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A floundering Arizona Cardinals team is just what the doctor ordered for the San Francisco 49ers to get back on track to a resounding 41-22 victory. After a six-game hiatus, Brock Purdy returned to toss three touchdown passes. George Kittle caught two, while Christian McCaffrey accounted for three scores.
The 49ers took control of the game from the jump, as return man Skyy Moore commenced the game with a 98-yard return to the one-yard line. And while Arizona quarterback Jacoby Brissett was slinging the ball to the tune of a record-breaking 47 completions, interceptions by 49ers defensive backs Deommodore Lenoir and Malik Mustapha, as well as an embarrassing 17 penalties by the Cardinals, ultimately sunk Arizona.
Per usual, every 49ers game this season has come at an injury cost. Robert Beal Jr. suffered a concussion, Tatum Bethune sustained an ankle injury, and Eddy Piñeiro tweaked a hamstring. All three players are expected to miss at least two weeks.
The schedule now turns to a primetime showdown at home Monday night against the Carolina Panthers, currently at 6-5 and in the mix in the NFC playoff picture. Led by Bryce Young, coming off a superb game last week in a win against Atlanta, the Panthers quarterback holds a two-to-one own-to-interception ratio, while skill position players Rico Dowdle and Tetairoa McMillan have had productive seasons.
Defensively across the board, the Panthers are essentially middle of the road in total, rushing, and passing yards allowed. Field position could be key with the 49ers in the upper echelon in return yards on kickoffs and punts, while Carolina is in the bottom tier in both.
Additionally, the field goal kickers will have an impact, given the uncertainty on the 49ers’ end and Carolina’s inaccuracy (nine combined missed field goals and PATs).
5 – UPTON STOUT
Whether it’s Renardo Green or Deommodore Lenoir, the 49ers’ defensive backs will have their hands full against Carolina’s most reliable receiver, Tetairoa McMillan. But an underrated matchup, presumably in the slot, will be Upton Stout versus Xavier Legette or Jalen Coker. Those receivers don’t have impressive season stats, but the measurables are noticeable, with both listed at 6’3″.
Stout has given up a ton of receptions, but has made a few plays as well. Playing the ball that leads to passes defensed should be Stout’s goal this week, but jump balls in which he’s in coverage could be challenging.
4 – CURTIS ROBINSON
With Tatum Bethune down for the near future, next man up at linebacker is Curtis Robinson, who will wear the green dot as the defensive signal caller. After posting 12 total tackles against Arizona, Robinson can pursue ball carriers effectively, drop in coverage when necessary, and has enough awareness to always be around the ball. Not the fastest pursuer and has missed tackles, but the message Monday night should be clear: prevent Rico Dowdle and Chuba Hubbard from hitting gaps or getting into open space on screens.
The tight end depth chart, collectively, does not have a ton of receiving yards, so minimizing that Carolina duo in the backfield is essential.
3 – RICKY PEARSALL
After a hot start to the season, Ricky Pearsall missed six weeks after a knee injury suffered in Week 4 vs. Jacksonville. He returned against Arizona, but only received two targets, one reception, and zero yards. Given the surprising news in recent days of the potentially imminent divorce between Brandon Aiyuk and the 49ers, Pearsall should feel even more incentivized to produce as a former first-round pick.
Carolina is likely down two starting linebackers this week, so that intermediate area where Pearsall excelled early in the season could be available for him and George Kittle this week. His first touchdown is on the table this week against a middling defense with a clear weakness behind the linebackers, in the center of the field.
2 – MATT GAY
The 49ers’ kicking game has been a clear strength ever since they cut ties with Jake Moody. With Eddy Piñeiro in the fold, the point after touchdown attempts were occasionally wonky, but his field goal attempts were excellent, connecting on 22 in a row. After a hamstring injury against Arizona that will likely keep Piñeiro out until after the bye, former Washington kicker Matt Gay steps in after being signed this week.
Gay has an accuracy clip of 84%, a career high of 58, and is perfect on his point-after-touchdown attempts. The problem with Gay is consistency from 50 yards and beyond. Of his six kicks missed this season, five have been from 50+.
If Kyle Shanahan is in field goal range on the fringes of 50 yards, more fourth-down attempts could be on the table. Gay is just keeping the kicking seat warm until Piñeiro returns, but kicks this week could be unpredictable by default.
1 – CHRISTIAN McCAFFREY
When the 49ers traded for Christian McCaffrey for four future draft picks four years ago, it was met with some media skepticism from football pundits. His run with Carolina was solid, accounting for 50 touchdowns in 64 career games with two All-Pro selections mixed in. Since joining San Francisco, his production and usage rate have been all-world (despite an injury-plagued 2024 season).
As for this season, CMC is currently averaging 24 touches a game, 11 total touchdowns, and leading the NFL in scrimmage yards. The ultimate dual threat and perfect security blanket for 49er quarterbacks.
Carolina does not stop the run or pass at an elite level, and with the previously mentioned injuries to linebackers, expect another heavy workload for McCaffrey. In a primetime game against the team that drafted him, a touchdown at minimum is expected, but a Herculean performance would not be shocking.
The opinions within this article are those of the writer and, while just as important, are not necessarily those of the site as a whole.
The San Francisco 49ers are preparing for their Week 12 contest against the Carolina Panthers on Monday at Levi’s Stadium in Santa Clara, California.
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Transcript provided by the San Francisco 49ers Communications staff.
Opening…
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Transcripts…