News 49ers Team Notes

49ers should replicate Packers’ approach in addressing key roster issue

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The 49ers face a number of dilemmas this offseason, with the situation at the wide receiver position chief among them.

Once a clear strong point of their roster, the 49ers’ receiving corps is a shadow of what it once was. Brandon Aiyuk has played his last snap as a 49er and the same could soon be said for Jauan Jennings. Ricky Pearsall, their first-round pick from 2024, has endured dreadful injury misfortune.

And with Kendrick Bourne and Skyy Moore also bound for unrestricted free agency, the 49ers have a decision to make as to how they rebuild the depth chart.

In Pearsall, the 49ers have a skilled route-runner who can consistently create separation and stretch defenses deep. However, it was obvious late in the 2025 season that, with Aiyuk not returning, the Niners sorely missed an X receiver who could do the same.

Should Jennings depart, the 49ers will also be looking to fill the void left by a high-floor possession receiver with some big-play upside.

The 49ers will try to bring Jennings back at the right price and, with some room for maneuver in free agency, there’s an argument to suggest San Francisco should use the resources it has to attack the open market by bringing in proven commodities. Alec Pierce of the Indianapolis Colts is seen by many as an excellent candidate to fill that X receiver role. Pierce led the NFL in yards per reception (21.3) for the second straight season in 2025.

Head coach Kyle Shanahan would almost certain prefer known quantities at receiver, which is why a return for Bourne on another short-term deal would be no surprise, especially if Jennings leaves.

Indeed, there’s reason to be skeptical that Shanahan will be willing to elevate Jacob Cowing and Jordan Watkins to prominent roles given the minimal snaps the two fourth-rounders have received to this point in their fledgling careers.

But, with the needs the 49ers have at other positions, particularly on the defensive line, San Francisco would be wise to embrace the youth movement and replicate an approach taken by their NFC rivals the Green Bay Packers.

Since 2022, the Packers have invested consistently in the wide receiver position in the draft — selecting eight players in that span.

While a perceived lack of number one receiver has been viewed as a problem over the years, Green Bay’s process of filling their depth chart with young wideouts has paid dividends. Christian Watson, Romeo Doubs, Jayden Reed and Dontayvion Wicks have all been productive, while Matthew Golden shone as a rookie after being taken in the first round last year.

The 49ers have three very talented young receivers in Pearsall, Watkins and Cowing. Brock Purdy has already developed an impressive rapport with Pearsall and did the same with Watkins training camp last season. Cowing also displayed some positive flashes in very limited action in 2024.

While the Niners would likely ideally want to lean on proven wideouts, Purdy’s track record of quickly establishing a rapport with his targets since ascending to the starting role in 2022 should be a factor in swaying them towards the opposite path and adding more receivers via the draft.

San Francisco still has Demarcus Robinson under contract and will be expected to bring Moore back because of his upside on special teams. As such, the 49ers will have veteran experience in some capacity. However, if they can add at least one receiver via the draft and allow them to compete for playing time with Pearsall, Watkins and Cowing, the results could be greatly beneficial for the 49er offense in the immediate future and in the long term.

Shanahan has continually proven he can manufacture offense largely irrespective of the weapons available to him. In an offseason in which they need to be smart about how they use their cap room and one in which they need to continue to get younger, it would be a wise play to back him and Purdy to get the most out of a largely unproven group of pass-catchers.

Either way, the approach the 49ers take at wideout will be one of the most fascinating stories to follow in another important offseason.

Source: https://www.ninersnation.com/san-fr...-packers-approach-addressing-key-roster-issue
 
49ers Draft profile: EDGE Zion Young

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JACKSONVILLE, FL - DECEMBER 27: Missouri Tigers defensive end Zion Young (9) rushes the passer during the Tax Slayer Gator Bowl between the Virginia Cavaliers and the Missouri Tigers on Saturday, December 27, 2025 at EverBank Field in Jacksonville, FL (Photo by Peter Joneleit/Icon Sportswire via Getty Images) | Icon Sportswire via Getty Images

Well, it’s draft season. So, not profiling multiple defensive linemen would be a mistake for the San Francisco 49ers’ projections. Toss in how unproductive the pass rush was last season, and we could be looking at two or three more defensive linemen added to the fold for whoever the 49ers choose for defensive coordinator. Nick Bosa’s return will help, and Bryce Huff and Keion White are cost-controlled, with Mykel Williams returning. But the 49ers’ philosophy of always drafting defensive linemen isn’t going to change.

Enter Senior Bowl standout EDGE from Missouri, Zion Young. The 6’5 EDGE rusher might have been created in a lab, and John Lynch was on hand in Mobile to watch his practices, which surely turned heads. The things the 49ers look for in EDGE rushers are there for Young. Long arms and is capable of setting the edge against the run. It would be hard to think the 49ers haven’t done their homework on Young.

Stop me if you’ve heard this one. His college sack production isn’t high. With 2.5 sacks, production is a concern. Sure, the tools are there, but you have to finish. Again, the 49ers would be betting on traits and their development skills to get the most out of Young.

Matt Holder of Bleacher Report listed his strengths and areas of development in his scouting report.

Where he wins

– Young has a good frame and build, and appears to have good arm length.

– Solid strength at the point of attack and the long arms help him get extension on blocks from offensive tackles.

– Consistently resets the line of scrimmage against tight ends.

– Decent at setting the edge and running his feet to avoid getting reached against the run.

– Solid power and leg drive as a pass-rusher to occasionally collapse the pocket when bull rushing or turning speed to power.

– Active hands as a pass-rusher and has shown improvement with his use of hands from 2024 to 2025.

– Good pass-rusher motor to get coverage sacks.

Areas of Improvement

– Lacks burst/acceleration off the line of scrimmage to threaten offensive tackles with speed around the edge.

– Not very twitchy and doesn’t show high-level athleticism as a pass-rusher.

– Use of hands when rushing the passer is still a work in progress, his timing is off which limits his ability to take advantage of his long arms.

– Subpar bend and angles around the edge, impacting his ability to corner at the top of the rush and leading to inefficient paths to the quarterback.

– Has a habit of occasionally working around blocks.

– Turns his shoulders perpendicular to the line of scrimmage when setting the edge.

– As a freshman at Michigan State, he was involved in a fight in the tunnel after the game against Michigan and pled guilty to misdemeanor assault charges while also serving a suspension. Also, he was arrested for DWI on Dec. 13, two weeks before Missouri’s bowl game, per KOMU 8.

While the physical skills will pique the 49ers’ interest, you have to wonder if character concerns will be the deal breaker for the front office. Also, can the 49ers afford to spend a second-round pick (his current projection) on a player with limited sack production? The 49ers must have instant contributors with their first two picks. Foregoing other positions for Young is a risk, but one that the 49ers will surely weigh during their process.

Source: https://www.ninersnation.com/general/155827/49ers-draft-profile-edge-zion-young
 
Report: NFL Projects 2026 salary cap as high as $305.7 million

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Oct. 29, 2012; Glendale, AZ, USA; An Arizona Cardinals fan wears a costume of fake money in the grandstands against the San Francisco 49ers at University of Phoenix Stadium. The 49ers defeated the Cardinals 24-3. Mandatory Credit: Mark J. Rebilas-Imagn Images

All that’s left is the Super Bowl, and then football, the greatest sport, ends. That means the second-greatest sport begins:

Waiting for football to start.

And part of waiting is anticipating the 2026 salary cap. The San Francisco 49ers could be a lot more active in 2026 free agency. For 2025, they tried to address the salary cap, which led to departures, trades, and a younger team than we may have been used to. 2026 could be a different beast depending on when the Brandon Aiyuk money shakes out, the Nick Bosa insurance, and other things.

This should help, too: a salary cap upwards of $305.7 million. Tom Pelissero reports that the league informed clubs of a projection in the neighborhood of $301.2 million to $305.7 million.

The cap in 2025 was $279.2 million.

Considering that the 49ers will be active in free agency this year (well, at least more active than last year), having a higher ceiling will certainly help them. The 49ers typically play their contracts into expected salary cap increases. That obviously led to problems during COVID and post-COVID, but things are back to normal.

Per OverTheCap, the 49ers currently have $23,327,521 in salary cap space. That number isn’t factoring in all those escalations mentioned above, so looking at it at the end of January could be a bit misleading. The numbers are based on an OverTheCap estimate of $295.5 million. So, if the actuals go above $305 million, that gives them another $10 million to play with, be it a year’s salary for a veteran, more guarantees, or just having something available for in-season transactions when they need to bring players in.

The actual salary cap is announced at the latest in early March, before the start of the new league year. We’ll know for sure how much money the 49ers can play with around then.

Source: https://www.ninersnation.com/san-fr...ects-2026-salary-cap-as-high-as-305-7-million
 
Eddie DeBartolo on going 31 years without a championship: “I wouldn’t”

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Sep 14, 2015; Santa Clara, CA, USA; San Francisco 49ers former owner Eddie DeBartolo Jr. before the game against the Minnesota Vikings at Levi's Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Kirby Lee-Imagn Images

Over on the feed, you may have seen a snippet from former San Francisco 49ers owner Eddie DeBartolo on the team’s 31-year drought to a Lombardi Trophy. When asked how frustrating it would be as an owner to go 31 years without a championship, DeBartolo said it as succinctly as possible:

“I wouldn’t.”

Eddie DeBartolo on how frustrating it would be to go 31 years without a championship as an owner:

"I wouldn't." 🔥 🎤

Via: @mattblively
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— OurSF49ers (@OurSf49ers) January 28, 2026

Obviously, this has brought many of the York/DeBartolo comparisons back into the fold, and speculation on how much better DeBartolo would have done if he still owned the team.

DeBartolo ceded control of the team after a scandal involving the former governor of Louisiana, Edwin Edwards. After being barred from controlling the team for a year, he decided to take the other part of the company, while his sister, Denise York, took the 49ers.

Eventually, her son, Jed, took over the team, and it’s the 49ers as you know it today.

Yes, it’s frustrating, and yes, we joke about the team being cursed—or in my case, waiting for something I call “The Great Disappointment” whenever the 49ers are in contention, but it’s also a much different era than it was during DeBartolo’s time. DeBartolo prided himself on getting personal with his players and taking care of them. That includes paying them top dollar and not having to worry about free agency or salary caps.

That’s the difference. The last time DeBartolo won a championship in the salary cap era (well, the salary cap we’re familiar with) with the 49ers was 1994, the first year of its introduction. The years that followed slapped the 49ers with consequences for that loaded team. The veterans hit on a good deal of their incentives, and the team had to do a ton of restructuring that put them on the path to mediocrity.

All I’m saying is that’s an appropriate response from a beloved owner like Eddie DeBartolo, but it also was in an era when he could spend money on players, and free agency wasn’t the thing it is today. Can you imagine all the free agency casualties the 49ers had over the last few years avoided because they didn’t have to worry about hitting a limit? Could they have managed to keep all those players? Who knows. Trades were more prevalent, but there was much more time to develop players and a larger window to win as a result.

I’m not saying DeBartolo is wrong, I’m just providing context that this is a different era, and it’s even harder to win when NFL teams are basically penalized for drafting well.

Then again, the 49ers could just shove all the chips in like other teams do for one year and then spend a few years in mediocrity. Personally, I would rather be in contention every year and not “buy” championships, but maybe that would be the new strategy.

Where do you come off on DeBartolo’s comments?

Source: https://www.ninersnation.com/san-fr...ing-31-years-without-a-championship-i-wouldnt
 
Golden Nuggets: One more week of this for 49ers fans

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LANDOVER, MD - DECEMBER 31: Brandon Allen #17, Sam Darnold #14 and Brock Purdy #13 of the San Francisco 49ers in the locker room before the game against the Washington Commanders at FedEx Field on December 31, 2023 in Landover, Maryland. The 49ers defeated the Commanders 27-10. (Photo by Michael Zagaris/San Francisco 49ers/Getty Images) | Getty Images

49ers Insider Drops Strong Message on Browns DC Jim Schwartz
“[Schwartz] is a guy who obviously Kyle Shanahan respects a lot,” Lee Chan said in her YouTube video published on Jan. 30. “I don’t know that he’s the best fit for the 49ers and how they’re built defensively. 49ers are built to rush from the line. They aren’t meant to be huge blitzers. They have the safeties be the erasers. You’ve got two linebackers. Fred Warner is your coverage and run stopper. So your defensive line doesn’t have to assess the situation. They don’t have to say, ‘Okay, this is a run play. This is a pass play.’ You know, they don’t have to look at how things are set up. They don’t have to look at the motions. They are just there to go get the quarterback.”

Meanwhile, former 49ers cornerback Richard Sherman believes Schwartz would benefit from being the Niners’ defensive coordinator if he has hopes of being an NFL head coach again.

“I think if Schwartz goes to another team, a contender who’s out of a defensive coordinator right now, I think he has a head coach job within the next two years,” Sherman said in a Jan. 30 video from “The Richard Sherman Podcast.” “And by contender, I’m thinking of the San Francisco 49ers, and I would imagine Kyle Shanahan is on the phone right now, whatever you need.

“After losing Robert Saleh to a head coaching job and showing a pipeline for his defensive coordinators to be elevated to head coaching jobs, you talk about DeMeco Ryans, you talk about Robert Saleh twice. Even my guy Jeff Hafley, who was on the staff in ’18, is now a head coach right now for the Miami Dolphins.”

Meanwhile, 49ers reporter Grant Cohn for On SI shared his thoughts on the three candidates and sees Morris as the guy San Francisco should hire among the three candidates they have interviewed, given his head-coaching experience and his role as the Los Angeles Rams’ defensive coordinator when they won the Super Bowl.”

49ers address several needs in new 3-round NFL mock draft
“K.C. Concepcion is a dynamic receiver with tremendous YAC ability and impressive quickness, excelling as a route runner who shoots out of his breaks. Throughout his stints at Texas A&M and NC State, he’s been a reliable underneath weapon with inside-outside versatility. His twitchiness underneath and speed-oriented game would be a near-perfect addition to San Francisco’s offense.”

“Caleb Tiernan is a massive blocker, standing at 6’7″ and weighing 329 pounds, with gap-zone run-blocking versatility,” Infante said. “He has the size, strength, hand usage, and spatial awareness to become a good starter in the NFL.”

“The 49ers saw firsthand that their edge-rusher depth wasn’t up to par as their defense declined in the second half of 2025,” Infante added. “The 6’5″, 275-pound Anthony Lucas is a lengthy, powerful defender with accurate hand placement and good speed-to-power rushing the passer.”

Source: https://www.ninersnation.com/san-fr...heem-morris-gus-bradley-electrical-substation
 
Kyle Shanahan bringing in old friend to fill 49ers’ defensive coordinator spot

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SANTA CLARA, CA - OCTOBER 19: Head Coach Raheem Morris of the Atlanta Falcons and Head Coach Kyle Shanahan of the San Francisco 49ers shake hands after the game at Levi's Stadium on October 19, 2025 in Santa Clara, California. The 49ers defeated the Falcons 20-10. (Photo by Michael Zagaris/San Francisco 49ers/Getty Images) | Getty Images

The 49ers have settled on their replacement for Robert Saleh and, despite plenty of talk about them staying in-house for his successor, they have decided against going with the continuity of Gus Bradley.

ESPN’s Adam Schefter reported on Sunday that the 49ers plan to hire Raheem Morris as their next defensive coordinator.

This move comes after Morris missed out on the Arizona Cardinals head coaching job. Morris was a finalist for that role, which will instead go to former 49ers assistant Mike LaFleur.

49ers head coach Kyle Shanahan and Morris have crossed paths at several points in their respective coaching careers.

They first worked on the same staff when Shanahan was the offensive quality control coach with the Tampa Bay Buccaneers from 2004-05. Morris was the assistant defensive backs coach during that span.

Morris was the defensive backs coach in Washigton from 2012 to 2014, spending two seasons with Shanahan once again, whose spell as offensive coordinator with the franchise lasted from 2010 to 2013.

Shanahan and Morris last worked on the same staff with the Atlanta Falcons during Shanahan’s two-season spell as their offensive coordinator from 2015 to 2016. Morris served as the assistant head coach and defensive pass game coordinator for Dan Quinn in 2015, and then as the assistant head coach and wide receivers coach in 2016.

Morris was unable to make the playoffs in his second go as a head coach with the Falcons, going 8-9 in 2024 and 2025.

But Shanahan will doubtless be delighted to get Morris on his staff, having effusively praised him after he was hired in Atlanta.

“Oh, it’s way past due. Raheem’s one of the best coaches I’ve been with,” Shanahan said following Morris’ hiring.

“I got to work with him earlier in my career in Tampa. When I was young I was trying to get my dad to hire him as a D-Coordinator. He ended up becoming a head coach so fast. Then I got a chance to work with him in Washington. Then Atlanta, he actually was on defense.

“He got to come work with me on offense for a year. The fact that he was on defense his whole career and came to be our receiver coach, it was unbelievable how cool he was. How good he did. Always tried to get him here every single year.”

Now Shanahan finally has Morris in the Bay Area, and he will be tasked with continuing the work done by Saleh and ensuring a young defense makes significant strides in 2026.

Morris does have a relatively recent track record of success as a coordinator during his most recent spell in that role with the Los Angeles Rams.

He coordinated the Rams’ Super Bowl-winning defense of 2021, which finished the year ninth in EPA per play, albeit with Aaron Donald, Von Miller and Jalen Ramsey at his disposal.

Los Angeles endured a severe downturn in 2022, but Morris has experience getting results out of a young defense, having done so in 2023 in Donald’s final season, when the Rams, fielding rookies such as Kobie Turner and Byron Young, finished 20th in EPA per play but 11th in success rate.

The 49ers will almost certainly look to add to their front after an anaemic performance by their pass rush in 2025 and, with Nick Bosa and Fred Warner set to return from injuries in plenty of time ahead of the 2026 kickoff, San Francisco has reason to be confident a coach who has previously leant heavily on the Cover 3 shells that are the foundation of its defense can put this unit on the path to success.

Source: https://www.ninersnation.com/san-fr...-friend-fill-49ers-defensive-coordinator-spot
 
Raheem Morris primer: What to expect from the 49ers defense and how each position is impacted

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SANTA CLARA, CALIFORNIA - OCTOBER 19: Head coach Raheem Morris of the Atlanta Falcons stands on the sidelines during the national anthem prior to an NFL football game against the San Francisco 49ers at Levi's Stadium on October 19, 2025 in Santa Clara, California. (Photo by Brooke Sutton/Getty Images) | Getty Images

When the San Francisco 49ers interviewed only three candidates for the defensive coordinator job, it felt like the two minority candidates were nothing more than a formality before hiring Gus Bradley. We will see if Bradley heads elsewhere after the 49ers hired Raheem Morris to replace Robert Saleh as their defensive coordinator.

There was speculation that Jim Schwartz would be a candidate. Recent reports have made Eagles’ defensive coordinator Vic Fangio’s return uncertain. Ultimately, Shanahan gets to work with Morris for the fourth time in the NFL.

Morris’s Rams’ defense aligns with the 49ers’ defensive philosophy heading into last offseason: stop the run. From 2021 through 2023, while Morris was the Rams’ defensive coordinator, they ranked seventh in rushing EPA and fifth in rushing success rate.

At his core, Morris runs an odd front. So you’re going to hear a lot about how Nick Bosa will have to stand up, maybe five plays a season. You can run 5-man fronts with your base defensive end having his hand in the ground—more on that shortly. It’s worth noting that Morris has shown flexibility. Back in 2020, his defense ran only an odd or bear front — a 3-4 look —17 percent of the time.

Raheem Morris and odd fronts​


Here is an example of a couple of odd fronts Morris and Jeff Ulbrich ran last year with Atlanta:

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That is a classic “bear front,” where you have a pair of 3-techniques and a nose tackle head up over the center. From a personnel perspective, it is easy to see how the 49ers could get their three rookies from the 2025 draft on the field at the same time. CJ West would be the nose tackle, while Alfred Collins and Mykel Williams would be the 3-techniques. Then Nick Bosa and whichever edge rusher the down-and-distance calls for on the opposite side. Morris isn’t going to be the coach to tell Bosa he has to stand up in this scenario.

When you do run these five-man fronts, and let’s say Bosa is lined up to the side where there are multiple tight ends or eligible receivers, like the screenshot below, that’s when Bosa would more than likely need to peel off into the flat or drop as a hook defender, which is what ended up happening with the Falcons:

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One way to ensure Bosa rushes the passer is by walking down a linebacker to the edge. In today’s NFL, this is known as a “Penny” front, and it’s something Morris has been doing for years. In Atlanta, he used Kaden Elliss as their adjuster in base packages. Morris did the same with Ernest Jones when he was in Los Angeles. These players can moonlight as edge rushers.

The adjuster for the 49ers was Dee Winters in 2025, who lined up on the edge 78 times last season. Here’s an example of Winters walking down to the edge in Week 1 on the left side of the screen. Next to him is Mykel Williams, with Jordan Elliott at nose, Kalia Davis as the other defensive tackle, and Bosa on the opposite edge.

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This front all but ensures Winters, Mykel, and Bosa all get 1-on-1 opportunities. Hiring Morris could end up being one of the most beneficial things to happen for the 49ers’ first-round pick from 2025. The majority of Williams’ rushes should come from the interior under Morris with a runway. You can’t ask for a better setup.

I was wondering who would be the 3-technique and how much the 49ers would need to invest in a defensive tackle this offseason, but that player is already on the roster. It’s just a matter of how quickly Williams will develop in Year 2.

Winters is under contract for one more season. We don’t know what to expect from Nick Martin because we didn’t see much of him as a rookie. However, Martin’s calling card coming out of college was that he was at his best rushing the passer. Walking Martin down in these fronts, given his history, likely made Morris an easy sell.

The 49ers’ signing Elliss as a linebacker would be the least surprising move, given his fit in this defense and how it would allow Warner to patrol the middle, if Morris isn’t a fan of Winters or Martin.

Here’s another look at Winters walking down as the adjuster the following week in New Orleans when the 49ers were in their base defense:

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Winters is on the left side of the screen, lined up next to Mykel. The 49ers are in their “big nickel” personnel, with Ji’Ayir Brown in instead of Upton Stout. Not that he can’t do it, but these strong reductions protect Stout from being in the run fit down after down. Instead, as you can see, the nickel is protected, and now it’s a linebacker inserted into the action.

Bosa’s return to health should unlock Bryce Huff. Williams cemented himself as an interior pass rusher, and those two outside of him will lead to favorable matchups. If the defense can get anything out of Collins and West as pass rushers, the product on the field in 2025 will seem like a distant memory.

Players like Sam Okuayinonu, a restricted free agent, and Keion White should have a greater impact with reduced roles as sub-package players. To reach its ceiling, the team will need the top two picks from the ’25 draft to contribute.

Having a dominant linebacker like Fred Warner gives Morris the versatility he hasn’t had. The beauty of these 5-1 penny fronts is that you really only need one linebacker. When that player is Warner, you can be uber-aggressive elsewhere.

Will we see more blitzing under Raheem Morris?​


After six weeks of the 2025 season, the Falcons’ defense ranked No. 1 in total DVOA, including first against the run and the pass. They were No. 5 in EPA per play. They were blitzing at a rate that would make Kyle Shanahan triple-check the numbers. Atlanta’s blitz rate was 42.4 percent, second only to Brian Flores.

It was a sign that Morris was comfortable evolving his scheme. After all, we’re talking about a guy who comes from a Vic Fangio-adjacent tree, and they are not known for their blitzing. The Falcons weren’t getting after the quarterback, so they decided to turn up the heat and manufacture pressure by blitzing.

By season’s end, Atlanta finished with the seventh-highest blitz rate on passing downs and the second-highest stunt rate on running downs. Stunting on running downs is an easy way to change the math in the box for defenses without sacrificing coverage on the back end. There are different ways, from line movements all in one direction to last-minute reductions, but Morris keeping his players on the move is a great sign.

The Falcons loved to blitz their nickel. Only two cornerbacks in the league blitzed more than Stout did last year. Stout’s win percentage as a pass rusher was 20.5 percent. It’s a skill set that is just scratching the surface. No player won more at his position with at least 15 pass rushes last year than Stout. He bested second place by three percentage points. It’s another building block for Morris to use in passing situations.

The Falcons ran Cover 3 at the fifth-highest rate last season and Cover 6 at the third-highest rate. That’s where the 49ers will likely live this year, with quarters being sprinkled into the mix. Despite the heavy blitz usage, Atlanta ran man coverage (Cover 1) at the third-lowest rate last season.

Which brings us to the secondary…

Changes to come in the secondary?​


Jessie Bates found out about Morris’s versatility at safety this past season after being named a second-team All-Pro. Bates, who had primarily been a free safety, had lined up closer to the line of scrimmage and in the box more than any other season in his career through the midway point of 2025.

Last year, in every regular-season game, 49ers’ cornerbacks Deommodore Lenoir and Renardo Green lined up on the same side. Falcons cornerback A.J. Terrell often shadowed a receiver. If there was an obvious No. 1 on the other side, Terrell was following him. That will be a change from Saleh to Morris, especially if the 49ers feel like they have a cornerback who is quality enough to travel with the opposition’s best.

Saleh didn’t do that until it was time to throw the kitchen sink at his opponents and give them looks they weren’t prepared for. To me, that suggests he didn’t believe he had the coverage players to travel.

You wonder how much the Rams’ secondary play influenced Morris’s decisions in Atlanta. Xavier Watts was the last pick in the third round of the 2025 NFL Draft, but he came into the league known as a ballhawk, and did nothing to change those preconceived notions after having five interceptions and six pass breakups as a rookie. Bates had three interceptions in 2026, but had 10 in the previous two seasons combined.

Morris has zero ties to any of the players on the 49ers defense. We know he’s not going to pivot off Bosa, Warner, Williams, and Stout, but it wouldn’t be a surprise to see a change at any other position.

The coverage silos the Falcons ran last year align with the strengths of Deommodore Lenoir and Renardo Green. Neither will be exposed in man coverage against the high-level wideouts. That doesn’t mean there will be a full game when they aren’t in 1-on-1 scenarios, but Saleh to Morris should make for a simple transition on the perimeter.

This is not breaking news, but the 49ers don’t have a Bates-level safety on their roster. Malik Mustapha and Ji’Ayir Brown specialize in coming downhill and making plays near the line of scrimmage. Brown is under contract for one more season. Marques Sigle did not show he could play the ball in the air as a rookie. All of these signs point to the 49ers finding a free safety this offseason.

There are plenty of options in the draft. Judging by everything Morris asks of his safeties and where the current depth chart stands, don’t be surprised to see the Niners use their highest pick on a safety under the John Lynch-Shanahan regime. That’s the one glaring hole on this side of the ball in Morris’s scheme, especially if there will be a spike in blitz rate.

Source: https://www.ninersnation.com/san-fr...ers-defense-and-how-each-position-is-impacted
 
Gus Bradley gets a DC job with Robert Saleh

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INDIANAPOLIS, INDIANA - SEPTEMBER 10: Defensive coordinator Gus Bradley of the Indianapolis Colts is seen during the game against the Jacksonville Jaguars at Lucas Oil Stadium on September 10, 2023 in Indianapolis, Indiana. (Photo by Michael Hickey/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Gus Bradley is becoming a defensive coordinator this offseason. Only it’s not with the San Francisco 49ers.

The Tennessee Titans are hiring Bradley to become their next defensive coordinator under recently-hired head coach Robert Saleh, according to Albert Breer. Bradley and Saleh were together on the 49ers staff this past season, and Bradley was in consideration for the 49ers defensive coordinator job after Saleh’s departure.

However, the 49ers went with an outside hire, as head coach Kyle Shanahan tabbed former Atlanta Falcons head coach Raheem Morris as their next defensive coordinator. Shanahan and Morris have known each other a long time, working together with the Tampa Bay Buccaneers, Washington Redskins, and Atlanta Falcons.

With Morris hired, Bradley started getting some serious outside considerations, with reports sharing that the Titans and the Arizona Cardinals were potential options for their vacant defensive coordinator roles. Bradley ultimately sided with the Titans, joining Robert Saleh’s new staff, and will become a defensive coordinator once again.

Bradley has a ton of coordinator experience, being one at the collegiate and NFL levels. He was a defensive coordinator in college at Fort Lewis and North Dakota State from 1992-2002. Then, after joining the NFL ranks, he became the Seattle Seahawks defensive coordinator from 2009-2012 before earning a head coaching job with the Jacksonville Jaguars.

After getting fired there, Bradley landed defensive coordinator jobs with the Los Angeles Chargers (2017-20), Las Vegas Raiders (2021), and the Indianapolis Colts (2022-24) before joining the 49ers staff. Now, he’s back in a coordinator role.

The 49ers are seeing a few changes to their defensive staff. They’ve now lost Saleh, Bradley, and defensive backs coach Daniel Bullocks, who was hired by the Green Bay Packers on Monday. We’ll see where they make additions.

Source: https://www.ninersnation.com/san-fr...ive-coordinator-tennessee-titans-robert-saleh
 
Golden Nuggets: The 49ers go abroad in 2026

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MEXICO CITY, MEXICO - NOVEMBER 21: Fred Warner #54 of the San Francisco 49ers take the field before the game against the Arizona Cardinals at Estadio Azteca on November 21, 2022 in Mexico City, Mexico. (Photo by Michael Zagaris/San Francisco 49ers/Getty Images) | Getty Images

49ers expect to give up home game to play internationally in 2026
“So far, the league has confirmed the following locations for international games during the 2026 regular season:

Melbourne, Australia (Melbourne Cricket Ground) — Los Angeles Rams participating

Rio de Janeiro, Brazil (Maracanã Stadium)

Munich, Germany (FC Bayern Munich Arena)

London, England — three games

Madrid, Spain (Bernabéu Stadium)”

Is 49ers’ defense facing a difficult adjustment with hiring of Raheem Morris?
“Morris, 49, has dabbled and evolved through the years, and he’s hard to pigeonhole when it comes to his defensive philosophy. Still, Morris and Wilks are now the only coordinators among the six hires Shanahan has made who aren’t students of the Seattle-style 4-3 defense that former Seahawks head coach Pete Carroll began to popularize more than 15 years ago.”

Hutchinson: Kyle Shanahan got his ruthless pragmatist
“Morris is far closer to a polyglot than a dogmatist.

This is someone who has that same foundation as Robert Saleh. It’s the Cover-3, Legion of Boom basis that’s mostly gone the way of the dodo. *Coughs in Gus Bradley*

Morris leaned on that from 2015-20 with Quinn in Atlanta, before running a 3-4 and 5-man “penny” fronts and a healthy dose of Cover-4 and Cover-6 with the Rams. He also did an effective job with their young group when they hit the reset the following year. He opted for these fronts with Aaron Donald as his paradigm-shifting nose tackle and a still-cooking Von Miller on the edge.

He failed his first year in Atlanta trying to continue that 3-4-heavy basis, and canned his own defensive coordinator, Jimmy Lake. He took a back seat this past year, allowing Jeff Ulbrich to reform the scheme similar to what the 49ers’ ran — part of why the 49ers got their run game going against Atlanta (see: below) — with a mostly 4-3 over setup and the Wide 9.

Atlanta didn’t quite have the horses on defense, and the main, valid criticism of Morris is that he’s never had a top-10 defense by the numbers. But the Falcons, a team with 31 sacks in 2024, set a franchise record with 57 sacks last season — second in the NFL — and they wreaked havoc before falling apart in the run game in the second half of the season after the 49ers showed their weaknesses.

Morris is a pragmatist. He is as experienced a 49-year-old coach as you’ll ever find.

For a defense that Saleh had a lot of fun experimenting with early, the communication on the back end was diabolically bad at times. Once injuries set in, it led to a sharp regression. It’s part of the reason Ji’Ayir Brown went from bit player to starter. He communicated in a secondary that didn’t.

Morris speaking multiple defensive languages and having experience working with young secondaries sets this up for someone who can not just command respect from young players, but communicate effectively… and ideally, teach them to do the same.

As for that front, Morris used the Wide 9 last year. And he also saw the weaknesses of it, particularly if your defensive tackles aren’t protecting your linebackers.

He’ll see what Saleh experimented with early. It’s actually not too hard to imagine the 49ers using their variety of chess pieces with different fronts.

If they played around with a tite front (4i-0-4i), they’ve got a perfect 4i in Mykel Williams and a similar counterpart in Keion White, with Alfred Collins also feasible. CJ West is a stellar nose tackle option. And then Nick Bosa and Bryce Huff or Sam Okuayianonu at the edge? That’s enticing.“

49ers, Kyle Shanahan lose another top assistant to Titans
“As expected, the Tennessee Titans have made a move to hire San Francisco 49ers assistant head coach Gus Bradley, bringing him on as their new defensive coordinator.”

49ers defensive assistant expected to join Packers
“According to Matt Zenitz of CBS Sports, the Green Bay Packers are expected to hire Bullocks for a role on head coach Matt LaFleur’s staff.”

49ers macro minute: Mac Jones and Brock Purdy split the season. Who came out on top? (paywall)
“Stout seemed to get stronger as the year went on and ended up as the team’s top rookie. Over the full season, quarterbacks had a 97.1 passer rating when targeting him. But that rating was just 74.9 over the last eight games. He allowed one touchdown (versus the Giants) and finished third on the team in tackles (82) behind linebackers Winters and Bethune.”

CBS Sports links 49ers to Joey Bosa, other key NFL free agents
“CBS Sports analyst Zachary Pereles recently examined the upcoming free-agent market, identifying the 49ers as a top landing spot for Joey Bosa, the older brother of star edge rusher Nick Bosa.”

49ers go in unexpected direction in latest NFL.com 2026 mock draft
“Sadiq (6-3, 245) is the first tight end off the board in Zierlein’s projection. Fellow NFL draft analyst Daniel Jeremiah also mocked Sadiq to the 49ers in his own projection, suggesting there may be growing consensus around the fit.”

Source: https://www.ninersnation.com/san-fr...ttle-seahawks-new-england-patriots-mock-draft
 
What would your first move of the offseason be as 49ers’ general manager?

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INDIANAPOLIS, IN - DECEMBER 22: John Lynch exits the field after an NFL football game between the San Francisco 49ers and the Indianapolis Colts at Lucas Oil Stadium on December 22, 2025 in Indianapolis, Indiana. (Photo by Cooper Neill/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Congratulations. You’ve just been hired as the San Francisco 49ers general manager. Unfortunately for you, the duration of your contract is based on the first move you make.

Let’s try to keep it realistic here. You’re not going to trade Brock Purdy or move all of your future draft capital for one player.

We can give you more flexibility. Let’s say you get one free agent signing, one roster cut, and then you get to make your dream selection in the first round. That would allow you to be diverse with your answers. Remember, there are no wrong answers.

We’ve tried to set the table with potential cap casualties, or free agents who could follow Raheem Morris, but the answers are never-ending because the way you look at the roster needs and how to fix the 49ers could be night and day from the person sitting next to you.

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My answer: I’ll move on from Bryce Huff to create $5 million in cap space. I’m going to use that money to trade for Kayvon Thibodeaux and extend him. So we’re looking at Thibodeaux, Mykel Williams, and Nick Bosa. Then, come the draft, I’m going to find a way to come away with Emmanuel McNeil-Warren. You’re welcome, Raheem.

What move would you make?

Source: https://www.ninersnation.com/san-fr...-of-the-offseason-be-as-49ers-general-manager
 
Fred Warner shares which 49ers player impressed him the most this season

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NEW ORLEANS, LA - SEPTEMBER 14: Fred Warner #54 and Upton Stout #20 of the San Francisco 49ers tackle Kendre Miller #5 of the New Orleans Saints during the game at the Caesars Superdome on September 14, 2025 in New Orleans, Louisiana. The 49ers defeated the Saints 26-21. (Photo by Michael Zagaris/San Francisco 49ers/Getty Images) | Getty Images

The San Francisco 49ers have several players doing media tours this week. Fred Warner sat down with SB Nation’s Jeanna Kelly to share his thoughts on everything from Raheem Morris to his thoughts about some of his teammates.

What are your thoughts about Raheem Morris?​

I’ve heard nothing but great things about him. I think everybody has said great things. How much they love him, how well-respected he is around the league as a man and as a coach. I’m eager to get him in the building, meet him, talk scheme, and about his plans for our defense. And ultimately, try to win a Super Bowl.

What did you learn about this team during the time that you were out?​


Honestly, you learn a lot when you’re behind the scenes and not watching from the sideline. I think we have one of the best cultures and standards of any team in the entire NFL, and you really learn that when you go through hard times as we have. When you have a bunch of guys who are kind of your key players, guys who you are paying a lot of money to win you a game on Sundays, and they’re on the sidelines. You’re asking guys to come up and play meaningful minutes. We found ways to win. We have the best head coach in the game, Kyle Shanahan.

It was stuff that I already knew, but you learn and reinforce that even more in a season like this.

Which defensive player impressed you the most in your absence?​


I gotta give it to my guy, Upton Stout, who is our rookie nickel cornerback—probably 5’9”, 5’10”, a buck 70, a buck 80. Not the biggest guy, but has the biggest dog in him, in his heart. He plays the game the right way. He’s one of my favorite NFL players right now. That’s how well he plays the game. He does it the right way. He’s awesome. Love having him on my team.

Why should 49ers fans feel confident in Mykel Williams?​


Yeah, I think he’s just made of the right stuff. I think, obviously, he came from a really prestigious program in Georgia, where he learned a lot of crazy things and techniques and how to play the game at a high level. That carried over really well at the beginning of the season, being able to play him and plug him on the outside and on the inside of our defensive line.

He’s really strong at the point of attack. It bodes well for him in the run game. He’s only going to grow in the pass game, and his pass-rush tools are going to build up. He’s going to be a really good player for us.

Do you have a take on the substation?​


Unfortuatelny I don’t. I don’t have a huge take on it because it’s something that’s kind of a hot topic right now, because of how injured we were at peak positions. People want something juicy to talk about and point the finger at.

At the end of the day, I don’t think there’s enough there or research behind it to validate it. Is it something? I don’t know. Is it nothing? I don’t know. I guess we’ll see as time goes on. I guess they’ll do more research and we’ll find out.

How are you doing with your rehab?​


So great. So good. I’m feeling back to myself again. It was a crazy injury, and something that I really couldn’t avoid. It was just being caught at the wrong point in time. But, luckily, they put everything back together in that surgery room, and I’m right back to myself.

Source: https://www.ninersnation.com/san-fr...ers-player-impressed-him-the-most-this-season
 
What were the best 49ers games this season?

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PHILADELPHIA, PENNSYLVANIA - JANUARY 11: Demarcus Robinson #5 of the San Francisco 49ers catches a touchdown against Quinyon Mitchell #27 of the Philadelphia Eagles during the first quarter in the NFC Wild Card Playoff game at Lincoln Financial Field on January 11, 2026 in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. (Photo by Mitchell Leff/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Much of the talk around the San Francisco 49ers over the past few weeks has been around their impressive season, as the team managed to win 13 games despite being hit by the injury bug.

Several of those games were one-score contests early in the season before the 49ers went on a strong five-game win streak to clinch a playoff spot before their Week 18 loss to the Seattle Seahawks. Then, San Francisco had the impressive playoff win on the road against the Philadelphia Eagles before their eventual exit against the Seahawks.

While the season didn’t end the way San Francisco wanted, there were definitely a number of games that were worth reminiscing on from an entertainment perspective. So, let’s rank the best games for the 49ers this season.

5. Week 1 vs. Seattle (17-13 win)

Looking back, that Week 1 team was far different than how both the 49ers and Seahawks ended the year. And it came with its rollercoasters as Brock Purdy threw for two interceptions and Jake Moody had two missed field goals before being released.

But it was a great start to the season as a road win over what ended up being a Super Bowl team, and the 49ers did it with a comeback drive as Brock Purdy hit Jake Tonges on 3rd & Goal for an incredible four-yard catch in the end zone over Tariq Woolen. That gave the 49ers a 17-13 lead with just over 90 seconds left.

It looked like the Seahawks were going to win, as they came back all the way to the 49ers 9-yard line with 42 seconds left. But Nick Bosa got the game-winning strip sack on Sam Darnold. and recovered the fumble to seal the deal.

San Francisco lost George Kittle early in that game and found out Brock Purdy had turf toe, but managed to get the win.

4. Week 11 vs. Arizona (41-22 win)

This one wasn’t a nail-biter by any means, but it was a dominant performance in Brock Purdy’s return from injury. The 49ers got out to a hot start with back-to-back touchdown drives to start the game, and ended up scoring five times in the first half to take a 25-10 lead.

The third quarter extended that lead to 35-10 and the game was virtually over from there, with the 49ers ultimately winning 41-22. This one had everything. Brock Purdy threw for 200 yards and three touchdowns. Christian McCaffrey ran for 81 yards and two scores, while adding 40 yards and a receiving touchdown, with one of his best games of the season to date. George Kittle went off with six catches, 67 yards, and two touchdowns.

The 49ers defense stopped the run and also forced three turnovers (two interceptions, one fumble). And Skyy Moore had a 98-yard kickoff return to open the game. Pretty good win that sparked a huge win streak for the 49ers.

3. Week 17 vs. Chicago (42-38 win)

A game with big implications for the playoffs and one against a top NFC team definitely cracks the list here. It was all offense in this one, which adds to the entertainment factor. Brock Purdy had a big game with over 300 yards and five touchdowns. Christian McCaffrey went off for 140 on the ground with a score. And the 49ers scored six touchdowns.

That included the go-ahead score with 2:15 left as the 49ers trailed by three in the final minutes. Brock Purdy was 4 of 5 for 66 yards and the game-winning touchdown to Jauan Jennings, who ran it in after the catch for a 38-yard score.

And somehow, the 49ers managed to get a goal-line stop to end the game. Chicago marched 63 yards to the 49ers two-yard line, and it felt like they were bound to score with a minute remaining. Caleb Williams converted a 3rd & 4, 3rd & 10, and 4th & 5 to keep the drive alive at crucial points. It all came down to the final play on 2nd & Goal at the 2-yard line, and Robert Saleh’s defense got the stop.

That was a late-season thriller that extended the 49ers win streak to five games and kept their one-seed hopes alive.

2. Week 5 vs. Los Angeles (26-23 win)

This was just a game the 49ers had no business winning. With a plethora of players out and Mac Jones injured coming in, San Francisco was a touchdown underdog on the road against the Rams.

Well, they set the tone from the jump with eight-play and 17-play touchdown drives on their first two possessions to take a 14-0 lead. They ultimately led 17-7 at halftime by essentially keeping the ball out of Matthew Stafford’s hands.

But Stafford and Los Angeles came back, tying the game at 20 apiece in the fourth quarter. But the Mac Jones-led 49ers kept pushing, generating a field goal drive and then forcing a huge fumble on the goal-line with an Alfred Collins punchout.

Stafford still tied things up with 40 seconds left by getting Los Angeles into field goal range on a short field, putting the game in overtime. The 49ers got a field goal first, and were looking gassed on the brink of a loss as Los Angeles drove down the field into the red zone.

But they got another huge stop on 4th & 1 at the 49ers 11-yard line with a run stop on Kyren Williams to win the game. It was huge for morale and a big divisional victory with the odds stacked against them.

1. Wildcard round vs. Philadelphia (23-19 win)

Once again, this was a game where the 49ers looked quite outmatched on paper and yet still found a way to win.

San Francisco got off to another good start with an opening drive touchdown, but the defense immediately looked outmatched, giving up seven points right back.

There were a couple of rough drives, including a 16-play, 94-yard Eagles touchdown drive in the second quarter, where they just kept finding ways to move the chains. At halftime, it felt like the 49ers were grateful to be trailing only by three.

Then came a Brock Purdy interception in the third quarter in Philadelphia territory. But the defense really stepped up in the second half and found a way to get some big stops, especially in the run game. Then came the 49ers comeback with a touchdown drive off a trick play from Jauan Jennings to Christian McCaffrey.

Then, after another Purdy interception, which led to an Eagles go-ahead field goal, the 49ers got the game-winning drive orchestrated by Purdy, ending in a four-yard touchdown pass to McCaffrey with under three minutes left.

Philadelphia drove down the field into the red zone, and things were looking bleak for a second. But the 49ers defense bottled up and got a huge stop, and somehow, the team won a playoff game on the road.

What are your top games this season? Are there any we missed? Let us know in the comments below.

Source: https://www.ninersnation.com/san-fr...s-season-philadelphia-eagles-los-angeles-rams
 
Should the 49ers give up a 1st round pick plus more for Maxx Crosby?

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PHILADELPHIA, PENNSYLVANIA - DECEMBER 14: Maxx Crosby #98 of the Las Vegas Raiders runs off the field after the game against the Philadelphia Eagles at Lincoln Financial Field on December 14, 2025 in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. (Photo by Mitchell Leff/Getty Images) | Getty Images

The San Francisco 49ers’ 2025 offseason was far from flashy. Mac Jones ended up being the most important addition. After an exodus of free agents, names like Luke Gifford, Luke Farrell, and Demarcus Robinson made up the Niners’ free agent class.

The 49ers have never been shy about making a trade. Skyy Moore, Brian Robinson, Keion White, and Bryce Huff were all trade acquisitions last season. According to Fox Sports reporter Jay Glazer, Las Vegas Raiders star pass rusher Maxx Crosby has played his final down in the desert.

National reporters are split on what Crosby’s trade compensation would be. Glazer believes Crosby would fetch as much as, or more than, the Dallas Cowboys did for Micah Parsons, who fetched a pair of first-round picks. On a podcast, NFL Network’s Ian Rapoport said, “It’s not going to be Micah Parsons compensation because Parsons was younger. But, you know, a late first-round pick would be real.”

If Trey Hendrickson were a popular trade candidate despite being 31 and playing through an injury, then the 28-year-old Crosby would certainly pique the interest of the 49ers front office. Crosby is the better all-around player, better scheme fit, and plays with the type of tenacity any coach would dream of.

As always, it comes down to the price. Crosby is in the tail end of his four-year, $94 million contract he signed in 2022. He’s in the final year of his contract, meaning you would need to extend him after giving up premium draft capital. Crosby’s cap number in 2026 is $35 million, thanks in large part to getting $30 million in guarantees.

Some fans may be reluctant to part ways with a first-round pick, since you’d have four years of a cost-controlled player, but the pushback would be the 49ers’ window being now, and the unlikelihood of the team finding a player anywhere near the caliber of Crosby.

This could be nothing but offseason fodder, as the Raiders might not have any interest in moving off their star player, regardless of his personal feelings. Let’s act like there is a chance. Would you go after Crosby aggressively? Does his turning 29 in August worry you? He’s in the same draft class asNick Bosa, and that duo would undoubtedly propel the 49ers up a couple of tiers defensively. Crosby is the type of player that would take the 49ers from a playoff contender to a Super Bowl favorite.

Source: https://www.ninersnation.com/san-fr...up-a-1st-round-pick-plus-more-for-maxx-crosby
 
It’s official: Former 49ers RB Roger Craig is a Hall of Famer

SB XXIV ROGER CRAIG


The San Francisco 49ers added another Hall of Famer. The wait is over for Roger Craig, as the legend and pioneer joined the 2025 Pro Football Hall of Fame class along with the following players:

Larry Fitzgerald
Luke Kuechly
Adam Vinatieri
Drew Brees

It’s no surprise that the loudest cheers were for Craig. The voters finally got it right, and Craig gets inducted in front of a pro-49ers crowd.

Here’s the official statement from the 49ers:

“Roger Craig was a player who revolutionized the running back position, delivering one of the most historic individual seasons in NFL history to date. Over the entirety of his career, Roger not only amassed high-level production and statistics as both a runner and pass catcher, but he helped the 49ers reach the ultimate goal of Super Bowl Championships with iconic performances. We applaud Roger for his induction and rightful place in the Pro Football Hall of Fame.”

And Craig’s accolades:

A three-time Super Bowl Champion (XIX, XXIII & XXIV), two-time All-Pro (Second-Team – 1985; First-Team – 1988) and four-time Pro Bowl selection (1986 & 1988-90), Craig redefined the role of the modern day running back. He helped the 49ers win Super Bowl XIX by becoming the first player in the Super Bowl Era to register three-or-more total touchdowns (two receiving & one rushing). In 1985, Craig registered 1,050 rushing yards and 1,016 receiving yards, becoming the first player to reach 1,000-or-more rushing yards and 1,000-or-more receiving yards in a single season, a feat that has only been accomplished two other times in NFL history. In 1988, Craig was named the Associated Press Offensive Player of the Year after he registered 310 carries for 1,502 yards and nine touchdowns and added 76 receptions for 534 yards and one touchdown through the air. His 2,036 yards from scrimmage led the NFL that season, while his 1,502 rushing yards ranked third. Craig is also a two-time recipient of the team’s Len Eshmont Award (1985 & 1988), the 49ers most prestigious annual honor, which is given each year to the player who best exemplifies the “inspirational and courageous play” of Len Eshmont.

Source: https://www.ninersnation.com/san-fr...ormer-49ers-rb-roger-craig-is-a-hall-of-famer
 
49ers exit interviews, WR: Multiple upgrades are needed to get back to 2023 receiver room

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SANTA CLARA, CA - NOVEMBER 24: Jauan Jennings #15 of the San Francisco 49ers celebrates a touchdown with Ricky Pearsall #1 of the San Francisco 49ers in the first quarter of a NFL game against the Carolina Panthers on November 24, 2025 at Levi's Stadium in Santa Clara, CA. (Photo by Matthew Huang/Icon Sportswire via Getty Images) | Icon Sportswire via Getty Images

The San Francisco 49ers’ wide receiver room looks drastically different from the team that was in the Super Bowl just two short seasons ago.

Brandon Aiyuk broke out with a 1,342-yard season, averaging 17.9 yards per reception, cementing himself as one of the top wide receivers in the league. Aiyuk had a remarkable 28 receptions of at least 20 yards. Deebo Samuel was one of the best sidekicks, averaging 14.9 yards per reception. Deebo had 15 receptions of at least 20 yards and gave the Niners one of the best run-after-catch threats.

Jauan Jennings was on the roster, but it may surprise some to know he only had 19 receptions that season. The four horsemen of one of the most prolific offenses of the decade were Aiyuk, Samuel, George Kittle, and Christian McCaffrey.

This past season, the 49ers totaled 51 receptions of 20+ yards as a team. Ayiuk, Samuel, Kittle, and McCaffrey had 65 themselves in 2023. Ricky Pearsall was well on his way to challenging Aiyuk’s ’23 number to begin the season, but injuries limited Pearsall to just nine games played. Pearsall tied for the team lead with 20+ yard receptions at nine with Jennings and Kittle.

Will we see a complete revamp of the wide receiver room this offseason? Let’s look at the current strengths and weaknesses before we decide.

Strengths​


Hands

While it may have felt like the dropped passes added up, he only finished the season with three drops on 90 targets. Ricky Pearsall only had one drop, while Demarcus Robinson only had one as well.

Jennings game is predicated on contested situations, and he only caught 56 percent of those this past season. So, that’s where it felt like the “drops” really came into play. However, Pearsall was 9-for-11 in contested situations while Robinson was 6-for-8. The main wide receivers were consistent in catching the ball this season, which is critical in an offense that gets you open underneath.

Weaknesses​


There is no reason to sugarcoat it. This is not a strong group. It’s tough to come up with multiple strengths without reaching. Jauan Jennings deserves credit for being near the top of the league in third-down receptions, but that’s where the praise comes to a screeching halt.

Health

Ricky Pearsall’s value might be underrated, considering 75 percent of his receptions resulted in first downs. He was the downfield threat that could stretch the field and open up things at the first level for everybody else.

But, and there’s always a but, when you miss half the season, your team is relying on Jennings as the No. 1 wideout. For as much of a fan favorite as Jennings is, he’s closer to a high-end WR3 than a low-end WR1. Then the domino effect comes into play because you’re now targeting Kendrick Bourne, or you can only run 12 and 13 personnel because you don’t trust the other wide receivers on the roster.

Jennings missed a couple of games. Rookie Jordan Watkins couldn’t work his way back into the rotation because he had a setback in-season. You’re not giving your offense any margin for error when the receivers can’t stay on the field.

Depth

Injuries exposed the 49ers’ depth. Over 51 percent of Bourne’s 2025 production came in two games. When he went against quality secondaries like Cleveland and Seattle, he struggled to get open. The Seahawks cornerbacks looked bored guarding Bourne.

Even the most diehard fans would struggle to name the other wideouts on the roster. Skyy Moore plays sparingly. Malik Turner was a thing in the playoffs, which tells you all you need to know. Looking back, it’s a credit to the play-caller and the quarterback that the offense was as productive as it was.

Talent and Athleticism

The scheme allowed Bourne to have those back-to-back 150-plus yard performances. The scheme put Robinson in a situation to have 1-on-1 opportunities down the field. The scheme cannot save you on third downs. The drop-off from 20+ yard plays from 2023 to 2025 is staggering, and it’s largely due to the Grand Canyon-sized gap in talent and athleticism.

The team didn’t have a wide receiver in the top 50 in yards after catch. Jennings was tied for 18th in missed tackles with ten, the same number as Aiyuk in ’23. The difference between the two is about 35 points in passer rating when targeted.

Needless to say, the team is in a difficult spot after the Aiyuk situation this past year, and addressing the issues in the wide receiver room is at the top of the offseason to-do list.

How does the WR room look in 2026?​


It’s probably best to close the Jennings as a 49er chapter. It’s the last opportunity for Jennings to cash in as a free agent, while the 49ers need more versatility and explosiveness. It was a fun run, but it’s time to move on.

Robinson is under contract for one more season. If he is your WR3, you are OK. If anything, Robinson can replace Jennings. Bourne and Moore are free agents. It might be tempting to bring Moore back, given his ability as a returner, but it also puts pressure on Moore to go above and beyond as a returner since he’s not contributing as a receiver.

  • Ricky Pearsall
  • Demarcus Robinson
  • Jacob Cowing
  • Jordan Watkins

At this point, counting on Day 3 picks Cowing and Watkins moving forward feels like nothing more than hope. Both need to show they’re capable of staying healthy. Pearsall isn’t exempt from the injury talk, either.

The 49ers would need to offer top draft capital if it plans to swing for the fences in the trade market this offseason. They have little leverage with Aiyuk.

Justin Jefferson’s contract is only tradeable with a post-June 1 designation. A.J. Brown and the Eagles are in a similar boat. Both teams would be up to their necks in dead money by moving those contracts. Jaylen Waddle had a tradeable contract, and this is the final year of guaranteed money in his deal, making him an intriguing option.

The good news is you can find quality receivers after the first round. The bad news is that you have to decide which positions —edge rusher, safety, or wide receiver— are more pressing needs.

The 49ers need to revamp their wide receiver room this offseason by getting bigger bodies who can last the wear and tear of an NFL season. It’s easier said than done from the outside looking in.

How would you fix this room this offseason?

Source: https://www.ninersnation.com/san-fr...-are-needed-to-get-back-to-2023-receiver-room
 
Former 49ers player says team would be ‘wrong’ to fire Kyle Shanahan in next 20 years

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LAS VEGAS, NEVADA - FEBRUARY 11: Patrick Mahomes #15 of the Kansas City Chiefs scrambling with the ball is pursued by Logan Ryan #33 and Fred Warner #54 of the San Francisco 49ers in overtime during Super Bowl LVIII at Allegiant Stadium on February 11, 2024 in Las Vegas, Nevada. (Photo by Focus on Sport/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Tenured head coaches in the NFL are becoming more and more of a rarity, with notable names John Harbaugh and Mike Tomlin moving on from their respective teams this offseason, among other coaches in recent years.

That’s made San Francisco head coach Kyle Shanahan one of the longest-tenured coaches in the league behind only Los Angeles Rams head coach Sean McVay and Kansas City Chiefs head coach Andy Reid. Shanahan has been at his post since 2017 and has easily been one of the best head coaches in the league during his tenure with the 49ers.

However, one thing that has evaded the head coach has been a Super Bowl, despite the 49ers making the big game twice, as well as the NFC Championship Game four times since 2019. That has still left some doubters of his out there, especially with other teams moving on from long-tenured head coaches recently.

But Shanahan has consistently been in the Coach of the Year conversation when having half-healthy rosters, and one former player believes that he should be the guy for San Francisco for the next 20 years.

Former 49ers defensive back Logan Ryan, who won two Super Bowls with the New England Patriots, said this week that Shanahan was one of the most impressive coaches he’s played for when talking with NBC Sports Bay Area’s Matt Maiocco.

“That is a 20-year, 25-year head coach,” Ryan shared. “If he gets fired by the Niners in the next 20 years, they’re wrong. He is a genius, he is brilliant. I loved his leadership. I love his playcalling. I loved playing for Kyle Shanahan. He blew me away.”

This came a couple of weeks after Ryan said that the 49ers should give Kyle Shanahan a lifetime contract following his performance this season.

Prior to Shanahan, the 49ers had a rough patch since moving on from Jim Harbaugh. They cycled through a pair of one-year coaches with Chip Kelly and Jim Tomsula, going a combined 7-25 in those two years, before moving on to hiring the former Atlanta Falcons offensive coordinator.

Just two years after being hired, Shanahan had the 49ers in the Super Bowl, going from 4-12 to 13-3 and the No. 1 seed in the NFC. Of course, then came the blown lead against Patrick Mahomes and the Kansas City Chiefs, but the 49ers then made the NFC Championship Game four times in a five-year period before a tough, injury-riddled 2024 season.

Then, in what many viewed as a retool year with the team shedding a ton of veteran salaries in the offseason, the 49ers exceeded expectations and overcame more injuries to make the playoffs and win 13 games on the year.

Shanahan will always be judged on his Super Bowl success, but the 49ers head coach has continued to have impressive showings as both a CEO and a play-caller. Now, he and the team will look to add some talent ahead of another push for a championship in 2026.

Source: https://www.ninersnation.com/san-fr...e-shanahan-genius-brilliant-lifetime-contract
 
49ers wide receiver hitting free agency wants to return

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SAN FRANCISCO, CALIFORNIA - FEBRUARY 04: Kendrick Bourne visits SiriusXM on Radio Row at Super Bowl LX on February 04, 2026 in San Francisco, California. (Photo by Cindy Ord/Getty Images for SiriusXM) | Getty Images for SiriusXM

The San Francisco 49ers are going to have some questions at wide receiver in the offseason. Only Ricky Pearsall is guaranteed to return. Jauan Jennings and Kendrick Bourne are free agents.

Bourne has already indicated wants to return.

“I’m trying to come back,” Bourne said on Richard Sherman’s podcast. “Talked to Kyle. Got a good relationship, had a good exit meeting. I’m trying to make it happen.”

Bourne stepped up for the 49ers’ wide receiver room when the injury bug hit, getting 551 yards receiving for 2026. This is after he came after Week 1. He made the most impact in Week 5 against the Los Angeles Rams, notching 142 yards receiving in a 26-23 win.

Bourne highlighted his relationship with John Lynch and Kyle Shanahan as a reason he was brought back.

“Any players out there,” Bourne said, recalling how powerful his relationship was with the 49ers brass. “Don’t leave and go on Twitter. You never know when you might need to come back.”

Besides not being around for training camp in the 2025 season, another possible reason for Bourne’s “only” 541 yards is that they already had a Bourne on the team in Jauan Jennings. This is not unlike a head-scratching trade the 49ers made for Stevie Richards a decade ago, when they had a similar player in Michael Crabtree.

The difference is that the 49ers needed Bourne after Week 1 left few survivors. Even after players returned, Bourne’s availability was invaluable.

With Ricky Pearsall’s unfortunate injury history, Brandon Aiyuk now AWOL, and Jauan Jennings set to hit the market, a single wide receiver won’t just fill the holes. When Bourne left for the New England Patriots, Jauan Jennings stepped right into the role he left, being a dependable third-down machine. With Jennings’ future uncertain, Bourne could reclaim the role he once had with the 49ers.

“San Francisco is home,” he said. “Money talks, but that’s definitely home.”

Source: https://www.ninersnation.com/san-fr...-receiver-hitting-free-agency-wants-to-return
 
Should the 49ers look at wide receiver again in the first round?

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COLLEGE STATION, TX - DECEMBER 20: Wide receiver KC Concepcion #7 of the Texas A&M Aggies slides for a catch that was later overturned on replay during the CFP First Round game between Miami Hurricanes and Texas A&M Aggies on December 20, 2025, at Kyle Field in College Station, TX. (Photo by David Buono/Icon Sportswire via Getty Images) | Icon Sportswire via Getty Images

It wasn’t that long ago that the San Francisco 49ers seemed to have a plan for the future at wide receiver. They drafted Ricky Pearsall in the first round of the 2024 NFL Draft, and he was expected to take a bigger role as a second-year pro after working behind Brandon Aiyuk, Deebo Samuel, and Jauan Jennings as a rookie.

The 49ers were expected to move off Samuel after the 2024 season, having engaged in trade talks about him a few times, and ultimately did trade him to the Washington Commanders. That set up a trio of Pearsall, Aiyuk, and Jennings for the 2025 season, with younger receivers potentially taking over for the latter afterwards.

But Aiyuk’s return from a torn ACL and MCL during the 2024 season never came, and he now isn’t expected to play another game for the 49ers after his relationship with the organization soured and his guarantees were voided last offseason.

Now, heading into the offseason, the 49ers have quite a few questions to answer at wide receiver. Jennings is a pending free agent and should see interest on the open market with a likely pay bump. Pearsall’s first two years have been hampered by injuries, as he’s only played 20 games since being drafted. And there was a lot of rotating in the position group in 2025, with guys like Kendrick Bourne and Demarcus Robinson seeing key roles for much of the season.

The 49ers should have money to spend in free agency, and a field-stretcher could be a priority, given the lack of speed San Francisco had at the position in 2025. Pending free agents like Alec Pierce and Rashid Shaheed could fit that role, assuming they don’t return to their current teams.

But the draft is also a place for the 49ers to improve and find a talented, cost-controlled option. Could that even come in the first round at No. 27 overall? NFL.com’s Cynthia Frelund believes so, mocking Texas A&M star wideout KC Concepcion to the 49ers in the first round.

“Concepcion’s ability to create space and earn YAC should fit well within Kyle Shanahan’s offense,” Frelund wrote.

Concepcion had 61 catches for 919 yards and nine touchdowns for the Aggies in 2025, averaging over 15 yards per catch, earning him All-American status.

Here’s what NFL.com’s Lance Zierlein wrote about Concepcion, comparing him to former Seattle Seahawks star wideout Doug Baldwin.

“Concepcion offers immediate burst and separation into space,” Zierlein said. “He’s elusive in beating press and getting into breaks with minimum damage from handsy coverage. While he has a one-speed approach, he can snap off routes with alarming suddenness, making him extremely difficult to match at leveraged break points.

“He’s instinctive against zone. He’s also a nightmare for man coverage on choice routes and near the goal line. He’s quicker than fast, with more value on utility throws utilizing run after catch. Concepcion’s ability to quickly uncover should be very appealing to teams with spotty protection and a young quarterback.”

At 5’11, 190 pounds, Concepcion could be utilized in the slot and on the outside, and his ability to separate could be a big boost for Kyle Shanahan’s offense. The 49ers lacked separators in 2025, and it really showed in their losses down the stretch.

There are a few holes to address this offseason, but wide receiver could very well be in the cards at No. 27 in the 2026 NFL Draft. And Concepcion is an option there.

Source: https://www.ninersnation.com/san-fr...draft-kc-concepcion-wide-receiver-first-round
 
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