Davidson;842115390 said:
I find it hard to believe there is a bias in the NFL. You get the best players and play them or you are out of job in 1 year.
I hate furd just as much as anyone and I hate Andrew Luck, but, hell, if I was a GM or coach, I would draft and play him every day and twice on sundays.
I think there are a lot of fans that grew up somewhere else than the bay area (LA) that went to Cal and became fans during the Tedford years and really have no emotional attachment to the niners (because they sucked during those years).
Well you are familiar with Luck, because Cal played against him and he played in the same media market (one of the reasons many NFL franchises have a bias towards players from local schools).
From my understanding that is similar to the Niners under Eddie D. He grew up a Notre Dame fan, he was a Notre Dame alum. He watched Notre Dame on Saturdays and the 49ers on Sundays. He was biased for Note Dame but also when drafting had a bias toward players he had seen on teams that played against Notre Dame: USC, Stanford, BYU and the service academies. He was an active owner and had a lot of influence. I was also told the Niners thought guys from Notre Dame, Stanford, BYU and the service academies were "character guys" and the Niners prided themselves on "being classy."
Similarly, Tony Morabito, the Niners original owner, grew up a Stanford fan, played for Santa Clara and the 49ers had Stanford quarterbacks as starters (and back-ups) almost exclusively for decades (only one Stanford QB that played in the NFL during those decades never played for the Niners). Does anyone really think that is just a coincidence?
So not a bias against Cal, but a bias towards other schools and a lack of love for Cal from the local franchise. The big exception was when Mooch was the head coach and Holmoe was Cal's coach. It is not coincidental that the Niners had their most Cal players on the roster at that time. There was a former Niner at Cal and a former Cal coach at the Niners and they were friends/former co-workers so Cal players had connections and advocates. Football is a business, but those who try to argue that it is purely rational and that bias and connections don't matter obviously have little business experience or somehow think it doesn't apply here. Besides, signing a player (or hiring someone for a job) that you know or is endorsed by someone you know is completely rational.
With Harbaugh at the Niners and his friend Shaw at Stanford, it seemed likely the Stanford connection would resume (it had diminished as Walsh's influence diminished--he was a strong advocate for Stanford players within the Niner organization), possibly to the detriment of Cal players. However, due to recent developments it sure appears that is not the case and I am glad about that, it makes it a lot easier to root for the Niners. Go Niners! Go Bears!