Kyle Shanahan may take plenty of heat when the postseason ends without a trophy, but around the league, the respect is still loud and clear.
Seattle Seahawks coach Mike Macdonald offered that respect in plain terms during a recent conversation with Matt Maiocco of NBC Sports Bay Area at the American Century Championship golf tournament in South Lake Tahoe. Even with Seattle having some success against San Francisco late last season, Macdonald didn’t blink when asked about the 49ers’ coach.
"Kyle, he's the best in the business," Macdonald said. "I mean, he doesn't have the track record that he has by accident, so we've got a ton of respect for him."
Macdonald also pointed out what makes life so difficult in the NFC West: the constant familiarity. Since division teams see each other at least twice every year, there’s no hiding anything.
Coaches have to keep adjusting, keep evolving, and keep finding new answers. That’s especially true when the opponent is Shanahan’s 49ers.
Shanahan’s reputation stretches well beyond San Francisco. He’s widely viewed as one of the NFL’s top offensive minds, and his teams are almost always in the mix late in the season. The criticism has followed him anyway, mostly because the 49ers haven’t finished the job in the Super Bowl.
That scrutiny has been building for years. It traces back to his time as offensive coordinator of the Atlanta Falcons, when his team built a 28-3 lead against the New England Patriots before losing it. The same storyline came back in his next Super Bowl appearance, when critics said the 49ers ran the football too often in a defeat against the Kansas City Chiefs.
Macdonald, who won a Super Bowl in the 2025 season, has already joined the group of coaches with hardware. Even so, he still made it clear that Shanahan’s standing in the league is earned, not inflated.
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