The 49ers are doubling down for the second half. It’s a boom-or-bust play

The 49ers are doubling down for the second half. It's a boom-or-bust play

Heading into the second half of a season where seemingly nothing has gone right, the 49ers are doubling down.

At 4-4, but with a Super Bowl window that the team believes is still wide open, the Niners made no major additions at the NFL trade deadline, adding only a depth defensive tackle (for a seventh-round draft pick two years from now).

Considering the well-documented holes and deficiencies on the roster and the seemingly favorable trade market for buying teams, the decision to effectively stand pat was a surprise.

What’d be even more surprising is if the 49ers are proved right in a few weeks.

Lynch believes he has all the right ingredients to make this the best meal in 30 years of Niners football.

Does anyone outside the facility have confidence that’s what will be plated come winter?

Or, to be more direct: Do the Niners really believe that’s what’s in store for them in the second half?

That’s a lot to put on the inflamed Achilles tendons of reigning NFL Offensive Player of the Year Christian McCaffrey. Remember when he was supposed to play in Week 1 after skipping most of training camp? Well, week-to-week turned into month-to-month and continent-to-continent, as after a trip to Germany for some not-available-in-America treatment, McCaffrey is set to debut on Sunday in Tampa Bay.

Will the Niners throw caution to the wind and have McCaffrey resume his 2023 workload (a league-leading 417 touches last season) in Tampa Bay or will he be part of a backfield committee?

Moderation might be prudent for the player’s longevity, but is it the most prudent tactic for winning games? He might not admit it publicly, but we already know Shanahan’s answer there.

In September, I wrote that McCaffrey’s injuries would define the Niners season. They certainly put a pall on the campaign’s first half, as teams pressed Niners wide receivers with aplomb, playing man-to-man defense against a passing game that prefers to see zone looks, knowing the Niners lacked the appropriate counter, a pass-catching running back.

I see no reason why the season’s definition will change in the second half.

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