| San Francisco 49ers Team History
  The 
                  San Francisco 49ers were charter members of the All-America 
                  Football Conference, which began play in 1946. Had it not been 
                  for the Browns, who won four championships and lost only four 
                  games in the league's four years of operation, the 49ers would 
                  have been the AAFC's dominant team. Their cumulative record 
                  was an excellent 39-15-2. They handed the Browns two of their 
                  four defeats but finished second each year. Even in attendance, 
                  the 49ers were second best in the AAFC next to Cleveland. 
 When the 49ers moved to the NFL in 1950 following the collapse 
                  of the AAFC, their original management team -- co-owners Anthony 
                  J. Morabito and Victor P. Morabito and general manager Louis 
                  Spadia -- remained intact. The 49ers in the 1950s boasted of 
                  some of the game's great individual stars: quarterbacks Frankie 
                  Albert and Y. A. Tittle, running backs Hugh McElhenny, Joe Perry 
                  and John Henry Johnson, tackle Bob St. Clair and defensive tackle 
                  Leo Nomellini. But the closest they came to a championship in 
                  their first two decades of NFL play was in 1957, when they tied 
                  Detroit for the NFL Western division crown but lost in a playoff.
 
 San Francisco flirted with success in 1970, 1971 and 1972, when 
                  the 49ers won three straight NFC Western division titles. Every 
                  year, they were eliminated by the Dallas Cowboys, in the NFC 
                  championship games 1970 and 1971 and in the first playoff round 
                  in 1972. In 1971, the 49ers moved their home games from antiquated 
                  Kezar Stadium to 68,491-seat Candlestick Park.
 
 A bright new era dawned for the 49ers on March 31, 1977, when 
                  Edward J. DeBartolo Jr. became the new team owner. He dedicated 
                  himself to transforming a team that never won a league championship 
                  into a pro football power. In 1979, DeBartolo selected Bill 
                  Walsh, renowned as an offensive specialist, as the 49ers head 
                  coach. It took Walsh just three seasons to bring San Francisco 
                  its first-ever league championship with a 26-21 win over Cincinnati 
                  in Super Bowl XVI.
 
 San Francisco also won the NFC West in 1983 and did even better 
                  in 1984 with 18 wins in 19 games and a 38-16 Super Bowl XIX 
                  victory over the Miami Dolphins. Walsh concluded his pro coaching 
                  career after a last-second 20-16 victory over Cincinnati in 
                  Super Bowl XXIII. In 10 years, Walsh compiled a 102-62-1 record 
                  and won six NFC West titles and three Super Bowls.
 
 The 49ers of the 1980s were loaded with a group of young superstars 
                  including quarterback Joe Montana, receivers Dwight Clark and 
                  Jerry Rice, running back Roger Craig and defensive back Ronnie 
                  Lott. George Seifert, who replaced Walsh, continued to take 
                  full advantage of the existing talent. Careful personnel planning 
                  paid off as capable new players were on hand when veteran stars 
                  retired. A perfect example is the quarterback position where 
                  Steve Young was on hand to replace Montana, who battled a series 
                  of injuries before leaving the 49ers.
 
 Seifert's record as the 49ers head man was awesome, with two 
                  Super Bowl wins -- a 55-10 win over the Denver Broncos in Super 
                  Bowl XXIV and a 49-26 victory over the San Diego Chargers in 
                  Super Bowl XXIX.
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