49ers fans lose it on Twitter after Trey Lance’s 80-yard TD pass

49ers rookie QB Trey Lance’s 80-yard touchdown pass to Trent Sherfield was a sight to behold, but paled in comparison to the Twitter responses that followed.
We’ve been waiting a long time for a small taste of San Francisco 49ers football. And when fans and the media finally received that first taste Saturday night, even in a meaningless preseason game against the visiting Kansas City Chiefs at Levi’s Stadium, it proved to be a little too much for them to handle.
The addition of rookie quarterback and new Niner hero Trey Lance, who was acquired at great expense over the offseason by San Francisco shipping off two additional first-round NFL Draft picks, plus a future Round 3 selection to move up to No. 3 overall, only added fuel the fire.
Deep in the midst of a “non-competition” with the incumbent starting quarterback, Jimmy Garoppolo, Lance was the player everyone wanted to see on Saturday night at Levi’s Stadium.
Not surprisingly, Lance received quite the ovation when he took the field following Garoppolo’s lone offensive series.
Lance’s first series didn’t go so well. His first pass attempted was a dart to wide receiver Brandon Aiyuk, only Aiyuk dropped it aft the ball hit him in the wickets.
Yet Lance quickly put the worries to rest on his second drive, rolling right and tossing an 80-yard touchdown bomb to wide receiver Trent Sherfield:
The collective ramp-up of noise inside Levi’s Stadium seemed to follow the arc of the ball traveling from Lance’s arm. It was the culmination of anticipation to finally see the rookie quarterback’s talents.
And once the ball landed in Sherfield’s hands and he took it to the house, needless to say, those attending and watching at home finally identified their quarterback of the future.
49ers Twitter reacts and overreacts some more to Trey Lance TD
Retweet to sign the “START TREY LANCE WEEK 1” petition 😤 #TreyBay
— FantasyLand Football (@fantasyland_fb) August 15, 2021
How will you remember the Jimmy Garoppolo era?
— Adam Rank (@adamrank) August 15, 2021
START TREY LANCE OR WE RIOT
— Brett Kollmann (@BrettKollmann) August 15, 2021
I’ve had this opinion for months so don’t consider this a preseason overreaction (idc, do whatever you want)
If the 49ers were to start Trey Lance week 1, they will win the NFC West and reach the Super Bowl.
He’ll elevate the offense so much.
Jimmy G=Alex Smith
Lance=Mahomes https://t.co/bM2WLLvqbc— Mitchell Lea (@mitchellea10) August 15, 2021
Needless to say, that’s a throw Garoppolo either wouldn’t or couldn’t have made. And while the rest of Lance’s inaugural NFL night had its up-and-down moments, including more drops from receiving targets and trying to operate behind a makeshift offensive line, the rookie’s first efforts will forever be known for this touchdown bomb.
Now, the question is whether or not the hype and reaction can help fuel the 49ers towards starting Trey Lance right away.
Read More: Jimmy Garoppolo has priceless reaction to Trey Lance touchdown
Head coach Kyle Shanahan has continued to stress that Garoppolo is still the Niners’ starter. And while Garoppolo certainly has the experience over Lance, who still only started one full year in college, Lance’s natural abilities and gifts are far more explosive.
It’ll only be a matter of time. Garoppolo knows that, too.
And judging by Twitter, so does everyone else.
Elon Musk Says He’ll Pay $11 Billion in Taxes in 2021 But Twitter Wants ‘Proof’

Elon Musk took to Twitter to clarify once and for all that he will be paying a whopping $11 billion as taxes this year.
If the number of times Elon Musk could count when someone has asked him to pay the full taxes, he would be a very rich..wait, never mind. The Tesla boss is rich beyond any private individual has been in history, reports said.
Musk has increasingly been facing criticism from many politicians and many others who insist he has not been paying taxes as compared to the profits his companies have been making. On Sunday, the SpaceX CEO took to Twitter to share that he will be paying a whopping $11 billion as taxes.
For those wondering, I will pay over $11 billion in taxes this year— Elon Musk (@elonmusk) December 20, 2021
But some of the questions did not stop. One person tweeted how they needed to see Musk’s tax returns while yet another asked how much percentage was that of his total income.
A few were, however scathing of the government who thought they will add that amount to their pockets rather than using it for some proper development.
Wow that’s enough to give each person in the world almost $2 million but instead the government will just stick it in their pockets— greg (@greg16676935420) December 20, 2021
Why not $200 billion? Asking for a Senator— litquidity (@litcapital) December 20, 2021
Earlier this week, Democratic US Senator Elizabeth Warren has tweeted to say that Musk should pay taxes and stop “freeloading off everyone else” after Time magazine named him its “person of the year”.
In response, Musk shot four tweets in which he said that the senator reminded him of a friend’s angry mom who yelled at everybody. He tweeted, ““And if you opened your eyes for 2 seconds, you would realize I will pay more taxes than any American in history this year.” “Don’t spend it all at once … oh wait you did already.”
He added further, “You remind me of when I was a kid and my friend’s angry Mom would just randomly yell at everyone for no reason.”
Musk responded by saying that he “will pay more taxes than any American in history this year”. This Twitter exchange left netizens divided as even though many supported Warren and agreed that Musk should pay more taxes, others felt that he was already doing enough.
Musk’s Tesla is worth about $1 trillion. Over the last few weeks, he has sold nearly $14 billion worth of Tesla shares.
The Tesla boss has been pushing for his colonize Mars agenda for years now, and has made it very clear in some occasions that he would rather spend the money on putting humanity on the red planet, than pay his taxes. “My plan,” the SpaceX founder tweeted about his fortune, “is to use the money to get humanity to Mars and preserve the light of consciousness.”
Twitter Admits Policy ‘Errors’ After Far-Right Abuse Its New Rules of Posting Pictures

Twitter’s new picture permission policy was aimed at combating online abuse, but US activists and researchers said Friday that far-right backers have employed it to protect themselves from scrutiny and to harass opponents.
Even the social network admitted the rollout of the rules, which say anyone can ask Twitter to take down images of themselves posted without their consent, was marred by malicious reports and its teams’ own errors.
It was just the kind of trouble anti-racism advocates worried was coming after the policy was announced this week.
Their concerns were quickly validated, with anti-extremism researcher Kristofer Goldsmith tweeting a screenshot of a far-right call-to-action circulating on Telegram: “Due to the new privacy policy at Twitter, things now unexpectedly work more in our favor.”
“Anyone with a Twitter account should be reporting doxxing posts from the following accounts,” the message said, with a list of dozens of Twitter handles.
Gwen Snyder, an organizer and researcher in Philadelphia, said her account was blocked this week after a report to Twitter about a series of 2019 photos she said showed a local political candidate at a march organized by extreme-right group Proud Boys.
Rather than go through an appeal with Twitter she opted to delete the images and alert others to what was happening.
“Twitter moving to eliminate (my) work from their platform is incredibly dangerous and is going to enable and embolden fascists,” she told AFP.
In announcing the privacy policy on Tuesday, Twitter noted that “sharing personal media, such as images or videos, can potentially violate a person’s privacy, and may lead to emotional or physical harm.”
But the rules don’t apply to “public figures or individuals when media and accompanying Tweets are shared in the public interest or add value to public discourse.”
By Friday, Twitter noted the roll out had been rough: “We became aware of a significant amount of coordinated and malicious reports, and unfortunately, our enforcement teams made several errors.”
“We’ve corrected those errors and are undergoing an internal review to make certain that this policy is used as intended,” the firm added.
Jack Dorsey Post Twitter Is Chasing His Crypto, Fintech Dream
At a packed Miami conference in June, Jack Dorsey, mused in front of thousands of attendees about where his real passion lay: “If I weren’t at Square or Twitter, I’d be working on Bitcoin.”
On Monday, Dorsey made good on one part of that, announcing he would leave Twitter for the second time, handing the CEO position to a 10-year veteran at the firm. The 45-year-old entrepreneur, who is often described as an enigma with varied interests from meditation to yoga to fashion design, plans to pursue his passion which include focusing on running Square and doing more philanthropic work, according to a source familiar with his plan.
Well before the surprise news, Dorsey had laid the groundwork for his next chapter, seeding both companies with cryptocurrency-related projects.
Underlying Dorsey’s broader vision is the principle of “decentralisation,” or the idea that technology and finance should not be concentrated among a handful of gatekeepers, as it is now, but should, instead, be steered by the hands of the many, either people or entities.
The concept has played out at Square, which has built a division devoted to working on projects and awarding grants with the aim of growing Bitcoin’s popularity globally. Bitcoin price in India stood at Rs. 44.52 lakh as of 12:50pm IST on December 1.
Dorsey has been a longtime proponent of Bitcoin, and the appeal is that the cryptocurrency will allow for private and secure transactions with the value of Bitcoin unrelated to any government.
The idea has also underpinned new projects at Twitter, where Dorsey tapped a top lieutenant – and now the company’s new CEO Parag Agrawal – to oversee a team that is attempting to construct a decentralised social media protocol, which will allow different social platforms to connect with one another, similar to the way email providers operate.
The project called Bluesky will aim to allow users control over the types of content they see online, removing the “burden” on companies like Twitter to enforce a global policy to fight abuse or misleading information, Dorsey said in 2019 when he announced Bluesky.
Bitcoin has also figured prominently at both of his companies. Square became one of the first public companies to own Bitcoin assets on its balance sheet, having invested $220 million (roughly Rs. 1,650 crore) in the cryptocurrency.
In August, Square created a new business unit called TBD to focus on Bitcoin. The company is also planning to build a hardware wallet for Bitcoin, a Bitcoin mining system, as well as a decentralised Bitcoin exchange.
Twitter allows users to tip their favourite content creators with Bitcoin and has been testing integrations with non-fungible tokens (NFTs), a type of digital asset that allows people to collect unique digital art.
Analysts see the transition as a positive signal for Square, the fintech platform he co-founded in 2009. Square’s core Cash App, after a bull run in its share in 2020, has experienced slower growth in the most recent quarter. It is also trying to digest the $29 billion (roughly Rs. 2,17,240 crore) acquisition of Buy Now Pay Later provider Afterpay, its largest acquisition ever.
But these ambitions will not pay off until years from now, analysts cautioned.
“The blockchain platform they’re trying to develop is great but also fraught with technical challenges and difficult to scale for consumers. I think he’ll focus more on Square and crypto will be part of that,” said Christopher Brendler, an analyst at DA Davidson.
© Thomson Reuters 2021
Interested in cryptocurrency? We discuss all things crypto with WazirX CEO Nischal Shetty and WeekendInvesting founder Alok Jain on Orbital, the Gadgets 360 podcast. Orbital is available on Apple Podcasts, Google Podcasts, Spotify, Amazon Music and wherever you get your podcasts.
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