Tom Brady’s LFG Player of the Game: 49ers WR Demarcus Robinson 🏆
It didn’t matter whether it was sunny and 65 or one of those infamously foggy days when the San Francisco windchill cuts through your coat like the weather’s got a chip on its shoulder. For more than a decade, there was always already a line outside State Bird Provisions as the clock ticked from 5:29 to 5:30 p.m.
Seven days a week since 2012, diners have queued up on the sidewalk along the 1500 block of Fillmore Street, sizing each other up in an unsubtle attempt to suss out which parties had reservations and which would be vying for one of the few tables — 30 percent of the dining room, to be exact — held aside for walk-ins. Anyone who didn’t get a seat during the restaurant’s first turn would be relegated to waiting for at least another couple of hours. Sometimes hungry would-be diners would crack open a bottle of wine and brown bag it, splashing drinks into red Solo cups. On Saturdays, to create a more festive air, the State Bird kitchen staff would pass out hot chocolate.
Co-owners and chefs Stuart Brioza and Nicole Krasinski, along with managing partner Elizabeth DePalmer, say that over the years, they often wondered when they’d show up to find no one waiting outside.
“Every year, we’d be like, is the line gonna go away?” Krasinski says.
“Sometimes they would come a little later than normal,” DePalmer adds. “We’d be like, ‘Oh, is today gonna be the day?’
“But we were surprised every day for 10 years.”
Even now, a full 12 years since State Bird Provisions opened its doors, it’s common to find a line of diners waiting outside the restaurant when service begins. But if you ask the trio, they’d swear they had no idea what a success the restaurant would be. State Bird Provisions has been credited with being among the first (if not the first) to adapt dim sum-style cart service to non-Chinese food — not to mention reinventing entirely new seasonings and turning the California state bird into a culinary phenomenon — but the owners say they opened it, at least in part, out of necessity.
“We didn’t want to bounce our rent checks,” Brioza jokes. “We were definitely doing something radical. And, you know, honestly, I think it was a lot of lukewarm reception in the early days.”
Of course, it didn’t take long for that to change.
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“So, little-known fact,” Brioza says. “State Bird was, in a really weird way, never meant to happen.” What he means is that it wasn’t a restaurant he and Krasinski planned on opening.
When the couple started toying with the idea of opening a restaurant, America was just coming out of the Great Recession. Brioza and Krasinski, who’d been working in the restaurant industry for more than a decade already, knew they wanted to open something of their own; they just weren’t sure what it should be. In the meantime, they were catering out of their Hayes Valley apartment. But due to the economic downturn, fewer customers wanted a full dinner spread. Instead, the pair would often cook meals comprised entirely of hors d’oeuvres — a full menu of small bites, but enough to leave guests feeling full.
Around this time, they toured the building that would eventually become State Bird Provisions. The space at 1529 Fillmore Street had previously housed a pizzeria, but it was small and dark, and Brioza and Krasinski weren’t into it. Then they stepped into the space next door and immediately fell in love. The longer, narrower space at 1525 Fillmore Street had high ceilings and character in spades. They wanted it for their dream restaurant — what would eventually become the Progress — but it wasn’t zoned for food and would need a complete build-out. So the landlord, who owned both spaces, made them an offer: He’d give them a deal on the space they really wanted, if they’d take that smaller space, too. They could open something at 1529 Fillmore Street far more quickly and have that up and running while they worked on making 1525 Fillmore Street whatever they desired.
All Brioza and Krasinski needed was, well, a restaurant to move into the space.
“So we had this idea,” Brioza says. “We started to do these mammoth hors d’oeuvre parties, like 10 to 12 items — and that was the birth of State Bird.”
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State Bird Provisions opened its doors on December 31, 2011. The decision to debut on New Year’s Eve was half joke — a goofy idea, because why not? — and half out of necessity, as the owners say they were eager to see sales coming in. The opening team consisted of 14 staff members, and back then the restaurant had just 40 seats. There was no written menu, by design. And the owners were so cash-strapped they could barely afford office supplies. (For a time, they used a laptop with a missing “B”; every time they wanted to insert the letter, they’d have to copy and paste it in.)
The kitchen set-up was similarly bootstrapped. Brioza recalls the mise en place being set out on a wooden table. Cooks might tweak dishes mid-service, making slight changes as they went along. “It was really freeform,” Brioza says. “And I loved that. It was just the spirit of cooking, not overly conceived. We didn’t sit and test dishes, you know? It was like, just go.”
Diners, however, didn’t immediately warm to the restaurant’s free-flowing ethos. Building on the inspiration of those catered parties, State Bird opened with a walk-up standing bar so diners could truly feel like they were at a dinner party. But the owners quickly found that standing up while eating at a restaurant didn’t quite land with customers, so they replaced it with a six-seat counter where diners could perch with a full view of the kitchen. Over those first few months, they continued to make similar tweaks, sorting out how to structure the written menu (once they decided that they did, in fact, need one) and how to explain the restaurant’s cart and tray service to first-time customers. In essence, they refined the State Bird Provisions concept based on feedback from those early diners. The idea to label the dishes diners could order from the kitchen as “Commandables,” for example, came from a Yelp review.
After the first four or five months, things started to click. But that didn’t mean the new restaurant was on solid ground. Check averages remained incredibly low relative to cost, about $35 per diner, Broiza says. They were committed to keeping the restaurant affordable, even selling half beers to keep prices low, but at the same time, they needed to make money. So they shifted their focus on raising check averages by $2 increments week over week.
“All of those little things played a big impact,” Brioza says.
The restaurant was moderately busy at that point. Then, the article happened.
“Honestly, the biggest thing in our lives was when Bon Appétit came around,” Brioza says. “That was kind of the day that changed everything for the restaurant.”
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On August 15, 2012, the day after Bon Appétit magazine crowned State Bird Provisions the best new restaurant in America, the restaurant’s phone would not stop ringing. It was a tsunami, DePalmer recalls. Diners hoping to snag a table would call and email the restaurant to falsely report that the online reservations system was broken. In fact, the restaurant was just completely booked. Yelp told the owners they’d never before seen so many clicks on a restaurant’s page.
“Everything was being broken in the best way,” DePalmer says.
Suddenly, the staff didn’t have to explain the restaurant or its unconventional service style; Bon Appétit did that for them. The magazine praised the restaurant’s freewheeling menu of small plates, which arrived on “dim sum-like” trolleys and trays. The Best New Restaurant in America 2012 title spawned the now-infamous line outside and preceded DePalmer joining the team to help weather that tsunami of attention. The chef-couple initially brought her on to help answer phones, but DePalmer has since become a key piece of the leadership team. The rest, as they say, is history. In August 2013, State Bird Provisions shut down for a two-month renovation that saw the dining room expand to its current footprint, and not long after reopening that October, the restaurant earned its first shining Michelin star. In 2014, the owners opened the Progress next door.
Still, despite more than a decade of success, Brioza says it might not have worked out the way it did had it not been for that piece in Bon Appétit. “That put us on the trajectory,” Brioza says. “It was like, we turned the music up loud, and we just cooked with as much care as we could. Freedom and flexibility. And we just started to grow into the restaurant that we never knew we were meant to be.”
These days, the State Bird Provisions restaurant family includes the Progress; the seafood-focused Anchovy Bar, which opened in 2020; and private event space the Workshop, located above the Progress. The trio of leaders has invested much thought and energy into building an ecosystem that connects all the businesses on the back end. They built a commissary kitchen that serves all the restaurants and created an internal newsletter to facilitate communication between all three restaurants’ staff. This allows one team to utilize another’s extra product and reduce food waste. For example, when the savory team has extra puffed black rice from making crackers, that excess product might go over to the pastry kitchen to be worked into a chocolate dessert.
Brioza says they talk often about the concept of doors, encouraging staff to adopt the mindset that anything — a leftover product or a new technique — can be an opportunity to create something new. Freedom and flexibility remain core to the State Bird Provisions mindset, even after 12 years in business. The trio is tight-lipped for now about future expansion plans, though they admit they’re not off the table.
Most importantly, perhaps, Brioza is still pleased with State Bird’s most famous dish.
“Personally, I still love frying the quail,” Brioza says. “I still love eating it. It’s not tired. It’s got a kind of timeless appeal for me.”
San Francisco 49ers tight end George Kittle finished a bottle of top-shelf tequila after tearing his Achilles in the 49ers’ eventual 23-19 wild-card victory in Philadelphia Sunday night, according to The Athletic.
Kittle, who popped his Achilles in the second quarter, requested it after the injury, and a San Francisco employee was seen delivering a bottle of Patron to the 49ers’ locker room.
The bottle reportedly was sent from the owners’ suite at Lincoln Financial Field.
49ers owner Jed York personally visited Kittle in the locker room and asked if he could get him anything — and that’s when the bottle of tequila was delivered a few minutes later, according to The San Francisco Standard.
Kittle was pushed out of bounds on a 6-yard reception and immediately grabbed his leg.
The All-Pro tight end was carted off the field and hobbled on one leg into the locker room, as seen in videos online.
He was ruled out for the rest of the game.
York and Kittle’s wife, Claire Kittle, both appeared visibly somber as they entered the locker room, according to The Athletic.
The Niners were the underdogs heading into the wild-card clash with the reigning Super Bowl champion Eagles.
San Francisco was already down two key players in defensive end Nick Bosa (knee) and linebacker Fred Warner (ankle).
The Eagles’ offense was a mess.
They committed four drops on third down, the most in a playoff game since 2006, per ESPN stats.
The 49ers visit the top-seeded Seattle Seahawks in an NFC divisional playoff game on Saturday.
The San Francisco 49ers suffered another devastating injury on Sunday. But, thanks to a strong supporting cast, they found a way to prevail once again.
San Francisco pulled off the biggest playoff upset so far in what’s been a wild wild-card round, defeating the Philadelphia Eagles, 23-19, on the road. Unheralded wide receiver Demarcus Robinson was a major reason behind Sunday’s upset as he hauled in six receptions for a game-high 111 yards and a touchdown en route to winning Tom Brady’s LFG Player of the Game.
When Robinson spoke with Brady after the game, it didn’t take long for him to find the one word to describe the 49ers.
“If it was one word, I’d say resiliency. Resilient,” Robinson said of his team. “These guys play with resiliency. We’ve got a lot of injuries throughout the year. Even tonight, like you said, losing Kittle, guys stepped up and knew they had to make plays. That’s what we were able to do today, go out and make plays.”
Sunday’s victory also came in comeback fashion for the Niners, who rallied from a 16-10 fourth-quarter deficit despite losing tight end George Kittle in the first half to a torn Achilles.
Robinson’s resiliency was on full display on the 49ers’ opening possession. He turned an intermediate pass from Brock Purdy over the middle into a 61-yard gain, zigzagging through the Eagles’ secondary on his way to Philly’s 16-yard line. He then caught a 2-yard touchdown pass from Purdy to end the drive.
There was possibly no greater sign of the team’s resiliency, however, than the play that gave them a 17-16 lead early in the fourth quarter. After their offense seemed stuck in the mud for most of the game, the 49ers found the end zone when wide receiver Jauan Jennings threw a 29-yard touchdown pass to running back Christian McCaffrey on a trick play.
Robinson was just one of a few supporting characters who contributed to the 49ers’ win. Fullback Kyle Juszczyk had a season-high four receptions for 49 yards, making a pair of big grabs that helped set up touchdowns in the fourth quarter. Defensively, linebacker Garret Wallow had a game-high 11 total tackles after recording just nine total tackles in the regular season.
The 49ers’ top player in McCaffrey also showed his resilience in the win. McCaffrey turned 21 touches into 114 yards and two touchdowns, with the second TD coming via a 4-yard grab with 2:54 remaining to give the 49ers a decisive 23-19 lead.
“I think the guys are just playing with resiliency, man,” Robinson said of his team. “Everybody knew what we had at stake. Everybody came out there and did their part. So, that helped us get the dub.”
The injury to Kittle was his second serious injury of the season after he missed time earlier in the year due to a hamstring tear. San Francisco has also seen some of its other stars get sidelined for the majority of the year, such as edge rusher Nick Bosa and linebacker Fred Warner.
Warner could potentially return later in the postseason, but another key piece in wide receiver Ricky Pearsall, who missed Sunday’s game, remains in limbo as he battles a knee injury. Of course, Purdy missed time this year due to shoulder and toe injuries that cost him eight games.
Despite all of that, the 49ers will now move on to play for a spot in the NFC Championship Game when they take on the Seahawks in Seattle next weekend. They nearly hosted the divisional round game, but lost to the Seahawks at home, 13-3, in the regular-season finale to give Seattle the NFC West and the conference’s No. 1 seed.
Robinson is optimistic, however, that there will be a different result this time around.
“Hopefully, we get the dub, obviously,” Robinson said. “We’ve just got to lock in, man. We’ve got to lock in and put more points on the board than we did last week at home. Just put more points on the board. The defense played lights out tonight. Hopefully, we keep playing that same way, man, and it leads to more dubs.”
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The San Francisco 49ers (12-5) visit the Philadelphia Eagles (11-6) at Lincoln Financial Field in Philadelphia for a Wild Card round showdown as the NFL playoffs get underway. USA TODAY’s panel of NFL experts have locked in their picks and predictions for the action. Here’s everything you need to know before kickoff on Sunday, January 11, including live updated odds and injury report news.
Name
Week 18
2025 Season
Blake Schuster
11-5
141-111-7
Jon Hoefling
11-5
137-128-7
Tyler Dragon
6-10
128-137-7
Chris Bumbaca
7-9
115-121-6
Lorenzo Reyes
8-8
119-131-6
Jordan Mendoza
8-8
113-123-6
Richard Morin
N/A
47-34-3
Opening Lines
Get the edge with our exclusive NFL betting picks
The Eagles feel like a lesser version of the Seattle Seahawks, and SF had several opportunities to win against Seattle in Week 18.
San Francisco has too many injuries. The 49ers will compete, but the Eagles are the best team in the tournament.
This season, it was San Francisco’s defense that let it down. The lack of a pass rush and lack of turnovers kept games closer. The thing is, Philadelphia’s offense was also underwhelming, which was surprising given the talent on the roster. I think this is a case where the Niner offense carries the day, though injuries on defense are a concern. Either way, this line feels too big.
This is a “go with the best unit on the field” play. The one I’m talking about? The Philadelphia Eagles’ defense. Kyle Shanahan vs. Vic Fangio should be a treat though.
The defending champions have been up-and-down this season, and that gives San Francisco to catch the Eagles off guard. Brock Purdy finds his form to deliver a stunner.
All San Francisco had to do was beat Seattle in Week 18 and it wouldn’t have had to leave home once during the postseason. Now the Niners have to go to Philly and face an Eagles team that’s probably furious after their season finale letdown. The Bay is about to experience some intense whiplash.
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