2002 San Francisco 49ers season
2002 San Francisco 49ers season | |
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Head coach | Steve Mariucci |
Home field | 3Com Park |
Results | |
Record | 10–6 |
Division place | 1st NFC West |
Playoff finish | Lost Divisional (Buccaneers) 31-6 |
Pro Bowlers | 6 |
AP All-Pros |
Terrell Owens (1st team) Fred Beasley (2nd team) Julian Peterson (2nd team) |
The 2002 San Francisco 49ers season was the team's 56th season, and 52nd in the National Football League.
The first season following divisional realignment, the Niners won the new-look NFC West title with a 10–6 record; they swept new division rivals Seattle and Arizona while splitting with the Rams; the Niners lost to former division rival New Orleans. In the Wild Card Game, the Niners fell behind the New York Giants 38–14 but erupted with 25 unanswered points and survived a chaotic last-second field goal attempt by the Giants; the 39–38 win was the 26th playoff win in the team's history. The Niners lost the next week at Tampa Bay and coach Steve Mariucci was fired, the result of a power struggle with owner John York and new general manager Terry Donahue. 2002 was the last winning season for the 49ers until 2011, when they finally snapped their eight-year streak of non-winning seasons.
Offseason
NFL draft
Round # | Pick # | Player | Position | College |
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Personnel
Staff
2002 San Francisco 49ers staff | ||||||
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Front office
Head coaches
Offensive coaches
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Defensive coaches
Special teams coaches
Strength and conditioning
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Regular season
Schedule
Week | Date | Opponent | Result | Record | TV Time | Attendance |
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1 | September 5, 2002 (Thu) | at New York Giants | W 16–13 | 1–0 | ESPN 8:30et | |
2 | September 15, 2002 | Denver Broncos | L 14–24 | 1–1 | CBS 4:15et | |
3 | September 22, 2002 | Washington Redskins | W 20–10 | 2–1 | FOX 4:15et | |
4 | Bye Week | |||||
5 | October 6, 2002 | St. Louis Rams | W 37–13 | 3–1 | FOX 4:15et | |
6 | October 14, 2002 (Mon) | at Seattle Seahawks | W 28–21 | 4–1 | ABC 9:00et | |
7 | October 20, 2002 | at New Orleans Saints | L 27–35 | 4–2 | FOX 1:00et | |
8 | October 27, 2002 | Arizona Cardinals | W 38–28 | 5–2 | FOX 4:15et | |
9 | November 3, 2002 | at Oakland Raiders | W 23–20 (OT) | 6–2 | FOX 4:15et | |
10 | November 10, 2002 | Kansas City Chiefs | W 17–13 | 7–2 | CBS 4:15et | |
11 | November 17, 2002 | at San Diego Chargers | L 17–20 (OT) | 7–3 | FOX 4:15et | |
12 | November 25, 2002 (Mon) | Philadelphia Eagles | L 17–38 | 7–4 | ABC 9:00et | |
13 | December 1, 2002 | Seattle Seahawks | W 31–24 | 8–4 | FOX 4:15et | |
14 | December 8, 2002 | at Dallas Cowboys | W 31–27 | 9–4 | FOX 1:00et | |
15 | December 15, 2002 | Green Bay Packers | L 14–20 | 9–5 | FOX 4:15et | |
16 | December 21, 2002 (Sat) | at Arizona Cardinals | W 17–14 | 10–5 | FOX 4:15et | |
17 | December 30, 2002 (Mon) | at St. Louis Rams | L 31–20 | 10–6 | ABC 9:00et | |
Season summary
Week 1
At Giants Stadium the 49ers clawed to a 13–6 lead on three Kerry Collins interceptions, but a late Tiki Barber score tied the game 13–13. Two Jeff Garcia passes for 45 yards and three Garrison Hearst runs for seven yards set up Jose Cortez's 36-yard field goal with ten seconds left and the 16–13 49ers win.
Week 2
Despite an eight-yard touchdown to Terrell Owens, Jeff Garcia struggled in San Francisco's home opener, fumbling in the third quarter then throwing an interception to Deltha O'Neal in the fourth. A late rushing score by Garcia made the final score 24–14 for the Broncos. |Weather= 68°F (Sunny)
Week 3
Jeff Garcia and Tim Rattay combined for just 125 passing yards as the Niners defeated the Redskins 20–10. Food poisoning forced Garcia out of the game. "I just didn't feel real crisp," Garcia said in the postgame press conference. |Weather= 71°F (Sunny)
Week 5
The Rams' collapse following their loss in Super Bowl XXXVI continued as Jamie Martin started and was intercepted twice. Garrison Hearst and Kevan Barlow rushed for 166 yards as the Niners pummeled the Rams 37-13. |Weather= 84°F (Sunny)
Week 6
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On Monday Night Football Terrell Owens caught two touchdowns, including what turned out to be the game-winner in the final eight minutes. After one touchdown Owens took out a magic marker and autographed the football before giving it to one of his assistants in the endzone grandstands, a maneuver that caused a stir in football circles.
Week 7
The 4–1 49ers faced the 5–1 Saints for the first time since divisional realignment split the two clubs out of the NFC West and formed the new NFC South. The two clubs put up a combined 840 yards of offense; the Niners led 24–13 after three quarters but the Saints outscored San Francisco 22–3 in the fourth quarter; Jeff Garcia was intercepted with 2:30 to go and Aaron Brooks ran in a one-yard touchdown for the 35–27 Saints win.
Week 8
Four rushing touchdowns (two of them from Marcel Shipp) could not keep the Cardinals from stopping the Niners as Jeff Garcia tossed four touchdowns and Jake Plummer was intercepted three times in a 38-28 San Francisco win. |Weather= 67°F (Sunny)
Week 9
The two Bay Area teams clashed in an overtime grinder as Rich Gannon threw for 164 yards and a one-yard touchdown to Jerry Porter. Garcia threw for 282 yards and two scores and rushed for 46 yards, 21 of them in overtime following a missed 27-yard Jose Cortez field goal attempt at the end of regulation. Cortez nailed the 23-yard kick in overtime for the 23–20 49ers win.
Week 10
The Niners faced former Rams coach Dick Vermeil, whose Chiefs had scored at least 34 points five times to that point of the season; they were held to 13 points and 256 yards of offense as the Niners ground out the 17-13 win. |Weather= 61°F (Cloudy)
Week 11
At San Diego Terrell Owens caught two touchdowns, one a 76-yard bomb, but the Niners blew a 17-7 lead to the Chargers as Drew Brees' touchdown to Fred McCrary with 31 seconds to go tied the game, and former Buffalo Bill Steve Christie won it with 4:11 to go in overtime on a 40-yard field goal. The two teams combined for 908 yards of offense.
Week 12
Despite putting up 409 yards of offense the Niners were pounded by the Eagles 38-17 as Koy Detmer and A.J. Feeley combined for three touchdown throws; Detmer added a rushing score and Brian Mitchell ran back a 76-yard punt for a touchdown. Future Eagle Terrell Owens caught two touchdowns. |Weather= 68°F (Clear)
Week 13
The Niners raced to a 31–10 lead behind three Garrison Hearst touchdown runs and a punt return score. In the fourth quarter Matt Hasselbeck (who had 427 passing yards in all) scored twice on passes to Koren Robinson and Darrell Jackson but was intercepted with 1:31 to go, ending the 31–24 Niners win. |Weather= 60°F (Sunny)
Week 14
Though the championship rivalry of a decade past had cooled off with the fall of the Cowboys to sub-mediocrity, the game at Texas Stadium nonetheless resembled Cowboy-49er clashes of yore. Despite intercepting Chad Hutchinson twice the 49ers saw the game lead change four times before the Cowboys surged to a 27–17 lead in the fourth quarter. Jeff Garcia then stormed the 49ers to the win on touchdowns to Tai Streets and a bobbling eight-yard catch by Terrell Owens with fifteen seconds remaining. In the 31–27 49ers win the two teams combined for 35 fourth-quarter points.
Week 15
San Francisco's struggles against Brett Favre continued despite a 45-yard Terrell Owens touchdown catch; following this score Owens took a pair of pom poms from one of the Niners cheerleaders and waved them in celebration. The two teams combined for just 565 yards of offense as Favre's Packers won 20-14, his ninth win in ten tries against the Niners to date. |Weather= 59°F (Light Rain)
Week 16
The Niners held the Cardinals to just 184 yards of offense in a 17-14 Niners win. Terrell Owens did not play.
Week 17
Having clinched the NFC West, the Niners rested many starters against the Rams as Jeff Garcia threw only three passes and Tim Rattay threw a pair of touchdowns to Tai Streets. The Rams played to salvage a win in their disappointing season and exploded to 28 fourth-quarter points to win 31-20; the Rams thus finished 7-9 while the Niners were 10-6.
Standings
NFC West | |||||||||
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W | L | T | PCT | DIV | CONF | PF | PA | STK | |
(4) San Francisco 49ers | 10 | 6 | 0 | .625 | 5–1 | 8–4 | 367 | 351 | L1 |
St. Louis Rams | 7 | 9 | 0 | .438 | 4–2 | 5–7 | 316 | 369 | W1 |
Seattle Seahawks | 7 | 9 | 0 | .438 | 2–4 | 5–7 | 355 | 369 | W3 |
Arizona Cardinals | 5 | 11 | 0 | .313 | 1–5 | 5–7 | 262 | 417 | L3 |
2002 Schedule
Week 1: at New York Giants
1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | Total | |
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49ers | 3 | 0 | 7 | 6 | 16 |
Giants | 3 | 3 | 0 | 7 | 13 |
at Giants Stadium, East Rutherford, New Jersey
- Game Date: Thursday, September 5, 2002
- Game Leaders
Passing: K. Collins (NYG)- 28/45 342 yards, 0 TD, 3 Int
Rushing: G. Hearst (SF)- 12 ATT 40 yards, 0 TD
Receiving: A. Toomer (NYG)- 9 REC 134 yards, 0 TD
- Scoring Summary
First Quarter-
New York Giants- M. Bryant 29-yard Field Goal (11 plays, 69 yards; 5:59)
San Francisco 49ers- J. Cortez 23-yard Field Goal (9 plays, 63 yards; 4:52)
Second Quarter-
New York Giants- M. Bryant 33-yard Field Goal (8 plays, 47 yards; 1:03)
Third Quarter-
San Francisco 49ers- G. Hearst 9 yard pass from J. Garcia (J. Cotez kick) (8 plays, 52 yards; 4:26)
Fourth Quarter-
San Francisco 49ers- J. Cortez 33-yard Field goal (9 plays, 49 yards; 4:54)
New York Giants- T. Barber 1-yard run (M. Bryant Kick) (14 plays, 77 yards; 6:13)
San Francisco 49ers- J. Cortez 36-yard Field Goal (6 Plays, 52 Yards; 1:49)
- Scoring Leader: J. Cortez (SF) 10 PTS
Week 2: vs. Denver Broncos
Weather 70 °F (Partly Cloudy)
1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | Total | |
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Broncos | 0 | 3 | 7 | 14 | 24 |
49ers | 0 | 7 | 0 | 7 | 14 |
at Monster Park, San Francisco, California
- Game Date: Sunday, September 15, 2002
- Game Leaders
Passing: J. Garcia (SF)- 27/36 205 yards, 1 TD, 1 INT
Rushing: M. Anderson (DEN)- 10 ATT 95 yards, 0 TD
Receiving: E. Johnson (SF)- 7 REC 69 yards, 0 TD
- Scoring Summary
First Quarter-
No Scoring
Second Quarter-
San Francisco 49ers- T. Owens 8-yard pass from J. Garcia (J. Cortez Kick) (6 Plays, 56 Yards; 2:37)
Denver Broncos- J. Elam 28-yard Field goal (5 plays, 17 yards; 1:19)
Third Quarter-
Denver Broncos- M. Anderson 1-yard pass from B. Griese (J. Elam Kick) (10 plays, 74 yards; 5:59)
Fourth Quarter-
Denver Broncos- O. Gary 1-yard run (J. Elam Kick) (4 plays, 46 yards; 1:59)
Denver Broncos- S. Montgomery 11-yard pass from B. Griese (J. Elam Kick) (13 plays, 99 yards; 6:37)
San Francisco 49ers- J. Garcia 1-yard run (J. Cortez kick) (8 Plays, 67 Yards; 1:35)
- Scoring Leader: B. Griese (DEN) 12 PTS
Notes
This was the first time in 14 years that a game between the 49ers and Broncos was not nationally televised. Between 1989 and 2000, the teams met on national television four consecutive times, on four different networks: Super Bowl XXIV on CBS, a Saturday afternoon game in 1994 on NBC, a Monday night game on ABC in 1997, and a Saturday afternoon game in 2000 on Fox.
Playoffs
NFC Wild Card Playoff Game – January 5, 2003
- San Francisco 49ers 39, New York Giants 38
1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | Total | |
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Giants | 7 | 21 | 10 | 0 | 38 |
49ers | 7 | 7 | 8 | 17 | 39 |
at 3Com Park, San Francisco, CA
- Game time: 4:30 p.m. EST/1:30 p.m. PST
- Game weather: 53 °F (12 °C), sunny
- TV announcers (Fox): Joe Buck (play-by-play), Troy Aikman and Cris Collinsworth (color commentators)
- Referee: Ron Winter
- Game attendance: 66,318
The Steelers' comeback earlier in the day (36–33 over the Cleveland Browns) was matched by San Francisco's similar late drive, overcoming a 38–14 deficit by scoring 25 unanswered points in the second half. A last-minute Giants drive collapsed when Trey Junkin botched a field goal snap, leading to a desperation heave to the endzone that fell short. There were two notable events in this game. The first one was when after the 49ers scored a touchdown, Terrell Owens caught a pass from Jeff Garcia for the two point conversion. After the catch, Owens did a little showboating. Michael Strahan of the Giants went up to Owens and pointed to the scoreboard and mocked Owens. (At the time, the Giants led 38-22). This is significant because the 49ers came back to win. After the 49ers scored another touchdown and made it 38-30, Joe Buck replied "The scoreboard doesn't look so great to Strahan anymore". The second event in the game was that in the 3rd quarter, Jeremy Shockey dropped a touchdown pass that would've put the Giants up 42-14. Instead, the Giants had to kick, making it 38-14. Nobody at the time knew how big of a mistake this dropped pass would be for the Giants, and how big of a blessing for the 49ers. The win was the 26th in a playoff game for the club and last until the 2011 Divisional Playoffs.
NFC Divisional Playoff Game – Sunday January 12, 2003
- Tampa Bay Buccaneers 31, San Francisco 49ers 6
1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | Total | |
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49ers | 3 | 3 | 0 | 0 | 6 |
Buccaneers | 7 | 21 | 3 | 0 | 31 |
- Scoring
- TB – Alstott 2 run (Gramatica kick) TB 7–0
- SF – field goal Chandler 24 TB 7–3
- TB – Jurevicius 20 pass from B. Johnson (Gramatica kick) TB 14–3
- SF – field goal Chandler 40 TB 14–6
- TB – Dudley 12 pass from B. Johnson (Gramatica kick) TB 21–6
- TB – Alstott 2 run (Gramatica kick) TB 28–6
- TB – field goal Gramatica 19 TB 31–6
The Buccaneers, with the league's top-ranked defense during the 2002 regular season, forced five turnovers, sacked quarterback Jeff Garcia four times, and limited the 49ers to only two field goals. Tampa Bay quarterback Brad Johnson, who had been sidelined for a month, returned to throw for 196 yards and two touchdowns. Fullback Mike Alstott scored two touchdowns, while the Buccaneers held onto the ball for 36:46 and held the 49ers to a season low 228 yards. This was San Francisco's first playoff game without a touchdown since 1986. Despite San Francisco's 10–6 record and their Wild Card playoff win against New York, coach Steve Mariucci was fired three days after this game. The 49ers would not return to the playoffs until 2011.
References
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