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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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Second Look: St. Louis Rams

Posted Dec 20, 2010



Call it a rivalry game, a divisional game, or an unofficial playoff game – just make sure to call it important.

For both the San Francisco 49ers and St. Louis Rams, Sunday’s second meeting of 2010 will leave one team with a great chance of winning the NFC West crown. The other… not so much.

St. Louis controls its playoff destiny. The 49ers do not.

If the Rams win their final two contests, a home tilt with the 49ers and road game in Seattle, the NFC West and a home playoff game at the Edward Jones Dome is all theirs.

If the 49ers win their next two games, coupled with one Seahawks loss, a near decade-long playoff drought will end with the 49ers hosting a playoff game at Candlestick Park even with a 7-9 record.

Needless to say, a lot is on the line when both sides meet. But the 49ers are hopeful to repeat a performance they put on six weeks ago when they defeated St. Louis 23-20 at home. Troy Smith threw for a career-high 356 yards and led the 49ers to a hard-fought win against a competitive Rams squad in his fourth NFL start.

Whether Troy or Alex Smith starts this week is anyone’s guess. Mike Singletary did not name a starter after the 49ers’ ninth loss of 2010. However, both Smiths have had success against St. Louis. Alex Smith threw for 222 yards and one touchdown in a 28-6 49ers win to close out the 2009 season.

Each quarterback attempted 28 passes in their respective starts against the Rams without an interception.

The same type of play will be needed from either of signal caller against a St. Louis defense that allows 337.4 yards per game.

On Offense

Sam Bradford has done well in becoming the face of the Rams organization. However in recent weeks, the rookie quarterback has shown his age. He’s thrown five interceptions and zero touchdowns in his past three games after producing 11 touchdowns and one interception during a seven-game, mid-season stretch.

Bradford was sacked three times last week in a 27-13 loss to Kansas City and at one point had completed only 9-of-27 pass attempts. He finished 21-of-43 with two interceptions and no touchdowns. Bradford attempted a career-high 42 passes previously against the 49ers and completed 30 of them for 251 yards with one touchdown in a game the Rams never led.

With few weapons on the perimeter for Bradford to utilize in the passing game, Pro Bowl running back Steven Jackson remains the biggest threat in St. Louis’ offense. He’s totaled the ninth most rushing yards in the NFL this season (1,148) and has five touchdowns – the most by any member of the Rams.

Though he’s mostly been successful in 2010, Jackson was bottled up by the Chiefs last week, averaging 3.5 yards on 19 carries. Jackson also caught five passes for 37 yards out of the backfield, and has 39 catches for the season, third-most on the team. The sixth-year back rushed for 81 yards against the 49ers already this season and scored on a 13-yard touchdown run.

St. Louis will surely need more production from other offensive playmakers to be victorious against the 49ers. Danny Amendola has emerged as the leading wideout with 75 catches for 627 yards and three touchdowns this season. Other receivers Brandon Gibson and Laurent Robinson had drops last weekend against Kansas City. However, it should be noted that the duo combined for 10 catches for 96 yards in the November meeting at Candlestick.

Similar to the inconsistent play on the perimeter, the Rams could certainly use an improved performance from the offensive line. The unit was responsible for two of the team’s five false-start penalties at home last week. They also allowed 3.0 sacks to the 49ers previously and have given up 30 sacks for the season.

On Defense

James Laurinaitis has been a stud for the Rams defense all season long, but that doesn’t mean the second-year linebacker hasn’t had his moments of struggle. Fortunately for Laurinaitis, one of those moments (pictured right) was negated by a holding penalty.

The inside linebacker has been responsible for covering 49ers Pro Bowl tight end Vernon Davis, who in turn, has made several big plays against the middle of St. Louis’ defense.

Laurinaitis leads the Rams with 98 tackles, 12 more than the next closest player, safety Craig Dahl. He’s critical to a run defense that allows 113.1 rushing yards per game, but also gave up a season-high 210 yards to Kansas City last week.

Dahl led St. Louis with 13 tackles the first time the teams met. The fourth-year pro has two interceptions, two behind cornerback Bradley Fletcher, who leads the team. Opposite of Fletcher is veteran Ronald Bartell, who has 52 tackles but no interceptions this season.

St. Louis’ secondary has benefitted from the underrated pass rush duo of James Hall and Chris Long, who have 8.5 and 7.5 sacks respectively. Both picked up sacks on Troy Smith back in November to go along with three more sacks provided by Laurinaitis, defensive end C.J. Ah You and former 49ers safety Michael Lewis.

Known for bringing pressure, Steve Spagnuolo’s defense has 12 different players with a sack this season.

The unit will have to dramatically cut-down the big plays they allowed to the 49ers in the first meeting if they want to be victorious the second time around. The 49ers averaged 9.8 yards per pass play and gave up eight passing plays that went for 20-or-more yards.

Big plays will surely be needed once more in an even bigger game for both teams. It comes down to who supplies more of them, the 49ers or the Rams.

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