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On February 17, 2009, 49ers.com officially announced new uniforms to be presented to the public during 49ers Draft Day events on April 25, 2009. The showcased design would be adopted for the 2009 NFL season. The uniform change rumors were confirmed by the team's chief operating officer Andy Dolich at the 49ers' State of the Franchise.
The San Francisco 49ers have two different uniforms: red and gold home uniforms and white, red, and gold road uniforms. However, the 49ers have changed uniform designs and color combinations quite often throughout their history.
The 1996 San Francisco 49ers season was the club's 51st since its inception. In commemoration, the 49ers wore a special 50th anniversary patch. They also wore a new uniform reminiscent of the 1994 throwback uniforms with white pants and shadowed numbers, but with a darker shade of red and an updated logo.
The San Fransisco 49ers once laid a claim to being the most dominant franchise in NFL history. After a disappointing, injury-riddled 2020 season, the organization appears to be trying to travel ...
Shows the period uniform the team would have been seen in . The 1955 San Francisco 49ers season was the franchise's 6th season in the National Football League and their 10th overall. They were coming off a 7–4–1 record in 1954, finishing in 3rd place in the Western Conference.
A lot of changes are coming to the San Francisco 49ers in 2022. But for the more casual 49ers fans, the most noticeable change might be to their uniforms. On Monday, the 49ers revealed that they ...
The list documents the season-by-season records of the 49ers' franchise from 1946 to present, including postseason records, and league awards for individual players or head coaches. The San Francisco 49ers began play in 1946 as charter members of the All-America Football Conference. When the 49ers joined the NFL after the AAFC-NFL merger in ...
The season is noted as running back O. J. Simpson's final year, quarterback Joe Montana's rookie season, and Bill Walsh's first year as head coach. The 1979 49ers remain the only team in NFL history to lose twelve games in which they held a lead. [1] They are also the first team in NFL history to attempt 600 or more passes, attempting 602.