49ers coach second-guesses his play calling
Updated: 2013-02-07 07:38
By Reuters in New York (China Daily)
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San Francisco 49ers head coach Jim Harbaugh said on Tuesday he wished he could change his play-calling at the end of Sunday's 34-31 Super Bowl loss to the Baltimore Ravens.
Despite marching down the field, the 49ers failed to score on the final three plays before the Ravens' punter took a safety with four seconds left. The clock ran out on the ensuing kick.
"We came up five yards short. Certainly, knowing how it ended up, how it finished when we didn't get the ball in, yeah, we would have liked to try a different play call," Harbaugh said at the 49ers' complex after the team's return from New Orleans.
"When you do something that doesn't work, you would have liked to have done something different - at least tried it. But you can't."
The 49ers, down by 22 points in the third quarter, were on the verge of the greatest Super Bowl comeback but failed to score despite having a first-and-goal from the seven-yard line in the final minutes.
After a two-yard rushing gain on first down put the ball on the five-yard line, the NFC champion tried three times to pass the ball to receiver Michael Crabtree, who was closely guarded and failed to make a reception for the go-ahead score.
The final plays came under criticism from disappointed San Francisco supporters, who wondered why the 49ers had not tried to give the ball to running back Frank Gore, who had taken the ball to the seven on a 33-yard run to set up the scoring chance.
Or why they did not look for rangy wide receiver Randy Moss, who has long been adept at snaring touchdown passes in his long, illustrious career.
Or why San Francisco quarterback Colin Kaepernick did not try to run an option play, since he had earlier scored on a 15-yard scamper.
Kaepernick said on Tuesday that he changed the play-call at the line of scrimmage when he noticed the Ravens would be blitzing and playing man-to-man coverage on the receivers.
"I audibled to a fade to Crab," Kaepernick said. "I'll take Crabtree one-on-one with anybody."
Harbaugh said in hindsight he wished he had tried something else, but that it was always easy to second guess.
"The would've-could've-should've is undefeated," he said. "That's never failed."
Note:
Super Bowl tops ratings; outage highly viewed, too
As it does nearly every year, the Super Bowl will almost certainly stand as the most-watched television event of 2013. This year, the Blackout Bowl wasn't too far behind.
CBS prevailed upon Nielsen Co to estimate how many viewers watched the Baltimore Ravens' victory over the San Francisco 49ers while excluding the 34 minutes in the third quarter when the game was stopped because of a partial power outage in the Superdome. The game was seen by an average of 108.7 million people, down from the previous two years but still ranking as the third most-watched show in US television history.
Leaving aside the outage period, which came at a time the Ravens had a big lead, was likely CBS' attempt to nudge the viewership to a historically high level.
Yet few people were interested in tuning out. Nielsen said 106.6 million watched the power outage delay, which was basically extended scenes of first-half highlights and players stretching to keep warm.
(China Daily 02/07/2013 page22)
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