For Frank Gore, the hardest
part of a hard season was checking his cell phone
on game days. That's when Mom used to call.
Liz Gore had always checked in with some last-minute
coachin g. Remember to do this. You'd better not do
that.
"You know, just little things,'' Gore said Monday.
Liz Gore died of kidney failure Sept. 12, 2007. She was
46.
Her son kept checking messages anyway. He couldn't
stop. "Even after practice, I look at my phone,'' Gore
said.
That was his heartbreak of 2007. There was also
frustration: An injured ankle. A lousy offense. A
losing season.
Gore made the Pro Bowl as an alternate, but it felt
like a letdown.
And now?
Gore is smiling again. He's laughing easily and roaring
around the practice field — a happy new year.
Gore still misses his mom. "I'm dealing with it. I will
never get over it,'' he said. But everything else has
him revved up for '08.
Atop his list is new coordinator Mike Martz, who has
the offense sing ing in 11-part harmony. The 49ers' 425
yards of total offense against the Chicago Bears last
week marked their highest total in an exhibition game
since 1996.
"We have a new leader, man, a new leader on the ship,''
Gore said of Martz. "When he stands up in the room, and
you hear him talk, you know that he knows what he's
talking about. Everything is going to change this
year."
Gore said he likes this offense even better than the
one Norv Turner ran— the one in which Gore set
the 49ers' single-season record with 1,695 yards
rushing.
If he prefers Martz's system to Turner's, you can
imagine how much better he likes it than Jim Hostler's.
Last season, the 49ers looked like they were trying to
move a boulder uphill.
"It had to take the whole half to get across the
50-yard line,'' Gore recalled.
Hostler's schemes lacked imagination — but not
common sense. At least Hostler was smart enough to get
the ball to Gore as often as possible. Gore had 40.5
percent of the 49ers' net offensive yards, the highest
percentage in the NFL, according to Stats LLC.
San Diego's LaDainian Tomlinson was second at 38.6, and
Philadelphia's Brian Westbrook was third at 36.7.
The problem for Gore was that his carries became too
predictable. Defensive coordinators, as well as fans,
reporters and beer vendors, knew when Gore was going to
get the ball. Opponents lined up eight-man fronts and
dared the 49ers to pass.
"They can't do that anymore,'' Gore said. "Even when we
played Chicago, you saw other guys — guys you
never heard of — getting open and making good
plays. That's a big thing."
Gore noted that the 49ers racked up 37 points that
night even without receivers Arnaz Battle and Bryant
Johnson. Plus, he added, Josh Morgan is a rookie still
learning how to play in the NFL.
"When everybody is on the same page,'' Gore said, "it's
going to be crazy."
With the arrival of Martz, there are frequent
comparisons of Gore to Marshall Faulk, the
do-everything back who thrived with Martz and the
rollicking St. Louis Rams.
Gore is honored by the talk, but said he and Faulk are
"two different players, two different guys."
Martz, though, will probably use Gore the same way he
used the 2000 MVP.
"Any time you can take somebody like Frank and put him
out on the perimeter, or get him one-on-one with
someone, that is what you want,'' Martz said. "You want
to put Frank in an environment where he can get the
ball away from the pack because his open-field running
is pretty special."
Even after a so-called down year, Gore trails only
Tomlinson and Westbrook in yards from scrimmage since
2006. Gore's 921 receiving yards during that span rank
fifth among running backs and his 5.4 yards per touch
rank sixth overall, according to Stats LLC.
Gore did all that as a marked man.
So imagine what he can do as a Martz man.
"No matter what you did in this league, Coach Martz can
still make you feel like you have to prove yourself,''
Gore said. "That makes you want to play hard. I have a
couple of great years in this league, but if I'm
messing up, he's going to get on me. That's what I like
about him.
"I'm going to be all over the place. I'm going to have
fun."
(mercurynews.com)