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George Kittle--Belichick: "He's as good as anybody I’ve coached." 2019 1ST Team All Pro. 1,000+ Yds in 2019 & 2018

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@Franisdaman what did you think of Bradshaw telling George to run the trophy around the stadium for the fans? At first, I thought he could have let GK say a few words, but then again, I thought, he is the "People's Tight End".
 
49ers' George Kittle named Pro Football Focus' Best Overall NFL player for 2019
By Dalton Johnson
January 22, 2020

George Kittle broke the single-season record for receiving yards by a tight end in 2018. And yet, he was even better in the 2019 season.

Pro Football Focus hands out the Stephenson Award to their top-graded player at the end of the season. The award has gone to defensive stars Aaron Donald and JJ Watt in five of the last seven seasons. That changed this season, though.

Kittle is taking home the hardware as PFF's highest-graded player for the 2019 season. The 49ers' star tight end finished with a 95.0 grade, the best ever for a tight end in the PFF era (2006-19).

Kittle, 26, dethroned former Patriots star Rob Gronkowski as PFF's best season by a tight end. Gronk previously held the honor with a 92.0 grade in the 2011 season.

While he missed two games with knee and ankle injuries, Kittle still had 1,053 receiving yards and five touchdowns. He had 85 receptions on 107 targets, good for a highly-efficient 79.4 catch percentage.

There's no doubt Kittle is one of the most dangerous players in the NFL with the ball in his hands. His combination of size and speed is deadly, and he catches nearly everything thrown his way. But like Gronkowski of the past, Kittle is more than just a receiving tight end.

Kittle was ranked as PFF's fourth-best blocking tight end. That's extremely high for someone who led his team in receiving yards.

[RELATED: 49ers' play of the year: Kittle’s grab or Greenlaw’s stop?]

In just three years, Kittle has gone from a steal as a fifth-round draft pick to perhaps the best overall player in all of football.

Kittle has a Super Bowl ring on his mind with a win over the Kansas City Chiefs in Miami, but "best player in the NFL" has a pretty nice ring to it, too.

LINK: https://www.nbcsports.com/bayarea/4...tle-named-pro-football-focus-best-player-2019
 
Chiefs know George Kittle, 49ers' run game pose huge Super Bowl challenge

By Josh Schrock
January 23, 2020

Last week, the Kansas City Chiefs faced a tough task in trying to slow down Derrick Henry and the Tennessee Titans running attack in the AFC Championship Game.

Coming into the game, Henry had carried the ball at least 30 times and racked up 182 yards or more in each of the Titans' last three games dating back to Week 17. The Chiefs were able to slow down the powerful running back, holding him to 69 yards in a 35-24 win that sent them to their first Super Bowl in 50 years.

After halting Henry, the Chiefs now must face a different kind of rushing attack when they meet the 49ers in Super Bowl LIV on Feb. 2. The 49ers rushed for 287 yards in their 37-20 NFC Championship Game win over the Green Bay Packers, with Raheem Mostert going wild on the ground for 220 yards and four touchdowns.

While both the Titans and 49ers love to run the ball, the Chiefs know they face a much different task in two weeks than the hurdle they cleared against Tennessee.

"The one thing is, San Francisco's got a bunch of guys they can put back there and hand the ball off too," defensive coordinator Steve Spagnuolo said Thursday. "Last week, we really concentrated on one number -- 22. I think [49ers head coach Kyle Shanahan] does a good job with changing -- it appears to us that he'll look at the defense he is playing and attack with those particular runs. It may not be what they ran against Green Bay last week or Minnesota the week before. I think he's really good at that. So we'll have to figure that out early and try to find a way to control it.

"What they are really good at is getting you to run East-West and then cutting it back," Spagnuolo continued. "They have the speed guys who can do that. One of the things we tried to do last week was try to get there before the running back got started. With these guys, that's a challenge ... More than anything cut back to me is huge. We talk about tracking the hips when the run goes away from you, and that's something we've got to put in the forefront of our thinking when they run the football."

Mostert, Tevin Coleman (who's status for the Super Bowl is in doubt) and Matt Breida are dangerous backs, but the 49ers' running game is so potent because of the blocking they get from the line, the receivers and tight end George Kittle.

"We were really impressed with how good of a run blocker he is," Spagnuolo said of Kittle. "We know what he can [in the passing game.] There are many games we come in and say, 'Our D-ends, there's no way they can lose a blocking battle with a tight end.' There are just teams that have tight ends that are more receivers. But this guy, he's as all-around a tight end as we've seen this year. I give him tremendous credit for the emphasis he puts on run blocking. He looks like he enjoys doing it."

For the Chiefs' defense to have success stopping the Niners in South Beach, safety Tyrann Mathieu will have to play a big part both in diagnosing the run game and in pass coverage against the likes of Kittle. He's aware of the challenge that awaits the Chiefs' D.

"When I watch him, I see a team that can obviously run the ball really well, but I think he adds a different element to their offense, a physicality," Mathieu said Thursday. "More so an attitude that he plays with. He seems like he's having a ball every ballgame. It will be important for me, guys like [safety Daniel Sorensen], to match that energy and just compete. Just treat this like any other ballgame and whoever lines up in front of you it's about man on man."

Shanahan's offensive schemes have allowed the 49ers to quickly diagnose the weak points in defenses all year and exploit them. Mathieu has been studying the tape and sees how the Niners try to confuse defenses with motion and different formations.

"I think the offensive coordinator, head coach does a good job of making a lot of plays look the same," Mathieu said. "They run a lot of different formations out of a lot of different personnel groups. I think at the end of the day, they like certain concepts. For me, I've been trusting myself all year. It's about believing in what I see and that has really allowed me to really play at a high level."

The Chiefs had the 29th ranked rushing defense by DVOA during the regular season, but they were able to bottle up Henry and hold him to just 7 second-half yards in the AFC Championship Game.

The 49ers, however, are a whole different animal.

[RELATED: Five moments that defined 49ers' run to Super Bowl]

LINK: https://www.nbcsports.com/bayarea/4...49ers-run-game-pose-huge-super-bowl-challenge
 
Would it kill him to make snarky comments on his the lack of blocking and getting coached up at Iowa to be a run blocker? Drop one Iowa prop.
 
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