Every game matters from here on out for the San Francisco 49ers, who improved to 7-4 after Sunday's decisive 41-22 win over the Arizona Cardinals. The 49ers now turn their attention to a Monday Night Football showdown against the Carolina Panthers before facing the Cleveland Browns and entering their long-awaited bye week. They'll return with a matchup against the Tennessee Titans.
On paper, the next three games are favorable, but the 49ers can't afford to overlook anyone as the Los Angeles Rams continue to separate themselves in the NFC West race.
Once that stretch ends, San Francisco will enter one of the toughest finishing slates in the NFL with back-to-back-to-back matchups against the Indianapolis Colts, Chicago Bears, and Seattle Seahawks.
Quarterback Brock Purdy says the team is embracing the challenge.
"I'm excited, just with the momentum that we have going, and guys ready to go in on this challenge of finishing out the season strong," Purdy said after Sunday's win. "But it's one game at a time, it's one practice at a time. But I think, more than anything, we all believe in each other."
The 49ers have battled a heavy wave of injuries throughout the season, including season-ending losses to All-Pro linebacker Fred Warner and star pass rusher Nick Bosa. Many have questioned whether the team can overcome the setbacks.
That list grew again in Arizona. Warner's replacement, Tatum Bethune, exited with an ankle injury, while kicker Eddy Piñeiro also suffered a hamstring issue that could cost him time.
"We've lost some guys, which sucks—some big names and everything," Purdy added. "But guys have just stepped up to the challenge, and this is what NFL football is all about. You find out who you are under pressure, but we've got the right guys in the building and we're ready for it."
Tight end George Kittle shares Purdy's optimism about the late-season push.
"The nice thing is we haven't had a bye yet, which is crazy to me," Kittle said. "... But we have a Monday night game, so we have an extra day to just kind of get our bodies right, figure out what we have to do. And then, a short week into Cleveland."
There is good news—the 49ers offense is finally getting healthy. Sunday marked Purdy's first appearance since Week 4 after aggravating a turf-toe injury back in the season opener.
"We're positioned right where we want to be," Kittle said. "Our offense is basically healthy, where we want everybody to be at."
The 41 points scored against Arizona were the most by the 49ers since the 2023 season, when they scored 45 against the Cardinals. Fullback Kyle Juszczyk said this is precisely what he expected the offense to look like before the injuries piled up.
"It felt awesome, it felt good," Juszczyk said. "That's how we planned for this thing to be. When all our guys were together, we planned on being this high-scoring offense, efficient offense, one that we thought could carry this team.
"So, it's a great testament that, first chance we got, we went out there and put up 41 points. That's pretty good."
The 49ers also welcomed back wide receiver Ricky Pearsall, who returned after missing time since Week 4 due to a knee injury. He finished with just one catch, but teammates insist the production is coming.
"He's going to pop off here in a sec," Kittle said of Pearsall, "because I wish you guys could watch practice the whole week, because he was just on fire the entire week. Just some of the looks weren't there, but he's going to have a great game. And then, when Ricky's running his routes full speed, and we get [WR] Jauan [Jennings] involved, and me and [RB] Christian [McCaffrey] and Juice [Juszczyk], I think it's just a very lethal offense."
Pearsall believes the best is yet to come. When asked if he thinks the 49ers offense can do some special things in the upcoming games, the receiver quickly responded, "Absolutely."
Pearsall added, "That's a lot of explosive guys on one unit, and we've got a really good play caller [in Shanahan], a really good system, so the sky's the limit for us."