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49ers’ Nick Bosa seeks repeat of 2019 dominance over Mayfield, more holding penalties

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SANTA CLARA, CALIFORNIA - OCTOBER 3: San Francisco 49ers' Nick Bosa (97) sacks Los Angeles Rams starting quarterback Matthew Stafford (9) in the first quarter at Levi's Stadium in Santa Clara, Calif., on Monday, Oct. 3, 2022. (Nhat V. Meyer/Bay Area News Group)




SANTA CLARA — Nick Bosa rarely whines about holding penalties that aren’t called against guilty opposing linemen. For years, the 49ers’ fan base, coaches and teammates griped plenty on his behalf, especially after the 2019 team’s Super Bowl loss.

But Bosa did pipe up about a non-call in Monday night’s win over the Los Angeles Rams, though he said he mentioned it “only one time.”

Any single play has the potential to reflect Bosa’s focus and importance to the NFL’s No. 1-ranked defense, as not only the league’s sack leader with six, but a resilient run stuffer.

“It seems like he just doesn’t get tired at all,” cornerback Emmanuel Moseley said.

“Nick’s an all-around player and never really takes a down off,” coach Kyle Shanahan said.

Hence, Bosa wasn’t going to let one non-call slide when it came to beating the Rams 24-9 and leveling everyone’s record at 2-2.

On the earlier play in question, Bosa noted that the official was looking downfield instead of appropriately at the trenches, and Bosa believes the official didn’t correctly hear his appeal for justice, which he said went like this:

Bosa: “He tackled me.”

Official: “He can do that.”

That response, Bosa said Wednesday, indicated the official “must not have heard me.” Plus, Bosa noted that Los Angeles is a rival that “gets away with a lot” of holding.

The next day, Shanahan said he “couldn’t agree more” with the notion Bosa is getting held more this season, and that the 49ers file weekly complaints with league officials.

Bosa was quick to throw a bone to them Wednesday: “The refs haven’t been too bad this year.”

Next up are the Carolina Panthers, who’ve drawn seven holding penalties in their 1-3 start while protecting Baker Mayfield, a quarterback who’s drawn Bosa’s ire since their Oklahoma-Ohio State days. Three years ago, in Bosa’s fifth NFL game, he sacked Mayfield twice in a rout over the Cleveland Browns, and Bosa celebrated by planting an imaginary flag in the turf to mirror what Mayfield once did at Ohio State’s stadium.

Asked if he’s kept in touch with Mayfield since their October 2019 matchup, Bosa said: “I don’t think we’ve ever been in touch.”

When Bosa appeared earlier Thursday on KNBR 680-AM, he said of Mayfield: “I don’t think I called him out last time before the game. I just called him out after. Maybe I’ll just call him out after, when it goes the way we want it to.”

Mayfield, the No. 1 overall pick in 2018, was traded to the Panthers three months ago for a 2024 conditional fifth-round pick. He ranks 31st in completion percentage (54.7) and 30th in passer rating (75.0), with four touchdown passes, three interceptions and 11 sacks in Carolina’s 1-3 start.

Wednesday, Bosa got practice off to rest for the first time this season. He’s played 77 percent of the defensive snaps. But he is not a one-man show. He’s praised the “elite” players at all levels of the defense, which could be without starting defensive tackles Javon Kinlaw (knee) and Arik Armstead (foot) this week.

“I’d love to have Arik and Javon, but whoever’s in there is pretty darn good,” Bosa said. That was evident Monday night as not only did he have two sacks but so did Samson Ebukam, while one sack apiece came from Hassan Ridgeway, Charles Omenihu and nickel back Deommodore Lenior.

WARD, VERRETT PRACTICE

Safety Jimmie Ward (hamstring) and cornerback Jason Verrett (knee) made their season debuts at practice, and while both could play Sunday, the 49ers have three weeks to activate them off injury lists.

Ward, who got hurt in mid-August, is not adamantly seeking to reclaim his starting role, which veteran Tashaun Gipson Sr. impressively has filled while working alongside breakout star Talanoa Hufanga.

“Huf’s been lights out, and Gip, too. I’ve got to give him flowers, too,” Ward said. “Hopefully they get me in the rotation but I trust the coaching staff and I’ll be on the sideline looking pretty. They can keep me clean until they need me.”

NO NFL HONORS

If the 49ers want to feel snubbed or disrespected, they can look to the NFL’s weekly player-of-the-week awards. Their defense hasn’t produced a winner since 2020 (Fred Warner, Week 16), and Monday night’s candidates includedHufanga (pick-six), Bosa (two sacks, 12 hurries), Samson Ebukam (two sacks, forced fumble) and Dre Greenlaw (15 tackles). An Eagles defender has won NFC honors each of the past three weeks, and Hasson Reddick earned this week’s with two sacks, two forced fumbles and two fumble recoveries.

The NFC’s offensive award, rather than go to Deebo Samuel for his 57-yard touchdown, instead went to Seattle Seahawks quarterback Geno Smith for his actions against the Detroit Lions’ 32nd-ranked scoring defense.

STAT SHEET

On Deebo Samuel’s 57-yard touchdown Monday, 52 yards came after the catch, and, according to Zebra Technology’s tracking data, he actually covered 79.7 on the ground that play, the most of any receiver in Week 4. His yards-after-catch proliferation has him at plus-699 yards over expected results, and he’s the only player plus-500.

HEALTH CENTER

Other not practicing beside Kinlaw and Armstead were offensive tackles Trent Williams (ankle) and Colton McKivitiz (knee); running back Ty Davis-Price (ankle), tight end Tyler Kroft (knee), and, safety Tarvarius Moore (hamstring). Limited: wide receiver Jauan Jennings (ankle) and tight end Ross Dwelley (ribs).


Originally published at Cam Inman

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