Kyle Shanahan: How San Francisco 49ers coach went from ‘nepo baby’ to one of the NFL’s finest offensive minds | CNN (2024)

CNN

Some say that football runs in their family. For San Francisco 49ers head coach Kyle Shanahan, it quite emphatically does.

Serving in his seventh year in the top job in San Francisco, Shanahan is now widely regarded as one of the finest offensive minds in the National Football League (NFL), but how he did he get here?

From a young prodigy, to facing disappointment and then shaking off any possible ‘nepo baby’ tag, Shanahan’s journey to his second Super Bowl has been one to watch.

Shanahan in San Fran

Mike Silver, a columnist for the San Francisco Chronicle and longtime NFL writer and analyst, has known the San Francisco coach for over two decades and remembers the first time he spoke with a 15-year-old Shanahan.

Silver was following Mike Shanahan, Kyle’s father, when he served as head coach of the Denver Broncos and, after practice one day, he got some one-on-one time with the younger Shanahan.

“I remember it vividly,” Silver explains, adding they never once spoke about football. “I was like: ‘Dude, what’s it like to be in high school?’ We were talking about movies and comedies and all sorts of stuff.”

While Silver could not have predicted Shanahan’s success during that conversation, ever since that moment, he has followed his career closely. With the pair now both in San Francisco, he has a first row seat for the 44-year-old’s debut head coaching job.

After making waves in various offensive roles throughout the league, Shanahan quickly rose to prominence and, in 2017, was named to his first ever head coaching job with the 49ers.

So far, Shanahan has enjoyed an incredibly successful time in the Bay Area: a Super Bowl appearance in the 2019 season was followed by back-to-back NFC Championship Games in 2022 and 2023.

However, Shanahan and San Francisco have always fallen slightly short of the ultimate goal – winning a Super Bowl title – something Silver says needs to be changed to cement the head coach’s legacy with the franchise.

“He has to win a ring,” Silver explains. “Nobody’s going to say he hasn’t done an incredible job. They’ve been to four conference title games in five years, they have an incredible collection of talent and they’ve done a lot of cool things … but he’s going to have to get this one or another one later.

“It’s a cruel, cruel world,” Silver says of the NFL’s harsh expectations of greatness. “But, you know, it’s even crueler with Patrick Mahomes standing between you and the awards podium, that’s no fun.”

Despite the losses, the ability to produce multiple deep playoff runs has stood out during Shanahan’s time in charge.

This consistency has been built on the offensive play calling and innovativeness of the head coach.

“I think if you gave truth serum to the other really, really smart coaches who are great at calling plays and creating plays and scheming it up, probably he’d win the vote as to who’s the most advanced,” Silver outlines.

Not only does Shanahan impress with his play calls, but he is blessed with one of the finest offenses in the NFL, including star skill position players in Christian McCaffrey, Deebo Samuel, Brandon Aiyuk, George Kittle and quarterback Brock Purdy.

Kyle Shanahan: How San Francisco 49ers coach went from ‘nepo baby’ to one of the NFL’s finest offensive minds | CNN (1)

Shanahan looks on from the sideline during the 49ers' game against the Los Angeles Chargers at Levi's Stadium on November 13, 2022.

Silver describes keeping all these explosive players happy as a “champagne problem” and says that, if the offense runs the way Shanahan envisions it, then everyone would get their fair share of action.

A key cog of this masterplan is Shanahan’s relationship with Purdy, who he drafted with the final pick of the 2022 Draft.

“As someone who’s watched [Purdy] closely now for 14 months, he’s got an incredible temperament. He’s a stone-cold killer,” outlines Silver.

Paired with his gutsy performances, Silver adds that these are crucial ingredients in the pair’s success. Purdy seems to never be afraid to attempt the big play when Shanahan dares him to make it.

Shanahan’s playcalling will prove vital during Super Bowl LVIII, but how did the young head coach make it to the precipice of the NFL?

Wunderkind

He might be a coach who utilizes so many of them in his offense, but there was only ever one route when it came to Shanahan’s career, and that was to make it in the NFL – in some way, shape or form.

“I studied every potential X’s and O’s play and issue possible,” Shanahan told the Denver Post in 2006. “I spent my whole life working on that. My goal was that any question a player could have about anything on the field, I’d be able to answer it.”

Shanahan grew up immersed in football. His father coached college ball before heading to the NFL where he embarked on an almost 30-year coaching stint in a variety of positions with different franchises, winning two Super Bowls (XXXII and XXXIII) as head coach in the process with the Broncos.

While Shanahan has admitted his father’s connections opened doors in the league, his success since stepping into the NFL has been of his own making. Silver says that to those in NFL circles, Shanahan put to bed his dependence on his father a long time ago.

First up, though, was a college job for a green Shanahan.

“When he decided that he wanted to be a coach, he went with Karl Dorrell over at UCLA,” dad Mike told NBC Sports in 2020. “He was there for a year but then he found out that when you’re a graduate assistant, you actually have to go to school. It’s not football all the time.”

Just a year later, Shanahan was in the NFL. It then wouldn’t be long before he became the youngest position coach in the league with the Houston Texans and then, at just 28 years old, the youngest offensive coordinator in the league.

Shanahan was out not just to prove that his age wasn’t a problem, but it was instead a positive.

“As long as you can help (players), they will listen and respect you,” Shanahan said to the Texans in 2007. “The fact that I’m young only helps me to relate with them better. It makes my job easier. I understand them better.

“I understand this moment that they are at in their life because I’m going through the same things.”

But throughout his career, critics of Kyle have always maintained that his family connections were the reason he’s where he is today. This sentiment only intensified when, following Kyle’s spell in Houston, the Shanahans teamed up.

Mike was head coach of the then-Washington Redskins and hired his son to be the team’s new offensive coordinator.

Kyle Shanahan: How San Francisco 49ers coach went from ‘nepo baby’ to one of the NFL’s finest offensive minds | CNN (2)

Washington Redskins coach Mike Shanahan with offensive coordinator and son Kyle Shanahan (right) during a game against the Philadelphia Eagles in 2013.

Washington struggled offensively during Kyle’s time as coordinator with some questioning the validity of how he got the job – and then stayed in the position.

“If Kyle had any other last name, his job might be up for discussion this offseason,” the Washington Post said in 2011 in a piece titled “Kyle Shanahan, hired by Mike Shanahan, must share the blame for Redskins’ woes.”

“I think (a Super Bowl) ring makes that all go away,” Silver says of Shanahan’s nepotism critics.

Super Bowl anguish

Following his time in Washington, Shanahan went to the Cleveland Browns and then excelled with the Atlanta Falcons as the team’s offensive coordinator.

While Shanahan’s time in Atlanta was a success, it will perhaps be most remembered for his disappointment in the Super Bowl.

Tom Brady and the New England Patriots took down the Falcons after making the largest comeback in Super Bowl history, coming back from a 28-3 deficit in the third quarter of Super Bowl LI to win 34-28.

“He’s had the stigma of 28-3 which isn’t necessarily fair to me,” explains Silver. “Kyle, as the offensive coordinator, kind of bore the brunt of that … [and] he carries this tag still to a degree”

Kyle Shanahan: How San Francisco 49ers coach went from ‘nepo baby’ to one of the NFL’s finest offensive minds | CNN (3)

Shanahan, during his time as the Falcons' offensive coordinator, looks on prior to Super Bowl LI against the New England Patriots at NRG Stadium on February 5, 2017.

Then, after reaching his first Super Bowl as a head coach in 2020 – leading the 49ers to his old stomping ground in Houston for Super Bowl LIV – it was another loss on football’s biggest stage for Shanahan.

San Francisco was defeated 31-20 by the Kansas City Chiefs, with his team once again surrendering a second-half lead.

It’ll be Mahomes and the Chiefs again for Shananan on February 11 in Las Vegas at Super Bowl LVIII, but will he have learned from previous failings?

Silver says the Niners head coach is all about winning and won’t feel complete until he gets his hands on the Vince Lombardi Trophy.

Full circle

When the San Francisco 49ers last won the Super Bowl in 1994, Kyle happened to be on the sideline as a 15-year-old ballboy with his dad Mike working as the team’s offensive coordinator.

“It was great. Just being down there, being a part of that stuff, being on the field after. Just being able to wander around the locker room and trying to collect anybody’s gloves who left them around,” Kyle told reporters before Super Bowl LIV.

It won’t be long before Shanahan is back on the sidelines at another Super Bowl – not as a ballboy, but in a slightly more senior role, looking to banish the demons of Super Bowls past and the pesky label critics have perhaps unjustly given him.

Kyle Shanahan: How San Francisco 49ers coach went from ‘nepo baby’ to one of the NFL’s finest offensive minds | CNN (2024)

FAQs

How much does coach Kyle Shanahan make? ›

Kyle Shanahan's salary is certainly deserved given his immediate success. In 2017, Shanahan signed a six-year, $21 million contract. Following San Francisco's Super Bowl run in 2019, Shanahan reportedly signed a new six-year deal worth $60 million through the 2025 season.

Does Kyle Shanahan have a wife? ›

How many Super Bowls has Kyle Shanahan lost? ›

Shanahan's decision will be picked apart like many others in this defeat: getting away from the run game that could have killed clock, the inability of the offense to do much of anything in the early third quarter and the fact that Shanahan now has three brutal Super Bowl defeats — two in San Francisco plus a blown 28- ...

Who is Mike Shanahan married to? ›

Shanahan is a Catholic. He and his wife, Peggy, have two children — a son, Kyle, the current San Francisco 49ers' head coach, and a daughter, Krystal. Shanahan is also a brother in the Delta Sigma Phi fraternity. In May 2008, Shanahan attended the wedding of George W.

Who is highest-paid coach in NFL? ›

Report: Andy Reid becomes NFL's highest-paid coach in deal that runs through 2029 - NBC Sports.

How much does Brock Purdy make? ›

San Francisco 49ers quarterback Brock Purdy has an estimated net worth of $300,000 according to Celebrity Net Worth. In 2022, Purdy signed a four-year $3,737,008 contract with the 49ers, with an average annual salary of $934,252.

Where do Kyle Shanahan live? ›

Kyle Shanahan

Back in 2020, Shanahan called the posh suburb of Saratoga home. He had purchased a lovely Spanish-style home in the tony town in 2017 for $6.8 million from former NFL quarterback Trent Dilfer.

Does Kyle Shanahan have tattoos? ›

Web kyle shanahan appreciated the chance to clarify why he has a tattoo of chris simms' initials on his ankle. Buried at the bottom of a washington post item on the redskins' offense wednesday afternoon was a small tidbit from cbs sports broadcaster..

How much money is Shanahan worth? ›

Kyle Shanahan has a net worth of around $16 million, as of 2024. His net worth is mostly the reflection of his NFL coaching contracts. He may have also signed some endorsem*nt deals but there is no clarity regarding the same.

Who's lost the Super Bowl the most? ›

The Patriots and Broncos are tied for the most Super Bowl losses at five. The Cleveland Browns, Detroit Lions, Houston Texans, and Jacksonville Jaguars are the four teams to have never appeared in a Super Bowl, although the Browns and Lions both won NFL championships before the Super Bowl era.

What was the biggest blown lead in Super Bowl history? ›

Those three trips to the NFL's final level have resulted in Shanahan being responsible for three of the largest blown leads in Super Bowl history.
  • 25-point blown lead as Falcons OC (2016 in Super Bowl LI vs Patriots, led 28-3)
  • 10-point blown lead as 49ers HC (2019 in Super Bowl LIV vs Chiefs, led 20-10)
Feb 12, 2024

Was Taylor Swift in the Super Bowl? ›

The global superstar attended the event to support her partner Travis Kelce, who plays tight end for the Kansas City Chiefs. This year, Swift attended 13 games. Due to her consistent presence throughout the season, Swifties both flooded into stadiums and flocked to their televisions to catch a glimpse of the star.

Who is Andy Reid's twin brother? ›

Does Kyle Shanahan have a son? ›

What nationality is Kyle Shanahan? ›

Kyle Michael Shanahan (born December 14, 1979) is an American football coach who is the head coach for the San Francisco 49ers of the National Football League (NFL).

What is Steve Kerr salary? ›

Golden State Warriors head coach Steve Kerr has agreed to a two-year contract extension, the team announced Tuesday. The deal is worth, according to Adrian Wojnarowski, and makes Kerr the highest-paid head coach in the league with an annual salary of $17.5 million.

What is the average salary of a coach in the NFL? ›

Nfl Coaches Salary
Annual SalaryMonthly Pay
Top Earners$59,000$4,916
75th Percentile$48,000$4,000
Average$45,110$3,759
25th Percentile$39,000$3,250

Who is the lowest paid NFL coach? ›

Here is a list of the lowest-paid NFL head coaches in 2024.
  • Kevin Stefanski, Cleveland Browns – $3.5 million.
  • Mike McCarthy, Dallas Cowboys – $4 million.
  • Zac Taylor, Cincinnati Bengals – $4.5 million.
  • Robert Saleh, New York Jets – $5 million.
  • Matt LaFleur, Green Bay Packers – $5 million.
Jan 31, 2024

What is John Lynch's salary? ›

On September 11, 2000, the Buccaneers signed Lynch to a six-year, $24 million contract extension that included $5.6 million guaranteed.

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