Utah Utes: Smith has one year to secure future with 49ers

Published: Friday, Sept. 5, 2008 12:19 a.m. MDT
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SANTA CLARA, Calif. — If Alex Smith can't reclaim the San Francisco 49ers' starting quarterback job over the next 17 weeks, he can forget about getting another chance next season.

General manager Scot McCloughan confirmed the harsh realities of NFL salary cap life this week for Smith, the former No. 1 overall draft pick from the University of Utah who will begin his fourth pro season Sunday as the backup to journeyman J.T. O'Sullivan.

Although the 49ers appear committed to keeping Smith this season, given the meager benefits of cutting him and the minuscule chances of trading him, their largesse won't continue in 2009.

When asked if the 49ers could keep Smith as anything less than the clear-cut starter next year, McCloughan said: "You can't."

"The amount of money we're going to invest in him, he'd have to be proven that he's the guy," McCloughan added. "When we get to the offseason, he'd have to be the guy for next year."

If the 49ers' decision to start O'Sullivan works out, Smith could make a hefty salary just by holding a clipboard this season. Smith also is scheduled to make more than $9 million in base salary next year, with a cap figure over $12 million.

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McCloughan acknowledges he was "surprised" last month when O'Sullivan beat out Smith, who was McCloughan's first draft pick with the 49ers three years ago. McCloughan expected Smith to be the Niners' starter Sunday against Arizona, getting the experience and seasoning he would need to be the long-term starter.

But O'Sullivan, the eight-team NFL veteran who spent last year in Detroit with 49ers offensive coordinator Mike Martz, apparently has a more thorough knowledge of San Francisco's new offense than Smith, who's on his fourth offensive coordinator in four years. O'Sullivan will make his first NFL start against the Cardinals.

"Am I disappointed? Not whatsoever," McCloughan claimed. "I think that you would have gone into this last offseason thinking that our starting quarterback would be (found) on the street. I don't think you'd find one team that would say that. ... We brought a quarterback in that fits the system that we're going to run, and he showed during the offseason and preseason that he was getting better with the system and it was working for him."

Smith is well aware of his predicament and his imminent departure from San Francisco unless he gets the job back. His tense relationship with Nolan in 2007 has largely cooled, and Smith remains publicly positive about his chance to contribute in San Francisco this season.

"I'm ready to do whatever they ask me to do," Smith said recently. "My shoulder feels fine. (I'm) just looking forward to learning all of the offense and playing whatever role I get."

Recent comments

To the dude that tried to make fun of using copy and paste.. Here…

CHase Sl | Sept. 6, 2008 at 1:15 a.m.

Hey Alex, could you spot a brother a couple of million dollars, things…

John Beck | Sept. 6, 2008 at 1:14 a.m.

When I was negotiating my contract with the 49rs, I asked them for…

Alex Smith | Sept. 6, 2008 at 1:12 a.m.

Alex Smith (Paul Sakuma, Associated Press)
Paul Sakuma, Associated Press
Alex Smith