Finding heir apparent to George Kittle may be impossible in 2024 draft

This may not be the year for the 49ers to go find a high-quality backup TE who can be the heir apparent to George Kittle.

Tight end has been an interesting position for the 49ers the last several years. Atop their depth chart has been perhaps the best all-around player at the position with George Kittle. Behind him has been a bit of a mess. San Francisco has had some quality blockers come through, but finding a quality pass catcher to really take advantage of multiple-TE sets has been a problem. With Kittle entering his 30s, that backup TE is also a player the club will look at as a successor to the do-everything All-Pro.

According to NFL Media draft analyst Daniel Jeremiah, this is not a good year for them to try to find that player. In a conference call with reporters on Wednesday, Jeremiah laid out a grim picture of the 2024 tight end class.

Well, they want their tight ends to be able to block and be a part of that process,” Jeremiah said of the 49ers. “So, unfortunately, with today’s college game, that lops off a good chunk of them. But Cade Stover from Ohio State would be one. That would be one who’s got some ruggedness and some toughness to him. That could kind of fit the mold a little bit there. That would be one name I’d throw out there.”

Stover is a projected third- or fourth-round pick, according to Dane Brugler of The Athletic. He posted 77 receptions for 928 yards and 10 touchdowns in 25 games the last two years for the Buckeyes. Pro Football Focus graded him out as an average overall blocker the last two years, but his size and playing style indicate he has some upside there.

Perhaps the 49ers really like Stover or another tight end more than Jeremiah thinks they might, but it doesn’t appear this will be a good year for San Francisco to land the high-quality TE2 that has long eluded them.

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49ers NFL draft moves hinge on RT Colton McKivitz

Everything is on the table for the #49ers in the first round of this year’s draft, and how they move will come down to … Colton McKivitz.

This year’s NFL draft should tell us a lot about how the 49ers view the value of a stout offensive line, and how much they believe right tackle Colton McKivitz will realistically improve over the offseason.

Most of the consensus on the 49ers’ needs, including this website, puts offensive tackle as the clear-cut top priority. It’s hard to imagine San Francisco doesn’t view its roster the same way.

However, while most mock drafts have the 49ers either trading up or reaching for an OT prospect at the end of Round 1, there’s a pretty easy path to draw where San Francisco opts to improve its long-term outlook over finding an upgrade at right tackle and/or heir apparent to left tackle Trent Williams. Their willingness and desire to trade up will come entirely down to how the team feels about McKivitz internally. They signed him to a two-year, $4.56 million extension last offseason, and then gave him an additional one-year extension this offseason worth up to $7 million. Those dollar amounts don’t necessarily tell us one way or the other what the team believes they’ll get from the 28-year-old moving forward.

If the club is out on McKivitz’s long-term outlook at tackle, history tells us they’ll make a big move to find his replacement.

They did so when they traded DeForest Buckner to the Colts in 2020 and immediately snagged his replacement, Javon Kinlaw, with the pick they acquired from Indianapolis. That same year they badly needed help in their receiving corps, so they traded up in the back of Round 1 to pick WR Brandon Aiyuk. Then when they needed a long-term answer at QB, they took the biggest swing in team history to move up to the No. 3 overall pick to draft Trey Lance.

This is a front office that isn’t afraid to jump up in the draft, but more recent history tells us they’ll only do so to address a glaring need. If they believe McKivitz is a player they simply can’t move forward with, then we should expect San Francisco to be aggressive in pursuing a trade up to find one of a deep OT class’s top players.

On the other hand, they may not view McKivitz as the kind of player who needs to be immediately replaced. He wasn’t great in 2023, but he was also not an abomination that needs replacing or it will derail the 49ers’ entire season. Adding competition there instead of handing him the job like they did last year may be enough to make the club feel good about its right tackle situation heading into camp. In this scenario, it’s hard to envision San Francisco making a significant jump up the board.

As with all things there’s a gray area between the two extremes that the 49ers may also be hoping to fall in. They could also be okay with McKivitz, but eager to add high-end competition for him where they’re happy to sit at No. 31 and take the best OT that happens to fall to them. In that case they’re adding a potential starter, but they’re using just one pick to acquire that player which makes it more palatable if they’re unable to beat out McKivitz on Day 1.

The 49ers won’t divulge their plans and in the lead up to the draft on April 25 there’ll be plenty of connections between San Francisco and any tackle prospect that may slide outside the top 15 or so. How the team moves in this year’s three-day selection process could make or break their hopes to extend their Super Bowl window, and for now it appears those moves will come down to how they feel about McKivitz.

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49ers have top-30 visit with underrated OT prospect

The #49ers had a 30 visit with a really interesting tackle prospect who could be the team’s next late-round gem.

The 49ers have options in this year’s draft. Offensive tackle remains their most glaring need, but it’s not a slam dunk that they go that route with their first pick. It’s also not out of the question they take multiple players at that position to give themselves as many options as possible while building out an offensive line.

Penn State’s Caedan Wallace is a later-round OT candidate who would make a ton of sense for San Francisco, and they’re hosting him on a top-30 visit according to the Draft Network’s Justin Melo.

Wallace won’t make his way into any Day 1 mock drafts. He may not even land in a Day 2 mock. As Day 3 prospects go though it’s easy to see how the 49ers could quickly fall in love with Wallace given their situation at right tackle.

In five seasons with the Nittany Lions, Wallace started 40 of the 47 games he played at right tackle. He checks all the size boxes at 6-5, 314 pounds with 34-inch arms. His athleticism won’t blow any coaches away, but Wallace has enough of a well-rounded skill set that the lack of elite athleticism shouldn’t make him an unplayable pro.

While Wallace grades out as a mostly average run blocker per Pro Football Focus, he allowed just one sack and 13 pressures in pass protection last season. In 2022 he gave up one sack and 12 pressures. The two sacks and 25 pressures across his final two college seasons were a massive improvement over the five sacks and 35 pressures he gave up just in the 2021 campaign.

That improvement, combined with his experience and size make Wallace the kind of prospect who could definitely compete for a starting right tackle job right away. If he’s unable to do that, there’s plenty to build on if the 49ers want to develop him for either a future starting job, or a spot as a swing tackle in a deeper version of San Francisco’s offensive front.

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Why did 49ers lose 2025 5th-round pick?

It turns out a $75,000 mistake cost the 49ers their 2025 fifth-round pick.

It turns out a fifth-round pick is worth about $75,000.

49ers general manager John Lynch on Monday at the NFL owners meetings told reporters the team’s accounting error that cost them a 2025 fifth-round pick came during the 2020 season when they overpaid a player by $75,000.

Instead of reporting the mistake to the league, the team tried to get the money back from the player. They were unable to do so, and their mistake was caught by the league heading into this season.

Since San Francisco didn’t circumvent the salary cap or do anything maliciously their punishment was relatively mild. Their No. 131 pick in the fourth round of this year’s draft dropped to No. 135, while their 2025 fifth-round pick was vacated. Still, Lynch told reporters he disagreed with the level of punishment the NFL handed down per ESPN’s Nick Wagoner.

While the 49ers may not have made the mistake on purpose, the league still has to ensure punishments are levied for such errors. Given the nature of this miscue, the punishment is probably fitting. Surely San Francisco will report the mistake through the proper channels in the future.

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Tyrion Davis-Price exit underscores huge draft problem for 49ers

Ty Davis-Price’s exit underscores how bad things have gotten for the #49ers in the third round of the draft:

The 49ers on Tuesday said goodbye to another third-round pick. Tyrion Davis-Price after two seasons in San Francisco left to join the Philadelphia Eagles on a reserve/future contract. His departure is another confirmation of a failed third-round pick, something that’s become all-too-common in the Kyle Shanahan and John Lynch era.

Not that hitting on picks in the third-round is the key to good drafting. Finding good players anywhere in the draft is paramount, and the Shanahan-Lynch 49ers have been superb particularly in the later rounds finding viable starters and quality depth pieces. However, there’s still premium talent available later on Day 2 where San Francisco’s current front office has really struggled.

Take Davis-Price for instance. He was the second running back selected in the third-round by the 49ers in as many years. They took him in 2022 partly because RB Trey Sermon, their third-round pick from the year prior, struggled so much. Now both are gone before Sermon’s rookie contract is up.

It’s not just running backs though. Going back through the third-round picks in the Shanahan-Lynch tenure shows just how badly the team has missed in that portion of the draft, particularly over the last five years.

Let’s take a look at all 12 third-round picks in the seven drafts run by the Shanahan-Lynch duo, and then crunch some numbers to find out just how dire things are:

Updated 49ers draft picks after Mike McDaniel hired by Dolphins

The #49ers list of 2022 draft picks needed updating after Mike McDaniel became the Dolphins’ head coach.

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The 49ers’ list of 2022 draft picks got an update when the Miami Dolphins hired former 49ers offensive coordinator Mike McDaniel to be their new head coach. McDaniel, who is multiracial, landed the 49ers two compensatory third-round picks under Resolution JC-2A that awards teams compensatory third-round selections for developing minority head coaches and general managers.

San Francisco landed a 2021 third-round compensatory pick when their former vice president of player personnel Martin Mayhew was hired as Washington’s general manager. They also got third-round picks in 2022 and 2023 for former defensive coordinator Robert Saleh getting hired as the Jets head coach. The comp. picks for McDaniel will also convey in 2022 and 2023.

Here’s an updated list of the 49ers’ 2022 NFL draft picks:

Round 1, Pick 29 (traded to Miami)
Round 2, Pick 61
Round 3, Pick 93
Round 3, Compensatory A (traded to Miami)
Round 3, Compensatory B
Round 4, Pick 132
Round 5, Pick 171
Round 6, Pick 185 (via Denver)
Round 6, Pick 206 (traded to New York Jets)
Round 7, Pick 248 (traded to Denver)

Their Round 1 pick and the first of their two Round 3 compensatory picks were dealt to Miami in the trade up to No. 3 overall in last year’s draft.

Their own sixth-round selection will actually go to Houston, but it was initially traded by San Francisco to the Jets in the trade to acquire defensive end Jordan Willis during the 2020 season.

The 49ers gained an additional sixth-round pick from the Broncos in the trade that sent linebacker Jonas Griffith to Denver. San Francisco shipped out their seventh-round pick in that deal as well.

An interesting addition will come when Jimmy Garoppolo is eventually traded. That may put another Day 2 pick in their war chest, giving them some maneuverability if they want to try and get up into the first round.

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Gil Brandt: 49ers 1st-round pick Javon Kinlaw has no weaknesses

SiriusXM NFL’s Gil Brandt believes 49ers first-round pick Javon Kinlaw has no weaknesses as a prospect.

The 49ers are banking big on their two first-round picks, Javon Kinlaw and Brandon Aiyuk. While they need both players to work out, the Kinlaw selection will be viewed especially critically since the club opted to parted ways with All-Pro DeForest Buckner in exchange for the draft pick they eventually used to pick Kinlaw No. 14 overall out of South Carolina.

Hall-of-fame executive Gil Brandt, who worked as an executive for the Dallas Cowboys from 1960-88, sees a flawless player in the 49ers’ first-round pick.

“He does not have a weakness on a grade that you use to evaluate players with,” Brandt said Sirius XM NFL Radio per Eric Branch of the SF Chronicle. “That’s unusual. I mean, Jerry Rice had a weakness (as a prospect) – he wasn’t a good blocker. Very few guys have no weaknesses at all and, in my estimation, he has no weaknesses at all.”

Kinlaw spent three seasons at South Carolina, and didn’t break out until his senior season when he collected 6.0 of his 10.0-career sacks. There were a variety of reasons he struggled early in his career, some of which were described by Branch in his detailed breakdown of the rookie, but perhaps the biggest one was where Kinlaw played.

He spent a lot of time at nose tackle for the Gamecocks, a position where stats are harder to rack up and the player’s job is to occupy blockers and fill gaps more than it is to record sacks and tackles.

If Kinlaw is a flawless prospect, as Brandt believes, the 49ers may not have to wait long to find their replacement for Buckner. Going into camp it looks like there’ll be a committee approach to filling Buckner’s 800-plus snaps. However, if Kinlaw doesn’t have any holes in his game and holds his own on all three downs right away at a better position for his skill set, there may not be any reason to take Kinlaw off the field for extended periods of time.

Translating college prospects to the NFL isn’t as easy as just evaluating their talents in college though. Kinlaw was dominant for South Carolina with a rare combination of size and athleticism. Simply. winning with physicality doesn’t often work in the NFL. There will be players who know how to properly handle Kinlaw’s size, length, speed and strength. If he can’t win that way, he’ll need to consistently find other ways to move offensive linemen and get into opposing backfields.

Brandt’s high praise is a good start though. If Kinlaw can get anywhere close to the expectations a prospect without weaknesses gets tabbed with, the 49ers will be in a good spot to have one of the NFL’s top defensive lines again even after trading one of their best players on that unit.

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Twitter reacts as 49ers take Georgia TE Charlie Woerner

The San Francisco 49ers took Georgia football TE Charlie Woerner in the sixth round of the 2020 NFL Draft. Here is the Twitter reactions.

On Saturday, the San Francisco 49ers selected Georgia tight end Charlie Woerner with the 190th overall pick in the sixth round of the NFL Draft.

It came as a bit of a surprise, as Woerner was viewed as a guy who was likely to go undrafted, but the 49ers took a shot on the former four-star out of Rabun County in Tiger, Georgia.

From 2016-2019, Woerner caught 34 passes from Jake Fromm. He tallied 376 yards and scored his lone touchdown last season against Georgia Tech.

He is primarily a run blocking tight end who is not afraid to get physical as you’ll see below.

Woerner is the nephew of former Georgia All-American defensive back Scott Woerner.

Here are some Twitter reactions to San Francisco taking the 6-foot-5, 245 pound Woerner:

49ers select Georgia TE Charlie Woerner in sixth round of NFL Draft

The San Francisco 49ers took Georgia football TE Charlie Woerner in the sixth round of the 2020 NFL Draft.

With the 190th overall pick in the 2020 NFL Draft, the San Francisco selected former Georgia tight end Charlie Woerner.

Woerner had to wait until the sixth round to hear his name called, but it did come as a pleasant surprise as he was seen as a guy who could have fallen out of the draft altogether.

Woerner (6-foot-5 245 pounds) came to Georgia as a four-star tight end in the class of 2016 out of Rabun County High School in Tiger, Georgia.

From 2016-2019, Woerner caught 34 passes from Jake Fromm. He tallied 376 yards and scored his lone touchdown last season against Georgia Tech.

Other than George Kittle, the 49ers don’t have much talent at the tight end position, so Woerner could come in and compete for that TE2 spot.

Woerner is the nephew of former Georgia All-American defensive back Scott Woerner.

 

2020 NFL Draft: San Francisco 49ers team preview

Draft Wire’s Gavino Borquez delivers everything San Francisco 49ers fans need to know heading into the 2020 NFL Draft.

Everything San Francisco 49ers fans need to know heading into the 2020 NFL Draft.

VITALS

Head Coach: Kyle Shanahan

General Manager: John Lynch

2019 record: 13-3

2020 DRAFT PICKS

1 (13)

1 (31)

5 (156)

5 (176)

6 (210)

7 (217)

7 (245)

TEAM NEEDS

Wide receiver

This position was always a need heading into the offseason, but after the 49ers lost WR Emmanuel Sanders, who signed with the Saints in free agency, it became even more glaring.

Defensive tackle

The 49ers traded DeForest Buckner to the Colts. Jullian Taylor, who’s expected to fill in for Buckner, is coming off a severe knee injury. Nose tackle D.J. Jones is also in a contract year.

Cornerback

Richard Sherman and Akhello Witherspoon are entering the final years of their contracts. Witherspoon hasn’t done enough to be retained and Emmanuel Moseley hasn’t proven himself as a long-term solution, either.

Offensive line

After releasing Mike Person, there’s expected to be a three-way competition for right guard between Ben Garland, Shon Coleman and Daniel Brunskill. The 49ers also need to find the successor to tackle Joe Staley.

TOP TARGETS

Jerry Jeudy | WR | Alabama

Denzel Mims | WR | Baylor

Ross Blacklock | DT | TCU

Justin Madubuike | DT | Texas A&M

Josh Jones | OT | Houston

Matt Hennessy | IOL | Temple

Noah Igbinoghene | CB | Auburn

Cameron Dantzler | CB | Mississippi State

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