Kurtenbach: Offensive creativity was demanded from Kyle Shanahan in a brutal NFC Championship Game. We’re still waiting

Kurtenbach: Offensive creativity was demanded from Kyle Shanahan in a brutal NFC Championship Game. We’re still waiting

If ever there was a moment for Kyle Shanahan’s offensive genius to display itself, it was Sunday.

The Niners were down to their fourth-string quarterback, journeyman Josh Johnson. Then they were back to third-string Brock Purdy, only Purdy didn’t have a working elbow.

That’s a problem if you’re trying to throw a football.

The 49ers had everything on the line in the NFC Championship Game, and everything was going wrong for them.

No quarterback, and a game that was slipping away — and yet the 49ers kept running the ball the way they always do, right into a Philadelphia defense that committed at least 10 men to stopping the run every snap; right until the clock hit 0:00 and the season ended.

The 49ers had 164 yards of total offense Sunday, with more than half of it coming from Christian McCaffrey running into a sea of green jerseys that knew he was getting the ball.

I’m not saying that Shanahan calling every exotic play he can imagine — whether it had ever been practiced or not — would have changed the game’s outcome.

No, it probably would have increased the Eagles’ margin of victory.

But there was a zero percent chance the plays Shanahan did call were going to win the Niners the game, and that was apparent in the moment.

Shanahan didn’t throw anything interesting against the wall, so how could any of it stick?

The kitchen sink is still attached to the wall, and I’m yet to hear a good explanation why that’s the case.

A downcast San Francisco 49ers quarterback Brock Purdy (13) sits on the bench as the final moments tick off in a 31-7 loss in the NFC Championship Game the Philadelphia Eagles, Sunday, Jan. 29, 2023, at Lincoln Financial Field in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. (Karl Mondon/Bay Area News Group)

Credit to the Niners’ players. They went down swinging. In the case of Dre Greenlaw and Trent Williams, literally. You can’t question the professionalism or toughness of anyone on that team. The football gods conspired against them Sunday, and they took it on the chin.

I wonder what they could have done if Shanahan decided to improvise just a bit.

There was little to no creativity in the offensive game plan with Johnson or after his injury. We didn’t see Samuel take direct snaps. We didn’t see Trent Williams line up as a fullback. We didn’t see anyhting bold, or interesting, or unique. The 49ers just ran it for two yards per play, every play, as the clock on their season ran out.

The 49ers played defense on offense. Was it all so the defense could be in a better position to score?

That’s an indefensible position. That’s a passive forfeit.

Nothing to lose, everything to gain. And the 49ers opted to do… nothing.

Nothing interesting, that is. There were end-around runs and attempts at misdirection, but the Niners did nothing that the Eagles had not seen on film and prepared to stop. This was not the 2019 NFC Championship Game, where the Niners only needed to pass eight total times to win the game.

Shanahan didn’t have a quarterback, but he didn’t fully scrap this original game plan. He just pared it down.

All the while, the Niners’ small chance of reaching the Super Bowl was being pared down, too.

San Francisco 49ers quarterback Brock Purdy (13) looks pained while walking the sideline after getting injured in the first quarter against the Philadelphia Eagles in the NFC Championship Game, Sunday, Jan. 29, 2023, at Lincoln Financial Field in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. (Karl Mondon/Bay Area News Group)
San Francisco 49ers quarterback Brock Purdy (13) looks pained while walking the sideline after getting injured in the first quarter against the Philadelphia Eagles in the NFC Championship Game, Sunday, Jan. 29, 2023, at Lincoln Financial Field in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. (Karl Mondon/Bay Area News Group)

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