SANTA CLARA, Calif. — Christian McCaffrey looked the part in his 49ers debut on Sunday against the Chiefs.
On the fourth play from scrimmage, he lined up in an I-formation, took a pitch to his left and cut inside for 10 yards. One play later, he lined up again, took a handoff and darted up the middle for another 9 yards.
Neither run was spectacular, but each was attention-grabbing as McCaffrey showed the vision, burst and power that helped establish him as one of the game’s top running backs when healthy. They hinted at the possibilities for a player who can affect games as both a runner and a receiver.
McCaffrey had no impact on the outcome, though, as the Chiefs turned a one-point lead into a romp by opening the second half with 4 consecutive touchdown drives that carried them to a 44-23 victory. The loss is sure to have the 49ers doing a lot of soul searching because this marks the second consecutive year they have opened the season with a 3-4 record.
As the game got away from the 49ers, McCaffrey was forced to watch from the sideline because of his rudimentary knowledge of the offense, particularly in pass protections and blocking assignments. Quarterback Jimmy Garoppolo admitted afterward to explaining McCaffrey’s responsibilities to the former Carolina star at least once in the huddle.
And while it’s safe to say the best is yet to come for McCaffrey, acquired via trade Thursday for four draft picks, in a San Francisco uniform, there remains great uncertainty about whether he will be enough to get the 49ers over the hump in their quest to win a Lombardi Trophy for the first time in 28 years. Fact is, they likely will be content for the moment if he helps them win their next game, Oct. 30 against NFC West-rival Los Angeles.
San Francisco has lost back-to-back games for the first time in 364 days — since opening last season with a 2-4 record that bottomed out at 3-5 — and the 49ers barely resemble the team that rebounded a year ago to advance to the NFC Championship Game, coming within a dropped interception of returning to the Super Bowl for the second time in three years.
And while there is every reason to believe they can turn things around — they are 2-0 against division opponents and only a game behind the front-running Seahawks, whom they beat 27-7 in Week 2; and they have a roster loaded with talent and a head coach in Kyle Shanahan who has directed them to two conference finals and one Super Bowl in his five seasons — there are also reasons for doubt.
The 49ers simply aren’t playing well. They have been beaten by lesser opponents — see: Chicago and Denver — as well as by themselves. On Sunday they had 3 turnovers and a safety. They committed 10 penalties — including a false start on a 51-yard field-goal attempt that forced them to punt late in the second quarter — and saw Garoppolo throw an interception from the Kansas City 5-yard line with 1:28 to go in the first half.
They gave up 48 yards on a kickoff return, 34 yards on a third-and-20 screen, and 3 completions of 40 yards or longer. A defense that was being mentioned as being the best in the league a few weeks ago surrendered 529 yards and 6 touchdowns on Sunday.