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Kyle Shanahan and the miracle San Francisco 49ers are a coaching masterpiece

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After a thrilling 42-38 win over the high-flying Chicago Bears on Sunday, the San Francisco 49ers did more than just survive another chaotic shootout.

They extended their winning streak to six games, moved to 12-4 for the 2025 season, and set up a Week 18 showdown with the Seattle Seahawks that will decide not only the NFC West but the No.1 seed in the conference.

In a league designed to flatten excellence and punish attrition, the 49ers have instead doubled down on both.

What makes this run genuinely remarkable is not simply the record, or the late-season momentum, but the context in which it has been achieved.

This is not a team cruising on health and continuity. This is a roster that, by midseason, looked more like a medical journal than a Super Bowl contender.

Nick Bosa, the defensive line’s wrecking ball and emotional compass, was lost to a season-ending injury. Fred Warner, the All-Pro heartbeat of the defence, followed him.

Brandon Aiyuk, the team’s top wide receiver, never even got going, missing the entire campaign. Brock Purdy, the franchise quarterback, was sidelined for weeks with turf toe.

For most teams, that list alone would be a death sentence. Instead, the 49ers just kept winning. Not clinging on, not scraping by, but scoring points, dictating games and out-coaching opponents who, on paper, had every advantage.

That is where Kyle Shanahan comes in, and why this season should be spoken about as a coaching flex rather than a lucky run. His offensive system remains the envy of the league not because it is clever, but because it is resilient. It bends around personnel, not the other way around.

Nowhere is that clearer than in the rise of Mac Jones while Purdy was out. Signed in the offseason as a depth move that barely registered outside Santa Clara,

Jones has seen his stock soar as a stand-in quarterback who has looked comfortable, confident and, crucially, effective.

Shanahan stripped the game down to timing, spacing and trust, asking Jones to execute rather than improvise, and the results have been startlingly functional. The offense has not just survived without its stars; it has evolved.

This is what elite coaching looks like in the NFL. Not vibes, not slogans, but week-to-week solutions to impossible problems. The 49ers may yet fall short in January, because the playoffs are cruel and random and unforgiving.

But whatever happens next, this season already stands as a reminder: when everything breaks, great coaching is what puts it back together.