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The 2024 conference title games are now just a day away. In the second of Sunday's two contests, the No. 1 seed San Francisco 49ers will play host to the No. 3 seed Detroit Lions for the right to represent the NFC in the Super Bowl.

In our effort to break down these matchups from every conceivable angle, we're once again using this space to do a little tale of the tape type of comparison, breaking down which team has the edge at every single position. We already did the same on Wednesday for the AFC finalists.

Without further ado ...

Quarterback: 49ers

Brock Purdy
SF • QB • #13
CMP%69.4
YDs4280
TD31
INT11
YD/Att9.64
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Brock Purdy and Jared Goff are pretty similar in that they are talented but limited quarterbacks who are unquestionably elevated by their scheme and surrounding talent. It's hard to extricate either of these players from their surroundings, but Purdy has shown a bit more ability to create outside of structure and under pressure, and has shown a higher ceiling in terms of his raw production -- even while throwing at lower volume. 

Running back: 49ers

Christian McCaffrey
SF • RB • #23
Att272
Yds1459
TD14
FL2
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McCaffrey is the NFL's best, most versatile, and arguably most explosive running back. He led the league in rushing and has been the best pass-catching back in the league since he was drafted out of Stanford. The Lions' tandem of David Montgomery and Jahmyr Gibbs is really damn good, and they make for excellent complements to each other given their divergent skill sets. But they just can't touch McCaffrey at the moment.

Wide receiver: 49ers

Brandon Aiyuk
SF • WR • #11
TAR105
REC75
REC YDs1342
REC TD7
FL1
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Both of these teams have star receivers. Brandon Aiyuk, Deebo Samuel and Amon-Ra St. Brown are each among the very best in the NFL, and the fun part about them is that they all win in different ways. Aiyuk operates essentially as a true X receiver within Kyle Shanahan's offense, and his ability to win at every stage of the route is rare. Samuel is the premier YAC creator in the league. St. Brown is arguably the best slot man, depending on how you classify someone like CeeDee Lamb. The top two, plus the steady contributions of Jauan Jennings as both a blocker and third-down receiving weapon, give San Francisco the edge over a group whose depth behind ARSB is intriguing but limited, at least right now. (Jameson Williams could level them up in the future.)

Tight end: 49ers

George Kittle
SF • TE • #85
TAR90
REC65
REC YDs1020
REC TD6
FL0
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George Kittle is one of the few tight ends who would still give his team the advantage at tight end against Sam LaPorta, who had arguably the best rookie tight end season of all time. The thing is, Kittle is arguably just as strong a pass-catching threat as LaPorta, while also being the best blocking tight end in football. There just aren't many opponents where San Francisco wouldn't have the advantage here.

Offensive line: Lions

This is the Lions' greatest area of strength, and they will need it to be just that on Sunday to pull off the upset. Sewell is already one of the premier right tackles in the league. Center Frank Ragnow and guard Jonah Jackson are very, very good. (Ragnow's injury status will be important to watch this week with Jackson already being ruled out.) Graham Glasgow and Taylor Decker are quality starters. Trent Williams is the best offensive lineman on either team, and possibly in the entire league. But the rest of San Francisco's offensive line is not nearly of the same quality, so Detroit gets the edge here.

Defensive line: 49ers

Detroit's got a pretty good group of players up front. Aidan Hutchinson is awesome. Alim McNeill had a breakout season. There's some pretty decent depth both inside and out. But the Niners -- Nick Bosa, Arik Armstead, Javon Hargrave, Chase Young, Randy Gregory, Kevin Givens, Javon Kinlaw, even Sebastian Joseph-Day -- are loaded. The Lions just can't compete with that.

Linebacker: 49ers

All due respect to Jack Campbell and Alex Anzalone, as well as Derrick Barnes, Jalen Reeves-Maybin and Malcolm Rodriguez, but Fred Warner and Dre Greenlaw are the best linebacker duo in the NFL. Nobody's topping them.

Defensive back: 49ers

At the beginning of the season, the Lions' defensive backfield looked much improved. Additions like Chauncey Gardner-Johnson, Cam Sutton, Emmanuel Moseley and Brian Branch helped take the group to a higher level. Moseley is now out, replaced in the lineup by Kindle Vildor. Ifeatu Melifonwu has taken a step forward and safety, and Kerby Joseph is still solid. This is a perfectly acceptable group, but it has also been lit up at times. There's a decent floor, but it's not locking anybody down. Charvarius Ward is better than anyone Detroit has to offer at corner, and the combination of Ambry Thomas on the outside and Deommodore Lenoir in the slot has been good. Ji'Ayir Brown has stepped right into Talanoa Hufanga's role and been good. Tashaun Gipson remains a good starter. Both among the regular group and the depth pieces, the Niners are better here.

Specialists: Lions

Jake Moody did not have all that good a rookie season. Michael Badgley has come in and provided an upgrade over Riley Patterson at kicker. Kalif Raymond has been more of a threat as a returner this year than has Ray-Ray McCloud. We'll give this one to Detroit.