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Fullback Kyle Juszczyk is a starter and tight end George Kittle is a reserve.
The NFL announced official 2019 Pro Bowl rosters Tuesday evening Richard Sherman Color Rush Jersey , and the San Francisco 49ers have two players in the initial roster for the postseason all star game, and three alternates. Defensive lineman DeForest Buckner, kicker Robbie Gould, and linebacker (specialist) Mark Nzeocha were selected as alternates. The game is scheduled for Sunday, January 27th in Orlando, Florida, with kickoff set for 12:00 p.m. PT on ABC and ESPN.It is always worth noting that rosters will change between now and January 27, when the Pro Bowl goes down in Orlando. Injuries and “injuries” will result in players dropping out. Whomever is playing in Super Bowl 53 the following week will drop out as well. There is a decent chance one or two more 49ers are added in after the fact.This marks Juszczyk’s third straight appearance in the Pro Bowl. He is a standout fullback, and considering the move away from the position for a lot of teams, it is not surprising he was easily elected a starter.Kittle has had a breakout sophomore season and rightfully earned his first Pro Bowl nod. He set the 49ers single season and single game records for tight end receiving yards. He is third among all tight ends in receptions and second in receiving yards. Both he and Travis Kelce have a chance at breaking Rob Gronkowski’s single season record for tight end receiving yards.If an injury replacement is needed, this would mark Buckner’s first Pro Bowl appearance, and comes as he is in the midst of the best season of his career. Buckner has 11 sacks and is second on the team with 60 total tackles. Considering how the NFL is evolving into a pass-first league, a defensive tackle with that many tackles is crazy. He is third among all defensive linemen.Nzeocha is a specialist alternate thanks in large part to a monster voter turnout from Germany. Nzeocha was born in Germany and is the first German-born Pro Bowler after NFL Germany fans and media mobilized for Nzeocha. He currently leads the 49ers in special teams snaps while also playing the SAM linebacker position.Gould has one Pro Bowl under his belt, way back in 2006. NEW YORK (AP) They’re not comparable to Power Five players, or even guys from the MAC, AAC or Mountain West. At least not on the football field.In the classroom? That’s no contest.Work in such subjects as nuclear physics, applied and computational mathematics, or geological engineering help Ivy Leaguers stand out in the real world. For NFL personnel people, such a resume is impressive – yet means a lot less than how fast a player ran the 40, how many squats he can do https://www.49ersfanshop.com/Jaquiski-Tartt-Jersey , or his injury history.That doesn’t mean the eight Ivy League schools who play in FCS – and don’t go to bowl games – get ignored by the pros. Indeed, there were 16 Ivies in the NFL last season, six starters. Two more were selected last weekend: Penn receiver Justin Watson in the fifth round by the Buccaneers, and Yale safety/linebacker Foye Oluokun in the sixth by the Falcons. A few others have been signed as undrafted free agents.Among the dozen 2017 pros were Tampa Bay tight end Cameron Brate of Harvard and New England fullback James Develin of Brown. Brate had 48 receptions for a 12.3-yard average and six touchdowns as one of Jameis Winston’s favorite targets with the Bucs. Develin merely has won two Super Bowls and made the Pro Bowl last season, as did 49ers fullback Kyle Juszczyk , who attended Harvard.”It takes an incredibly driven and dedicated individual to excel at the highest levels of academia and athletic competition,” says Robin Harris, executive director of the Ivy League. ”The Ivy League’s unique approach allows our student-athletes to focus on reaching their fullest potential in both realms and prepares them for lifelong success, whether in their field of study or professional athletic opportunities.”Oluokun hopes to seize his opportunity as a linebacker in Atlanta, though he’s versatile enough to handle safety duties. At 6-1, 234, he’s got the size, and can handle pass coverage.Then again, when you can juggle a course load filled with the likes of macroeconomics, econometrics and European economic history, you probably can breeze through a playbook.”I believe 100 percent it prepares you,” Oluokun says of the schoolwork at Yale and the challenges of making the NFL. ”You have got to put in that work and there are really no shortcuts here, and if you get behind you need to catch up, and that’s not easy. So if you make that mistake, you learn from it.”At first thought I thought it might be stressful Mike Person Jersey ,” he adds of being a student-athlete in the Ivy League, ”but it really is manageable if you approach it the right way. You have teachers who will help you out and you have tutors if you need them, or other students are kind of helping you out because they are in the same situation.”Except that the great majority of football players from Yale, Penn, Columbia, Harvard, Brown, Princeton, Dartmouth and Cornell are not heading to the NFL. Still, the true standouts get drafted, going back to 1949, when Penn’s two-way lineman Chuck Bednarik went first overall to Philadelphia. All Bednarik eventually did was make the Pro Football Hall of Fame.Ivies in the league last season were Brate; Develin; Juszczyk; Giants tight end Ryan O’Malley (Penn); Colts center Anthony Fabiano (Harvard); Giants long snapper Zak DeOssie (Brown); Browns center J.C. Tretter (Cornell); Seahawks long snapper Tyler Ott (Harvard); Browns tight end Seth DeValve (Princeton); Colts defensive tackle Caraun Reid (Princeton); Panthers center Greg Van Roten (Penn); Jets linebacker Josh Martin (Columbia); Buccaneers quarterback Ryan Fitzpatrick (Harvard); Bills center Adam Redmond (Harvard); Bears tight end Ben Braunecker (Harvard); and Vikings guard Nick Easton (Harvard).Two current head coaches, Dallas’ Jason Garrett (Princeton) and Houston’s Bill O’Brien (Brown) also are Ivy guys.”The NFL is incredibly challenging for all players, especially rookies that have to make a big adjustment playing against professionals,” says Princeton coach Bob Surace. ”I have been impressed by the talent level of the athletes in the Ivy League. More high school football players have turned down Power Five schools recently as they realize they can reach their athletic dreams and long-term career goals better in the Ivy League than any other conference.”As important, we are having more players make NFL teams better because our players love to compete, they have outstanding work habits and a burning desire to achieve at the highest level in everything they do.”Including, given the chance, in the NFL.—