Opening comments:
CEO Jed York: āGood afternoon everybody. Thank you for joining us today. To our fans and everybody tuning in online and on T.V., itās my pleasure to introduce two great gentlemen that are going to help bring us back to where we belong. We started this process shortly after the season was over and we wanted to make sure that we took our time, that we were thorough, to find the best combination of people for a head coach and a general manager that can work together and bring this organization back to the pinnacle. Thereās a lot of work in front of us. Thereās certainly not a lot of time to celebrate on just making a hire. Itās now time to get to work and Iām going to turn it over to these guys to introduce themselves and then weāll turn it over to you guys for questions.ā
Opening comments:
General manager John Lynch: āThanks, Jed. I first want to thank everybody for coming on out today. I must take a moment to show my appreciation to Jed, Danielle, the entire York family, for really showing the confidence in Kyle and I with this awesome responsibility of the task of bringing the 49ers organization back to where it belongs and thatās competing for championships. I also want to thank my family, starting with my wife Linda and my kids. They were going to surprise me today and fly up here. She was pulling the kids out of school. They got fogged in in San Diego, so unfortunately they arenāt here. But, it was a big change for them and it was important that they bought in and theyāre incredibly excited, so I want to thank them. I also want to thank everybody who I was working for at FOX. They were incredibly classy with the way that they handled this whole situation. They saw the opportunity, they saw my excitement and got behind what I was doing. I want to thank all those people. That being said, todayās about the future of this team and Jed talked about itās time to get to work. The workās already started and weāre having a lot of fun putting this thing together. People who know me well will tell you that Iām not into a whole lot of promises, but I will make a few. Iāve been pretty clear in saying that this week, [head coach] Kyle [Shanahan] and I are on the same page that weāre going to put together and assemble a team and how long that takes we donāt know, but weāre going to assemble a team that will make you proud. I can promise you this; weāre going to have players that will compete, that will compete every day, that will compete to be the best that they can be. Theyāre going to be great teammates. Weāre going to have a team that plays fast. Weāre going to have a team that plays physical. We believe in those things. Weāre going to have guys with great character, football character and weāre going to have guys that are interested in making their community a better place. Thatās important to Kyle and I and itās important to Jed. I could not ask for better partners in the process and the challenge that lies ahead in Jed and Kyle. This thing moved pretty quick. We were just in a gathering back there and I think it surprised everybody how quick it went, but like I said to the folks back there, when I decided I wanted to marry my wife, that went pretty quick too and thatās doing pretty well 23 years later. I trust in that. I think when you know, you know. I understood what a great organization this was. I had the opportunity to play for [former 49ers Hall of Fame coach] Bill Walsh at Stanford and really just was enamored with the 49ers organization and all it stood for. [Former 49ers offensive coordinator] Mike Shanahan came, before that it was [former NFL head coach] Denny Green who was very involved in the 49ers and knew the 49er way. Mike Shanahan had spent time here and we talked about the standards of performance, all those things. And, thatās what I very much believe in. But, Jedās passion, we just kept checking boxes on things that we were aligned with in terms of how you do build a championship football team. The same thing can be said for Kyle. With Kyle, I think heās one of the brightest minds in the game. Heās proven that, I think, every step of his career. He had a big challenge because his dad was kind of a big deal in this league. But, Kyle, I think to me, heās a guy who soaked in all the knowledge and experience of being a coachās son, but then went out and did it on his own and has become his own man. This year, he engineered one of the most prolific offenses in the history of football. The Falcons led the league in almost every offensive category. He was named āAssistant Coach of the Yearā by three esteemed outlets. Heās not only a smart football man, but heās a leader who sets the tone through his work ethic. I like what Kyle represents because heās convicted. He knows what he wants and heās going to find a way to make that happen. I think heās innovative. I think heās aggressive. Those are all things I believe in. What Kyle and I talked about from day one, that this needs to be a partnership, that we saw the fact, through doing a lot of his broadcast and getting to know him, that we saw football in a very similar light, we see life in a very similar light. We understand that this has to be, everyoneās got to be rowing the boat together in the same fashion from the cafeteria, to the equipment room, to the locker room, all the way up to the front office. I see all my guys in the front office up here who have been hard at work in that room. Theyāve already made me proud. Thatās what itās going to take to get this organization back. So, all these qualities, and speaking of Kyle, is why I really believe heās the perfect head coach to lead this team on the field and why I look forward to working alongside him for a long time to get this place back to where weāre competing for championships. With that, no further ado, itās my pleasure to turn it over to the 20th head coach in the history of the San Francisco 49ers, Kyle Shanahan.ā
Opening comments:
Head coach Kyle Shanahan: āThanks, John. Definitely going to be tough to follow all that, but Iāve got to start out thanking Jed and the whole York family. Giving me this opportunity is, itās a dream come true and itās not just an opportunity to be a head coach, but to be a head coach at a place like this where you talk about Bill Walsh, you talk about [former 49ers head coach] George Seifert, [former 49ers head coach] Steve Mariucci, [former 49ers head coach] Jim Harbaugh and you can go down the line with the coaches. When you go back to the history of the players, before I get into that, Iād also like to definitely thank my wife sitting up here, Mandy. All my kids who are back at home. Iāve also got to thank the Atlanta Falcons. What theyāve done for me the last two years, itās been great. Starting with [Atlanta Falcons owner] Arthur Blank, [Atlanta Falcons head coach] Dan Quinn, [Atlanta Falcons general manager] Thomas Dimitroff, the entire coaching staff there and all the players. Those were two special years and it helped me get to somewhere Iāve been trying to get to my entire life and I canāt thank them more for that. Talking about the 49ers though, itās always been a special part of my heart. I moved out here in sixth grade and I moved away from here to move to Denver at the end of my freshman year of high school. I had three good years here and I have a very high expectation of what Iāve always thought this franchise is and that it was the best franchise in sports. I remember spending all my summers up in Rocklin as a ball boy. I had a little rollout bed in my dadās room that I would spend, back then training camp was about a month long. Our connecting roommate was [former 49ers offensive line coach] Bob Mckittrick, I was a ball boy for the O-Line the entire time there. I remember staying up every night, playing ping pong with [former 49ers wide receiver] John Taylor. It took me two years to beat him and then after I did, then he finally told me he was going to start using his right hand. Then I realized I was never able to beat him. But, guys like [former 49ers OL] Harrison Barton, [former 49ers RB] Tom Rathman, [former 49ers QB] Steve Young, [former 49ers WR] Jerry Rice, all these guys have really been a big part of my life even though I was only with those guys for three years. Itās just, those are the guys I looked up to and guys I wanted to be. I had a hard time being them as a player, even though I tried my hardest. It was much easier as a coach to be involved in this stuff. To be back to this, what Iāve always known the Niners to be, I canāt wait to have the opportunity and we owe it to the fans and everyone out here that together we bring it back to what it was. Iām very confident weāre going to do that. I wanted to be a head coach my whole life, but it wasnāt something that I was just going to do to do. Itās something Iād like to do forever. The only way you can do that is if you have a good opportunity to win somewhere and that starts to me with the owner and the commitment of the organization. Getting to know Jed through the interview process and hearing him talk and getting to know him as a person and what heās committed to doing gives me a ton of confidence in where weāre going. Itās not easy to win in this league. Itās not easy at all. But, when you have everyone go in the same direction, thatās what gives you a chance. For Jed to allow John and I to come together and bring us in at the same time and to be here with John, and nothingās guaranteed, but I always bet on people. Regardless of the situation, I know Iāve got two guys sitting next to me who, our intentions no matter what it is, is to do things the right way, to commit to the right people, to work extremely hard and make the right football decisions. I keep things pretty simple in my life. I try to. Thereās really two things that are important to me and thatās my family and thatās football and thatās really all the things I think about. As sad as that is, itās true. Thatās all you guys will get from me. You donāt always make the right decisions, but I can promise you guys weāre going to do everything we can to do that. Weāre going to hold people accountable. Weāre going to do it the right way. Everybody whoās in this from the top to the bottom will be going in one direction. What does it take to win now and what does it take to consistently win over the long-haul. We will be committed to that 100-percent. I could sit up here and talk forever, but Iām sure you guys would have a lot more fun asking questions, so weāll get that started.ā
You have one job one day. You have a new job the next day. How much time did you take after the Super Bowl to reflect on the Super Bowl and how will that experience help you in this particular job?
KS: āIt was actually pretty, it was a special thing to go through. Obviously, you guys know the result of that which wasnāt easy. Itās as hard as anything Iāve gone through. What was really cool about that is, most head coaches who have been in that situation are usually at their next spot the next day and Jed told me to take my time and he allowed me to take a day and a half before I came out here. I was definitely grieving it and I probably will for a while, but to be able to go up to the building in Atlanta the next day and get to talk to all the players, all of us spent some time together and go through it again, really gave us some closure on it. We put our whole heart and souls into that season, into that game. We did everything we could. I know the results werenāt what we wanted, youāve got to live with that, but Iām real proud of the coaching staff, myself, the players, that we did as good as we could. We had no hesitation and we let it all out there. Youāve got to live with the results, but thatās why weāre in this business, youāve got to take the good with the bad. Iām just very happy that I was a part of it.ā
You talked to roughly 15 people throughout this process for both jobs. When you got feedback on the team and the organization, what did you maybe learn about your team that you didnāt know and how did that inform your decision to hire these two?
JY: āI donāt know that thatās what informed my decision to hire these two, but itās certainly talking to people. I think they saw that weāre not where we should to be and we need to get better. And I think thatās very clear. I think in talking to Kyle, he was very direct with what he wants to do with the team and how he wants to build this thing and get it right. He knows that heās going to have the leeway to do that and heās going to have the time to do that and we need to make sure that we commit to building something that weāre going to all be proud of when itās all said and done.ā
Six year contracts for coaches and GMs are not that common in this league. Some might even see it as a risk from a business standpoint. What convinced you to make that commitment to both of these men?
JY: āI believe in both of these guys. Similar to the last question, we arenāt where we want to be. We are a two-win team right now and we need to make sure that these guys have everything that they can to get this thing up and running. I believe in these guys and I think theyāre going to be here a lot longer than that.ā
There was a report that after the Super Bowl you were telling people that you blew it. Is that accurate and is that something that you, to be clichƩ, that you learn from, that you take to this job and maybe there are things that you said you are going to remember from that certainly in the fourth quarter that you take into this job?
KS: āOf course. I remember every single play and I will go over those for the rest of my life. Thatās kind of the life we live as coaches. Itās magnified in the Super Bowl, but itās also that case in every game. I was informed of that report actually a few hours before I came in here. I donāt know if I used those exact words, but that sounds about how I talk. When youāre the coordinator of an offense or youāre the head coach of a team, youāre responsible for what happens out there. If a play doesnāt go right, if a player misses something, that starts with the offensive coordinator when youāre on offense. I did believe we had a very good chance to win that game, especially at the end, and we didnāt get it done. In terms of using the words, āI blew it,ā I donāt look at it that way. I believe we missed an opportunity. We didnāt get it done. Iāll go back through every play for the rest of my life. I talked to our players about that the night before game, in terms of itās human nature when you get in big moments like that, to lock up, to hesitate, to try to take the easy way out and make sure you donāt get blamed. Thatās something that I wasnāt going to do and people on our team werenāt going to do. We played that game how we played the entire year and I thought I called plays in that game the way I had the entire year. Doesnāt mean Iām always right. Doesnāt mean theyāre always going to work, but I promise you I prepare as hard as I possibly can. I always do what I believe is right with our coaching staff and the players and then you live with the consequences. Yeah, itās going to be hard living with that loss. Every play that didnāt work, I regret, as always. But, I can deal with it because I can look at myself in the mirror and know I did what I thought was right at the time and that was the most important thing to me. I didnāt change because of a circumstance. I did what I thought was right, but whatever happens, if you do what you thought was right and you believed in that because of the preparation you had, then you should be able to live with the consequences.ā
Itās no secret that one of the big decisions this franchise faces in the upcoming season is at the quarterback position. I understand you probably canāt or donāt want to talk specific names, but Iām interested in general. Who would you like to see starting at quarterback for the 49ers this season? A) A rookie that you can mold? B) Someone who played quarterback in the league this season and might be available either by trade or free agency? C) Maybe a guy whoās been a backup in this league that has not received a chance to start? If you can just give us any indication how you would rank those choices that would be helpful.
KS: āYeah, thatās a pretty easy answer, because itās the same for that position as any position; you want the best player possible. And thereās not one absolute answer to that. Everyone wants the best quarterback in the league. Everyone wants the best left tackle in the league, the best receiver. Thatās what youāre always trying to find and thatās what youāre always looking for as a personnel staff and thatās what youāre always hoping to get as a coach. You donāt get those options every year. Thatās why you have to look into the draft at every single possibility. You have to look into free agency and every single possibility. You have to look at possible trades and every single possibility. Thatās why there is no offseason because thereās so many possibilities and thereās no absolute way on how to find that in this league. But, thereās different options each year. We have to find out every single one of those options and then you evaluate those and whatever you think the best option is that gives you the best chance to win now and in the future, thatās what my A is and B and C. There is no exact answer. You have to see the options and you rank those differently every year. It depends on what your choices are.ā
As you evaluate the quarterback position, are you looking at a good decision maker or are you looking at somebody that can essentially make all the throws?
KS: āYou guys are probably going to get annoyed with me at this a lot, but I really never speak in absolutes. You take the best possible scenario. Everybody wants, I always joke around about it, but as a receiver I hope to find six [Atlanta Falcons WR] Julio Joneses who can give you everything. Thatās not going to happen. Youāve got to find what the best options are. People have won in this league being pure throwers and can make every throw in the pocket. People have won in this league making plays with their legs. Thereās been tall quarterbacks who have made it. Thereās been short quarterbacks who have made it. Thereās lots of ways to do it, but you have to find out what characteristics makes someone successful and when you do feel that they have certain characteristics, when youāre talking about the quarterback position whether itās their intelligence, their mobility, just their throwing ability, then youāve got to think of, āAlright, how can I put a scheme together that allows him to use those traits?ā And, does he have the players around him to allow him to use those traits? Thatās how you start to package things together. You donāt just get to build your player like you want on Madden how it goes. Youāve got to see whatās out there. Everyone has different things and you rarely get the full package. If you find a guy who has the full package, then you do whatever it takes to get that guy and you donāt think twice about it. But, thatās easier said than done. Thereās not many of those people on the planet. Thereās lots of ways to be successful. Never can a quarterback do it by himself. So, itās important that you have someone who can handle the pressure, who can do it week in and week out and also has the ability to do what youāre asking of them. But, itās also going to take a very good cast around him.ā
Other than your history with the 49ers from your childhood and the franchiseās prestigious history from the 80ās and 90ās, what made this job attractive to you? Why did you want to come here?
KS: āI believe that theyāre committed to winning. Meeting with Jed and talking to him, it was really the first time getting to meet him and having two different interviews with him, spending a lot of time with him, everything that he said was as good as I could hope for. And just like Jed said, I didnāt go into these interviews just trying to get a job. I went into these interviews being very honest. I have been around this business a lot, my whole life, but especially even coaching and Iāve been in a lot of different organizations and thereās lots of things that I believe are important to consistently win and to be able to talk to Jed realistically where we thought the team was at and where we thought it could go and to not hold anything back and to see how he reacted and to understand his commitment and when a guy is committed and gives you a six-year contract and shows that heās willing to give you some time. What I didnāt want to do was come here and make a bunch of decisions just trying to win to save ourselves right away. I want to win the first day to the last day. Iām going to do everything possible to do that. But, I also want to make the right decision for the organization. John wants to make the right decision for the organization. And in order to do that, youāve got to do it the right way. Weāll see what resources are available out there. Weāve got a lot of good draft picks. Weāve got a lot of money in free agency to spend. But, you donāt just go do that to do that. Youāve got to make sure that you make the right decisions, you build it the right way. Everyoneās goal is to win right away, but the main goal is to build a team that can win consistently and thatās what our goal is. And when you have an organization that shows you that, that youāre confident in them as people, you can talk to them that way and trust them as humans and they also back that up with the contract situation they gave us together, I canāt think of a better situation for ourselves.ā
Itās February 9th which is kind of late to be putting together a staff and Iām just wondering how far along you are in the process and when do expect to have that completed?
KS: āThatās the first thing that Iām trying to do is finish the staff up. Definitely as behind on that as you can be and thatās just the way it is. I wish I could have started earlier, but getting to play in the Super Bowl is a pretty cool thing also. So, itās something that youāve got to deal with but itās something that Iām going to be doing here nonstop. Weāre not there yet. Weāre getting closer, but nothingās finalized. Thatās something that weāve got to get done a lot sooner than later.ā
John had talked about one of the, at least down on the list of reasons for wanting to keep his interview secret was the fact that he had heard about a culture of leaking information from the 49ers and he wanted to see if you and chief strategy officer & executive vice president, football operations Paraag Marathe could keep that information private. He also said he had a very good job. He wasnāt desperate to go anywhere and so therefore he asked very direct questions. Iām just wondering as far as those direct questions, did he address leaks and that culture and has it made you reevaluate anything?
JY: āWe talked about a lot of things openly and directly, but I donāt think we delved deeply into that. He brought up some of the media reports of that being an issue and obviously, nobody knew that we interviewed John. It didnāt come out and I think that speaks to the culture that we have in this building. I think itās very important to make sure that the things that we do together, we want to make sure that we are open and transparent, but there are a lot of things that are going to happen with the three of us that are not discussed with anybody else and thatās where the give and take has to be between us and the media and the fans of, ultimately, I think our fans want to have a Super Bowl parade down Market Street and weāre going to do everything that we can to get to that and everything might not be perfect along that path, but if we work backwards from that, we will be open with the fans, we will be open with the media, but there are a lot of things that weāre going to be doing together and weāre going to have to keep those in-house.ā
Welcome back to the Bay Area for both you guys and this is a question for both of you. Who is going to have final word on free agency, the draft, 90-man roster, 53-man roster? How does that break down?
JL: āWe committed [SFGate.com reporter] Kevin [Lynch] to, nice last name by the way, I like that. We committed to truly making it a partnership and I think the roles as theyāre defined are reflective of that. I can tell you Kyle has control of the 53. I have the 90. Free agency and draft, I think I have. But, in all of those, itās also written that, subject to approval of the other guy. And so, thatās the way we wanted it. Thatās the way we wanted it reflected, but thatās the reality of it. Thatās the way when we started having these discussions, I think why they went so well is because thatās what both of our motivations were. I think weāve both seen places where it works and thatās the situation you have. Weāve seen places that it doesnāt work and youāve got friction and thatās not what we were all about.ā
Ā KS: āThatās one of the reasons I didnāt want to pass up this opportunity. When it comes down to the 53 and the 90, a lot of that is just something you have to put down on paper and itās stuff that helps you out if stuff goes really bad. If stuff doesnāt go really bad and youāre working with the right people, it usually isnāt something that comes up. To have an opportunity where an owner gives you a chance to come in with a GM and to make sure that we both meet together before they do it, thatās what made this so special. You donāt get that opportunity much in our business and thatās something that I never really thought I would get that opportunity and when seeing that we had an owner who understood how important that was and gave us that opportunity, thatās something that I didnāt think it was something I could pass up because that is special and that, like I said, itās very hard to win in this league, but you have a chance if youāre all going the same direction.ā
With you being in charge of free agency and kind of leading the charge with that, if I was a free agent player right now, what would be your recruiting pitch to me on why I should come here?
JL: āYou like winning. Because weāre going to do that. You like doing things the right way. Because weāre going to do that. Iām looking at former players out here. I see [vice president of football affairs] Keena Turner, I see [director of player engagement] Parys [Haralson]. I believe thatās [former 49ers CB] Eric Wright, [director of alumni relations] Guy McIntyre, [former 49ers G/C] Jesse Sapolu, [former 49ers QB] Steve Bono. Anybody else in here a former player? Those guys created the standard that weāre striving for. Iāve reached out to a lot of these guys and let them know that not only are they welcome, we really want these guys around because thatās what weāre aspiring to be. Iāve also told them we canāt ride on their coattails. We understand that we have to earn their trust as well. We understand that we have to put in the work. Thatās the only way you do it. You go about your business every day and try to get a little bit better. So, thatās important to me. Thatās important to us. But, yeah, thatās what I would tell a free agent player. Iād also tell them youāve got a head coach thatās going to put you in the right position to be successful. I think thatās one of Kyleās great skills. He takes players and he plays to their strengths. I think thatās what great coaches do. They play to the strengths. From the way he worked with [Cleveland Browns QB] Robert Griffin III in Washington to the way he adjusted to [Atlanta Falcons QB] Matt Ryan and really pulled every ounce. He lets players max out by putting them in optimal positions and I think thatās the mark of a great head coach.ā
KS: āI think when you look at also what excited me so much about John is John had a pretty good deal before coming here. I remember when he told me why he wanted to be a general manager and he really missed someone winning and losing at the end of a game. He enjoyed doing the announcing and being a part of the NFL, but the fight to go through something with a group of guys and what we go through together and it is not easy and itās a grind for everybody, but it is worth it. Thatās really what people who played, people who coached, those are the reasons when people get out of it they miss it so much. When youāve got a guy who had as good of a life set up with his job and where he was and he wants to come be a GM for one reason, because he wants to be a part of that working to win again and thatās how I think too. Thereās a lot of stuff that goes on in this business and itās a big time business and I get that, but when it comes down to it, when you have the people who are working together to try to lead the organization the way they think is pretty simple, itās about football and really not much else. I think thatās what players want to be a part of. Weāre going to shoot guys straight and weāre going to make those hard decisions. Every decision we make wonāt be based off perception, it wonāt be based off what gets people to like us the most, itās going to be based off of whatās best for this organization and gives this place the best chance to win and I hope people can respect that and I believe players respect that. Weāll shoot people honest and it will be very simple to understand why we make our decisions. Weāve got a one-track mind and itās how to get this organization great again.ā
I donāt doubt the desire or drive or work ethic. One thing that is lacking for Mr. Lynch, experience. Youāve never been in this position before. So, question for both of you: how do you, with two months to go before free agency and the draft, kind of fill that void of experience and how are you doing that because obviously those decisions in the draft room are very quick? Youāve never had to put together a roster before. So, even though you know the game, new territory.
JL: āThatās a good question and I think the answer to that and itās something that Jed, Kyle and I spoke about, Iāve got to surround myself with a great team. Iāve already done that. [Vice president of player personnel] Adam Peters has joined us as vice president of player personnel and Adamās an incredibly skilled evaluator of talent. Give you a little scoop here. Weāve also made another hire. A former teammate of mine and also a former general manager in this league, [senior personnel executive] Martin Mayhew has joined us as a senior personnel executive. We also have [assistant general manager] Tom Gamble in this room who, you know, Jed said, āHey, do you have a problem?ā I said, ā29 years of experience, why wouldnāt I embrace that?ā So, Iām going to embrace all those guys. I can tell you that weāve been in draft meetings for the last two days and itās been great. I think we have a great process going. Iām not a guy whoās going to come in and just change everything. You come in and see what you have and Iāve been very encouraged with what we have already. I told Jed the whole time, hereās what I know. I know football. Iāll put my football acumen up with anyoneās. I can always improve and I know that. I know people and I know how to lead and I think those are important to me. To me, Iāll learn the rest. But youāre right, thereās things happening right now and I thought thatās why it was so critical to surround myself with people who have been there before.ā
Kind of a two-part question. In wanting to get the franchise back to its winning ways, what are some of the things that you want to do? Is offense your first priority or defense and have you reached out to any of the current players on the roster and with the lack of experience, what do you want them to know up front that they can trust this process?
KS: āIāve talked to a couple guys. I havenāt gotten a chance to reach out to everyone yet. I got here yesterday. I havenāt been able to do anything to tell you the truth. Canāt wait to get in and study our own roster. Thatās the first thing. After figuring out this coaching staff, Iām going to sit and watch a lot of tape and study our own roster. Youāve got to do that before you look at anything because I have no opinion on free agency until I know whatās here and it starts with whatās here. But, looking forward to meeting all these players. Iāve got a lot of respect for a lot of guys that Iāve played against over the years and Iāve been evaluating guys coming out of college. So, itās not just about going against guys. I know the background of them coming out of college also. Weāre going to do things right and weāre going to work hard at it and weāre going to do our best to get the best players in here possible and make sure to take care of the players who are here doing things right. I always feel that when you have a good player, as long as heās a great person and has great character, then you can never go wrong and those are the guys youāve got to take care of. Thereās a lot of good players, but itās hard to find a good player and a great person. And when youāve got both of those together, thatās what gives you a chance to win because thereās rough times in this league. Thereās rough times in every year. As soon as you lose two games in a row in this league, it becomes Armageddon everywhere and thatās part of the business. You hear it any time you get out of the building. You hear it from your wives. They hear it from everyone else. You need strong people. Itās not just about talent. You need strong people with high character. Sometimes you canāt find out really who people are until you go through adversity and Iām looking through doing that with guys and finding out who are the guys who can handle it, who wants to fight their way out of it and you try to find the guys who when things get tough, the ones who point fingers, those are the ones that itās tough to win with and youāve got to find that out and that does take time. But, Iām planning on going through lots of good times and bad times with these guys and when you do that, thatās how you form a bond. Shared sacrifice that you go through with each other and like Iāve said probably a bunch of times, itās not easy, but itās worth it and weāre going to be ready to go through that grind.ā
JL: āI would just say some of the players are here and Iāve visited with them all. I think the important thing for Kyle and I to do first and foremost is to be very clear with the vision we have for this place, what itās going to take to be successful. And then I think once you set a vision, youāve got to also let them know that weāre not going to have a lot of rules but the rules we have, weāre going to adhere to. Thatās not just to do that, thatās because Iāve been there before, Kyleās been there before and disciplineās a big part of this thing and accountabilityās a big part of this thing. I remember [former NFL head coach] Tony Dungy taking over in Tampa and prior to that, it was constant change and Tony came in and said, and people talk about six-year contracts, what that represents to players is stability and I think you need stability. But, those players also need to know that weāre going to be relentless in our pursuit of players who fit what weāre looking for. So, itās important to articulate what it is weāre looking for. Weāve tried to do that. Weāll continue to do that and then finding guys that fit that and we wonāt stop until we do.ā
Some of the criticism around the first of the year was that it was going to be hard for you to land your preferred candidates for these openings. Do you feel vindicated today sitting with Kyle and John here?
JY: āI think these are hands down the two best guys. Iām not worried about feeling vindicated from criticism. Part of my position is to take criticism and I fully accept that. Iām the person that asked for it. I sat down with [KNBR radio hosts Brian Murphy and Paul McCaffrey] Murph and Mac a while ago, said hold me accountable and I want you to hold me accountable and we havenāt lived up to our standard. I think when you look at Kyle, when you look at John and you look at the teams that theyāre starting to build, weāre starting to put together something that I think has a chance to be special. But again, itās not about vindication. Itās about what work can we put in to get to where we want to go. And itās getting to Market Street. Itās taking a ride with the mayor of San Francisco and hoisting the Lombardi trophy. Thatās what weāre here to do.ā
How much personnel experience have you, we could see a couple Cleveland players who ended up with Atlanta this year, how much hands-on experience have you had with this and given the clout you had as we all said, the hottest coordinator candidate, why didnāt you demand full control? Nothing against John here, but demand full control of the 90, of everything like Atlanta Falcons head coach Dan Quinn has had, like I assume your dad had in Washington. Why not demand all of it?
KS: āI donāt want to demand all of it. I think, whatās important to you? Iāve always thought none of it matters if youāre working with the right guy. So, itās what do you want to put down on paper. I donāt need all of that down on paper. It was important to me to have the 53 on paper because I think itās important that the players know that and that the coaching is ultimately going to be responsible for that. But, thatās more of a perception thing. When I got paired up with John and talking to Jed, why demand all of that stuff when I donāt think it matters? Itās not something to fight for. It wasnāt something that John needed to fight for. I wanted both to have shared responsibility and I think John felt the same and weāre not coming in here, weāre not if things go bad I want to make sure I have all this stuff. Things arenāt going to go bad. Weāre coming here together and itās going to work together or weāre going to lose together and thatās what makes it special. You know what both our intentions are. Thereās no hidden agendas with any of us. Itās weāre going to keep this as simple as it can be. I think that would be me speaking out of two sides of my mouth if I was trying to demand everything and taking advantage of a certain situation.ā
This team is coming off two pretty tough seasons with not great records. So, I know itās going to take some time. But, at the end of next season, what would you consider a successful season? Not just in terms of record, but in changes on the team and in the organization?
KS: āWell, I personally, something thatās been important to me over the years is truly answering that question would be trying to answer to you a result and results are not something that you can control. Weāre going to worry about this process and the process is weāre going to work as hard as we can to get the right people in here and do it the right way. If thatās your process and you do that day in and day out and every single day, we have to set a certain standard here and that standardās going to start with the coaching staff, the personnel department, what our expectations are and my expectations are is that everyone works their hardest and gives their best every single day. But, it doesnāt truly become a standard until thatās the playerās standard and once we can get the players to own that to where we donāt have to always make sure that weāre telling people to do it, theyāre actually holding each other accountable, thatās when you have something special. And that doesnāt happen overnight. You definitely have to give them direction. But, itās just coach talk until they own it. And when they do own it, thatās when good things happen. So, at the end of this year, I hope at the end of OTAās, I hope at the end of training camp, however long it takes, weāll keep working to do it. But, I hope we can develop a culture here where our players have an extremely high standard, an extremely high expectation that matches exactly what the three of us are talking about up here.ā
Can you kind of explain, the history of the league is littered with guys who were great OCs, who were great DCs, but they didnāt work as a head coach. How do you kind of make that transition? And then, there was a report yesterday that said you werenāt going to hire an offensive coordinator. Can you kind of explain then how the offense will work and what went into that decision as well?
KS: āYeah, weāre going to put together a great coaching staff. I plan on calling the plays, which is usually an offensive coordinatorās duty. I donāt think itās that important to name an offensive coordinator. Weāre going to get a bunch of good coaches in here that I think a bunch of guys will eventually be capable of doing that. But, I didnāt think that was the most important thing right now, especially with myself planning on calling it. I donāt know if it will always be like that, but especially in this first year, I think itās important to set that tone. If you look at the history of people who have been successful coordinators, not head coaches, I mean, you have to look at every situation individually and itās what situation were they in? How much time were they given? Did they have the ability to succeed? Maybe they werenāt as good as a head coach as a coordinator and weāll see how I am. Iām very confident that Iāll be able do a good job as a head coach. I canāt do everything the exact way Iāve done as a coordinator, but when I was a coordinator I couldnāt do everything the exact same way I did when I was a quarterback coach, or a receiver coach, or a quality control or a G.A. You have to adjust. You have to grow. You never stay the same. Youāre always getting better or worse. Iāve been waiting for this moment my whole life and I know Iām ready for it. I believe Iāve been ready for it for a while. Iām not going to be a finished product by any means. You better work every single day to get better and I promise you guys I will. I hope I can start off being great right away, but I know itās going to take work and Iām not going to do everything right, but I promise you guys Iāll learn from my mistakes. Youāre going to get someone committed to their job and itāll work out.ā
Has there been any communication with QB Colin Kaepernick and how are you guys approaching the process with him given his contract status going forward?
JL: āColin reached out and we plan on visiting. Thatās something Kyle and I committed too. Kyle spoke to that in order to find out what you need you have to first really take inventory of what you have. And so, weāre still very much in the process of doing that. Weāre just at the beginning of it. The first order of business is Kyle and I both really attacking it and seeing what we have here and weāll do that with his situation. Weāll sit down with him and if we see fit that heās a part of it, weāll commit to that. If not, weāll figure things out.ā
KS: āIt starts with me with just studying people. Most of the offensive guys I havenāt studied since they were college players. The defensive guys Iāve studied to a degree because Iāve played against the Niners a couple times over the last few years. So, with me itās, I see a lot better than I hear. I need to go watch it on tape. Colin, just like any other player, is someone Iām going to be watching a lot of tape on over these next few weeks. Before we can look into anything, free agency, draft, anything, you have to know what the players on your team are. That doesnāt happen from just turning on a game. That happens from watching a lot of stuff. It takes a lot of time. It is a process. I am a little bit behind right now, but I have the time to do it and Iām looking forward to it and canāt wait to get started on it.ā
This article was originally posted on KNBR.com.