When the 49ers move, some of us will die a little more

by clorenz1 | November 9, 2006 at 08:46 pm | 1164 views | 3 comments

I was born into a Bears family.  My father and his three brothers were cheering on the only team worth a spit in the NFL before I was even a glimmer.  But my dad moved from Chicago to Washington, DC: my place of birth, a Redskins fan by default.  And no matter how many games we watched or how many people pushed me towards the yellow & red I was not happy.  Perhaps it was the politically incorrect characture of the Native American mascot or because they had no style. It became evident that I was born a 49er and I will die a 49er.  I knew one day I would move to San Francisco and complete my journey, but back in the 80's I wore my gold 9ers jacket with pride.  When I moved to Ohio, I laughed at those ridicules Browns fans, and loved there instant hatred of the free flying gold and red, timeless winners.  I wore number 80 in football.  Those Bengels were even more fun to cheer against.  Rice, Montana, Young, Taylor, Lott, and the list goes on, and on.  When I look back on my childhood I remember my family, and I remember Joe Montana passing to Jerry Rice, perfection in motion, the 49ers.  And now they may move away.  Well it may only be a few miles, but as each recent season seems to looks bleaker it seems that the once late great San Francisco 49ers will never be the same.  It feels like a different location and a different team...


But the 49ers' identity will be forever changed if the club moves away from Candlestick Point and its dilapidated, wind-swept stadium -- the home to several of the most memorable playoff games in NFL history during San Francisco's run to five Super Bowl championships in the past quarter-century.

Before the 49ers moved to Candlestick Park on the waterfront near the southern boundary of the city in 1971, they played their first 25 seasons at Kezar Stadium, a charming, cramped field that still sits in the heart of San Francisco, just a short walk from the Haight-Ashbury district. Coach Mike Nolan saw his first 49ers games there when his father, Dick, ran the club.

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kz

What surprises me is how incredibly nonchalant people are being about the whole idea. In my local newspaper, two hours from the Bay, it was just a brief.

clorenz1

Hi kz,

Yeah, I know. It is very odd, and ESPN only had a one line link regarding the move. 

It is not as if the Houston Texans are going to move, it is the SF 49ers, a incredibly storied franchise!

  

clorenz1

Stop the Presses! 

Breaking 49ers News! 

Feinstein has helped to hault the plans to move for now!

The Mayor has also helped to extend the negotiations! 

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November 9, 2006 at 08:46 pm by clorenz1, 1164 views, 3 comments

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