Can the 49ers Bounce Back from Their Latest Super Bowl Collapse?

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Where do the 49ers go from here?
They've been a resilient team for years. They've had some extremely crushing losses. But this one in the Super Bowl has to be the most crushing, embarrassing loss of all time, and I think it shakes their confidence to their core.
Every time the 49ers have fallen short under Kyle Shanahan, they've been able to make an excuse. They lost but Nick Bosa got held. They lost but Jaquiski Tartt dropped an interception. They lost but Brock Purdy got injured. If those things hadn't happened, surely the 49ers would be champions by now, because they have a great coach and a great team. They're simply victims of bad luck.
Not this time.
Now they have to question their head coach. Because everyone agreed the 49ers had the best roster in football this past season, and it finally earned the No. 1 seed for the first time since 2019. The players handled their business and mostly stayed healthy, which is rare for them.
And in the Super Bowl, the 49ers defense played so much better than it did four years ago when it gave up 31 points to the Chiefs. This time, the defense gave up only 19 points to the Chiefs in four quarters. And then the game went to overtime. And the 49ers won the toss. And then Shanahan made the biggest blunder in Super Bowl history. He asked for the ball first because he didn't understand the playoff overtime rules. And the Chiefs laughed at him.
Now the 49ers players can't look at Shanahan the same. They can do almost everything right, as they did this past season, and he can still find a way to mess it up.
If the 49ers start slow next season, don't be surprised if Shanahan loses the locker room. He may have lost it already.

Grant Cohn has covered the San Francisco 49ers daily since 2011. He spent the first nine years of his career with the Santa Rosa Press Democrat where he wrote the Inside the 49ers blog and covered famous coaches and athletes such as Jim Harbaugh, Colin Kaepernick and Patrick Willis. In 2012, Inside the 49ers won Sports Blog of the Year from the Peninsula Press Club. In 2020, Cohn joined FanNation and began writing All49ers. In addition, he created a YouTube channel which has become the go-to place on YouTube to consume 49ers content. Cohn's channel typically generates roughly 3.5 million viewers per month, while the 49ers' official YouTube channel generates roughly 1.5 million viewers per month. Cohn live streams almost every day and posts videos hourly during the football season. Cohn is committed to asking the questions that 49ers fans want answered, and providing the most honest and interactive coverage in the country. His loyalty is to the reader and the viewer, not the team or any player or coach. Cohn is a new-age multimedia journalist with an old-school mentality, because his father is Lowell Cohn, the legendary sports columnist for the San Francisco Chronicle from 1979 to 1993. The two have a live podcast every Tuesday. Grant Cohn grew up in Oakland and studied English Literature at UCLA from 2006 to 2010. He currently lives in Oakland with his wife.
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