He'll be working for his
fourth offensive coordinator in four years, but
what's that mean for Frank Gore? Gore became the
first rookie in 15 years to lead the 49ers in
rushing under Mike McCarthy in 2005, became a Pro
Bowl starter the next year under Norv Turner, then
had another productive season last year under Jim
Hostler. But now that Mike Martz is in charge,
Gore says the best is yet to come.
Gore admitted this spring that it's not the optimum
situation for a running back of his pedigree and skill
to have to start over again and learn a new offensive
system with a new coordinator, which is something Gore
has had to do in each of his four seasons since
entering the NFL with the 49ers.
But there is starting over, and then there is starting
over with a guy such as Martz running the show.
"It's tough," Gore said. "But working with a guy who's
had a lot of success in this league, that's been a head
coach in this league, it make you really want to work
for him and listen to him. Because you know that he
really knows what's going on."
Gore, like most of San Francisco's offensive players,
never had that feeling last year with Hostler, who was
unable to build upon - or even maintain, for that
matter - the momentum the offense carried into 2007
after a year of rising promise under Turner's
direction. Instead, the San Francisco attack took a
nosedive south, finishing last in the NFL in eight
offensive categories with historically bad numbers.
But while the 49ers were finishing last in the NFL in
total offense, last in scoring and last in the eyes of
analysts everywhere, Gore was quietly fighting through
an ankle injury that forced him to miss one game and
hampered him in others to assemble a fine season -
particularly considering he was the only thing the
offense really had going right for it the entire year
and truly was a marked man every time he stepped on the
field.
Gore doesn't see that happening now that Martz is at
the controls.
"I mean, this is going to be a fun offense," Gore said.
"We're going to be spreading the ball around. We have a
lot of sets, doing two backs, motion everybody out, we
go empty (backfield). This year, we won't see eight,
nine men in the box no more. I like it like that, you
know?
Yes, Frank, we know.
Even with defenses stacked to stop him with multiple
defenders crowding the line because they had absolutely
no respect for San Francisco's anemic passing game,
Gore still finished fifth in the NFC with 1,102 yards
rushing last year, averaging a respectable 4.2 yards a
pop. He also led the 49ers in receptions with 53 and
produced 1,538 yards from scrimmage.
This came a year after Gore had captured the attention
of defensive coordinators throughout the NFL with a
breakout 2006 season during which he led the NFC with a
franchise-record 1,695 yards rushing and led the 49ers
with a career-high 61 receptions.
With the progress both he and the offense made during
Turner's one season as 49ers offensive coordinator -
Turner left the team in February of last year to become
head coach of the San Diego Chargers - Gore boldly
stated goals of challenging for NFL records and
breaking the 2,000-yard rushing barrier in 2007.
After the humbling experience of last season in
Hostler's extremely rocky debut as a NFL coordinator,
Gore uses no numbers in talking about his goals this
season. But that's not to say his goals aren't big.
"I don' t want to put no numbers out there," Gore said.
"I just want to go out there, have fun, play hard and
try to win some games, hopefully go back to the Pro
Bowl. And that's what this offense is about. It's going
to be a fun offense."
And, just like he has been in the past two incarnations
of San Francisco's offense, Gore will be the main man
in that attack.
"The potential to build that offense around Frank Gore
is pretty exciting," Martz said. "He's really a
complete player, and that's hard to find in this league
anymore. I think you can put him as the centerpiece and
build around that."
Gore looked like the centerpiece during the 49ers'
spring minicamp earlier this month, lining up as the
single back in a variety of formation and slashing
through the line with the ball cradled in his chest.
But that was just the half of it. Gore also could be
seen going in motion to leave an empty backfield,
lining up in the slot and in wing positions along the
line, and even splitting out wide in some formations.
In other words, he's not just going to be a running
back in the Martz offense. He's also going to be a
pass-catcher.
And Gore, for one, is all for that.
"I'm touching the ball more in the passing game and
getting out in the slot running routes and showing
people I can run routes, showing them I can catch the
ball very well running routes out of the backfield,"
Gore said. "People don't know I can do that. It's going
to be a surprise to a lot of people."
The natural comparison observers make is that Gore is
Martz's new version of Marshall Faulk, and naturally
that's all right with Gore. Gore already has spoken
with Faulk several times, with Faulk offering Gore help
any time he needs it, even saying he was willing to
meet up with Gore when Gore is training at the 49ers
facility in California or at his home in Miami.
Gore is soaking up whatever tips he can get from Faulk,
because that's the prototype for the position he's now
playing.
"(Martz) will use me in the same way," Gore said. "All
the success that he's had with other guys, like
Marshall … I want to be a guy that one day
(Martz) can go tell other people that he once coached
Frank Gore."
(sfo.scout.com)