Instant analysis of 49ers’ deflating 13-3 loss to Seahawks in bout for No. 1 seed

SANTA CLARA – The 49ers’ road to Super Bowl LX now must begin, well, on the road.

Saturday night’s 13-3 home loss to the Seattle Seahawks means the 49ers won’t swipe the NFC’s No. 1 seed from their opponents. Instead, the 49ers will open the playoffs as a wild-card team, most likely as the No. 6 seed and possibly against the defending Super Bowl champion Philadelphia Eagles.

Regardless of the 49ers’ seed, they can only hope quarterback Brock Purdy escaped serious injury from a hit with 1:51 remaining, when clobbered in the back by Derick Hall and then leveled by Leonard Williams. Purdy walked off on his own power, but his final play summed up how inept the 49ers’ offense was against arguably the NFL’s top defense.

In Week 1, the 49ers overcame a 10-7 fourth-quarter deficit to claim a 17-13 win in Seattle, with Jake Tonges making a go-ahead touchdown grab with 1:34 left. In Week 18, they would have to try battling back from a 13-3 deficit, and the goal-line theatrics instead came from Seattle’s defense early in the fourth quarter.

That’s when a Purdy pass bounced off Christian McCaffrey’s hands and into Drake Thomas’ hands at the Seattle 3 for a comeback-crushing interception. Such was life against the league’s second-stingiest scoring defense, even if the 49ers had averaged 35.6 points per game over their six-game win streak.

Purdy finished 19-of-27 for 127 yards with three sacks, while Seahawks counterpart and 2023 49ers backup Sam Darnold was 20-of-26 for 198 yards with no turnovers.

McCaffrey ran for a season-low 23 yards on eight carries, and he had 34 yards on six catches. Seattle’s running back tandem of Kenneth Walker III and Zach Charbonnet combined for 173 yards.

If the Los Angeles Rams (11-5) lose at home Sunday to the Cardinals (3-13), then the 49ers (12-5) will be the No. 5 seed and open at the NFC South winner, either the Tampa Bay Buccaneers or the Carolina Panthers, the latter of whom would advance if the Atlanta Falcons lose to the New Orleans Saints.

The Seahawks (14-3) — who, like the 49ers, entered Levi’s Stadium on a six-game win streak — get the NFC’s only wild-card bye. Should the 49ers advance next week, they could be in Seattle for a divisional-round rematch if they’re the lowest remaining seed; Green Bay is locked in as the No. 7 seed.

The 49ers didn’t score until 66 seconds before halftime, via Eddy Piñeiro’s 48-yard field goal. Neither left tackle Trent Williams (hamstring) nor wide receiver Ricky Pearsall (knee, ankle) suited up, and although Kittle returned from a one-game absence, he had just 9 yards on his first four catches before a 20-yarder early in the fourth quarter.

Not only is the 49ers’ defense seemingly in a freefall entering the playoffs, starting linebackers Tatum Bethune (groin) and Dee Winters (ankle) left injured Saturday night. That will intensify speculation on just how quickly Fred Warner might be able to join their playoff charge if cleared from his Oct. 14 ankle surgery.

The 49ers’ deficit grew to 13-3 with 14:15 remaining when Seattle settled for a 31-yard field goal. Earlier on that drive, the Seahawks converted a third-and-17 play, not via pass but rather a 19-yard Walker run that was stopped by defensive lineman Yetur Gross-Matos, who nearly recovered an opening-drive fumble in the backfield.

Missed tackles, explosive plays and penalties could have doomed the 49ers to a bigger first-half deficit, but the Seahawks failed to score on a goal-to-go opening drive and Jason Myers missed a 47-yard field goal before making a 45-yarder.

Myers failed again on a 26-yarder off the right upright with 2:20 remaining to tease a last-chance 49ers rally in what could be their final home crowd this season.

Seattle settled for a 45-yard field goal from Myers and a 10-0 lead after Ji’Ayir Brown broke up a potential 27-yard touchdown catch by Jaxon Smith-Njigba at the goal line. Earlier, Darnold scrambled for a third-down conversion to the 49ers’ 31, and in the process, he avoided Winters, whose right ankle got stepped on by left tackle Josh Jones.

Turned away on fourth-and-goal on their first drive, the Seahawks took a 7-0 lead on their next possession, with Charbonnet’s 27-yard, third-and-2 touchdown run as he cut back around the left edge past Ji’Ayir Brown and avoided Malik Mustapha inside the 5. That possession started at the 49ers’ 35-yard line, compliments of linebacker Garrett Wallow’s 15-yard facemask penalty on the Seahawks’ 10-yard punt return.

The 49ers’ offense went 3-and-out on its opening two possessions, with those two punts equaling Thomas Morstead’s total the previous three games combined. They breached midfield on their third series, only for Purdy to get engulfed in the pocket on a fourth-and-1 throw that fell incomplete to Kyle Juszczyk from the Seattle 39.

The 49ers’ defense opened with a goal-line stop on Seattle’s opening drive, with Darnold sailing a fourth-down pass wide of Cooper Kupp against rookie Upton Stout’s coverage. Deommodore Lenoir’s pass-interference penalty against Smith-Njigba in the end zone teed up the Seahawks for first-and-goal from the 1, but then came a Tatum Bethune sack and then solid tackles on Charbonnet runs by Jordan Elliott, Keion White and Brown.

(Visited 1 times, 1 visits today)

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *