2 Winners and 6 Losers from the 49ers loss to the Seahawks

2 Winners and 6 Losers from the 49ers loss to the Seahawks
Niners Nation Niners Nation

When you get your butt kicked in the fashion the San Francisco 49ers did on Saturday night against the Seattle Seahawks, it should be easy to acknowledge who the better team was. A 35-point loss was going to happen with Fred Warner, or if John Lynch made a trade at the deadline, or any other excuse you’ve seen since the loss.

The Niners shot themselves in the foot so many times that they needed to reload. That didn’t help their case as a short-handed underdog on the road. We’ll talk about the loss all week and how that’ll shape the 49ers’ path moving forward, starting with the Winners and Losers from Saturday night.

Winners

Trent Williams

The Seahawks played with a level of physicality that few players offensively were prepared for. Trent Williams was. He had multiple takedowns in pass protection and, while he allowed a quarterback hit, looked like the one player holding his own and not physically overwhelmed upfront.

Dee Winters

Winters was one of the few defensive players who matched Seattle’s physicality. He had nine tackles, five stops, three tackles for loss, two of which were “hustle stops,” and also had a pair of quarterback pressures, including a quarterback hit. Winters was flying around as you’d want from your WILL linebacker. He cut down on his missed tackles this time around, only having one. Winters was targeted four times in coverage and allowed 20 yards. It was the game the 49ers needed from Winters.

Losers

Special teams

Rookie Jordan James and backup nickel Chase Lucas took bad routes on the opening kickoff, leading to a touchdown. The punter and kicker did their jobs on Saturday night, but Skyy Moore wasn’t able to get anything going, nor was Brian Robinson as a returner. You can’t give up a score in the playoffs.

Ricky Pearsall

Pearsall got bullied by the Seahawks’ secondary. He couldn’t haul in a third-down target after a diving attempt. That was as open as he has been all night. There were multiple reps in which Pearsall was jammed for multiple seconds during the play. He had a difficult time shaking free from Devon Witherspoon.

As the game progressed, Pearsall was looking to avoid contact. On the 4th & 2 play when the quarterback was sacked, Pearsall ran into Demarcus Robinson. It was an ugly outing from the Niners’ second-year wideout.

Spencer Burford

Mike Macdonald put a bullseye on Burford. His players took full advantage of Burford “getting out over his skis” as a blocker. Purford allowed a team-high six pressures, including a quarterback hit. Whether it was 1-on-1 or defending the different games Macdonald ran at him, Burford looked like a player who had no business being on the field.

Marques Sigle

It was like Austen Pleasants all over again. You look competent in limited action one week, and turn around only to show your true colors the next. Sigle had six tackles and a stop, but...