FOXBOROUGH, Mass. — When Jimmy Garoppolo arrived as a rookie quarterback in New England in 2014, it didn’t take long for his teammates to give Tom Brady’s new backup a nickname.
“What a lot of us used to call him is a ‘gamer,’” Patriots veteran safety Devin McCourty recalled this week. “From the first time he took snaps in the preseason, he’d be making plays – whether it’s staying alive in the pocket, whether it’s making a great throw.
“I would just say he was a guy who somehow made big plays.”
Two seasons later, Garoppolo got his chance to show off those skills, starting two games in 2016 while Brady was serving his four-game suspension as part of the “Deflategate” scandal.
Once the player assumed to be Brady’s heir apparent in New England, Garoppolo now returns Sunday to face his former team for the first time since being traded to San Francisco (3-3) in 2017.
No longer the wide-eyed youngster waiting his turn, he’ll be back on what he called his “old stomping grounds,” fresh off making it to his first Super Bowl as a starter last season. He’ll also be trying to add to the recent struggles of a Patriots team that is now being led by Cam Newton and finds itself below .500 through five games for the first time since 2001.
New England (2-3) hasn’t started 2-4 since Bill Belichick’s first season in 2000, when the Patriots went 5-11.
“It’s an exciting week. Get to go back to where it all started for my NFL career,” Garoppolo said. “Can’t wait until Sunday.”
Belichick said he sees a quarterback on film that has gotten better since the trade.
“He led the 49ers to the NFC championship last year … so I don’t think there’s any question about his skill level and what he’s been able to accomplish and what their team’s been able to accomplish,” Belichick said.
Garoppolo struggled earlier this season in losses to Arizona and Miami and missed two games because of an ankle injury. But he is coming off a three-touchdown performance in last Sunday’s win over the Rams.
“We’ll be ready for his best,” Belichick said. “I’m sure we’ll get it.”
During Super Bowl week in January, as Garoppolo was preparing to face the Chiefs, he was asked about his connection with Belichick, and what texting with his former coach was all about.
“Just congratulations, things like that. ‘Keep things going,’” Garoppolo recalled on Super Bowl opening night in Miami. “Coach and I, we had a great relationship. Great guy. Very honest. Very straightforward. I always appreciated him for that.”
Garoppolo effectively managed a run-heavy offense en route to the Super Bowl last year, but couldn’t deliver in the end against the Chiefs.
Would Belichick have preferred to have kept him in Foxborough? Absolutely, but that’s not how it worked out.
“Everybody here had a lot of confidence in him,” Belichick said of Garoppolo. “It’s one of those situations where you’re just not able to keep all the players based on how the system is set up. It’s understandable.”
TOUGH CRITIQUE
Newton said this week that he is still far from playing his best football.
“I just haven’t been good,” he said. “I haven’t matched enough good plays together for my liking. That’s what it comes down to.”
Newton sat out the Patriots’ 26-10 loss at Kansas City on Oct. 5 after testing positive for COVID-19. In his first game back last week against the Broncos, Newton rushed for a season-high 76 yards.
But he struggled in the passing game, completing 17 of 25 passes for 157 yards, no touchdowns and two interceptions.
He said he needs to be better making reads and with his placement of the ball to receivers.
“I know what I’m capable of,” he said. “My standard is extremely high and I haven’t been meeting it.”
REMATCH
49ers Coach Kyle Shanahan will face off against a Belichick-coached defense for the first time since the Super Bowl following the 2016 season, when Shanahan was offensive coordinator in Atlanta. The Falcons broke out to a 28-3 lead before losing in overtime. Shanahan also lost to New England as an OC in Washington in 2011 and in Houston in the 2009 season, both by 34-27 scores.
FILLING IN
San Francisco’s offense took a hit when running back Raheem Mostert went down with a high ankle sprain last week that will sideline him for a few weeks. Backup Tevin Coleman is already out, leaving the bulk of the work to Jerick McKinnon and undrafted rookie Jamycal Hasty.
Hasty got his most extensive action yet last week when he had nine carries for 37 yards and helped close out the win over the Rams.
“I just like he came in the game and the moment wasn’t too big for him,” Shanahan said. “When he came in and gave us a little bit of a spark and helped us out.”
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