
On Wednesday,
Gretz mentioned that the 49ers were giving
Mike Singletary an early Christmas gift: the head coaching gig for next season.
The club canned
Mike Nolan after a 2-5 start, but the team has been 5-4 since. And next year, Singletary will have the pleasure of trying to win football games without offensive coordinator
Mike Martz sabotaging everything. This comes as shocking news to, well, nobody, really. Not even
J.T. O'Sullivan.
With Martz one-and-done in San Francisco, who should take over the play-calling duties? The
San Francisco Chronicle's Gwen Knapp has a suggestion:
If, however, [Norv] Turner is available and Singletary is interested, nothing should get in their way. When Turner left San Francisco two years ago, he put the 49ers in a terrible position. The 49ers had already responded to the Cowboys' interest in Turner by promising to pay him a salary commensurate with his status as the coordinator who had given the breath of life to a moribund offense. Then San Diego came along with a late offer, and Turner went, taking the 49ers' future with him.
For all the knocks on Turner the head coach, he's the
anti-Ron when it comes to coordinating up an offense. Norv had a lot to do with
Alex Smith's progress in 2006, and before that, he was a coordinator for the Dolphins, Chargers and Cowboys. And in virtually every stop, he was successful. There's no reason to think he wouldn't be able to revitalize the 49ers' moribund offense, particularly if you think
Shaun Hill is a more viable option than Smith.
Of course, there's the little issue of Turner still having a job.