NFL Network analyst Deion Sanders said Sunday night the 49ers no longer want to play for Jim Harbaugh.

“They want him out,” Sanders said. “They’re not on the same page.”

Harbaugh’s reaction? He didn’t mince words Monday at his news conference.

“I personally think that’s a bunch of crap,” he said.

However, it wasn’t just Sanders. ESPN analyst Trent Dilfer said in a radio interview Monday the lack of energy and bad body language by the 49ers offensive players in a 26-21 win over the Eagles on Sunday suggested the atmosphere around the team – led by the offensive-minded Harbaugh – has become “almost toxic.”

Your thoughts, Jim? Harbaugh looked surprised.

“Really?” he said. “I haven’t seen Trent or Deion around much.”

Harbaugh’s point: How would Sanders or Dilfer know about vibe around the 49ers?

The obvious answer, of course, is that they’re speaking with people in the organization with knowledge of its inner-workings. Neither Sanders nor Dilfer cited a source, which Harbaugh noted.

“I think whenever you talk about unnamed sources — if somebody has a good story to tell, they want to put their name to it,” Harbaugh said. “… So I don’t put a lot of credibility into the unnamed source.”

After a season-opening win at Dallas, Harbaugh responded to a NFL Network report that he’d lost the locker room by saying he didn’t think his players were sources for such a story.

Today, he said players had not since used his open-door policy to air issues they had with his leadership. Harbaugh painted a picture of unity and used Sunday’s come-from-behind win over Philadelphia to make his point: The 49ers trailed 21-10 in the second quarter after they allowed two touchdowns on special teams and had an interception returned for a score. They responded by outscoring the Eagles 16-0 in the final 38 minutes.

“What I love about our ballclub is there’s no finger-pointing,” Harbaugh said. “There’s total belief in each other. And offense lifted up defense, defense lifted up the offense and both doing that with the special teams. That’s a joy to be around. That’s a joy to coach.

“Now, they’re playing for each other. That’s what they should be doing. So I’m not taking any credit for that. I’m just expressing that it’s a joy to be around these fighters, these men.”

Sanders is reportedly close with Michael Crabtree and they share the same agent, which fueled speculation the 49ers wide receiver was the source for his statements Sunday night. Sanders, however, took to Twitter and said Crabtree wasn’t his source. In doing so, he suggested his source could have come from the front office: “My sources,” he wrote, “wear uniforms, suits and ties.”

Meanwhile, Dilfer is close with 49ers general manager Trent Baalke, who has reportedly had a contentious relationship with Harbaugh. Before the season, Harbaugh and CEO Jed York tabled contract-extension talks with the coach entering the fourth season of a five-year, $25 million deal.

At the time, both Harbaugh and York said they wanted to eliminate a distraction and have the sole focus be on winning the Super Bowl.

That, obviously, hasn’t worked out as planned, but Harbaugh insisted his relationship with York and Baalke is strong.

“(It’s) very good,” Harbaugh said. “Everybody on the same page. Everybody focused on this season, making it the best it can possibly be. Working well together.”