Want to beat 49ers? Just follow Vikings’ blueprint

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Great coaches don’t just win games; they expose the opposition in the process.

That has been Kyle Shanahan’s modus operandi for nearly two decades as an offensive play-caller in the NFL.

But on Sunday in Minneapolis, Shanahan wasn’t the one winning the X’s and O’s battle.

No, it was the Vikings’ play-callers, head coach Kevin O’Connell and defensive coordinator Brian Flores, who looked like masterminds in the 49ers’ 23-17 loss.

“I think he had a very good game plan against us,” George Kittle said of Flores.

“You can feel it when you’re playing a really good coach who knows what they’re doing,” Nick Bosa said of O’Connell, who worked under Shanahan in Cleveland and in his first year running the 49ers.

Indeed, you can. And Sunday’s loss has the Niners feeling spun.

The NFL is a copycat league. What works for one team in one game will be replicated by the entire league a week later.

And if you can put on tape a scheme that can beat the reigning NFC champions, you can bet your top and bottom dollar that the rest of the league will try to do the same thing when they play the 49ers.

Yes, the coaching mismatch on Sunday was so significant—the Vikings’ game plan so illuminating—that it likely created a blueprint for the rest of the league to replicate.

The Niners couldn’t handle what the Vikings threw their way Sunday. They better get used to seeing it a lot more in the coming weeks.

Worse yet, the 49ers knew what was coming, at least when their offense was on the field.

Last year, quarterback Brock Purdy couldn’t handle the chaos Flores calls for in the Vikings’ defense — a scheme that loads up the line of scrimmage before the snap with linemen, linebackers, and even safeties. You don’t know if any, or all, are coming at you until the ball is snapped.

Purdy might have finished the game with a nice, gaudy stat line — 28 of 36 for 318 yards and a touchdown, but he had two turnovers (a lost fumble and interception) and was sacked six times. The Vikings forced mistakes, particularly in key situations, and it left the Niners looking like a shell of the offense that was No. 1 in the NFL last season.

Even Purdy’s success was hard-earned. He had to complete some passes inside absurdly tight windows, often challenging two, three, or even four defenders.

It wasn’t a formula for sustainable success, and it showed in the final scoreline.

The NFL’s player-tracking data showed that Purdy completed 8 percent more passes than expected—an elite number.

Even so, the result was a total quarterback rating of 41 out of 100. That’s downright awful — the third-worst mark of his career.

The Niners’ 24-year-old quarterback has played 16 regular-season games against NFC opponents. His only two losses have been to Flores’ Vikings.

Flores has Purdy’s number.

And now the rest of the league has access to it, too.

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