Brandon Jacobs, RBs lead 49ers past Vikings 17-6
So much for all those questions about how Brandon Jacobs and San Francisco's retooled running back group might fit behind three-time Pro Bowler Frank Gore this season.
Sure seemed seamless in the preseason opener.
Jacobs, Kendall Hunter and Co. helped the 49ers pile up 260 yards rushing, sprinting past the Minnesota Vikings 17-6 Friday night in an impressive debut.
''It's always the first question,'' 49ers coach Jim Harbaugh said. ''Just human nature, you're trying to find out what's in another man's heart. Is he about us? Is he about himself? It has been a great group, from first-year guys to 10-plus year guys. I think it's been a good fit.''
So much for an NFC title game hangover, too.
Alex Smith tossed a 4-yard touchdown pass to Brett Swain on the opening possession, backup Colin Kaepernick ran 78 yards for a score on the next and San Francisco's season was off and running - literally.
Jacobs, Hunter and Rock Cartwright combined for 69 yards rushing on the first drive for San Francisco (No. 4 in the AP Pro32 rankings) while Gore watched from the sideline. Minnesota had only 82 yards rushing.
''We ran the ball really well that opening drive and all game,'' Smith said. ''Anytime you can do that it just makes our jobs a lot easier.''
The only real shortcoming for the Vikings' regulars came on the scoreboard.
Christian Ponder completed 4 of 9 passes for 80 yards, and Toby Gerhart ran for 31 yards for Minnesota (No. 29) in place of rehabbing starter Adrian Peterson.
The Vikings' offense showed promise, moving the ball with ease until settling for field goals of 39 and 26 yards by new kicker Blair Walsh in Candlestick Park's whipping winds.
''We would have liked to have come out with touchdowns rather than two field goals,'' Ponder said. ''But it was a pretty good start. There were a lot of positives. We moved the ball well against a really good defense.''
Randy Moss made his 49ers debut after sitting out last season, though it was hard to notice. The 35-year-old wide receiver, who signed a one-year deal with San Francisco, played sparingly and was never targeted.
In the first game at Candlestick since the overtime loss in the NFC championship game to the New York Giants on Jan. 22, the new-look 49ers started strong.
Jacobs, who signed a one-year deal with San Francisco after winning his second Super Bowl with New York, showed his strength in short-yardage situations - a missing element for the 49ers last season - by running for 3 yards on fourth-and-1 from San Francisco's 47 to extend the opening drive. He added a 23-yard sprint and finished with 31 yards on the ground. All four of his rushes led to a San Francisco first down.
The big, burly running back's transition has gone well.
San Francisco also received rushes of 19 yards by Cartwright and 14 by Hunter to set up Smith's short fade to Swain that finished off the first-team's only possession.
The 12-play, 84-yard drive lasted 7:21 and resembled the kind of grind-it-out fight that helped the 49ers to a 13-3 regular season last year and the franchise's first playoff appearance in a decade.
Anthony Dixon (46 yards) and rookie LaMichael James (15 yards) also chipped in late, too.
''I don't think they really need me to bounce outside here, we have other backs to do that,'' Jacobs said. ''I'm coming to play the ground game, the tough game, the 1970s-type game. That's the kind of football I want to play.''
For a team that relied so much on defense a year ago, the offensive blitz - even for the preseason - could go a long way to lift San Francisco's spirits.
Kaepernick, the former Nevada quarterback drafted 36th overall last year, kept a read-option on his second play from scrimmage for a 78-yard touchdown, sprinting down the right side almost uncontested.
He stiff-armed cornerback Chris Cook the final 20 yards, tossed the ball when he reached the end zone and flung his arms wildly in celebration after giving San Francisco a 14-6 lead. He threw for 40 yards on 5 for 9 passing and had 90 yards rushing.
''I felt very much at home when I saw that hole open up,'' Kaepernick said. ''I had a flashback there.''
Not a bad opening act.
Maybe the only major blemish for the 49ers came when linebacker Aldon Smith, the runner-up for AP Defensive Rookie of the Year, left in the first quarter with what the team called a bruised hip.
Harbaugh said he was still waiting to hear from the team doctor, but ''preliminary (results) looks like we'll be all right, looks like we'll dodge a bullet there.'' Smith walked out of the locker room without talking to reporters.
The other hiccup came when Carlos Rogers bit on an outside fake by Stephen Burton and thought he had safety help over the middle on Minnesota's first possession. Burton sliced back inside and caught a 52-yard pass from Ponder to put Minnesota at San Francisco's 24-yard line.
While the Vikings starters moved the ball often, they never found the end zone.
Gerhart, the 2009 Heisman Trophy runner-up under Harbaugh at Stanford, carried the bulk of the offense, including a 16-yard run to San Francisco's 12-yard line. But drives for Minnesota's regulars ended in field goals by Walsh, who is replacing longtime veteran Ryan Longwell.
''If we can turn these 3s into 7s, that's really going to be a big thing for us,'' Vikings coach Leslie Frazier said. ''That's something we talked about all offseason. We need to get those 7s.''
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