This Overlooked 49ers Camp Battle Could Create A Familiar Unease

While the spotlight may not shine as brightly on the 49ers' punter battle, the competition between Corliss Waitman and Jack Bouwmeester could play a pivotal role in shaping the team's overall success this season.

One of the quieter battles in 49ers camp might turn into one of the more important ones. While the attention will naturally go to the flashier position fights, San Francisco still has a punter job to settle, and that decision could matter plenty once the regular season starts.

Corliss Waitman and Jack Bouwmeester are the two names in the mix, and they’ll spend training camp and the preseason trying to win the role. It’s not the kind of competition that grabs headlines the way a kicker showdown does, but it’s still a real roster decision for a team that has to replace Thomas Morstead.

Morstead was steady for San Francisco last season, even if there were stretches when the offense kept him on the sideline. Now the 49ers have to see which of the two newcomers can handle the job.

Waitman looks like the early favorite. He brings NFL experience, and he’s a left-footed punter, something coaches tend to value because of the different spin it creates and the trouble it can cause returners.

Last season, he averaged 45.5 yards per punt and put nearly 42-percent of his kicks inside the 20-yard line. That’s a dependable profile, and in this case, familiarity may help.

Bouwmeester offers a different kind of appeal. He entered as an undrafted free agent out of the University of Texas after also spending time at the University of Utah.

At Texas, he averaged 44.5 yards per punt, and at Utah he averaged 43.6. He also comes with a little extra intrigue because he’s from Australia and is still waiting on visa approval.

The 49ers have already had success with an Australian punter in Mitch Wishnowsky, so there’s at least a recent example of that path working out.

Even if punters don’t usually draw much attention, the position matters. Offenses go cold sometimes, and when they do, a team needs someone who can flip the field and keep things from spiraling.

San Francisco has been there before. Andy Lee gave the 49ers a huge leg for years, often on teams that needed it more than most. The hope now is that Waitman or Bouwmeester won’t have to work that often, even if they still need to be ready for every chance they get.

There’s also a bigger special teams question hanging over camp. The unit took a big step forward last season under Brant Boyer, but the 49ers lost both their punter and their primary kick and punt returner from a year ago. That leaves room for change, and it’ll be worth watching whether Boyer can keep the momentum going or whether San Francisco sees a drop in those areas.

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