SANTA CLARA – Alex Smith spoke last in the media tent on Friday. Here’s what he said, courtesy of the 49ers.
[WR] Randy [Moss] was saying it’s a work in progress, the offense, the passing game, and fitting in with you. Do you feel that way too?
“For sure, I guess I kind of always feel like it is. You’ve never arrived. You’re never there and we certainly aren’t there. You’re constantly striving for perfection, striving to get better and with the NFL, with the way it is today, the team will never be exactly the same. Things are constantly changing. You’re going to have new faces coming in, young and old and you adjust. It’s a whole new identity. It’s totally unique in itself, especially in the perimeter unit when you add new faces. It takes a little bit.”
Have you and Randy done anything special off the field, go to dinner, anything like that?
“You mean like a date? [laughter]
To build that chemistry?
“No one-on-one date. We’re not there just yet. We’re still more on the courting stage [laughter]. No, we’ve hung out a lot at OTA’s and team functions and stuff. During the offseason we spent some time together, but we’re not exclusive [laughter].”
Is it intimidating at all to be a quarterback with Randy Moss?
“Yeah, for sure. At first it definitely can be. As a guy you grew up watching, a veteran that does so much, the great thing about being around Randy is he makes keeps it light. He makes it fun to play out there. So that vanished pretty quick. He’s a great communicator out there. A guy that played that much, he sees things really well, communicates really well. So, it’s really been great working with him. Honestly I’ve learned a lot.”
Is your impression of him now different than what it was before?
“I guess I didn’t have an impression before besides the player he was and the special player he was, didn’t know what to think. I heard some from [Lions QB] Shaun [Hill]. Shaun Hill played with him and had nothing but good things to say. So other than that I didn’t really have an impression.”
At the end of last year, you talked about how this offense hasn’t scratched the surface of what it could be. Do you have an idea of where that surface is now, is it even more know because of the player’s you’ve added?
“I just think, no question, we’ve gotten better. Without a doubt, I mean naturally that part of it, I just think that this offseason we have gotten better. Not just in the sense that we have a year under our belt, but I really feel that personnel-wise we’ve gotten better. We’ve gotten more depth. But yeah, I think the next steps, the biggest one is consistency. Just doing that day-in and day-out, play after play after play, game-in and game-out. There’s always going to be ups and downs, but just not the fluctuation that we had last year at times.”
Is it going to look differently, schematically?
“For us the goal is to always be really balanced. We don’t want to be one-dimensional. We don’t want to be predictable. That’s not going to be us. We’re constantly going to be doing things a little different and whatever it takes to win. However we field the best matchup that week, the best way to attack a scheme, those types of things. It’s hard to put a finger on it.”
Did you throw more in this last year than how many other years?
“Tough to say, I learned a lot last year, for sure, both from teammates and especially coaches. Learned a lot just going through those experiences as well, getting to the postseason, playing in those types of games. Certainly you kind of just have to go through that in order to grow in that aspect. But I’ve learned a lot from a lot of the people I’ve been around, coaches and players. Been fortunate to have been around a lot of great coaches. But anytime [QB coach] Geep [Chryst], G-Ro [offensive coordinator Greg Roman], certainly coach Harbaugh, I mean the guy played the position that long. I’ve got a lot of guys that I’ve tried to soak up information from and learned quite a bit last year.”
You have some fast receivers on this team besides Moss. Is it challenging or different to throw the deep ball to him?
“Speed is a factor. The other thing certainly is his size and his ability to play the ball in the air. Those are things, I mean we talked about throwing together and learning. It is a process. I think that’s part of it. Certain guys are better at different things. They have better strengths, different strengths. So, no question those are things you just continue to work on.”
You said after the NFC Championship game, the best thing was to come back and light a fire. How long did that burn in your gut?
“I think that feeling is still there. As much as we all talk about pressing delete on last year, I mean obviously a lot of excitement going to the playoffs and the 13-3 and things like that and getting a playoff win. But I don’t think that anyone is pressing delete on the taste in our mouth. Working that hard to get that close to your goal and not get there is definitely, I think even more bitter than some of the losing seasons that we’ve been a part, that I’ve been a part of. So, no question, that is still there. Whether or not it’s a good thing, we’ll see.”
This is your second season with Greg Roman. Will you be adding new things or going deeper into his playbook?
“A better question for him. The first thing I’d say is both, get better at what we’re doing. Some things are going to stay the same, let’s get better at them, more consistent. At the same time let’s take steps in different directions. We’ve got a large catalog of film and things to look at from last year and really look at, ‘Hey what are we going to do better, do we need to scratch some things.’ Things like that.”
How curious are you about the battle for the backup job behind you? You know those guys well, you’ve been at meeting with them. How’s that going?
“Yeah, I’ve spent a lot of time, I mean we spend a ton of time together. They’re all very, they’re all good guys. We’ve got a great group in that quarterback room. I’ve said this before, this is by far this is the most talented group I’ve been a part of, as far as top to bottom and depth. Four guys that I really feel like can play at a high level. You just don’t see that. And they all have different strengths, they’re all extremely bright and they work extremely hard. That’s the thing, so no question. I’ve got the best view in the house I feel like. But no question, I feel like those guys push me. All three of those guys push me every day they come out and they all have a great mentality. When they step in there, they all go after it and it’s competitive and it’s great to have in the quarterback room. I don’t think you’d want it any other way.”
You seem to have a lot of depth at wide receiver. Jim said you guys have five number one receivers, you have the rookies too. At some point in camp, do you just sort of have to narrow it down to really build a relationship, a chemistry, a rapport with only a couple of those guys?
“Luckily that’s not my job. I do think that’s a tough job, this year more than ever. A bunch of talented guys, a lot of depth. But no, for me I’m not thinking about that. I really step into the huddle and no matter who’s in there I feel confident that those guys are going to know what they’re going to do, they’re going to win. I think that’s the great thing about having this problem is that’s what the season’s going to be like. Last year was a great testament to that and how many guys we had to play outside. The next guy’s in and he’s got to go. That’s the great aspect of football I think. And I think that’ll happen obviously as touches goes and the reps just kind of work themselves out. As you move on towards camp and you move into the heart of camp that stuff kind of takes care of itself.”
This is going to be your first full training camp with Michael Crabtree. What can you guys do with that full camp that you haven’t been able to do in the past?
“He had such a great spring and summer. I think just keep doing what he’s doing, what we’re doing. I felt like he had a great offseason. And I think just continue to work hard. The guy does so many things, he can do so many things. You need a guy in that sense to just keep getting better. Just keep getting, like I said, more consistent and just continue to strive to get better.”
How much did getting so close last year, is that motivation this year?
“I kind of answered with the other question. Certainly it’s still there, you still have that taste. But, it’s a brand new year. How can I say it? None of us are dwelling on what happened last year. You learn from it and move on. That’s the great nature of the NFL I think. There are no easy games. Everybody’s in it every year. Unlike any other professional sport, this is the sport I really feel like year-in and year-out, it’s anybody’s. Whoever can put it together. There’s so much parody across the league as far as talent. So, you have to earn everything. You have to start over. And it really starts today.”


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So much for Mr. Crabs getting a full training camp. M/M reporting he limped from practice 20 minutes early. Here we go again.
Stop it
He’s fine so save the Drama.
Did Alex take some public speaking courses during the offseason? Those were really smooth, articulate answers. No “you know”, “no doubt”, “for sure” verbal stutters.
Also, “There’s so much parody across the league as far as talent.” Good to know Alex sees the humorous side of the NFL. ;-)
Ha ha, parody :)
Thoughts to ponder:
When Trent Dilfer was here, AS made it a point to say how helpful he was because AS finally had somebdy to talk with. AS seems to be the type of person who needs that from people he works with as opposed to just keeping it quiet. He gets better with mastery more so than most, and to master a system, AS needs to talk a lot with what happened. Some guys are more quiet like
MC hasn’t been the most vocal of guys, and if he isn’t with AS, that could be a big reason why the 2 have never really connected.
AS needs guys like RM (can’t believe I wrote that), and maybe MC doesn’t/isn’t that type of person. At least to date he hasn’t been.
DS
I’m curious, how do you know these things about Alex Smith?
Nick
I titled the post “Thoughts to ponder” so I don’t know, only hypothesizing.
To be fair, I hypothesized GB doesn’t win game 1 in the playoffs months before it was known who their opponent is, and that Terrel Brown sucked and Spencer is better. So, take what you will from it.
I just remember AS speaking very glowingly of Trent Dilfer. And we have all heard that MN didn’t know QB’s. When Turner left, AS was kinda by himself. And some people solve problems/improve by talking it over. Nobody to talk with, slows down the learning process considerably for these people. Thus we can explain AS great leap from year 1 to 2 (got Norv), and the rather slow sometimes stagnant improvement from years 3-last year fter AS lost that guy to talk with (Norv).
Why would AS be so excited to have TD as a teammate if he was getting this need fulfilled by the coaching staff? It isn’t because Trent is such a good QB. It must be something else. Agree?
And I am only guessing about MC. But what little I know is that MC was in the hoodie back row guy at meetings and was pretty quiet. Not a perfect match for a QB who needs to talk (I’m guessing) with, and to understand his WR. We all know that AS needs to understand the system completely (more so than most QB’s) before his true skills are unleashed. But, how can you understand everything if your leading WR ismore the quiet type in meetings? Unless AS is a mind reader, he/you can’t.
AS is very analytical. He majored in economics, which last I checked is heavy in math. Math is very analytical, so that is why I say he is analytical. And is why he needs to understand everything to understand something. Not all people are like that (I guess MC isn’t). AS is.
And if MC is to remain a Niner long term, JH and staff need to work at bridging the gap in how the 2 learn. Because naturally, it doesn’t work.
You can’t have a #1 WR who is silent and non-communitive and keeps things private about stuff of a relevant nature with a QB who needs to know.
AS sounds more confident than any time in the past – as far as I can remember. Perhaps that pitching coach and shrink really helped him out.
By the way, I didn’t sense anything negative in what AS said about MC. I don’t think they have issues.
You don’t have to have issues between 2 people for things not to work. You only need to have differences that are to wide to cross.
PS I was more thinking what AS said in TC 2010, when he clearly was not happy MC wasn’t practicing. Said something like “I need to get in sync with my teammates.” Then they played Seattle, MC sucked. Out of sync with AS. AS in the first half of that year throwing to MC was horrible. Throwing to everybody else he was good, bordering on very good. I think AS knew what he needed, and told us. And he was right.
…I get your point DS……WR’s that go the extra mile to talk/communicate do help out the QB more…
Crabtree is kinda weird – he is a whispering diva………
T.O – was a loud diva
J.R – was a balanced diva
OMG,
1st Day of TC and you want to bring up the “Diva” Take?
Wayyyy too much time on your hands. Or are you just bored?
Because there’s plenty more substance to talk about.
First of all, great interview, Grant. Good questions, good answers. You can see the maturity and experience he’s gained…very good stuff. I’m excited about the offense…as he said, the deepest, most talented QB group since he joined the team. Solid OL that just gained the experience of a 3-time Pro Bowler in Davis. A very talented receiving corps…the deepest, most-talented backfield in many years. Put it all together and there’s reason to be excited…I’m anxious to see it all unfold.
What a difference having a competent coach, being in the same system, and getting some shiny new toys in the WR corps make. Alex sounds like a strong and confident QB. I can’t wait for him light up opposing secondaries this season!
Is there any doubt that Alex will have his best season this year?
Nope
Thanks Jack
Yes. ALex will get preseason to prove whether he’s got anything more than what we saw last year.
My guess is Alex is waived before the end of the season.