Prolific pass-catcher Kittle takes more pride in blocking for 49ers RBs
SANTA CLARA, Calif. — No tight end in NFL history has been as productive catching the ball over the first three years of a career as George Kittle.
A player that skilled as a receiver might be expected to ask — or even demand — for the ball to come his way.
But instead of spending his time telling his San Francisco 49ers coaches or quarterback Jimmy Garoppolo how open he is, Kittle has other play-calling requests instead.
“Everyone knows what he’s done in the pass game, but he has never once in three years came up to me during a game and said, ‘Hey I need this route.’ Or, ‘Hey we’ve got to do this,’ ” coach Kyle Shanahan said. “He’s never once came up to me about a pass play, but he comes up to me about every seven plays about what type of run play we need to do, who we need to allow him to hit, things like that. It makes it very fun to call plays for him.”
For as accomplished as Kittle is as a receiver — his 197 catches and 2,664 yards receiving ranking as the most by a tight end through three seasons — it is his ability as a run blocker that sets him apart from some of the other top tight ends in the league.
That skill was on display last week when Kittle’s blocking helped the Niners (14-3) generate a franchise playoff record 47 carries for 186 yards in a 27-10 victory over Minnesota.
Right tackle Mike McGlinchey said Kittle has the mentality of an offensive lineman and is one of the key components of the running game.
“That’s what’s really cool about George and the best part about him,” McGlinchey said. “He takes more pride in how he’s doing in the run game than he does in the pass game even though he’s the best at both.”
The 49ers’ running game looks different when Kittle is healthy and is able to seal the edge with his blocks that help fuel the outside zone running game. San Francisco averaged only 2.9 yards per carry in three games when Kittle was sidelined or severely limited by injuries to his knee and ankle. That compares to a 4.8 yard average in the other games.
That shows the kind of impact he can make even when he’s not producing in the passing game.
He had only three catches for 16 yards — his fewest yards in a game since his rookie year in the playoff opener against the Vikings — but that didn’t bother him at all.
“I take pride in my run game,” Kittle said. “That’s how I grade myself in games. Passing yards and receiving yards take care of themselves.”
Perhaps that’s to be expected from a player who caught only 48 passes in 25 college games at Iowa, as he fell to the fifth round of the draft.
The Niners believed in his athleticism and potential and were surprised he lasted beyond the third round. But they were very fortunate he was there at 146th overall as the ninth tight end selected in that draft.
“We were just shocked that he was still sitting there in the fifth,” Shanahan said. “But he didn’t have a lot of production in the pass game. They didn’t do that a lot at their school. They did more run game, and he was a great run blocker. I feel like people called him just a run blocker just because he didn’t have the stats. But stats don’t tell you much. It’s how you move.”
Remove the ads from your TribLIVE reading experience but still support the journalists who create the content with TribLIVE Ad-Free.