A | B | C | D | E | F | G | H | CH | I | J | K | L | M | N | O | P | Q | R | S | T | U | V | W | X | Y | Z | 0 | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | 8 | 9
2005 San Francisco 49ers season | |
---|---|
Owner | Denise DeBartolo York and John York |
President | John York |
General manager | Mike Nolan |
Head coach | Mike Nolan |
Offensive coordinator | Mike McCarthy |
Defensive coordinator | Billy Davis |
Home field | Monster Park |
Results | |
Record | 4–12 |
Division place | 4th NFC West |
Playoff finish | Did not qualify |
Pro Bowlers | None |
The 2005 San Francisco 49ers season was the 60th year for the team overall, and their 56th season in the NFL. They improved their two-win 2004 season by two games.
Former head coach Dennis Erickson had been fired just after the end of the 2004 season, and Mike Nolan (son of former Niners head coach Dick Nolan) took the helm.
Despite having a better record than the 2–14 Texans and 3–13 Saints, statistics site Football Outsiders calculated that the 49ers were actually, play-for-play, not only the worst team in the NFL in 2005,[1] but the worst team they have ever tracked.[2] According to the site, the 49ers offense in 2005 is the third-worst they had ever tracked.[3][2][note 1] The 49ers 3,587 total offensive yards were the fewest of any team in 2005, and their 239 points scored were third-worst in the NFL.[4] Despite finishing with the worst record in 2004, the 49ers ended up playing the second-toughest schedule in the NFL in 2005 as they played eight games against eventual playoff teams, including games against the top seeds in both conferences, the Seattle Seahawks and the Indianapolis Colts, and games against the Chicago Bears and the Tampa Bay Buccaneers. The 49ers played the Bears and Buccaneers because those teams, like the 49ers, had finished last in their NFC divisions in 2004, but unlike the 49ers both teams improved enough to win their divisions in 2005.[5]
San Francisco's 1,898 team passing yards in 2005 were the lowest such total in the decade of the 2000s.[6]
Offseason
2005 Draft
The 49ers had the first pick in the 2005 draft, and selected Utah quarterback Alex Smith. The 49ers were in need of a quarterback, and the two top prospects at the position were Smith and California quarterback Aaron Rodgers. Rodgers, the second quarterback drafted, famously dropped to the 24th pick on draft day, and went to the Green Bay Packers. Rodgers is a four-time league MVP, has been voted to the Pro Bowl ten times in his career, and won Super Bowl XLV with the Packers in 2010. Smith enjoyed a successful if unspectacular career with the 49ers, starting all sixteen games for two full seasons and taking them to the NFC Championship game in 2011. He was traded to the Kansas City Chiefs in 2013, where he would earn most of his accolades, before being traded to Washington, where he won Comeback Player of the Year in 2020 following a horrific leg injury two years earlier.
2005 San Francisco 49ers draft | |||||
Round | Pick | Player | Position | College | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | 1 | Alex Smith * | QB | Utah | |
2 | 33 | David Baas | C | Michigan | |
3 | 65 | Frank Gore * | RB | Miami (FL) | |
3 | 94 | Adam Snyder | G | Oregon | |
5 | 137 | Ronald Fields | DT | Mississippi State | |
5 | 174 | Rasheed Marshall | WR | West Virginia | |
6 | 205 | Derrick Johnson | CB | Washington | |
7 | 215 | Daven Holly | CB | Cincinnati | |
7 | 223 | Marcus Maxwell | WR | Oregon | |
7 | 248 | Patrick Estes | TE | Virginia | |
7 | 249 | Billy Bajema | TE | Oklahoma State | |
Made roster † Pro Football Hall of Fame * Made at least one Pro Bowl during career |
Staff
Front office {{{front_office}}} Head coaches
Offensive coaches
|
Defensive coaches
Special teams coaches
Strength and conditioning
|