Last week, we started a commencement of the top players at each number in San Francisco 49ers establishment history. As the commencement to the beginning of instructional course proceeds, the commencement of uniform numbers likewise keeps, going to numbers 26 through 50.
These days, these numbers are principally relegated to running backs and protective backs, with linebackers and tight finishes being qualified for the numbers during the 40s also. While that hasn't forever been the situation, the principles accomplish pretty much correspond with the 49ers' period of strength during the '80s, so the present slideshow is loaded up with players who moved the ball on the ground or watched the auxiliary.
Who has the most interceptions in 49ers history?
This is additionally the slideshow with the most elevated level of resigned numbers. Four numbers in this reach have been resigned, with Lobby of Famers on the two sides of the ball addressed.
In contrast to the main bookkeeping sheet, where a functioning player in Colin Kaepernick danced to a genuinely simple success at his number, there are no walkovers for cutting edge players here. Have any semblance of Antoine Bethea or Eric Reid done what's needed to guarantee a number as their own after a couple of seasons? How about we go inside and out and find out.
26: Wendell Tyler (1983-1986)
Tyler was the running back before Roger Craig assumed control over the job all day for the '80s 49ers, making the Ace Bowl and winning a Super Bowl ring in 1984 and wrapping up with 3,112 hurrying yards for the establishment. Darryl Pollard, who began two seasons at cornerback and won his own Super Bowl ring in '89, and Imprint Roman, who played for four seasons at wellbeing during the 2000s, additionally merit considering.
27: Carlton Williamson (1981-1987)
Extreme, intense call here. Williamson was a double cross Master Bowler at solid security and part of the three protective backs the 49ers drafted in 1981, making ready for optional progress during the '80s. He completed his profession with 17 captures. His principal contest is R.C. Owens, known for his "rear entryway oop" association with Y.A. Bit in the last part of the '50s. I might be siding a lot with present day time players here.
28: Dana Lobby (1992-1994)
Not much to browse here. Dana Lobby won a Super Bowl ring as an incidental starter at security with the 49ers, completing his 49ers profession with four interferences. That is one more than Charles Cornelius, who additionally wore the number in 1979 and 1980, or Keith Lewis, who wore it from 2004 through 2008. Joe Cribbs is the greatest name to wear the number, however his greatest years were in Bison, and he ran for only 890 yards as a 49er. The street is clear for Carlos Hyde to take this one after a season or two.
29: Wear Griffin (1986-1993)
Griffin monitored the cornerback position for eight seasons, giving strong, if never Expert Bowl-level, play while heading to acquiring two Super Bowl rings. He completed his 49ers profession with 22 capture attempts. He likewise was the group's dropkick returner, however he just arrived at the midpoint of 9.0 yards per return on 74 dropkicks.
30: Bernie Casey (1961-1966)
Casey at last made the Genius Bowl the year after he left the 49ers, yet he seemingly merited it for two or three years of being a top objective for John Brodie. Casey drove the 49ers in getting for three seasons and piled up 4,008 getting yards on 277 gatherings. He took on a supporting role to Dave Parks when he joined the group in 1964, however the previous school high-hurdler stayed a valuable recipient for his whole 49ers vocation.
31: Donte Whitner (2011-2013)
The hard-hitting power of San Francisco's optional during the Jim Harbaugh-time, Whitner's vocation in San Francisco was brief however effective, making two Master Bowls in his last two seasons before he left in free organization. His short vocation settles on different protections potential decisions here, strikingly Chet Creeks and Zack Bronson, however Whitner's awards make him the pick.
32: Mel Phillips (1966-1977)
Life span or pinnacle esteem? That is consistently the inquiry while doing a rundown like this, and I'm constantly conflicted between potential outcomes. Phillips began as a security for over 10 years for the 49ers, through the great long periods of the mid '70s and the terrible long stretches of the last part of the '70s, recording 12 captures over his profession. His principal rivalry is Ricky Watters, who had three Genius Bowl a very long time as a running back from 1992 to 1994 — and remember about Norm Standlee, a star for the AAFC-period 49ers. This is a genuine difficult decision, yet I'll take the life span this time over just three years of Watters.
33: Roger Craig (1983-1990)
While Plain Butchery and Joe Perry are in front of him on the establishment surging yards list, Craig's worth as a recipient out of the backfield, too, saves him as my decision for most prominent running back in establishment history. Craig is one of just two players, alongside Lobby of Famer Marshall Faulk, to have 1,000 yards surging and getting in a similar season, with Craig being the very first to arrive at that all out in 1985. Include an All-Genius gesture in 1988, four Expert Bowl gestures and three Super Bowl rings, and it's astonishing that he hasn't had all the more a push to make the Lobby of Notoriety, just being a finalist once in 2010.
34: Joe Perry (1948-1960, 1963)
One more resigned number, which makes this choice a lot less complex. Perry was certainly not a unique 49er, yet participated in their second season in the AAFC. He held the establishment record for surging yards until Plain Butchery broke it, and was the very first NFL rusher to have consecutive 1,000 yard seasons, some time ago when they just played 12 games. He wasn't exceptionally strong or extremely tricky, he recently had blasting rate — they didn't time the 40-yard run then, at that point, however he could run a 9.7 100-yard run, consequently his epithet "The Stream". He resigned as the NFL's record-breaking forerunner in surging yards, which he held until Jim Brown broke it in 1963.
35: John Henry Johnson (1954-1956)
Johnson's a Lobby of Famer, yet this isn't generally so straightforward as you would suspect. Johnson just played for the 49ers for three seasons, piling up the majority of his hurrying yards with the Pittsburgh Steelers. They were a decent three seasons, making the Star Bowl in 1954, however that is a brief timeframe. Sufficiently it's to get him past any semblance of Larry Schrieber and Dexter Carter, however don't count out Eric Reid requiring this one day, on the off chance that he plays for quite some time.
36: Merton Hanks (1991-1998)
Hanks was something other than a gaudy pidgeon-necked score festivity. An Expert Bowl wellbeing for a very long time during the '90s — remembering an All-Star gesture for 1995 — Hanks was a ball-selling free security, keep 31 captures in the red and gold, and is one of the better draft takes in establishment history, having fallen right down to the fifth-round. He beats Tommy Davis, an excellent kicker and punter from the 1960s who is third on the 49ers' unsurpassed scoring list behind Jerry Rice and Beam Wersching.
37: Jimmy Johnson (1961-1976)
Another easy decision, Johnson's number was resigned by the group the year after he resigned in the wake of expenditure over 15 years as one of the top one man to another protectors ever. At the point when Paul Zimmerman set up the entire century group for Sports Delineated in 1999, he picked two open-field cornerbacks. One was Deion Sanders, and the other was Johnson. He frequently went completely unchallenged during games, so dreaded were his inclusion abilities. All things considered, his 47 captures remained as the group record until 1989.
38: Dashon Goldson (2007-2012)
Was Goldson a result of San Francisco's top protection, taking into account his lower level of play since he moved to Tampa Cove? It's conceivable, yet as a result of that framework, Goldson made two Master Bowls and an All-Genius gesture in his six years with the group. Quite possibly of the hardest hitter in the group, Goldson leaving his imprint with 14 block attempts and 278 handles, a significant number of them of the "bone-pounding" assortment. It helps that there's very little contest at the number.
39: Hugh McElhenny (1952-1960)
One more resigned number and one more Corridor of Famer. A dangerous, subtle sprinter, McElhenny had 4,288 hurrying yards in his 49ers vocation, averaging 4.9 yards per endeavor. He was a kick and dropkick returner too, and an emphatically better than expected one at that. The double cross first-group All Genius and six-time Star Bowler acquired 9,100 universally handy yards for the establishment and was named to the 1950s The entire Ten years Group and the 50th Commemoration All-Time Group. It's significant that Kermit Alexander had a strong vocation as a returner in the No. 39 pullover after McElhenny however before it was resigned.
40: Abe Woodson (1958-1964)
A genuine extreme one here. Woodson was a cornerback yet truly succeeded as a bring man back. He stays the establishment chief in dropkick return yards with 4,873 and is just behind Dexter Carter in all bring yards back. Couple that with 15 block attempts, five Ace Dishes and two All-Experts, and you have one of the most risky weapons of his day. He simply gets my pick over Ken Willard, a fullback who had 8,086 yards as a sprinter and beneficiary for the group in the last part of the '60s and mid '70s. Either pick works here.
41: Terry Kirby (1996-1998)
I was enticed to put Antoine Bethea here, yet couldn't legitimize doing it after only one season. Assuming he copies his exhibition from 2014, he'll bring this opening gives over. Up to that point, we're giving it to Kirby, who acquired 1,237 yards as a sprinter in the last part of the '90s for the establishment, serving generally as a difference in pace for Post Hearst.
42: Ronnie Lott (1981-1990)
One more resigned number and the best protective back in establishment history. Lott's awards need no presentation. He's the establishment chief with 51 capture attempts. He was named first-group All-Expert multiple times, both as a cornerback and a free security. He made the Star Bowl in nine out of his 10 seasons, missing just 1985. He was the spirit and head of the 49ers' underestimated protections during the '80s. He kept on playing in the wake of cutting off the highest point of his finger. A legend.
43: Jim Cason (1948-1954)
We need to return to the AAFC to see as the best 43, and he was really wearing No. 93 at that point, however you take what you can get on a number for certain sorry scraps. Cason was a double cross Master Bowler at wellbeing, single-wing halfback and dropkick returner in the early stages of the establishment. Cason drove the AAFC in 1949 with nine block attempts, adding up to 25 in his 49ers vocation. He likewise added up to 2,521 generally useful yards, for the most part as a returner.
44: Bruce Taylor (1970-1977)
A many individuals will pick Tom Rathman, the unyielding fullback from the brilliance days in the last part of the '80s and mid '90s, and it's difficult to contend too exhaustingly with that pick. All things being equal, nonetheless, I'll go with the Master Bowl cornerback and returnman from the mid '70s in Taylor — Rathman never made a Star Bowl. Eddie Pigeon, a wellbeing from the mid '60s, and John David Crow, a halfback from the last part of the '60s, make this a genuinely jam-packed number.
45: Johnny Strzyklaski (1946-1952)
Whenever troubles arise, the extreme cheat — in that Stryzkalski just wore No. 45 for one season, however on a powerless number, we'll take it. A unique 49er, Strzykalski had two times of marvelously useful hurrying, driving the AAFC in yards per convey in both 1947 and 1948. Then Joe Perry, future Corridor of Famer, showed up, and Strzyklaski changed over completely to even more a hindering player, succeeding there, as well. He wasn't simply a result of the more vulnerable AAFC, either — he made an Ace Bowl in the NFL in 1950 when the 49ers moved into that association.
46: Tim McDonald (1993-1999)
McDonald split his vocation bet
ween the Phoenix Cardinals and the 49ers, however it was in San Francisco that he won his Super Bowl ring. Playing solid wellbeing for a long time, McDonald was one of the top tacklers at his situation, keep 469 performance handles in San Francisco, 6th all-time (as per the assortment of official and informal numbers on Master Football Reference). McDonald and Merton Hanks are up there with any wellbeing team in establishment history.
47: Dicky Moegle (1955-1959)
The 49ers truly haven't at any point had a genuinely remarkable No. 47, so Marcus Cromartie, this might be your chance to make history! Until somebody truly has a special interest, we're going with Moegle, a security from the 1950s. He made the Ace Bowl as a new kid on the block in 1955 and completed his 49ers vocation with 20 captures. Ed Henke merits a note here too, however he likewise wore Nos. 75 and 89 and will appear later on this commencement.
48: Sammy Johnson (1974-1976)
Could I at any point count Aldon Smith, who wore No. 48 in his tenderfoot instructional course and preseason prior to changing to 99? No? Could I at any point count Busta Anderson or Shayne Skov, both of whom are wearing number 48 right now as they're attempting to make a program? No? Fine, I'll take Johnson, who had 809 yards from scrimmage in over two years in the group. It's him or John Woitt, who had a capture return for a score in 1969. These are a few sparse scraps.
49: Lord Cooper (1980-1986)
It seems like 49 ought to be passed down from one legend to another, with whoever has had a long, useful vocation with the 49ers wearing the pullover — in this way, for instance, Joe Montana giving the shirt to Jerry Rice and afterward to Bryant Youthful and Patrick Willis and presently Joe Staley, I assume. Easily overlooked details like "the rulebook" and "connection to one's unique number" keep that from occurring. Bruce Mill operator as an extraordinary obstructing fullback is a famous decision here, however I'll go with Cooper, a fullback and tight end from the mid '80s. He never fully paired his youngster season sums of 83 gatherings and 1,287 yards from scrimmage, yet he was valuable for a long time. Ralph McGill and Jeff Fuller, safeguards from the '70s and '80s, individually, get good notice gestures.
50: Riki Ellison (1983-1988)
Some great rivalry at this number! Ellison was an exceptionally impressive center linebacker for the group, with three Super Bowl rings, yet he's a long way from the main linebacker to succeed in this number. Ed Facial hair, Dave Washington, Gary Plummer and Derek Smith likewise set up exceptionally strong numbers in the pullover. None especially leap out over one more as mind-blowing, so I'm counting rings — it's a genuinely strong sudden death round.
Read Also : Is Alessia Zecchini still diving?
Last week, we started a commencement of the top players at each number in San Francisco 49ers establishment history. As the commencement to the beginning of instructional course proceeds, the commencement of uniform numbers likewise keeps, going to numbers 26 through 50.
These days, these numbers are principally relegated to running backs and protective backs, with linebackers and tight finishes being qualified for the numbers during the 40s also. While that hasn't forever been the situation, the principles accomplish pretty much correspond with the 49ers' period of strength during the '80s, so the present slideshow is loaded up with players who moved the ball on the ground or watched the auxiliary.
Who has the most interceptions in 49ers history?
This is additionally the slideshow with the most elevated level of resigned numbers. Four numbers in this reach have been resigned, with Lobby of Famers on the two sides of the ball addressed.
In contrast to the main bookkeeping sheet, where a functioning player in Colin Kaepernick danced to a genuinely simple success at his number, there are no walkovers for cutting edge players here. Have any semblance of Antoine Bethea or Eric Reid done what's needed to guarantee a number as their own after a couple of seasons? How about we go inside and out and find out.
26: Wendell Tyler (1983-1986)
Tyler was the running back before Roger Craig assumed control over the job all day for the '80s 49ers, making the Ace Bowl and winning a Super Bowl ring in 1984 and wrapping up with 3,112 hurrying yards for the establishment. Darryl Pollard, who began two seasons at cornerback and won his own Super Bowl ring in '89, and Imprint Roman, who played for four seasons at wellbeing during the 2000s, additionally merit considering.
27: Carlton Williamson (1981-1987)
Extreme, intense call here. Williamson was a double cross Master Bowler at solid security and part of the three protective backs the 49ers drafted in 1981, making ready for optional progress during the '80s. He completed his profession with 17 captures. His principal contest is R.C. Owens, known for his "rear entryway oop" association with Y.A. Bit in the last part of the '50s. I might be siding a lot with present day time players here.
28: Dana Lobby (1992-1994)
Not much to browse here. Dana Lobby won a Super Bowl ring as an incidental starter at security with the 49ers, completing his 49ers profession with four interferences. That is one more than Charles Cornelius, who additionally wore the number in 1979 and 1980, or Keith Lewis, who wore it from 2004 through 2008. Joe Cribbs is the greatest name to wear the number, however his greatest years were in Bison, and he ran for only 890 yards as a 49er. The street is clear for Carlos Hyde to take this one after a season or two.
29: Wear Griffin (1986-1993)
Griffin monitored the cornerback position for eight seasons, giving strong, if never Expert Bowl-level, play while heading to acquiring two Super Bowl rings. He completed his 49ers profession with 22 capture attempts. He likewise was the group's dropkick returner, however he just arrived at the midpoint of 9.0 yards per return on 74 dropkicks.
30: Bernie Casey (1961-1966)
Casey at last made the Genius Bowl the year after he left the 49ers, yet he seemingly merited it for two or three years of being a top objective for John Brodie. Casey drove the 49ers in getting for three seasons and piled up 4,008 getting yards on 277 gatherings. He took on a supporting role to Dave Parks when he joined the group in 1964, however the previous school high-hurdler stayed a valuable recipient for his whole 49ers vocation.
31: Donte Whitner (2011-2013)
The hard-hitting power of San Francisco's optional during the Jim Harbaugh-time, Whitner's vocation in San Francisco was brief however effective, making two Master Bowls in his last two seasons before he left in free organization. His short vocation settles on different protections potential decisions here, strikingly Chet Creeks and Zack Bronson, however Whitner's awards make him the pick.
32: Mel Phillips (1966-1977)
Life span or pinnacle esteem? That is consistently the inquiry while doing a rundown like this, and I'm constantly conflicted between potential outcomes. Phillips began as a security for over 10 years for the 49ers, through the great long periods of the mid '70s and the terrible long stretches of the last part of the '70s, recording 12 captures over his profession. His principal rivalry is Ricky Watters, who had three Genius Bowl a very long time as a running back from 1992 to 1994 — and remember about Norm Standlee, a star for the AAFC-period 49ers. This is a genuine difficult decision, yet I'll take the life span this time over just three years of Watters.
33: Roger Craig (1983-1990)
While Plain Butchery and Joe Perry are in front of him on the establishment surging yards list, Craig's worth as a recipient out of the backfield, too, saves him as my decision for most prominent running back in establishment history. Craig is one of just two players, alongside Lobby of Famer Marshall Faulk, to have 1,000 yards surging and getting in a similar season, with Craig being the very first to arrive at that all out in 1985. Include an All-Genius gesture in 1988, four Expert Bowl gestures and three Super Bowl rings, and it's astonishing that he hasn't had all the more a push to make the Lobby of Notoriety, just being a finalist once in 2010.
34: Joe Perry (1948-1960, 1963)
One more resigned number, which makes this choice a lot less complex. Perry was certainly not a unique 49er, yet participated in their second season in the AAFC. He held the establishment record for surging yards until Plain Butchery broke it, and was the very first NFL rusher to have consecutive 1,000 yard seasons, some time ago when they just played 12 games. He wasn't exceptionally strong or extremely tricky, he recently had blasting rate — they didn't time the 40-yard run then, at that point, however he could run a 9.7 100-yard run, consequently his epithet "The Stream". He resigned as the NFL's record-breaking forerunner in surging yards, which he held until Jim Brown broke it in 1963.
35: John Henry Johnson (1954-1956)
Johnson's a Lobby of Famer, yet this isn't generally so straightforward as you would suspect. Johnson just played for the 49ers for three seasons, piling up the majority of his hurrying yards with the Pittsburgh Steelers. They were a decent three seasons, making the Star Bowl in 1954, however that is a brief timeframe. Sufficiently it's to get him past any semblance of Larry Schrieber and Dexter Carter, however don't count out Eric Reid requiring this one day, on the off chance that he plays for quite some time.
36: Merton Hanks (1991-1998)
Hanks was something other than a gaudy pidgeon-necked score festivity. An Expert Bowl wellbeing for a very long time during the '90s — remembering an All-Star gesture for 1995 — Hanks was a ball-selling free security, keep 31 captures in the red and gold, and is one of the better draft takes in establishment history, having fallen right down to the fifth-round. He beats Tommy Davis, an excellent kicker and punter from the 1960s who is third on the 49ers' unsurpassed scoring list behind Jerry Rice and Beam Wersching.
37: Jimmy Johnson (1961-1976)
Another easy decision, Johnson's number was resigned by the group the year after he resigned in the wake of expenditure over 15 years as one of the top one man to another protectors ever. At the point when Paul Zimmerman set up the entire century group for Sports Delineated in 1999, he picked two open-field cornerbacks. One was Deion Sanders, and the other was Johnson. He frequently went completely unchallenged during games, so dreaded were his inclusion abilities. All things considered, his 47 captures remained as the group record until 1989.
38: Dashon Goldson (2007-2012)
Was Goldson a result of San Francisco's top protection, taking into account his lower level of play since he moved to Tampa Cove? It's conceivable, yet as a result of that framework, Goldson made two Master Bowls and an All-Genius gesture in his six years with the group. Quite possibly of the hardest hitter in the group, Goldson leaving his imprint with 14 block attempts and 278 handles, a significant number of them of the "bone-pounding" assortment. It helps that there's very little contest at the number.
39: Hugh McElhenny (1952-1960)
One more resigned number and one more Corridor of Famer. A dangerous, subtle sprinter, McElhenny had 4,288 hurrying yards in his 49ers vocation, averaging 4.9 yards per endeavor. He was a kick and dropkick returner too, and an emphatically better than expected one at that. The double cross first-group All Genius and six-time Star Bowler acquired 9,100 universally handy yards for the establishment and was named to the 1950s The entire Ten years Group and the 50th Commemoration All-Time Group. It's significant that Kermit Alexander had a strong vocation as a returner in the No. 39 pullover after McElhenny however before it was resigned.
40: Abe Woodson (1958-1964)
A genuine extreme one here. Woodson was a cornerback yet truly succeeded as a bring man back. He stays the establishment chief in dropkick return yards with 4,873 and is just behind Dexter Carter in all bring yards back. Couple that with 15 block attempts, five Ace Dishes and two All-Experts, and you have one of the most risky weapons of his day. He simply gets my pick over Ken Willard, a fullback who had 8,086 yards as a sprinter and beneficiary for the group in the last part of the '60s and mid '70s. Either pick works here.
41: Terry Kirby (1996-1998)
I was enticed to put Antoine Bethea here, yet couldn't legitimize doing it after only one season. Assuming he copies his exhibition from 2014, he'll bring this opening gives over. Up to that point, we're giving it to Kirby, who acquired 1,237 yards as a sprinter in the last part of the '90s for the establishment, serving generally as a difference in pace for Post Hearst.
42: Ronnie Lott (1981-1990)
One more resigned number and the best protective back in establishment history. Lott's awards need no presentation. He's the establishment chief with 51 capture attempts. He was named first-group All-Expert multiple times, both as a cornerback and a free security. He made the Star Bowl in nine out of his 10 seasons, missing just 1985. He was the spirit and head of the 49ers' underestimated protections during the '80s. He kept on playing in the wake of cutting off the highest point of his finger. A legend.
43: Jim Cason (1948-1954)
We need to return to the AAFC to see as the best 43, and he was really wearing No. 93 at that point, however you take what you can get on a number for certain sorry scraps. Cason was a double cross Master Bowler at wellbeing, single-wing halfback and dropkick returner in the early stages of the establishment. Cason drove the AAFC in 1949 with nine block attempts, adding up to 25 in his 49ers vocation. He likewise added up to 2,521 generally useful yards, for the most part as a returner.
44: Bruce Taylor (1970-1977)
A many individuals will pick Tom Rathman, the unyielding fullback from the brilliance days in the last part of the '80s and mid '90s, and it's difficult to contend too exhaustingly with that pick. All things being equal, nonetheless, I'll go with the Master Bowl cornerback and returnman from the mid '70s in Taylor — Rathman never made a Star Bowl. Eddie Pigeon, a wellbeing from the mid '60s, and John David Crow, a halfback from the last part of the '60s, make this a genuinely jam-packed number.
45: Johnny Strzyklaski (1946-1952)
Whenever troubles arise, the extreme cheat — in that Stryzkalski just wore No. 45 for one season, however on a powerless number, we'll take it. A unique 49er, Strzykalski had two times of marvelously useful hurrying, driving the AAFC in yards per convey in both 1947 and 1948. Then Joe Perry, future Corridor of Famer, showed up, and Strzyklaski changed over completely to even more a hindering player, succeeding there, as well. He wasn't simply a result of the more vulnerable AAFC, either — he made an Ace Bowl in the NFL in 1950 when the 49ers moved into that association.
46: Tim McDonald (1993-1999)
McDonald split his vocation bet
ween the Phoenix Cardinals and the 49ers, however it was in San Francisco that he won his Super Bowl ring. Playing solid wellbeing for a long time, McDonald was one of the top tacklers at his situation, keep 469 performance handles in San Francisco, 6th all-time (as per the assortment of official and informal numbers on Master Football Reference). McDonald and Merton Hanks are up there with any wellbeing team in establishment history.
47: Dicky Moegle (1955-1959)
The 49ers truly haven't at any point had a genuinely remarkable No. 47, so Marcus Cromartie, this might be your chance to make history! Until somebody truly has a special interest, we're going with Moegle, a security from the 1950s. He made the Ace Bowl as a new kid on the block in 1955 and completed his 49ers vocation with 20 captures. Ed Henke merits a note here too, however he likewise wore Nos. 75 and 89 and will appear later on this commencement.
48: Sammy Johnson (1974-1976)
Could I at any point count Aldon Smith, who wore No. 48 in his tenderfoot instructional course and preseason prior to changing to 99? No? Could I at any point count Busta Anderson or Shayne Skov, both of whom are wearing number 48 right now as they're attempting to make a program? No? Fine, I'll take Johnson, who had 809 yards from scrimmage in over two years in the group. It's him or John Woitt, who had a capture return for a score in 1969. These are a few sparse scraps.
49: Lord Cooper (1980-1986)
It seems like 49 ought to be passed down from one legend to another, with whoever has had a long, useful vocation with the 49ers wearing the pullover — in this way, for instance, Joe Montana giving the shirt to Jerry Rice and afterward to Bryant Youthful and Patrick Willis and presently Joe Staley, I assume. Easily overlooked details like "the rulebook" and "connection to one's unique number" keep that from occurring. Bruce Mill operator as an extraordinary obstructing fullback is a famous decision here, however I'll go with Cooper, a fullback and tight end from the mid '80s. He never fully paired his youngster season sums of 83 gatherings and 1,287 yards from scrimmage, yet he was valuable for a long time. Ralph McGill and Jeff Fuller, safeguards from the '70s and '80s, individually, get good notice gestures.
50: Riki Ellison (1983-1988)
Some great rivalry at this number! Ellison was an exceptionally impressive center linebacker for the group, with three Super Bowl rings, yet he's a long way from the main linebacker to succeed in this number. Ed Facial hair, Dave Washington, Gary Plummer and Derek Smith likewise set up exceptionally strong numbers in the pullover. None especially leap out over one more as mind-blowing, so I'm counting rings — it's a genuinely strong sudden death round.
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