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http://www.stltoday.com/sports/colu...cle_9d4bff7e-df47-51bb-8117-feb607fdd307.html
The Rams face a grim NFC West battle with the Seahawks and 49ers lording over the division. Seattle and San Francisco have the two best teams in the entire NFL.
But if the 49ers organization implodes, the work out at Rams Park would get a bit easier.
Last week the NFL was abuzz with speculation the Browns pondered acquiring disgruntled 49ers coach Jim Harbaughfor a package of draft picks. Niners czar Jed York shot down the story, but then Browns owner Jimmy Haslamadmitting exploring such a potential deal last month.
So what is going on in San Francisco? We will let the experts break it down for you:
So it’s up to the general manager and the rest of the personnel operatives to find the right players for their coach. They are there to serve, not to dictate what happens on the field.
This is why Kevin Demoff hired Jeff Fisher first, then relied on Fisher’s counsel while hiring general manager Les Snead. By all accounts, Fisher gets the room he needs to do his job.
Disagreements are inevitable. There is nothing wrong with some creative tension as long as it doesn’t lead to massive rifts like the one developing in San Francisco.
Rams fans know how devastating that can be. The “Greatest Show on Turf” had a short run in St. Louis after Rams Park infighting turned a World Championship operation into a dysfunctional mess.
Can the powerful 49ers avoid a similar fate?
The Rams face a grim NFC West battle with the Seahawks and 49ers lording over the division. Seattle and San Francisco have the two best teams in the entire NFL.
But if the 49ers organization implodes, the work out at Rams Park would get a bit easier.
Last week the NFL was abuzz with speculation the Browns pondered acquiring disgruntled 49ers coach Jim Harbaughfor a package of draft picks. Niners czar Jed York shot down the story, but then Browns owner Jimmy Haslamadmitting exploring such a potential deal last month.
So what is going on in San Francisco? We will let the experts break it down for you:
- Jason La Canfora, CBSSports.com: “Things are not getting better behind the scenes for the San Francisco 49ers. There was a persistent rumble throughout the combine about the extent of the rift between coach Jim Harbaugh and the team's front office. It doesn't seem like it will go away, and there is increasing buzz that the team might have to decide between Harbaugh or GM Trent Baalke. The men are barely speaking, I'm told, and almost all communication is through email. Harbaugh also has a strained relationship with team president Paraag Marathe, sources said, and he has clashed with many within the organization. It could prove untenable. If anything, the impression I got this week was that the situation there is actually much worse than how it has been portrayed in the media, and helps explain the delay in giving a new deal to the coach, who has two years left on a contract he has outperformed. Harbaugh has done nothing but reach, at least, the NFC Championship Game since coming to San Francisco three years ago, and the longer this goes on, the worse it might get. To almost anyone I posited the question to, the response was pretty much the same -- there is no way they can't extend Harbaugh. But then again, in the NFL, you never know.”
- Chris Burke, SI.com: “Harbaugh’s current contract situation is hovering over the 49ers’ offseason a bit. He’s currently through three seasons of the five-year, $25 million deal he signed prior to 2011, but the two sides reportedly have discussed an extension. Harbaugh said in December that he 'absolutely' wants to remain in San Francisco.”
- Ray Ratto, CSN Bay Area: “Harbaugh's contract status . . . remains murky, with night and morning friction, and there is no telling how much of the gear-grinding between coach and general manager Trent Baalke is behind the money wrangling. In other words, Browns deal or no, the clashing of shields in the 49er front office is now a daily front-and-center item, and if York hasn’t already chosen a side, he’s going to have to, and sooner rather than later. And this, children, is why one should never count one’s dynasties before they have actually been crowned. People have a tendency to turn into people, and more often than not, people end up being the biggest impediment to the greater achievements of other people.”
- Bill Williamson, ESPN.com: “This five-time Super Bowl-winning franchise was had become all but irrelevant before Harbaugh was hired. They are moving into a new stadium this year. They want Harbaugh to be part of it for now and the foreseeable future. No matter what a potential trade would have brought, I think the 49ers would have lost. They don't need more draft picks. They need strong coaching. The only way of ensuring it is getting an extension for Harbaugh done. If the 49ers can't, this story about a trade with Cleveland will have legs and hover over the team. Undoubtedly, it will create future angst and further stories. If we get to December and Harbaugh is still months away from his walk year, there will be a lot of teams looking to make a splash in 2015 and ready to make a big trade for Harbaugh. That will not be good for the franchise. The 49ers have a great thing going and Harbaugh is a big reason why. Getting an extension is the only smart solution to ensure stories like this go away.”
- Marcus Thompson II, San Jose Mercury News: “It was no doubt an entertaining revelation, this Jim Harbaugh-to-Cleveland drama that came to light Friday. Oh, to be a pen on the desk when G.M. Trent Baalke took that call. Bet those wheels were churning when the Browns came dangling draft picks in front of his nose in exchange for his alpha male head coach. Harbaugh wants $10 million without a Super Bowl ring, huh? I'll show him hardball, and ship him and his $8 khakis to NFL purgatory! Though it is great theater -- especially since late February is like intermission for sports junkies -- this is the kind of stuff that kills dynasties. Or in the 49ers case, snuffs 'em out before they are built. What are we doing here, gentlemen? Here is what we know: The 49ers have built something, and there is no reason to think they can't get better. Harbaugh has been exceptionally successful, and you're not going to find a better coach right now. Harbaugh has never led the 49ers to a Super Bowl victory. Both Baalke and Harbaugh are currently getting owned by Seattle. Neither of them really wants to break apart what's been built. This posturing is dangerous. However captivating, the most likely result of you two slap boxing is someone striking too hard and a real fight breaking out. Put your egos aside and hammer out an extension and end this front office reality show.”
So it’s up to the general manager and the rest of the personnel operatives to find the right players for their coach. They are there to serve, not to dictate what happens on the field.
This is why Kevin Demoff hired Jeff Fisher first, then relied on Fisher’s counsel while hiring general manager Les Snead. By all accounts, Fisher gets the room he needs to do his job.
Disagreements are inevitable. There is nothing wrong with some creative tension as long as it doesn’t lead to massive rifts like the one developing in San Francisco.
Rams fans know how devastating that can be. The “Greatest Show on Turf” had a short run in St. Louis after Rams Park infighting turned a World Championship operation into a dysfunctional mess.
Can the powerful 49ers avoid a similar fate?