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  • Thu., Aug. 08, 2013 6:00PM - 9:30PM PDT 49ers vs. Broncos -The game will mark the 35th preseason contest between the two teams, with Denver holding an 18-16 edge over San Francisco. During last year’s preseason matchup in Denver, the 49ers defeated the Broncos 29-24.
    -This will mark Denver’s first preseason trip to Candlestick Park since 2009 when the 49ers edged the Broncos 17-16.
  • Fri., Aug. 16, 2013 5:00PM - 8:30PM PDT 49ers at Chiefs -The 49ers and Chiefs have met nine times in the preseason. San Francisco leads the all-time series 6-3.
    -San Francisco has won the past two preseason contests. In the last meeting, during the 2003 preseason, the 49ers won 24-6 at Kansas City.
  • Sun., Aug. 25, 2013 5:00PM - 8:30PM PDT 49ers vs. Vikings -It marks the eighth time the 49ers and Vikings have met in the preseason.
    -The 49ers lead the all-time preseason series 4-3 and are 2-0 against the Vikings at home during the preseason.
    -The 49ers have won the past two contests, which were both played at Candlestick Park, a 17-6 win last season and a 15-10 victory in 2010.
  • Thu., Aug. 29, 2013 7:00PM - 10:30PM PDT 49ers at Chargers -It marks the 27th consecutive year in which the two teams have met in the preseason.
    -San Francisco leads preseason series 21-20 after the 49ers won, 35-3, at Candlestick Park last preseason.
    -It marks the 23rd preseason matchup in San Diego, with the Chargers holding a 16-8 series advantage at home.
  • Sun., Sep. 08, 2013 1:25PM - 4:25PM PDT 49ers vs. Packers In what will mark the team’s final season at Candlestick Park, the 49ers open the 2013 campaign by facing playoff teams from 2012 in four of the first five weeks, starting with the Green Bay Packers on September 8. This marks the second consecutive season that the 49ers and Packers have met in Week 1. Last season, San Francisco defeated Green Bay in two contests, 30-22 on the road in Week 1, and 45-31 at home in the NFC Divisional round of the playoffs. The 49ers overall record against the Packers is 28-34-1, including 17-11-1 at home.
  • Sun., Sep. 15, 2013 5:30PM - 8:30PM PDT 49ers at Seahawks San Francisco travels to division-rival Seattle to face the Seahawks in prime time on Sunday night. The overall series is tied at 14 games apiece, but under head coach Jim Harbaugh, the 49ers are 3-1 versus Seattle. The teams split the 2012 series, with each team winning on their home field.
  • Sun., Sep. 22, 2013 1:25PM - 4:25PM PDT 49ers vs. Colts On September 22, San Francisco will host the Indianapolis Colts for the first time since 2005. The 49ers are 18-24 overall against the Colts, including an 11-10 record at home. The Colts defeated the 49ers, 18-14, in the teams’ last meeting in Indianapolis, in 2009.
  • Thu., Sep. 26, 2013 5:25PM - 8:25PM PDT 49ers at Rams The Niners will have a short week as they will travel to St. Louis for a Thursday night, NFL Network showdown with the Rams on September 26. The overall series is split at 62-62-3, and 31-31-1 on the road. Both contests last season went into overtime, with the Rams winning, 16-13, in St. Louis, and the teams tying, 24-24, in San Francisco.
  • Sun., Oct. 06, 2013 5:30PM - 8:30PM PDT 49ers vs. Texans San Francisco faces the Houston Texans on Sunday night October 6, in front of a national audience on NBC. It marks the third prime time appearance through the first five weeks of the regular season for the 49ers. This will be only Houston’s second trip ever to Candlestick Park in the regular season, and their first since the 49ers won 20-17 in overtime, in 2005.
  • Sun., Oct. 13, 2013 1:25PM - 4:25PM PDT 49ers vs. Cardinals The second game of the back-to-back home-stand will be on October 13 vs. the Arizona Cardinals. San Francisco owns a 26-17 overall record against the Cardinals, including a 15-8 mark at home. In the 2012 regular season finale, San Francisco won 27-13, clinching the NFC West Division title for the 19th time in franchise history. The Niners have compiled a 7-1 record versus Arizona over the past eight games.

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Manningham Displays All-Around Skills

Posted Oct 11, 2012



He hasn’t been volunteering a ton of personal information since joining the San Francisco 49ers this offseason, but Mario Manningham was in a sharing mood during his Thursday press conference from 49ers headquarters.

In fact, the ex-New York Giants wide receiver who is set to face his former teammates this weekend saved his best material as he walked off the podium.

“My favorite color is red,” Manningham said, “in case y’all wanted to know.”

The free agent addition had plenty of quality sound bites when speaking to a mix of Bay Area and national reporters.

In addition to declaring his favorite color, the 6-foot, 185-pound wideout, explained his ability to catch deep sideline passes with excellent body control comes from Manningham’s front-yard childhood football games in Warren, Ohio.

Manningham said the 6-on-6 games had strict rules, too. Each player had to catch the ball with two feet inbounds and not one foot like in most pickup games around the country.

The early emphasis on body control has carried over into the fifth-year wideout’s promising NFL career. It clearly helped his 38-yard sideline catch in last season’s Super Bowl victory for the Giants.

“You had to get two feet in – if you didn’t have two feet in, you weren’t getting in,” Manningham explained. “That has a little to play with it.”

When asked to guess his playing age during those cramped football contests, Manningham had the whole room chuckling after he explained, “I was knee-high to a duck.”

Because of those early football games, Manningham has developed into one of the best route-runners in the business. In his first year with the 49ers, the former New York third-round pick has caught 19 passes for 186 yards. Last week, Manningham added his first touchdown catch of his 49ers career in a 45-3 win over the Buffalo Bills.

“Mario is a very talented receiver,” offensive coordinator Greg Roman said. “He’s got a great feel for the game. He understands leverage; he understands how to get open. He’s got really, really, extremely good feet and he’s done nothing but a great job with catching the ball for us.”

But that was just the half of it.

“He’s fast,” Roman continued, “straight line speed. He can get in and out of cuts really quickly and he also knows how to set up routes. Mario is a guy with a great attitude, shows up to work every day and gets his job done. He’s done a great job. I think Mario is a guy we can keep evolving with. I think he’s a very talented football player. He’s got a real tough mentality.”

Manningham’s first touchdown with the 49ers was all a result of out-thinking an unsuspecting Bills defensive back.

“I kind of set him up,” Manningham said of his 10-yard touchdown catch. “I made him think I was going inside. He fell for it, so I made sure I came out my route flat and Alex (Smith) threw a good ball. I was pretty wide open on that.”

Manningham’s done a solid job in route-running, but he’s also added a new dimension to his game with the 49ers – running the football on well-designed reverse runs.

“I like the reverses,” said Manningham, who has picked up 57 yards on two carries so far this season. “In four years (with the Giants) I had two reverses. In four months I’ve had two reverses here.”

Running the football is something the new 49ers wideout continues to master, but Manningham’s ability to control his body down the boundary is constant. Sideline catches while tapping toes or dragging toes, all while maintaining balance was evident from Manningham’s early practice sessions with his new club.

“We’ve seen him practice, just starting in our OTA’s, make some really, really great catches on the boundary,” Roman explained. “And then it’s highlighted by one of the biggest plays ever in the Super Bowl, Super Bowl history was that catch he made. Which was pretty remarkable if you really go back and look at it. It was something. He knows where he is on the field and he’s very talented.”

Manningham also knows the personnel he’ll face this week.

Besides trading texts with close friends Ahmad Bradshaw and Hakeem Nicks (who returned to practice on Thursday on a limited basis), Manningham know what he’ll see in Giants cornerbacks Corey Webster and Prince Amukamara.

Manningham said the familiarity has made preparation easier this week.

“I know the DBs, how they play, how they press, how patient they are at the line,” Manningham explained. “It makes it a little bit easier.”

New York enters Sunday’s matchup allowing an average of 261.4 (t-22nd in the NFL) and will face a 49ers team coming off its first 300-yard passing game of the season.

Manningham said he’s spoken to his defensive teammates about the offense they’ll face this Sunday.  The former Giants wideout is more focused on out-performing his former defensive backs whichever way they choose to defend him and his new teammates.

“I don’t know how they’re going to play,” said Manningham, who caught 160 passes for 2,315 yards and 18 touchdowns in four seasons with New York. “It doesn’t matter, they can press, play off. I feel like we have a great offense no matter what they do.”

The biggest takeaway Manningham shared with his new teammates about his former colleagues was the mindset the visiting team will take into Candlestick Park this Sunday.

Teams from the NFC West are a combined 10-0 at home to start the 2012 season. It marks the first time in league history that a division is unbeaten or untied at home through five weeks.

“I know what type of game we’re about to play on Sunday,” Manningham said. “I know how they get started. I know how they roll. Believe me, when they come here, they’re going to be ready to play. I know they’ll be ready to play.”

So will the 49ers.

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