Wilson’s progress at QB puts him way ahead of Kaepernick

Here is my Wednesday column explaining why Russell Wilson is better than Colin Kaepernick.

SANTA CLARA – You have to admit, Russell Wilson looked like a miniature combination of Joe Montana and Steve Young Monday night against the Saints – Montana’s cool demeanor and precision from the pocket, Young’s explosive ability to make plays on the run. Wilson has been that Montana-Young combo most of this season, his second in the league.

Kaepernick’s combo this season hasn’t been nearly as good. Sure, sometimes he looks like Brett Favre. But, other times he looks like a guy doing a bad impression of Alex Smith – the sacks, the inability to convert third downs at a respectable rate, the not throwing to receivers who are open, plus a bunch of delay of game penalties and fumbled snaps sprinkled in here and there. Call those Kaepernick Specials.

Last season, Kaepernick seemed better than Wilson — Kaepernick went to the Super Bowl and Wilson didn’t. But this season, it is not close. Wilson is way better.

Here are five reasons why:

1. Accuracy. Wilson has improved in this area and Kaepernick has regressed. This season, Kaepernick is completing 57.8 percent of his passes – stink-o-rama. Wilson is completing 64.9 percent of his passes – great-o-rama. When Montana was Wilson’s age, Montana completed 63.7 percent of his passes. Try to get your head around that one.

2. Elusiveness. This really isn’t Kaepernick’s strength. He’s fast when he gets his long stride turning, but he’s not elusive in the open field or in the pocket. Elusiveness always has been one of Wilson’s best traits. He runs circles around defenders, like Young used to do, and he sure runs circles around Kaepernick.

3. Improvisation. Another trait Wilson shares with Young. When Young was scrambling, he always knew when to pass, when to run and when to pump fake. These things were like breathing for him, and they’re like breathing for Wilson. This season, Kaepernick has not been a good improviser. He’s been mechanical, like Alex Smith.

On Wednesday, Jim Harbaugh gushed to the Bay Area media about Wilson’s ability to improvise: “(He has) that feel that only so many quarterbacks have had that have ever played the game – to extend plays.”

“Does Kaepernick share that ability?” a reporter asked Harbaugh.

Harbaugh paused and said, “I think they’re both very talented quarterbacks.” He could have said, “Yes, Colin shares the ability to improvise.” But he didn’t. Harbaugh didn’t give Kaepernick praise he doesn’t deserve. Finally, Harbaugh added, “They both throw really well from the pocket, too.”

4. Passing from the pocket. Even though Wilson is a peanut and Kaepernick is a giant, Wilson is a better pocket passer. On Monday Night when the Seahawks scored 27 points in the first half against the Saints, Wilson completed 10 of 13 passes from the pocket – 77 percent. Wilson sees the whole field and goes through more reads during his passing progressions than Kaepernick who tends to stare at his first read like someone lip-reading a menu and, if the first read isn’t open, Kaepernick just runs.

5. Composure and preparedness. This is where Wilson has separated himself from Kaepernick the most. Wilson already carries himself like Peyton Manning. Wilson understands NFL defenses, understands situational football and understands how to act like the face of a franchise. Kaepernick forgets how many timeouts he has and runs out of bounds when he has to stay in bounds – boneheaded stuff. Kaepernick rejects being the face of the franchise. Look at any of his press conferences.

And ever since Kaepernick’s last three plays of the Super Bowl when he failed at the goal line, he has failed under pressure. This season, he has lost to every team he’s faced likely to be in the playoffs, and in fourth quarters his QB rating is 51. When he’s behind, his QB rating is 58. Compare that to Wilson, whose fourth-quarter QB rating is 93 and whose QB rating while losing is 94. Like Montana, Wilson is cool under pressure. But Kaepernick is unsure of himself when things don’t go his way or things get tight.

I’m throwing in a bonus reason why Wilson is better than Kaepernick, and it has nothing to do with either quarterback.

BONUS REASON: Scheme, the thing the 49ers hate talking about.

The Seahawks’ offensive scheme perfectly fits Wilson’s skill-set. Their offensive coordinator, Darrell Bevell, has done a fabulous job orchestrating packages of plays for Wilson – read-option runs, play-action passes, quick passes, screen passes, rollout passes and deep passes.

The 49ers’ offensive scheme does not fit Kaepernick’s talents, it fits Alex Smith’s talents – choose the best possible play before the snap, manage the game and don’t turn the ball over. The Kaepernick Offense was supposed to revolve around the Pistol and read-option, but the 49ers pretty much scrapped all that back in Week 3 because Frank Gore couldn’t run out of it. The Niners went back to their 2011 base offense instead of creating something new for Kaepernick.

Maybe scheme is the reason Wilson has become so much better than Kaepernick. Kaepernick is not just any quarterback. He’s Harbaugh’s personal project, the selected one, and Harbaugh doesn’t appear to know how to coach him. If Kaepernick played for the Seahawks and Wilson played for the 49ers, maybe Kaepernick would be the better player right now.

Grant Cohn writes sports columns and the “Inside the 49ers” blog for the Press Democrat’s website. You can reach him at grantcohn@gmail.com.