The San Francisco 49ers are among the most dynamic franchises, not only in the National Football League but in all of professional sports. They have won five Super Bowl titles and have produced some of football's most dynamic players in Joe Montana, Jerry Rice, and Ronnie Lott, all of whom were coached by Bill Walsh, one of the game's most innovative thinkers. The 49ers' greatness came 35 years after the franchise began in 1946. During those years, they achieved no conference or league titles, even though they produced eight Pro Football Hall of Fame inductees, including the celebrated "Million Dollar Backfield." Offering a detailed look at the 49ers' prolonged growing pains, from the 1940s through the mid-1970s, Founding 49ers focuses on that mostly unfulfilled time before the DeBartolo family rescued the franchise. Author Dave Newhouse provides a fascinating look at the 49ers' early years through the eyes of the players who gave the franchise its foundation. Ex-49ers from the 1940s, 1950s, 1960s, and 1970s share their tales within these pages, including two members of the original 1946 team; Lou Spadia, the last surviving member of the 49ers' original front office; former 49ers coach George Seifert; and Hall of Fame quarterback Dan Fouts, son of an early 49ers broadcaster. These mostly forgotten 49ers didn't win like their successors, but they were highly entertaining, they broke down racial barriers, and they turned San Francisco into a major-league city. Founding 49ers captures the history of those pre-Walsh 49ers like no book before it.
I saw my first to 9er games in '57 (including the infamous loss to the Lions ) at age 8 so these were the 9ers of my youth. John Brodie, Tittle, Perry, McElhenny, Parks, Krueger, and so many more. Loved the stories-especially the ones about how the players hated Red Hickey and how Brodie couldn't stand Dick Nolan. The chapters on the foundational years were also great and I learned a lot. One thing that I think could have improved the book a bit would have been some more depth and insight into some of the key games: the loss to the Cowboys in '70, the introduction of the shotgun in '61 are two that jump out at me. A great read for any long time 9er fan-not just the Harbaugh/Shanahan band wagon fans.