Kurtenbach: Fred Warner’s season-ending injury is a breaking point for the 49ers’ season ...Middle East

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Kurtenbach: Fred Warner’s season-ending injury is a breaking point for the 49ers’ season

Even the toughest, most resilient teams have a breaking point.

The 49ers likely reached theirs Sunday in a 30-19 loss to the Tampa Bay Buccaneers.

    San Francisco spent the first five weeks of this season not just weathering a storm of injuries, and not just surviving, but even thriving without the contributions of George Kittle (out since the first half of Week 1), Brock Purdy (has played two games), Brandon Aiyuk (out since Week 7 of 2024), and Nick Bosa (season-ending injury in Week 3).

    For a roster that was built on the stars-and-scrubs model, having nearly a quarter of your team’s salary sheet on the sidelines is a big problem, and yet the 49ers went to Tampa Bay with a 4-1 record and a chance to take first place in the NFC standings Sunday. It was a testament to the players’ toughness, the coaches’ brilliance and the overall program’s character.

    Amid everything this team had survived, it was impossible to put a limit on its potential for this season. After all, many of those missing star players would be returning in the weeks to come.

    But that line of optimism snapped alongside Fred Warner’s ankle.

    The Niners showed they could survive almost anything.

    But how can this team push forward without its heart and soul?

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    You know the mantra by now—it has been repeated so often around Santa Clara that it’s become a complete cliché: Next man up.

    And that applies to almost everyone in the league.

    It does not apply to Warner.

    Sure, the Niners will still have 11 men on the field when they play defense (though that didn’t happen once Sunday) and Tatum Bethune, Warner’s understudy, is a decent enough player. But no one in the league can replace the future Hall of Fame linebacker. He’s peerless—a demigod of the gridiron. The very idea that the Niners can operate business as usual without him is an insult to the game.

    And while I don’t think Warner’s excellence was ever taken for granted, his absence will highlight just how important he has been for the 49ers for the last eight years.

    Warner had missed one game as a professional. Sunday was his 121st start in 122 games. Each year, he has had 118 tackles or (many) more. He was elite against the run and the best coverage linebacker in the game against the pass. Last year, he served as the team’s not-so-secret defensive coordinator while playing on an ankle with a hairline fracture. He earned first-team All-Pro honors.

    There is no coming back from this injury, though. Not this season, anyway. His right ankle was both dislocated and fractured, the brutal byproduct of Niners safety Ji’Ayir Brown trying to make a tackle on Tampa Bay’s third offensive possession and rolling up into the back of Warner’s legs.

    “It looked pretty bad,” Mac Jones said. “Fred’s our team captain and has been the leader of this team for a really long time… I’m disappointed that I didn’t play better for him.”

    “It’s just heartbreaking,” Christian McCaffrey said. “It’s such a weird game when you have to see somebody like that [go down to injury]… and then just have to continue to play.”

    McCaffrey then called Warner “one of the best players I’ve ever played with — one of the best leaders I’ve ever played with.”

    The injury was so sickening that the CBS broadcast only replayed it once, lest anyone with a weak stomach lose their lunch.

    The defense’s performance that followed for the Niners was every bit as unsettling.

    Without Warner, the guy who makes sure the unit is aligned and who cleans up errors before they are exploited, the Niners’ rookie-filled defense was gashed for 352 yards and four touchdowns. Baker Mayfield’s Buccaneers made moving the ball look easy, even with their third-stringers playing wide receiver and backups at running back and key offensive line spots.

    It probably was easy.

    With no Bosa to speed up quarterbacks and force running backs the other way, and no Warner to make them pay for mistakes, the Niners’ defensive margin for error is now zero. Sure, a week of preparation will, theoretically, clean up some of the communication issues, but not having two elite players at vital positions—the defense’s only elite players, we should note—means that the ceiling for this unit is only so high. If they’re just league-average the rest of the way, that’ll be a miracle of coaching for coordinator Robert Saleh.

    This team will now only go as far as its offense can carry them. Even with Kittle, Purdy and perhaps Aiyuk returning, what’s the upside for a team that averages the fewest yards per carry in the NFL and saw the stone-footed Jones sacked six times Sunday?

    The Niners aren’t just a one-dimensional offense right now; with Warner out, they’re a one-dimensional team.

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    Maybe that’s enough to win six of their next 11 games and sneak into the playoffs. That’s likely going to be this season’s great accomplishment. But to expect anything beyond that—something that seemed entirely reasonable just a day ago—now feels downright naive.

    You don’t replace Fred Warner. You don’t adjust to life without him, either. You move on, yes, but without Warner, the 49ers’ season has a clear point of delineation.

    With Warner, the Niners were going somewhere.

    Without him, it’s going to take everything they have to simply survive the season.

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