers, the model that Harbaugh learned as a first year quarterback ends differently.
[photo via Getty]

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66 Responses to “The San Francisco 49ers: They Resemble a Jim Harbaugh Quarterbacked-Team, and a Team He Beat in the Playoffs”
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November 14th, 2011 at 3:57 PM
4 hours away until monkey asses are made famous by The Rock
November 14th, 2011 at 3:59 PM
Bowman has arguably been playing better than Willis this year, it’s great to watch. Those guys are everywhere on the field, you’d swear there were two or three of each of them out there.
November 14th, 2011 at 4:01 PM
oh yea…i was stunned at how beastly their LB corps was. i knew they were good, but hadn’t seen em in action before they thunderfucked my browns.
November 14th, 2011 at 4:03 PM
Navarro Bowman…yet another LB out of LinebackerU.
/not coached by Sandusky
November 14th, 2011 at 4:04 PM
who are the others? overrated paul poz and…?
/linebacker who?
November 14th, 2011 at 4:04 PM
I am fascinated by this aspect – many of the same players were on last year’s roster. “Coaching” gets a lot of credit, but most coaches want their players to block & tackle. “Motivation” is subjective and hard to measure.
Why didn’t these guys play like this under Singletary? Just because he fussed at them?
Also, OT: NFL Network reports Matt Cassel has a “significant” hand injury, which might mean he would miss the rest of the regular season. Hello, Tyler Palko!
November 14th, 2011 at 4:07 PM
Why didn’t these guys play like this under Singletary?
Had to be the pants thing.
November 14th, 2011 at 4:07 PM
Sean Lee was doing some nice work for the Cowgirls before he broke his wrist against the Eagles.
November 14th, 2011 at 4:07 PM
Well there are also things called schemes and this thing called play calling, where you put your players in positions to do well. Singletary also was terrible at in-game adjustments, if something wasn’t working he had nothing to do about it.
November 14th, 2011 at 4:09 PM
SC will tell us shortly that his boy Stanzi is next in line.
November 14th, 2011 at 4:10 PM
sean lee? hurt?
THIS IS THE MOST SHOCKING DEVELOPMENT IN THE HISTORY OF SPORTS.
November 14th, 2011 at 4:13 PM
Way off topic, but a good story nonetheless:
My sister is an English teacher in a low to middle class district in the Pittsburgh area. One of her student’s has a mild case of Asbergers. The way she told it, he kept to himself and was pretty weird and didn’t fit into many social groups. But he was a nice enough kid and the other students let him do his thing. This kid was jumped in the bathroom by 2 kids (she thinks it was a gang initiation thing) — turns out the Asberger’s kid was MMA trained and totally beat down these two kids. When her male teacher friend went into the bathroom to break it up, one kid was bloodied on the ground and the other was in some submission hold screaming “DONT BREAK MY ARM!” The kid did not get in trouble. Just goes to show you to be very careful with who you mess with — I loved this story.
November 14th, 2011 at 4:14 PM
What’s supposed to happen tonight?
November 14th, 2011 at 4:16 PM
If the Niners get the No. 2 seed, they will play at Green Bay for the NFC title. Don’t see anyone going into Candlestick and beating them. (The Week 2 Dallas win there was weak, and wouldn’t happen again.)
November 14th, 2011 at 4:16 PM
He is back and still kicks ass with a clubbed hand.
November 14th, 2011 at 4:17 PM
KingGrizz…High School kids?
Sweet story.
November 14th, 2011 at 4:17 PM
A lot of the MMA training centers offer free anti-bullying courses to kids to help them defend themselves.
/great story anyway
November 14th, 2011 at 4:17 PM
Broccoli Beef, I hear ya. But, how many ways can you describe a 6-yard out pattern or a trap run to the left side or a weakside blitz? Who of us can say with certainty that Singletary’s staff has quantifiably poorer quality schemes? How much was scheme and how much was on-field execution?
There are some fundamental basics of football that haven’t changed for generations. Sometimes, it ain’t scheme, it is a player being diligent about his assignment.
Regarding Singletary’s in-game adjustment, that speaks to a leadership style that perhaps stifled up-channeled communication. You think a subordinate coach during a game told Singletary “hey, boss – the run game ain’t working, let’s do something else” or “hey, Mike – our blitz packages aren’t working, let’s try something different”.
My larger point is Harbaugh is probably saying similar things that Singletary said before – block, takcle, run, catch, know your assignment and do it. Whatever the scheme may be, players have to be diligent about their preparation and execution.
My son (a huge Jets fan) and I go back and forth about this all the time. Every team has strong guys, fast guys, smart guys and talented guys. Every team has coaches who stay up late and wake up early designing schemes and game plans. Then the game begins. There is a fine line between winning and losing in the National Football League (stands at attention), and I wish I could bottle that difference.
November 14th, 2011 at 4:19 PM
I believe she said he is in 11th grade. I doubt anyone will mess with him for the rest of his high school career. That gets you alot of street cred in any high school.
November 14th, 2011 at 4:19 PM
KingGrizz, that is soooo cool. Down with bullies.
November 14th, 2011 at 4:19 PM
who are the others? overrated paul poz and…?
Overrated Paul Poz having a pretty good year.
November 14th, 2011 at 4:20 PM
well cena and rock are teaming up for survivor series so expect the rock to go around making fun of people until Miz and R-truth beat him up and cena makes a save..should be electrifying. Mick Foley will probably show up as well
November 14th, 2011 at 4:21 PM
That’s the problem though…Singletary’s scheme blew.
Look at the McFadden the last 2 years with Hue Jackson (he was the OC last year). Jackson came in and said “What plays do you like to run?” McFadden told him, and Hue said “They’re in the play book”. They dumped Cable’s zone blocking garbage, and McFadden’s career has taken off.
/sometimes it’s just scheme
November 14th, 2011 at 4:22 PM
LOOK HOW YOU OVERRATED HIM RIGHT THERE. proof’s in the puddin’ brother.
November 14th, 2011 at 4:22 PM
don’t know why, but i don’t want to see the niners in the super bowl unless they win.
might be some strange deep seated hatred of the cowboys and steelers, but if any team is perfect in the superbowl, it should be the niners.
November 14th, 2011 at 4:24 PM
Retard strength.
November 14th, 2011 at 4:24 PM
I remember a fight in high school were a strung out nerd kid just throttled a gear head who was picking on him. RAGE!!!!
November 14th, 2011 at 4:24 PM
LOOK HOW YOU OVERRATED HIM RIGHT THERE. proof’s in the puddin’ brother.
You’re Overrated!!
/Jags v Brownies this weekend
//battle of two 3-6 titans
November 14th, 2011 at 4:25 PM
faguars will win handily. browns are HORRIBLE.
November 14th, 2011 at 4:26 PM
“tackle”. Dang, I can’t spell for beans today.
November 14th, 2011 at 4:27 PM
I think asbergers kids have no sex drive? That guy who discovered the whole mortgage-based-securities fraud was some guy with asbergers who could work like 20 hours a day
November 14th, 2011 at 4:27 PM
Did you go to high school with the cast of Grease?
November 14th, 2011 at 4:27 PM
Went to record it now, it’s 3 hours too? Sheesh.
November 14th, 2011 at 4:27 PM
i’m definitely getting my kids into that or karate or tai kwon do
November 14th, 2011 at 4:27 PM
It’s too bad his Aspergers won’t allow him to care about that.
November 14th, 2011 at 4:28 PM
One play in particular stands out to make a point… 3rd and 4 in the second half. WR goes in motion from left to right then stops, TE gets up to motion, but the Giants jump offsides because they see movement. Free 5 yards and a first down.
Yes, there are only so many ways to run the same plays but there are also so many more ways to lead into those same plays that cause confusion. And if that confusion causes even a half second delay from the defense, that’s sometimes the difference between a 1st down or stop, or a completion compared to a pick.
And the difference between Singletary and Harbaugh is this… when the coaches tell Singletary his shit isn’t working, he doesn’t know how to fix it and can’t come up with anything different. Harbaugh has the ability to adapt and come up with other things as the game goes on.
November 14th, 2011 at 4:28 PM
Dude might get some asperopussy for that. Kudos.
November 14th, 2011 at 4:29 PM
that’s “adderall perscription” not asberger’s.
November 14th, 2011 at 4:30 PM
faguars will win handily. browns are HORRIBLE.
After watching them play the Colts yesterday I can’t say the Jaguars are any better. D is solid, but offense is offensive. Also lost a starting o-lineman and CB (Mathis) for the season.
November 14th, 2011 at 4:30 PM
But only about 30 minutes of actual wrestling no doubt
November 14th, 2011 at 4:30 PM
i remember one where the tough guy did a partially open handed slap, and the other guy did a forearm wrestling punch move, complete with the footstop to sell it to the cheap seats.
best worst fight i ever saw in high school
November 14th, 2011 at 4:31 PM
I think asbergers kids have no sex drive? That guy who discovered the whole mortgage-based-securities fraud was some guy with asbergers who could work like 20 hours a da
That still leaves 4 hours or so to make do with the office maid.
November 14th, 2011 at 4:31 PM
shermer h.s.
November 14th, 2011 at 4:37 PM
Broccoli Beef, I am enjoying this back and forth. I agree with the points, BUT…
One play in particular stands out to make a point… 3rd and 4 in the second half. WR goes in motion from left to right then stops, TE gets up to motion, but the Giants jump offsides because they see movement. Free 5 yards and a first down.
I’m guessing in the week leading up to the game, the Giant’s defensive coaches maybe mentioned “don’t jump offside” or “watch out for what SF likes to do when sending guys in motion”.
Also, when we watch the games, sometimes the players’ sheer physicality allow them to make up for that half-second where they were previously at a disadvantage. That is a part of what amazes us about pro football – watching guys do things physically that normal humans can’t, despite the scheme.
Furthermore, did Singletary pull double-duty as head coach and defensive coordinator? I guess (guess) that when he was hired as HC, he wasn’t hired for his “decided schematic advantage”, but for his motivational skills. I thought his coordinators and subordinate coaches were responsible for the in-game adaptations?
/I live for a good argument.
November 14th, 2011 at 4:43 PM
Likewise
Very true, I’m sure they were told ahead of time. But if you watched those Singletary teams, there wasn’t anything like that to gameplan. Just the fact that you have to spend extra time on that is a win for the team. It’s one more thing they have to think about, on top of the normal plays themselves.
Yes, he was definitely more motivational than schematic, that’s just plain to see and obvious. But in my opinion, the in-game adaptations are on the head coach. If the OC/DC are calling plays that aren’t successful, the HC needs to step in and offer something up that’s different to try and switch things up.
November 14th, 2011 at 4:54 PM
Broccoli Beef, the things you point out seem clear. If Singletary noted those things, perhaps he would have had the same level of success that Harbaugh is having now. You and I can note those things as we watch games.
We take it for granted that pro coaches note those things at a greater level of detail than fans can, due to proximity and access. So, why didn’t Singletary “get it”? Why didn’t he see the things Harbaugh appears to see? Both men played the game at the highest level. Both had measurable success as players.
That difference is another thing where if I could capture it and sell it, I could make a mint.
November 14th, 2011 at 5:00 PM
No kidding!
I honestly think it has something to do with the position they played. It really is true that QB is one of the most demanding positions in all of sports. Think about it… you need to know your own offense, where your guys are going to be, and you need to know the blocking schemes as well. And once you can lock down your own team’s offense, you need to know how to read a defense and what they’re going to do! Yes the defenders also need to know a lot about what’s going on, but ultimately it comes down (to a very basic level of course) to see ball, attack ball.
November 14th, 2011 at 5:08 PM
I think you GREATLY underrate a good coaching staff that puts their players in the best position to succeed.
November 14th, 2011 at 5:09 PM
the great Chuck Daly used to say “they let you coach them”. If people believe in your leadership in any walk of life, they’ll follow. If they get the idea that you don’t know what you’re doing, you’ll lose them at a quick clip. You can get by initially with the rah rah stuff, but unfortunatley for Singletary, he was at the point where his players saw that was all he had.
November 14th, 2011 at 5:11 PM
Broccoli Beef, I salute you, sir.
And, (because I don’t get out much), I have gone back and forth on this point as well. Some years, it seems “game manager” quarterbacks have success, supported by great teammates. Other years, a knowledgable QB plays at a high level that lifts his teammates. Fast forward to when a particular QB goes into coaching, maybe he is inherently better prepared to lead the whole team.
Given that point, maybe more QBs should be head coaches. However, don’t forget Norv Turner played quarterback…
November 14th, 2011 at 5:11 PM
This right here.
After awhile the players realized Sing was a moron that only knew how to yell and scream, and nothing about scheming and planning and putting together an actual gameplan.
November 14th, 2011 at 5:12 PM
I am fascinated by this aspect – many of the same players were on last year’s roster. “Coaching” gets a lot of credit, but most coaches want their players to block & tackle. “Motivation” is subjective and hard to measure.
Why didn’t these guys play like this under Singletary? Just because he fussed at them?
Well there are also things called schemes and this thing called play calling, where you put your players in positions to do well. Singletary also was terrible at in-game adjustments, if something wasn’t working he had nothing to do about it.
Me and my dad had this same conversation yesterday. I felt like Singletary was good with the defensive side of the ball and motivating the players because the team played hard and the defense was solid last year as well. They gave up more big plays than they have this year. I also, read an article on grantland where they describe how Harbaugh has simplified the blitz reads in the offense for Alex Smith by building “hot routes” into all passing plays to eliminate confusion between what Smith sees and what the wide-outs see.
http://www.grantland.com/story/_/id/7218353/quarterbacking-made-simple
November 14th, 2011 at 5:14 PM
haha, yep, that about sums up the Singletary error.
Well he does know offense… haha
November 14th, 2011 at 5:14 PM
Both also played in completely different eras. One was a defensive leader, one was an offensive leader. Just because said player played the game, does not mean he knows everything there is to know about it.
November 14th, 2011 at 5:17 PM
Rondoman, at the risk of mis-applying this comparison, there are times where I see similarities between football and the military. As military members, we too get told what to do, when to do it, and where to do it regardless of the name of our commander or even in some cases his/her personal experience. We don’t have to like our commanders, but we are expected to follow directives to the max extent.
In my time in uniform, whereever I was deployed, I was expected to consistently perform my specified duties. I had some commanders that would sit with the troops and have a beer. Had some commanders that would buy a round. Other commanders wouldn’t speak to certain troops until the troops had a certain level of experience.
Whether the boss “liked” me, or even knew me, I was responsible for knowing my job and doing it well. I do see a parallel between that and the NFL. That is why I always wonder why certain coaches have success while others who use the same phrases and techniques don’t have success.
November 14th, 2011 at 5:17 PM
Bottom line, I think, Singletary as a head coach was a buffoon and an idiot. He had no idea how to do much of anything. Some of the stories I read suggest that he was just totally incapable of being a head coach, much less a decent one.
He was in WAY over his head and when things started to go wrong, it was already a lost cause as the players could see he was in over his head as well.
November 14th, 2011 at 5:17 PM
They actually played together on the same team.
November 14th, 2011 at 5:18 PM
For one, Singletary and Harbaugh are not similar whatsoever. They are not using the same phrases and techniques.
November 14th, 2011 at 5:20 PM
I hadn’t read that, that’s a good read, thanks.
November 14th, 2011 at 5:21 PM
Fuck. My bad, thanks for pointing this out. I think the bid difference is that Sing was a linebacker and Jim was a QB, and the big difference for the Niners is they seem to know what they are actually doing on offense now.
November 14th, 2011 at 5:23 PM
even in the military, there have been many occurences of bad leaders who happened to catch “friendly fire”.
November 14th, 2011 at 5:24 PM
THIS is why I got KO’d in my survival pool
November 14th, 2011 at 5:26 PM
Desean Jackson is broke lol.
November 14th, 2011 at 5:27 PM
Oh, for sure.
November 14th, 2011 at 5:28 PM
Benjamin, ’tis true. However, there have been generations of men and women who went out and just did their jobs, even as commanders got fragged or even dismissed from their duties.
Those same members were told “stay physically fit”, “study your flight manuals”, “study your intel”. Whether my commander was a Singletary type or a Harbaugh type, it was up to me to study my flight manuals, study my celestial navigation procedures and stay up on survival skills.
For the individual player, no matter how good or bad your coach, the player still has to work on his skills and execute.
November 14th, 2011 at 5:29 PM
“From what I’m told, [Jackson] owes Drew Rosenhaus a lot of money. . . . We’re talking hundreds of thousands of dollars. Is he broke? I don’t know how you define broke, but I know when he signs his new deal he will owe Drew Rosenhaus a lot of money.”
Eskin claims that Jackson is using a credit card from Rosenhaus to get by, among other things. That sounds like broke to us, at least until the next contract arrives. Keyshawn Johnson of ESPN alluded to Jackson being broke on Sunday morning as well.
Brilliant!