O'Sullivan leading 49ers in the right direction even if was just
preseason
By Andy Lopusnak, Bay Area Sports Drive Magazine
August 29, 2008
It's been an eventful preseason for the San Francisco 49ers offense. The
team racked up the most total yards in a preseason game in over a decade
when the 49ers compiled 425 at Chicago. San Francisco has also had the
most points in a game, 37 also against the Bears, in almost twenty years. This
should seem like fantastic news for an offense that was dead last in the
NFL last season in nearly every statistical category. However, it is still the
preseason when teams worry more about getting video of players than the
scoreboard or yardage total.
After all, the New England Patriots, the first team in NFL history to go
16-0 in the regular season, went winless this preseason (0-4), while the
49ers were a muffed punt return away from posting just their third winning
preseason in the last 14 years.
Nonetheless, if the 49ers can even show a glimmer of this offensive
fortitude come Week One of the regular season, the 2008 year could be very
exciting. An unexpected surprise for the upcoming season is the emergence
of little-known J.T. O'Sullivan as the team's starting quarterback. There was
much hype over Shaun Hill getting the job. Hill was one of the lone
highlights offensively last season when he completed 68.4% of his passes
with five touchdowns to just one interception while going 2-0 as a starter
at the end of an abysmal year that featured four different starting QBs.
Some felt that the arrival of Mike Martz, the team's fifth different
offensive coordinator in five years, might be the spark former number-one
overall selection Alex Smith needed. Neither happened as O'Sullivan's
on-the-field performance outshined them both.
With the starting quarterback gig wrapped up, O'Sullivan didn't even play
in last Friday's exhibition finale, a 20-17 loss to San Diego, but in three
contests he completed 62.5% of his passes (20-of-32) for 20-of-32 for 351
yards with two touchdowns and two interceptions for a 91.8 passer rating.
He averaged 10.6 yards per pass attempt while Smith and Hill barely
had half as much per attempt in the preseason..
"(O'Sullivan) probably got the better command between the three (QBs)," said 49ers head coach Mike Nolan on naming O'Sullivan the
team's starting QB. "He played with consistency and we moved the ball well
as a unit. We scored points, we did the things that I think our really
important playing that position. I'm very confident that J.T. [O'Sullivan]
is at the point where he's our best man for the job right now."
O'Sullivan enters his seventh NFL season in 2008 and has played for seven
different teams, but only got some NFL action last year (in his sixth NFL
year), completing just 13-of-26 for 148 yards with an touchdown and two
interceptions as a member of the Detroit Lions. Yes, he was there with
Martz, but most speculated that at best O'Sullivan would be the backup or
emergency QB because of his familiarity with Martz's complex offense.
A graduate of nearby UC-Davis, O'Sullivan isn't the first former Aggies QB
to play for the 49ers. Mike Moroski played in 15 games for San Francisco
in 1986 and threw two touchdowns and three interceptions. The team drafted
Scott Barry in the sixth round of 1985, but he didn't make the squad even
though the QBs coach that year was former UC-Davis coach Paul Hackett.
Kevin Daft, the QB that O'Sullivan replaced at UC-Davis, was briefly with the
49ers in 2001.
Little Division II UC-Davis ties to the Bay Area run even deeper than the
49ers. The area's local Arena Football team, the San Jose SaberCats, also
has a former UC-Davis alum at the QB helm. Mark Grieb is one of the best
in his sport and is a two-time ArenaBowl Most Valuable Player. This past 2008
AFL season, Grieb led the indoor league with 100 passing scores and took
his team to the ArenaBowl, that league's championship game, for the fourth
time in seven seasons. Since the SaberCats started their run as a dynasty in
the spring of 2002, the 49ers haven't even come close to a playoff berth.
Maybe this will change with a former UC-Davis Aggies quarterback leading the
Niners this season. After all, San Francisco's new offensive coordinator,
Mike Martz, does love former AFL players like Kurt Warner, who led the St.
Louis Rams to a Super Bowl win in his first full NFL season. Packing the
bags for Tampa in February for Super Bowl XLIII seems unlikely but
anything's possible and Mike Martz has proven this in the past. Now it's
J.T. O'Sullivan's turn.
See game photo gallery
>>