Trent Green was cleared to drive this
week, so he joined his Chiefs teammates on the sideline Sunday. Out
on the field, Damon Huard was obviously happy to have him riding
shotgun.
Getting advice and encouragement from Green and even suggestions
on which plays to run, Huard and the rest of the Kansas City Chiefs
played almost flawlessly in a surprising 41-0 rout of San Francisco
(1-3).
``Trent's the best,'' said Huard, a journeyman who'd hardly done
anything but carry a clipboard for six years until Green was knocked
unconscious with a severe concussion on Sept. 10.
``He's always got a smile on his face. He's always had some great
advice and something to offer. It was nice to have him out there
today.''
Huard hit 18 of 23 passes for 208 yards and two touchdowns,
missing only two of his first 15 tosses as the Chiefs (1-2) roared
to a 24-0 halftime lead en route to their first shutout in almost
four years.
The nearly airtight pass protection helped. While compiling a
133.3 passer rating _ 158.3 is perfect _ Huard was hardly ever
touched or even hurried by a San Francisco defence which had rung up
12 sacks in its first three games.
``What a great veteran offensive line,'' Huard said. ``There are
so many guys that make my job easy. And our defence _ are you
kidding me?''
The revamped and obviously improved Kansas City defence held Alex
Smith to 92 yards passing and the 49ers to 93 yards rushing. In
their first three games, the 49ers had given up only four sacks.
But the Chiefs took Smith down five times.
``It's pretty discouraging,'' said 49ers coach Mike Nolan.
``That's a pretty tough loss. I would say that's the most difficult
loss in the year and a half that I have been here. I didn't see lack
of effort. I saw a lot of poor play.''
Green, who is out indefinitely, was not shy in calling plays.
``He's a great play-caller,'' said coach Herm Edwards. ``It was
great all week to have him around. He's one of our leaders on our
team.''
Dante Hall scored Kansas City's final touchdown on a 60-yard punt
return, giving him 11 touchdown kick returns in his career.
Larry Johnson rushed for 101 yards and two touchdowns for the
Chiefs, who handed the 49ers their first shutout since 2004 and only
their second since 1977.
The Chiefs' defence has not allowed a touchdown in two straight
games.
``We just came out here and played all-out and played with our
heart,'' said rookie defensive end Tamba Hali, who had one of the
sacks. ``We're going to let teams know that we have a good
defence.''
Tony Gonzalez passed a couple of NFL milestones. The 10-year
veteran caught a 14-yard toss during the Chiefs' second touchdown
drive and moved past Ozzie Newsome for second all-time among NFL
tight ends with 663 receptions. He also passed Jackie Smith for
third all-time in career receiving yardage at his position.
Huard hit Hall with a 13-yard touchdown pass in a 10-play,
73-yard drive on the Chiefs' first possession.
Then the 49ers gave a preview of things to come on their first
four plays, following up a sack and a delay-of-game penalty with
Frank Gore's fumble. Jared Allen recovered and it led to Lawrence
Tynes' 22-yard field goal.
San Francisco cornerback Shawntae Spencer had a terrible day. He
made his first bad mistake when he was flagged for pass interference
against Hall in the second period, a 19-yard penalty followed by
Johnson's one-yard TD.
His second big mistake came one play after Smith, who had thrown
115 passes this season without an interception, got picked off by
Sammy Knight.
Eddie Kennison got behind the third-year cornerback on a fly
pattern and beat him down the sideline for a 34-yard touchdown pass
and a 24-0 lead.
Maurice Hicks fumbled the second-half kickoff and Jarrad Page
recovered for the Chiefs and Tynes converted it into a 49-yard field
goal.
Johnson's two-yard TD run put the Chiefs on top 34-0 early in the
fourth.
It was the first shutout for the Chiefs defence since Dec. 1,
2002.
``I think it was embarrassing. It was definitely frustrating,''
said Smith. ``We need to learn from this.''
Notes: It was the 19th shutout in Chiefs history. The 49ers had
not been shut out since Sept. 26, 2004 in a 34-0 loss at Seattle.
The last time before that was 7-0 Oct. 7, 1977 against Atlanta. ...
First-and second-year quarterbacks since 1994 are 2-18 in their
first visit to Arrowhead Stadium. ... The paid attendance was 77,609
but there appeared to be an unusually high number of empty seats,
attributable at least in part to the NASCAR race going on at Kansas
Speedway a few kilometres away.