
San Francisco, CA – December 6, 2025. The 49ers are preparing for the final playoff push, but inside the locker room, frustration has surfaced. And this time, it comes from the franchise quarterback himself.
Brock Purdy has spent the entire season holding together a roster battered by injuries and inconsistency. He has stayed patient with young players learning on the fly. But privately, coaches say Purdy hit his breaking point this week — and it centers on a rookie who was once expected to be a defensive bright spot.
The player in question, Marques Sigle, arrived as a fifth-round pick out of Kansas State, drafted No. 160 overall to help fill the void left when Talanoa Hufanga departed in free agency. Early in training camp, the 49ers believed they had found a versatile defensive back with toughness, strong instincts, and real potential in run support.
But after a promising preseason — including a forced fumble against the Raiders and a surprise Week 1 start with three tackles and a key fumble recovery — Sigle’s development hit a wall. His coverage issues became glaring. His Week 5 meltdown against the Rams became a viral talking point. And his efforts to take over a starting role quietly collapsed as coaches pulled back his snaps.
By Week 12, what once looked like a rising defensive contributor had faded into a rotational safety and special teams piece, logging around 15–20 snaps per game with a middling 68.4 PFF grade.
According to team insiders, the concern isn’t just on-field. It’s preparation, focus, and the inconsistency that comes with a rookie feeling too comfortable too quickly.
That’s where Brock Purdy stepped in.
In a conversation later confirmed by multiple people inside the building, Purdy delivered a pointed message aimed at young players — and understood by everyone to be directed at Sigle. In the quarterback’s words:
“This league doesn’t wait for anybody. Talent isn’t enough. If you start slipping in your habits, you lose your job. If you keep slipping, you lose your career. We’re trying to win a Super Bowl — we don’t have room for guys who think potential will carry them.”
For a roster loaded with veterans who pride themselves on discipline, Purdy’s tone struck hard. The 49ers’ defense has battled through injuries at safety, giving Sigle opportunities he was unable to seize. Coaches say his run defense remains NFL-caliber, but the mental side — recognition, communication, assignments — has lagged behind.
The team still believes in Sigle’s long-term outlook. His athleticism, versatility, and instincts make him an appealing developmental piece behind Ji’Ayir Brown and Jason Pinnock. But internally, the conversation has shifted from “future starter” to “needs to reset.”
If the 49ers make a deep playoff run, they will rely on rookies staying locked in, not drifting. And Purdy’s message — sharp, direct, and unmistakably serious — makes one thing clear:
There is no margin for complacency in a championship locker room.
New York Giants fire defensive coordinator Shane Bowen
The New York Giants have reportedly parted ways with defensive coordinator Shane Bowen.
The news comes from ESPN’s Adam Schefter. It isn’t immediately known who will be the interim defensive coordinator upon Bowen’s departure.
“Giants fired defensive coordinator Shane Bowen, per source,” Schefter reported.
The #Giants are firing defensive coordinator Shane Bowen, sources tell me and @MikeGarafolo.
The first move by interim coach Mike Kafka.
pic.twitter.com/oNqkTsjGea — Ian Rapoport (@RapSheet) November 24, 2025
While the Giants’ defense has shown flashes this season, it has been a poor season for the unit overall.
The biggest stain on Bowen’s tenure this season has been the fact that the Giants have blown a whopping five fourth-quarter leads of 10-plus points.
SNY’s Connor Hughes explains why the Giants didn’t fire Bowen when they cut former head coach Brian Daboll loose a few weeks back.
“The Giants didn’t want to fire Shane Bowen at the same time as Brian Daboll because Mike Kafka didn’t have a great grasp of the defensive staff,” Hughes reported.
“They wanted to give him time to determine for himself if a change was needed & who should be replacement.”
Hughes goes on to add that the blown fourth-quarter lead on Sunday was the final straw for Bowen.
“A fifth blown fourth quarter lead was enough. Shane Bowen is out, sources confirm to SNY,” Hughes added.
As far as who could replace Bowen is concerned, Hughes mentions outside linebacker coach Charlie Bullen as a strong possibility.