SANTA CLARA — George Kittle likes things loud, boisterous and enthusiastic.
So it’s no surprise the 49ers tight end is looking forward to Thanksgiving night in Seattle, where the 49ers (7-3) visit the Seahawks (6-4) at one of the most deafening venues in the NFL.
“They absolutely hate us up there,” Kittle said following a 27-14 win over Tampa Bay Sunday. “What a great fan base to hate us. It’s going to be really fun.”
Kittle prides himself on being a dominating blocker but has been at his explosive best as a receiver of late. He has caught 31 passes for 432 yards and two touchdowns in his last four games, including eight receptions for 89 yards and a touchdown against Tampa Bay.
The previous week’s win over Jacksonville included a career-long 66-yard touchdown pass from Brock Purdy that coach Kyle Shanahan said was “like a grenade out of a bunker.”
There may be no slowing Kittle’s roll in Seattle, given that he has 13 receptions for 274 yards and three touchdowns in his last two trips to the Great Northwest.
The former fifth-round draft pick out of Iowa is proving he is still an ascending player despite the wear and tear of seven seasons treating his body on Sundays like a jalopy in a demolition derby.
Purdy has been an equal-opportunity distributor — Kittle, Brandon Aiyuk and Christian McCaffrey are tied for the team lead with 43 receptions each — but has 12 touchdown passes to Kittle in his 18 games as a starter including the postseason.
Before Purdy arrived, Kittle had 24 touchdowns in 76 games — 17 of those thrown by Jimmy Garoppolo.
Former 49ers tight end Brent Jones said Garoppolo didn’t have Aiyuk and McCaffrey at their peak to the degree Purdy has, which loosens things up for Kittle. But Jones also credited Purdy with looking towards his tight end with greater frequency.
“He certainly does look for him more,” Jones said on KNBR. “I don’t want to be hard on Jimmy. I think Jimmy did to a degree but not as much and never enough.
Said Kittle: “I do enjoy the fact that Brock is throwing me the ball in the red zone. It’s fun.”
Fun is a theme with Kittle, and not just when he’s catching the ball. His love for blocking makes him valuable even if he’s not catching passes, and his positive vibes are contagious to his teammates.
As for the recent uptick in production as a receiver, Shanahan considers it an inevitability as long as Kittle is healthy enough to do damage.
Stay hot, @gkittle46!#TBvsSF on FOX
NFL+ // https://t.co/KTh0i4oaLh pic.twitter.com/3wJoozLKGx— San Francisco 49ers (@49ers) November 19, 2023
“The way George plays, and the way it ties into the run game and the pass game and with how good he is, it’s usually something we don’t have to force,” Shanahan said Monday. “It’s just a matter of time.”
Kittle credits the efficiency of the offense for his own production as a receiver.
“We have a lot of opportunities because of the way Brock takes care of the ball and the way he’s able to extend plays with his feet,” Kittle said. “When you’re on the field for eight-to-10 plays and you get down in the red zone and the defense is a little tired and they might mess up a coverage.”
Of course, Kittle is one of the biggest reasons the 49ers’ offense has remained on the field. Of his 43 receptions, 28 have gone for first downs, a career-best percentage of 66.1 that is the tops at his position this season.
Kittle is encouraged by the 49ers’ progress but far from satisfied. The 49ers settled twice for Jake Moody field goals in the red zone and didn’t adequately run out the clock on Tampa Bay in the second half. Penalties and turnovers plagued the 49ers during their three-game losing streak.
“We’re definitely not there yet,” Kittle said. “We had five plays and out on the first drive. We weren’t great in the bleed (the clock) drill. We’re taking steps in the right direction but there are parts of our game we need to execute and get better at. If you turn the ball over or get penalties on first and second down it’s hard to be a good football team. It’s hard to stay on the field. Our defense is playing at a high level and it’s allowing us to cover up those mistakes, but it’s something we need to work at and get better very quickly at.”
Although seven tight ends have more than Kittle’s 43 receptions, his 638 yards are good for 15.1 yards per reception. The only tight end with more is Minnesota’s T.J. Hockenson, who has 736 yards compiled on 75 catches.
Kittle plays with such abandon he has logged just one season in which he didn’t miss at least one game due to injury. That was in 2018, when he had 88 receptions for 1,377 yards and five touchdowns. He is currently on pace for 73 receptions, 1,102 yards and nine touchdowns.
No offense to Ross Dwelley, Charlie Woerner or Braden Willis, but the drop-off from Kittle at his position is a steep one so the 49ers are keeping their fingers crossed that he stays healthy and productive.