(08-30) 16:35 PDT -- Frank
Gore is as giddy as a kid with a new 160-gig
PlayStation 3 with DualShock 3 controller.
He's talking about the new playbook devised by
offensive coordinator Mike Martz and an offense that he
thinks will take maximum advantage of the 49ers'
options.
"I love it, man," he said. "I've got a great feeling
about it."
No longer, he feels, will opponents stack the box with
everybody but the quality-control guy in their fever to
stop the 5-foot-9, 217-pound running back. Last year,
the 49ers' passing game worried nobody except the
49ers.
"You can't do that now," he said. "When we played
Chicago, you saw guys you never heard of getting open
and making good plays. Our second group was going
against their best defense and doing what they wanted
to to them."
The 49ers scored 37 points that night, their highest
total in a preseason game since 1989. That's a sharp
contrast to last year when, under coordinator Jim
Hostler, the 49ers were last in the NFL in yards per
game - nearly 40 yards worse than the second-worst
offense.
"It would take us a whole half to cross the 50-yard
line," Gore said.
Martz has completely repainted the picture. According
to Gore, his offense gives players more flexibility to
change their assignments on the fly
depending on what the defense does. "This gives us more
options," he said. "It makes the game easy again."
Of course, Martz also walked in the door with instant
credibility, based on his track record in St. Louis and
Detroit.
"You saw in the past with your own eyes what his
offense could do," Gore said. "We've got a new leader
on the ship. When he stands up in the room, you know he
knows what he's talking about. Everything's going to
change this year."
He appreciates that Martz is an equal-opportunity
critic in meetings.
"No matter what you have done in this league, he makes
you feel like you still have to prove yourself," he
said. "If I mess up he's going to get on me. That's
what I like about him. He treats everybody the same."
Martz might be able to unleash more options than the
49ers could last year, but the top one remains Gore.
"I haven't seen anything he can't do," Martz said.
"He's what we thought he'd be and more. He doesn't make
mental errors. ... He's the kind of player to build an
offense around."
Gore is an excellent receiver as well as a runner,
prompting comparisons to Marshall Faulk, the
record-setting all-purpose back for Martz's Rams. Martz
said last week it's unfair to compare them; he didn't
want to slight either one by doing so.
Then he proceeded to compare them: "They can both catch
the ball and they're outstanding runners, but they're
just different. Frank is a more physical and powerful
back inside, and Marshall is very elusive."
Gore has learned not to set goals based on the
accomplishments of other elite players. Shortly after
finishing the 2006 season with a franchise-record 1,695
yards, he announced he was taking aim at Eric
Dickerson's NFL record of 2,105 yards in 1984.
He barely got halfway, with 1,102 in 2007. He broke his
hand in preseason when he caught it in a teammate's
pads during a blocking drill. An ankle injury against
the Giants in the sixth week forced him to play at
"80-85 percent" almost the rest of the season, he said.
The death of his mother, Liz, to kidney disease the
second week of the season was an even more devastating
and lasting setback.
"It was very tough," he said. "After practice I'd look
at my phone and (wouldn't) see a phone call from her.
... I'll never get over it, but I'm getting better."
(sfgate.com)