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Robert Kupbens-USA TODAY Sports


Kyle Shanahan, Brock Purdy speak after 49ers’ first training camp practice

Jul 24, 2024 at 2:32 PM


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San Francisco 49ers head coach Kyle Shanahan and quarterback Brock Purdy spoke to reporters on Wednesday, after the team's first practice of training camp. Here is everything they had to say.

Transcripts provided by the San Francisco 49ers Communications staff.

Opening comments:

"[T] Trent Williams wasn't here today. So just before you have to ask guys, he didn't report. It's contract related. [president of football operations/general manager] John's [Lynch] speaking with his representatives, been doing it for a while. He'll continue to go. When they work it out, I'll be pumped to see him."

WR Brandon Aiyuk showed up but he didn't practice. He's essentially holding in. Is that preferable to a holdout or is it a sign that maybe a deal's imminent?

"I don't really know what it means. It just means his back is sore today and his neck is sore. So going to stay out of practice, which obviously is a hold in. And so we expected it, and I understand the situation fully."

It looked like RB Isaac Guerendo went out with a little hamstring in there?

"Yeah, we think it was a hamstring. So it looked like he hyperextended a little bit. He was going about half speed it looked like. So it was an unusual one, but they just told me it was a hamstring. But we got to get the MRI."

Trent was at minicamp. I don't know that he worked. Was it the contractual situation kind of extend back to then?

"Yeah, we've been talking about it for a while. The first day, he had his daughter graduate and stuff. And then he came and I don't think we did any O-line stuff anyways. But it's been going on in discussions for a while."

What's your view on hold ins? Can they just go on indefinitely for you? Do you have a point where you're like, we can't have that?

"I don't think we've had a hold in. So I don't see much difference between a hold in and a hold out. It's probably better for them to hold in because so they don't get fines since you can't resend them like you could back in the day. But I don't see much difference."

Is it better for you or same difference?

"Same difference. I think it's better for them I think too that at least they can be around here, in meetings and stuff like that. So hopefully when things do work out they're just still use to some things. They haven't been that far behind."

You said you talked to Brandon occasionally through the offseason. Did you talk to him since he's been here and how do you gauge his move?

"It's been one day with him and I think he's coming in with a plan that's been obvious so far. He is holding in and we'll see how it goes each day."

Trent Williams is obviously quite good and quite important. How concerning is it that he's not here?

"It was something I knew could be a possibility. I was hoping that he would be here but I knew it could be a possibility. I feel pretty confident it'll all work out in the long run. And he'll be here and we'll get on the same page with everything. But it's just one day of practice. And I think Trent will be alright missing a few practices."

With where Trent is in his career. Is it part of this to figure out kind of like how much more he wants to go? Is that kind of a piece of the puzzle here?

"I think a lot of things play into it, but I'm not going to get into the personal parts of the contract."

You just accept this is part of having a roster that's veteran. You have a lot of veteran players, RB Christian McCaffrey had his deal redone, you've had other situations, or does this seem a little different? Do you accept that this is just the way it goes with a roster like this?

"I think it goes this way more often with the roster like this. But I've been on other teams and seen a lot of things like this happen. I don't think we've had too many of them, but I think people deal with it around the league. I've seen a number of it throughout the years and I've been on teams that have had to deal with it. So, I think both reasons."

Your offseason communication with WR Deebo Samuel last year about his physique is well documented. How do you think he looked reporting to training camp?

"I think Deebo looks great at that. He looked great in OTAs and minicamp, And I think he looked better today."

Why didn't Christian McCaffrey do any team stuff today?

"Just our plan with him. He did all individual and stuff and tomorrow I think he does team stuff. We have a whole thing mapped out, so it'll be different each day. A number of players are like that."

LB Fred Warner said during minicamp that LB Dee Winters was the best player in OTAs. What have you seen from that second-year player? What kind of jump has he made?

"He made a huge jump. Always waiting to see the guys to do that in the second year and I thought he really did in OTAs. I think it was nice for him not having Fred and [LB] Dre [Greenlaw] out there. So he gets a lot of reps. And he was ready for those reps. When you go through your rookie year sometimes things click for guys and I think being behind guys like Dre and Fred being able to watch how they work. He's kind of clone himself after those guys, just the work ethic being a pro and just so dialed in and locked into everything. He was so ready for OTAs and when you're that ready for OTAs, then you get so much better in OTAs which will allow him to be a lot better here in training camp."

S Malik Mustapha had an impressive pick today. What's he looking like to you?

"That was awesome because I just watched the route and I thought [WR] Danny [Gray] got the corner so I thought he was going to win on the go route and then the middle third safety picked it off with ease. He showed his range there. I got to kind of see what the quarterback did. Hopefully he didn't stare it down, but if he looked him off and he still got there then it was extremely impressive. But it was still showed a lot regardless of what the quarterback did, being able to get there, eat that up because if he didn't, that was a big play."

CB Isaac Yiadom had a nice one-on-one against Deebo down the field. Is he looking like what you expected?

"He has. He had a really good OTAs. He's been really good at the line of scrimmage. He's been one of those guys too that we just got to know him in the offseason, but so locked in, such a professional and really stood out in OTAs and picked up where he left off today."

In your mind, would you like to have a locked in nickelback who only plays when you have three instead of sliding DB Deommodore Lenoir more outside then inside? Does that matter to you?

"In the ideal world you want everyone to be at their best position all the time and never have to move. But if someone's our best outside guy and our best inside guy, that's what you'll do. You're always going to put the best three on the field, however it can tie with your best 11. So it's always nice when you can just pencil guys in and never have to move guys, so it just makes things easier on everybody. The same goes with wideouts too. But you're always going to put the best guys in the best spots."

How does QB Brock Purdy look to you physically from the Super Bowl and now? Size-wise, bulk, anything that stands out to you about his physique?

"Brock works really hard in the offseason. We always joke about his baby [DL Nick] Bosa legs. He builds those up, gets his strength. Brock is always improving each year. It's the work ethic he has, mentally and physically. He continues to get better."

What's the balance for a quarterback as far as bulk, size and being able to also go through a season, be agile, throw the ball and all those types of things?

"You add bulk to help you and you don't just add it to add it. So those guys experiment with that a lot. Sometimes guys add a lot of weight, a lot of muscle, thinking it's going to help and then they get into something where they don't feel quite as athletic, they feel a little bit heavier and then they usually learn from that in the next season. They still try to be as powerful and explosive, but they lean up a little bit. So it's a lot of trial and error. You have to find out what makes you your best. But you know, with a quarterback it's always a lot more legs than upper body. You want that upper body fluid, you don't want it tight, but you have to be able to handle the hits too."

Last season Brock talked about working on his agility, his mobility, maybe running a little bit more this season. Is that something you've seen him do in the offseason and how would you see that can fit into his game?

"That's not something that I see much because that has to do with shuttle drills and things like that, stuff they do with [head of strength & conditioning] Dustin [Perry], our Strength Coach, or they're doing on their own when they're working out. But I think that's a great part of it. Brock isn't necessarily a running quarterback, but he's a guy who can make a lot of plays with his legs. And when you do have that quickness and speed, if you work at anything you get better at it. So for him to add in that area and just get stronger in it, it completely helps his game. But it's not, I don't think it's a specific area he is focusing on. I think he just tries to improve on all of it."

How has S Ji'Ayir Brown looked to coming into his second year?

"I'm pumped about Ji'Ayir, I

thought he finished the year great last year. He's had a hell of an offseason. He's around here all the time. The guy lives football and I'm pumped for him to go through this camp."

Is he ready for the responsibility of maybe S Talanoa Hufanga not being ready? "Yeah,

I thought he was ready last year. Everyone knows how good of a player Huf is and [S Ji'Ayir Brown] Tig got his opportunity when Huf went down and he was ready for it. I talk about Dee Winters, someone who was always ready but never really got that opportunity. Tig was the same, but he did get it. And then when you're ready for it and you get to play through some stuff, it makes you so much better, the experience, and he took that right into the offseason. Huf not being quite ready right away will allow him to get more reps and just continue to help him."

With Brock running, as a rookie, he said an emphasis was to make sure he exhausted plays from the pocket. Don't get out here too early. As he matures and evolves, will he have more freedom to make that decision?

"It's always a weird question, he's free to play football. Didn't you watch him play his rookie year versus Miami? He ran all over the place. So Brock is going to react and go. One of the things that guys, if you don't know what you're doing and you don't know where the ball is and you aren't reading coverages and your anxiety is high and you're revved up, a lot of times you get in that pocket and you can't see anything and you just look for exit angles and you try to break and get out of there. And when you do that, you sometimes you make plays, sometimes you don't. The key is how to tie both together. How can you help other people make plays when there's an opportunity for you to do it, can you react and just go? But if you're just looking for that, sometimes it's hard to be a good quarterback. I think Brock has done a great job at balancing both of those out. I think the more he plays, the more you always get better at the drop back stuff, which I think can help you, not have more freedom to, but it could help your mind make quicker decisions on when it's time to do it. When I do have a bad look, when I have a good look and I want to wait on something, times in games, weather, things like that. That just comes with experience."

RB Cody Schrader is a guy with a ton of experience in college. Have you seen that early on here, carrying over to how he's picking stuff up?

"Always when you get the experience playing in college, it helps here. But it's still different. So the more you can have some of those similarities and things, it'll always help with this level. Sometimes when you get guys who have played in the system or a certain style of ball that just is completely different, it takes him awhile to kind of learn football but his has definitely helped him."

QB Brock Purdy


How concerning was it not seeing T Trent Williams out there today?

"Man, it's the first day of camp. I know he is dealing with some contract stuff, but for me I've got to go out there and lead the boys in the first day. Obviously this is a long process in terms of like camp and we've got time and all that. But for me, my mindset was go out, do my job today and try to bring some energy to our offense and that's where my focus was at."

You've been asked a few times if you are a bit bulkier this season or this offseason coming in, how have you just kind of prepared coming to this season rather than prepared last season coming off an injury?

"Yeah, last year a lot of it was rehabbing my arm and trying to get my arm healthy while trying to work out and stuff as well. So I feel like this year I actually had some time to work on my craft and my body and stuff. But I feel like it's really just like anybody else too in terms of offseason, right before camp starts everyone gets after it and tries to get in like the best shape as they can. So that's what I did. And I think for me moving forward, it's like how can I maintain that strength and all that throughout the season? And it's a grind. We're going to be practicing, four, three days in a row. So I've got to just stay on it and feel good. Went down to Jacksonville, my guys got me right, and I'm excited."

Are you bigger or about the same size?

"Probably a couple pounds heavier. I think feeling good and not just trying to put on weight, but good weight. That's right. And still being able to move around and be quick and things like that. That's all part of my game. And I didn't want to just bulk up and try to gain as much weight as I can. I was smart about it. So I've still got to move and throw well."

Are you established to the point now where you may take training camp a little differently and that maybe the first couple years you were like 'I got to be efficient. I got to do the real efficient thing.' Whereas now that you're the guy now you would say, 'I'm going to try this and see if it works?'

"I think there's a balance to that because that is how we have success here is as 49ers quarterbacks. It's being efficient, making the right decisions over and over and over again. Trying to be a superhero and make all these different kind of throws and stuff, like that's not how we we're coached. That's not how we win games here. So we're going to practice how we play and how we try to win. And so, last year there's some throws and stuff that you try out in camp and it may go well, may not. Same thing this year. But I think overall more than anything it's how can I be the most efficient quarterback at practice so that when we get into the game situations, nothing changes. My mindset's not different. I want to play just how I practice. So that's our mindset."

You were gaining velocity on your passes coming out of Iowa State into your rookie season. Has that continued? Were you able to make any gains in that regard this offseason?

"I think so. Just like little mechanical things down in Jacksonville that we worked on and honed in on, just in terms of being an efficient thrower. There's a guy that comes in and does like the 3D motion capture stuff, and we look at my mechanics and try to apply it to my on-field training and get more power out of my hips and all the stuff that goes into it. But I was down there for a good month. So, we were actually able to chip away at some things, where last year I was there for a couple weeks. It was more about my elbow rehab and then I had come back here early. So I got some good time away to work on it. And I do feel like I got better just with my arm and mobility and strength. But like I said earlier, that's something that I have to maintain as we go."

So is that mostly lower body when you're adding velocity in miles per hour?

"I think both. Just like the physical training part of it and then tying it back into your hips and your shoulder being tied together, the sequencing of throwing. I think all of those things together have allowed me to get a little bit more velocity on the throws and stuff."

Is there a play from the Super Bowl that still gnaws at you?

"Yeah, there's a couple plays I'd say that I think back on and wish 'dang it.' So, yeah."

Could you tell us one of them?

"I think that third down that got tipped. We ran double slants. That's one of them that comes up, towards the end of the game. There's that one. I think earlier on there was like a second-down play that I could have hit [WR Brandon] Aiyuk on a window pretty quick, and it just happened and it closed quickly. So those are the kinds of plays that run through my mind when I think about the Super Bowl and like how can I take my game to the next level is those kind of plays. Capitalizing on those plays."

It looks like the one that got tipped that you referred to first, it's like well what was it going to do but obviously hindsight's 2020. But if you could do it over, what should you have done in that play?

"Aiyuk in the slot. I think if I was quick enough with my feet and got the ball out, because that play we're thinking read it inside out and I'm thinking [WR Jauan Jennings] J.J. third down, like J.J.'s had a great game and then Aiyuk actually popped with a guy blitzing free. So it's in those moments right before it happens, how can I see it clearly still stick to my fundamentals of reading that play inside out, not just getting to the outside read. So it's those plays and those moments that's situational football. That's where I can grow. And so that's what I mean by like, there's certain plays like that where I'm like, 'dang.'"

How do you balance using that as motivation versus driving yourself insane by thinking about it too much?

"Yeah, that's a sport and that's the world that we live in just in terms of playing a professional sport. We're not going to be perfect. You're not going to make every single play. You get to the highest stage playing in the Super Bowl and there's a crucial play like that. You're hard on yourself. We're professional, like we want to compete and be the best and we want to be perfect, but that's just the nature of it. Man, you're going to come up short sometimes. But I think the best separate themselves by going and experiencing those things and then being able to learn from them and make change not do those same mistakes over, but actually make change and be ready for the moment that comes again."

How excited are you to have the vertical threats this year? WR Jake Cowing, WR Danny Gray, maybe even TE Brayden Willis?

"Yeah, I'm really excited being able to have some boys that can go downfield and give them a shot. And I think for them, it's coming to practice every day being consistent, building that trust. We have to, those young guys especially. So that's what I think these first couple weeks of practice at camp are like, 'alright, let's give those young guys an opportunity with some looks and going deep and see what they can do with it.' But on air man, they can fly and they can do it. So we've just got to connect on 11 on 11 and continue to build that trust. So I'm excited for them."

Do you feel the benefits yet of having a true offseason? This is your first true offseason where you've been able to participate the whole time going into a season.

"Exactly that. I got OTAs, I got those reps. Just being able to build a relationship with the new guys that came in. And then go away for summer and continue to get better at my craft and build off of the reps that I had in OTAs and actually able to watch all the games from last year with [head coach Kyle] Shanahan and [quarterbacks coach Brian] Griese. And now being at camp feels good. I feel ready to roll and excited just based off of the growth that I've had this offseason. I'm nowhere near perfect, but I know I can continue to grow and be better, and I need to be better for this team. So that's how I look at it, but definitely excited not coming off a UCL again."

Does this day one feel smoother?

"I'd say so, but there's still some rust. We could all feel it. Timing in routes, leading receivers, play calls, getting in and out of the huddle, but for a day one, I didn't think it was too bad."

A lot of new tight ends in the room. Your first throw today went to TE Eric Saubert. Do you feel that you've built some rapport already with him in OTAs? And then how is it going with the tight end room in particular?

"I think the way he came in for OTAs. We started throwing pretty early with him and, learning how he moves and how he sees things. Then coming in and being ready to roll for camp, he made a great play today. So that's something that we're going to continue to have to build off of and get after together. But I'm really excited for him and [TE] Brayden Willis and his opportunity. And obviously, [TE] George [Kittle]. So it's a great room. I know George is doing a great job with leading all those boys and some young guys and new faces coming in. Having [TE] Logan Thomas come in as well and his just veteran presence, it's going to be a solid room. So obviously we've got camp for all those boys to showcase and see what they can do and who's going step up. But I'm excited to work with them all and throw them the ball."

I imagine the highlight of your offseason was your wedding. What stands out to you about that day? Everyone says it's a blur. What do you remember about your wedding day?

"It went so fast, but we had just all the best people, the closest people in our life, be there for us in one day. And so it was a pretty special moment to be able to go through that whole season last year of football, Super Bowl and the craziness and coming back from surgery to then marrying my best friend, it was crazy. That was the best day of the year for me. And looking back on it, we're just so thankful for everyone in our life. To come together as one with my wife and my best friend, there's nothing better."

The big games that this team has played the past few years and all the disappointment it's experienced the past few years, coming so close to achieving the final goal and not getting it. How do you, as a leader, make sure this team maintains that fire and doesn't burn out?

"We've all just been there. We've tasted it. Obviously, the Super Bowl, it's a couple plays away from literally being Super Bowl champions. The year before that, NFC Championship. The year before that, NFC Championship. So we have guys in this locker room that tasted it and they want it. And coming back, it was a heartbreak. Losing that Super Bowl and the way we did it, the overtime, all that. How badly we want it for this fan base and this organization, we want it. But coming back from OTAs, and then obviously now with camp, with having all the guys back, just the way [LB] Fred [Warner] is acting, George, [FB Kyle Juszczyk] Juice, these guys that have been in the league for a while, they're back ready, hungry. And I'm going into my year three, so I'm hungry. But I did the same thing. I walked in, I'm like, 'How are these guys gonna, seem or feel?' You can feel it, they're hungry for it and we're ready to do it for this organization and the fan base."
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