You guy's see the 49ers new GM.......

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Eddiie DeBartolo's 27 year old nephew......WTF



Like the MNF announcers were saying hows he going to feel in the NFL meetings with the other owners the likes of Jerry Jones and so forth.

But can't do any worse than his dumb shit father who's wife shuffled the delegated duties to when the team fell in her lap that she really wanted no part of.............Sluty ass bitch!



Jed York steps forward as face of 49ers

By Matthew Barrows
mbarrows@sacbee.com
<!--& /mi/pubsys/story/bug, format=>q{ [/mi/pubsys/story/bug]
} &--> <script> //$(document).ready(function(){ // $("#bug").dialog("autoOpen","false"); //}); </script> Published: Sunday, Oct. 26, 2008 | Page 1C
<!-- CLOSE: #story_header --> SANTA CLARA – The dark hair and dark eyes. The boyish face. The certain calm and comfort under the media glare.
The Bay Area and beyond did a collective double take Tuesday when a figure in a navy blue suit appeared before them to announce that 49ers coach Mike Nolan had been fired.
Eddie D?
The face at the lectern, however, didn't belong to Edward DeBartolo Jr., the beloved and longed-for former owner of the 49ers. It belonged instead to his 27-year-old nephew, Jed York, who has run the 49ers' day-to-day operations for months but who until Tuesday had stepped aside while his father, John York, handled big, football-related news.
It wasn't just the fans laying eyes on the younger York for the first time who were struck by the family resemblance.
John McVay was hired by DeBartolo in 1979 and was the team's director of football operations throughout its glory days in the 1980s and 1990s.
"I have a great sense of him," McVay said of York. "What I see in him is Eddie all over again. … He looks like him. He's built like him. And I see a lot of Eddie's charm in Jed. Just the way he reaches out to people. He's not standoffish at all."
For many longtime fans and observers, a fresh face is exactly what the 49ers need. The team's faithful had grown restless not just with Nolan, who had failed to have a winning season in 3 1/2 seasons, but with the organization as a whole.
Two weeks ago, Philadelphia Eagles supporters arrived en masse at aging Candlestick Park in a game the 49ers let slip away in the fourth quarter. Today's game against Seattle nearly left the 49ers with their first television blackout since 1981.
York certainly isn't flying solo at 49ers headquarters. In fact, he insists his parents are the true owners.
"Put it this way," he said. "If Roger Goodell needed to call someone about the 49ers, he would call my mother (Denise DeBartolo York) and father."
Still, Jed York, listed as "Vice President of Strategic Planning/Owner" in the team's media guide, is the only one of the three who works continuously out of the 49ers' offices in Santa Clara.
And he handled an awfully big piece of business last week.
Handling the dirty work

Shortly after the 49ers fell to the New York Giants for their fourth consecutive loss, the Yorks decided to fire Nolan and replace him with Mike Singletary. But they wanted to do so after today's game against the Seattle Seahawks, which precedes the team's bye week.
When ESPN reported as much Monday afternoon, Jed York thought the news would undermine the team's preparation for today's game. So he called his father, who was in San Francisco, and his mother, who was in Youngstown, Ohio, and the three agreed to fire Nolan that day.
And so he did in a one-on-one sit-down with Nolan. The two later were joined by general manager Scot McCloughan.
York has a small office that overlooks the team's practice fields. His desk is surrounded by family photos. Many are of Uncle Eddie or of his grandfather, shopping center developer Edward DeBartolo Sr., who bought the 49ers in 1977.
One of York's most cherished possessions is an old matchbook with the name of his grandfather's first construction company. Another is a framed dollar bill, the first dollar he ever made while working for the DeBartolo Corp. in Ohio in 1996. His grandfather, a product of the Great Depression, once had his first dollar framed and on display in his own office.
York also has several photographs of his father, with whom he is very close. Indeed, Jed York is the embodiment of two family lines 49ers fans see in opposite terms: the DeBartolos, who brought five championships to San Francisco, and the Yorks, whose 10-year reign has coincided with a fall to the bottom of the league.
The young owner may have the surname of the man 49ers fans don't trust, but he also has the ear of the man they adore.
Reached at the Tampa, Fla., headquarters of DeBartolo Sports and Entertainment last week, Eddie DeBartolo said he speaks with his nephew perhaps four or five times during the season and had talked to him that day.
 

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