If the 49ers weren’t awkward and untrusting of any form of
media, it wouldn’t be a normal media session with the team. However, Saturday’s
romping defeat of the Packers, and a birth in the NFC Championship game for the
second year in a row, only provided the team the opportunity to shed light on
their obvious change in gameplan for the playoffs.
The 49ers
were a different team Saturday night. The national telecast showed a more
refined Colin Kaepernick, a more hard-nosed runner in Frank Gore and a nearly
spotless gameplan by offensive coordinator Greg Roman two weeks in the making
-- a much different gameplan than opponents were preparing for over the past
few weeks.
Kaepernick
said the 49ers
ran the “pistol” formation well over 50 percent of the time on Saturday,
which is well above the team’s average use of the formation since he was named
starter in Week 8.
"We had a lot more ‘Pistol’ formation in this game plan," 49ers coach Jim Harbaugh said (via ESPN), "both handing the ball off and [Kaepernick] running and play action. We're pretty multi-dimensional on that formation."
Yahoo! Sports Jason Cole is reporting that it was the 49ers’ intention to undervalue the “pistol” formation in the final weeks of the regular season to set up a strategic run in the playoffs.
"We didn't use it against the Cardinals because we wanted people to think we weren't going to use it," Roman said. "We worked on it a lot this week. A lot of practice."
An overwhelming amount of positive results
came out of the substantial use of the “pistol” formation on Saturday, and if
Roman was not a serious candidate for an NFL job, he most certainly is now.
The 49ers’ defeat of the Packers was very similar to that of
the team’s destruction of the Bears in Kaepernick’s very first start in the NFL.
The same offense against the Packers looked effortless, and Kaepernick was
using his arm and his legs on the way to booking a trip to the NFC Championship
game against the Atlanta Falcons.
The Bears had no clue what type of structure the 49ers’
offense would have on that Monday night in the middle of the season, and
although the Packers thought they knew what was coming Saturday, they did not
see the overwhelming majority of the plays running through Kaepernick being of
the “pistol” formation variety.
The 49ers are still a running team centered on Frank Gore --
it is well documented. However, that is merely the basis of what the 49ers
offense is all about. Once Gore and the running game begins to become
successful, Kaepernick and the option run becomes the focal point and the
recipe for an opponent’s nightmare. The scheme was put on fully display
Saturday night in front of an astonished football nation that never thought
Kaepernick was the type of quarterback to put a team on his back and lead a
them to the NFC Championship with such maturity and rarely seen athletic
ability.
Now the 49ers aren’t just thinking about the NFC Championship
because they are currently favorites in the NFC to advance to the Super Bowl
over Atlanta. One roadblock remains,
however, and the Falcons will have one week to prepare for an offensive
gameplan that could takes weeks to prepare for, and attempt to stop the same
offensive gameplan that was nearly unstoppable Saturday night against the
Packers.
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