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Brandon Staley finds ‘common ground’ in joining 49ers’ coaching staff

Brandon Staley finds ‘common ground’ in joining 49ers’ coaching staff

Brandon Staley, five months after being fired as the Los Angeles Chargers coach, is excited to join a 49ers organization in whatever capacity Kyle Shanahan and John Lynch need.

SANTA CLARA – There is no single reason Brandon Staley is on the 49ers’ coaching staff. Instead, there are many:

a.) Kyle Shanahan wants all-around insight from a former NFL head coach, which was Staley’s job with the Los Angeles Chargers from 2021 through Week 15 last December.

b.) Nick Sorensen enters only his first season as a defensive coordinator, and Staley oversaw the 2020 Los Angeles Rams’ defense, which ranked first in the NFL.

c.) The 49ers’ defensive system could use a few tweaks while returning to its 2017-22 style.

d.) Heck, he’s already coached one Bosa, so now he gets an up-close view of how great Nick is compared to his older brother, Joey.

General manager John Lynch already tapped Staley to help advise during last month’s draft, knowing he had been a larger figure in the Chargers’ three prior drafts.

“I don’t think looking at it as a reset is a bad thing,” Staley said of his career path. “Playing quarterback, when you reset, it gives you pause to move on to the next thing.”

Speaking Wednesday to Bay Area media for the first time since becoming “Assistant Head Coach/Defense,” Staley kept his job description vague. After all, Shanahan – and perhaps Lynch – will dictate what they need from Staley, and not the other way around.

On the surface, he figures to mostly help the defensive backs, filling a void created by Sorensen’s promotion to replace one-and-done coordinator Steve Wilks.

Staley gave no hints of an impending power struggle even though he, too, interviewed for the defensive coordinator role in February.

“Nick knows who the defensive coordinator is, and Brandon does,” coach Kyle Shanahan said Tuesday. “Brandon is in a real good spot, just leaving from being a head coach and how he can help us in a number of roles. I think Nick feels very excited to have a guy on the staff who has called plays, who has done it at a number of different places and things.”

Ironically, Staley recalled being on the other end two years ago, when he interviewed Sorensen for the Chargers’ special teams coordinator job. Sorensen ultimately joined the 49ers as a defensive assistant, and, two years later, so has Staley.

“Talking to Kyle and John, there is a lot of common ground in how to lead a football team,” Staley said. “That is what I was looking for more than anything, an opportunity where you feel you’ll be aligned with the right people who do things the right way and you have a chance to improve, and where you also have a chance to affect a team that can compete for a championship.

“All those stars kind of aligned. It’s been energizing. That reset has allowed me to do that.”

Staley, 41, began coaching in the college ranks 2006-16, and it was early in that first job as a Northern Illinois graduate assistant that he overcame a cancer battle with Hodgkin lymphoma.

“My personal journey, there is not a day that goes by where I am not reminded of it, and I am very thankful for it,” Staley said. “Hopefully it will help me here.”

Staley’s NFL start involved coaching outside linebackers under former 49ers defensive coordinator Vic Fangio on the Chicago Bears (2017-18) and the Denver Broncos (2019).

“Oh man, I felt like I coached for the Niners long before I got here. Working with Vic and then Ed Donnatell, they both mean a lot to me,” Staley said.

Staley was the 2000 Los Angeles Rams’ defensive coordinator when they – including new 49ers pass rusher Leonard Floyd — led the NFL in fewest points and yards allowed. That propelled Staley to a head-coaching role with SoFi Stadium’s other tenant.

He went 24-24 with the Chargers, reaching the playoffs once when their 2022 team infamously blew a 27-0 lead in a wild-card loss at Jacksonville. He was fired after Week 15 last season following a 63-21 loss in Las Vegas on ”Thursday Night Football.”

“You take a deep look at all of it. You have to unpack it the right way. You have to take time to do that, which I did,” Staley said of getting fired. “You have to talk to a lot of different people who can help you. I read a lot. I worked out a lot. I was with my kids. Through all that, doing it the right way, it led me to an opportunity here and I was ready for it.”

That reading went far beyond playbooks. He read line after line of biographies and leadership lessons, and even economics.

“I’m a big book guy. I’m not a podcast guy. I have to read it, highlight it,” Staley said. “I’ve always looked at reading as improving, you’re getting closer to being better and more of who you can be. … I don’t really read for fun. I read to improve.”

Improving the 49ers’ defense under Sorensen’s authority is priority No. 1.

“Brandon is helping him on a lot of things just like all the other coaches do on the defensive staff,” Shanahan added. “With Brandon’s expertise just in other areas than just defense, with his expertise as a head coach and things, I thought he was a real benefit in the draft and helps me in a number of areas also.”

— The 49ers finalized their preseason schedule. They’ll visit the Tennessee Titans on Aug. 10 (4 p.m. PT), host the New Orleans Saints on Aug. 18 (5 p.m.), and finish the exhibition slate in Las Vegas against the Raiders on Aug. 23 (7 p.m.).

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