Brandon Aiyuk’s camp publicly refutes another trade rumor

Another Brandon Aiyuk trade rumor shot down by Aiyuk’s agent.

Another Brandon Aiyuk trade rumor has been publicly denied by the wide receiver’s agent. After an author at a website that covers the Pittsburgh Steelers reported that a person inside the Steelers building would be shocked if the team didn’t trade for Aiyuk, Aiyuk’s agent Ryan Williams took to the internet to dispute the report.

“Another ‘report’ that couldn’t be more incorrect,” Williams wrote on Twitter. “Fictional ‘journalism’ should really stop.”

It’s interesting that Williams is coming out publicly and doing this. Another random Twitter user ‘reported’ that an Aiyuk trade was in the works and Williams shot that one down too.

Perhaps he’s just looking out for his client. Maybe he’s just really anti-false reporting. Conventional wisdom says trade rumors muddying the waters might help a player in negotiations. Granted, a team knows what clubs are and are not calling so it’s hard to imagine San Francisco getting scared off by a rumor involving them.

Still, this may be a matter of the 49ers and Aiyuk’s camp being on good terms heading into negotiations on a long-term extension. Aiyuk is entering the fifth and final year of his rookie contract in 2024.

Trade rumors swirling may be perceived by the 49ers as Aiyuk’s camp trying to leak information to help them in those negotiations. By publicly denying the rumors Williams removes himself from being the possible culprit behind the reports.

Ultimately for 49ers fans worried Aiyuk may get dealt, seeing his agent deny even flimsy report from smaller-profile reporters has to be good news.

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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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NFL draft: Never rule out 49ers adding DL help

A draft analyst took the 49ers out of the running for one of the draft’s top edge rushers. We are going to go ahead and not do that based on everything we know about the 49ers.

Never underestimate the 49ers’ desire to bolster their defensive line. A handful of free agency moves that saw the club add a pair of defensive ends and a pair of defensive tackles might have pushed the defensive front down their perceived list of needs, but San Francisco’s front office isn’t above continuing to add there.

A recent report from draft analyst Tony Pauline indicated the 49ers would be out on Western Michigan pass rusher Marshawn Kneeland because the club signed Leonard Floyd and Yetur Gross-Matos in free agency.

We’re going to go ahead and rebut the argument (from Pauline or anyone else) that the 49ers can be crossed off the list of teams that might be interested in Kneeland in the second round (or possibly late in the first round) of this year’s draft, because the 49ers can never have enough pass rush help.

When the club was in pursuit of then-Bears pass rusher Khalil Mack, general manager John Lynch said pass rush was as important to a defense as the quarterback is to an offense. The team has continued prioritizing their pass rush throughout Lynch’s tenure with head coach Kyle Shanahan. They drafted Nick Bosa No. 2 overall in 2019. They traded for DE Dee Ford that same offseason. In 2022 they used a second-round pick on USC DE Drake Jackson. Last year they spent a fifth-round choice on Georgia DE Robert Beal. All the while they’ve added low-risk, high-reward free agents at those spots as well.

Floyd and Gross-Matos should help a 49ers pass rush that sorely lacked in production last year, but history tells us a couple of veteran free agent additions won’t stop San Francisco from adding more depth, particularly if they believe that player can be a starter over the long-term. A player like Kneeland (or pick your favorite DE in this year’s class) wouldn’t have much competition for snaps right away since Gross-Matos figures to play inside some of the time and neither Jackson nor Beal are proven commodities at the NFL level.

It’s entirely conceivable the 49ers view DE as one of their top needs for this year and in the future. They might even use a first-round pick there depending on how the board shakes out. Of course, there are other positions San Francisco could spend its first couple selection on, but the defensive line is always a spot they’ll look to improve and ruling them out of the sweepstakes for one of the draft’s top edge rushers isn’t something we’re willing to do.

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49ers best offseason story line is one that isn’t happening

The best part of this #49ers offseason is a thing we’ve not had to talk much about.

Can we take a moment to appreciate something we’ve not had to really write about or cover this offseason? The 49ers for the first time in a long time have no offseason drama at quarterback. There are no questions, there’s just a healthy Brock Purdy coming off a terrific second season as a pro, lined up as the team’s starting QB for the start of the 2024 season.

What a fun thing!

In the 2017 offseason we had to consider all the options in the draft with Kyle Shanahan assuming the head coach role.

In 2018 we had to wonder whether the team would pay Jimmy Garoppolo or franchise tag him.

In 2019 Garoppolo was coming off an ACL injury.

In 2020 Garoppolo was coming off a rough Super Bowl performance and questions about his long-term viability as a starting QB started to sprout.

In 2021 the 49ers drafted Trey Lance and threw Garoppolo’s future into massive flux.

In 2022 Lance took over and Garoppolo was supposed to be gone, but then it turns out he wasn’t.

In 2023 Purdy was coming off major elbow surgery and his status was up in the air enough that we had to ponder the merits of a Lance vs. Sam Darnold quarterback battle.

This offseason the only drama under center was how the 49ers would navigate the QB2 and QB3 spots on their depth chart. That’s how Super Bowl contenders typically operate in an offseason. They have no questions about what’s happening at quarterback, and instead get to focus on the things we’ve gotten to look at this year. We’ve gotten to dive into things like offensive line help, defensive line depth, Brandon Aiyuk’s future and other very important, non-quarterback things.

None of this is to say there won’t be more question marks in the near future. Purdy after the 2024 season will be extension eligible. There’ll be questions about how much he should be paid and what other pieces the team can/should keep with a more expensive signal caller atop the QB depth chart. With that comes additional scrutiny each year Purdy and the 49ers don’t hoist a Lombardi Trophy.

For now we’ll kick that can down the road though and enjoy at least one year of offseason certainty at QB for the 49ers. It may be the last one for awhile.

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49ers NFL draft strategy: The case for trading back from 1st-round pick

The case for a 49ers trade back out of the first round is less about their top need and more about what that trade down can lead to elsewhere in the draft:

There’s a pretty glaring priority atop the 49ers’ list of needs in this year’s NFL draft. They have to find a starting-caliber right tackle to work as an upgrade on RT Colton McKivitz. At worst they have to bring in a player or two to act as legitimate competition for that starting job after effectively handing it to McKivitz last season.

Despite a deep offensive tackle class, finding one that’s likely to slide down to the 49ers at the No. 31 overall pick isn’t necessarily easy. Typically we’ve explored options where San Francisco trades up for that player, but there’s a pretty strong case to be made that trading down might actually bear more fruit.

It needs to be stated up top here that this isn’t advocating for a sizable trade down to the middle-to-late second round. However, if they’re able to slide back a few spots into Day 2 while accumulating either more Day 2 and/or early Day 3 draft capital, they could ultimately check their OT box and set themselves up to start filling other needs with higher-quality draft capital. The latter of those two things is the most important.

Should the 49ers hang out at No. 31 they could find themselves in a position where they’re reaching for a player just to check their top need. Trading back opens the door for them to still get a tackle prospect they liked at 31 while also positioning themselves to check off some other boxes that have flown under the radar some in the lead up to this year’s draft.

While OT is the obvious top need, the 49ers also need to start restocking their cupboard with players they can lean on to help build out a Super Bowl roster in the next two or three years. Doing that via their typical assortment of picks hasn’t been super helpful the last two drafts.

This is a year where they need to be aggressive in moving around the board outside of Day 1 to target players they really like. Whether that’s on Day 2 or early in Day 3 matters less than just ensuring they’re targeting specific players and using their newly-acquired draft capital via their initial trade back to start filling out some of the holes left over from uninspiring picks from the last couple years. Trading back and utilizing those picks to start moving up elsewhere in the draft and prioritizing quality over quantity across all three days would make a ton of sense for the 49ers given where they’re at in their Super Bowl window.

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Could 49ers be looking for NFL version of Shohei Ohtani?

Do the #49ers have visions of adding the NFL’s Shohei Ohtani?

Finding an NFL comparison to Los Angeles Dodgers two-way superstar Shohei Ohtani is impossible. Impacting the game both ways the way Ohtani does isn’t something an NFL player would be able to do consistently given the physical rigors of the sport. The 49ers might be trying to find that player anyway.

In what could be an expansion of their “positionless” offense, the 49ers are hosting Utah running back/defensive back Sione Vaki on a top 30 visit according to the Draft Network’s Justin Melo.

Vaki played both directions for the Utes and posted 317 rushing yards, 223 receiving yards and five total touchdowns as a running back last season. He also contributed 92 tackles, 12 tackles for loss, 2.0 sacks, one interception and six pass breakups as a safety. His defensive contributions came across 26 games in two seasons, while his offensive stats were all accumulated in the 2023 campaign.

The likelihood that Vaki can regularly play both ways in the NFL is very slim. Adding a player like him though could open two doors for San Francisco. There’s a chance it’s straightforward where they like Vaki at one position or the other and believe he can contribute for them at one of those spots. The other side of that coin though is one where they like Vaki for one spot, but they really like the idea of having two-way capability. Perhaps they like him as a running back who can add emergency depth at safety. They could also view him as a safety who can work into a couple of different offensive packages at running back.

Chances are it’s the former where they like him at one position or the other. Given Ohtani’s meteoric rise in baseball though it’s hard not to ponder what a regular two-way NFL player might look like. While Vaki might have the skill set to be effective on both sides of the ball though, it’s much more likely he winds up sticking at one no matter how lofty a team’s ambitions for him might be.

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49ers pick WR in Round 1 of mock draft decided by betting markets

Here’s a thing that’s probably not going to happen to the 49ers in this year’s draft:

Pro Football Focus published a fun spin on a mock draft where author Arjun Menon crafted a 32-pick projection based on odds implied by betting markets. That is to say each player was selected based on which player has the best odds to go to a team. It’s a fun process, but the 49ers pick for it comes with a pretty sizable flaw.

Menon’s mock sends Georgia wide receiver Ladd McConkey to the 49ers because “it seems like the 49ers and Brandon Aiyuk are moving further apart in contract negotiations with each passing day.”

We’ll put a pin in the assumption on contract negotiations for now and focus instead on the potential trading of Aiyuk itself.

McConkey landing with the 49ers is certainly not out of the question. He’s a versatile, tough WR who spends an almost comedic amount of time running open. It’s easy to see why head coach Kyle Shanahan would love having a player like him to pair with quarterback Brock Purdy for the foreseeable future.

What isn’t accounted for in the world where the 49ers are drafting McConkey because they traded Aiyuk is that they’d likely only deal Aiyuk for a first-round pick this year. Perhaps it’s the Jaguars and the No. 17 choice. Maybe it’s the Steelers with the 20th pick. Either way if we’re going to venture into this world where the 49ers are trading Aiyuk, there should be additional implication that the trade fetched them something in the first round.

Perhaps odds aren’t accounting for that possibility despite the fact “it seems like the 49ers and Brandon Aiyuk are moving further apart in contract negotiations with each passing day.” Maybe McConkey being the implied favorite to land in San Francisco has nothing to do with Aiyuk.

It should still at least be acknowledged that if the 49ers are dealing the All-Pro wide receiver it would be for a first-round pick this year and probably something else. The Titans received Nos. 18 and 101 for WR AJ Brown. Baltimore got the No. 23 pick for WR Marquise Brown and the 100th overall selection.

It’s easy to envision a scenario where the 49ers trade Aiyuk and pick a wide receiver in the first round. It’s also not hard to see the 49ers picking a WR in Round 1 without trading Aiyuk. What is difficult is to see the 49ers dealing Aiyuk this offseason for anything less than a first-round pick in this year’s draft.

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Brock Purdy gets a raise from NFL in front of eventual raise from 49ers

Two #49ers added some money for vastly outperforming their contracts.

The NFL on Monday announced its performance-based payouts for the 2023 season. These payouts add some money for players on rookie contracts who dramatically outperform the money that comes on their rookie deal. 49ers quarterback Brock Purdy and cornerback Deommodore Lenoir were both among the top 25 performance-based pay recipients for last season.

Lenoir landed with the 14th-highest performance-based pay bump for last season. The 49ers’ starting nickel CB added $790,744 after a terrific third season where he started all 17 games and posted a career-high three interceptions. His contract as a fifth-round pick in 2020 paid him a $940,000 base salary this year.

Purdy, the final pick of the 2022 draft, was a Pro Bowler and top-five MVP finalist. He earned an additional $738,916 for his tremendous second season. That number nearly matches his $870,000 base salary from last year.

This won’t be the last time Purdy receives a substantial uptick in pay for his performance, but it’s more likely the next one will come from the 49ers. He could certainly receive performance-based pay from the NFL after the 2024 campaign since his rookie deal will earn him just $985,000 in base salary again next season. However, after next season Purdy will also be eligible for a contract extension with San Francisco.

Assuming he continues playing at a high level in the 49ers’ offense, his pay bump will make the small added funds from the NFL seem paltry.

It’s unclear exactly what kind of deal Purdy will be looking for, and it’s unclear what the 49ers will be willing to pay him based on what the roster will look like once they have a sizable QB deal on the books. It’s not likely the deal is going to be something exceedingly affordable. Even if he’s simply looking for top-10 QB money the 49ers would be looking at a deal in the range of $40 million per year, commensurate with the deals signed by Rams QB Matthew Stafford, Cowboys QB Dak Prescott and Giants QB Daniel Jones. They’re all tied for the 10th-highest average annual value among QBs.

Should Purdy take a leap in his second full season as a starter where he has a full offseason that isn’t hindered by recovery from major elbow surgery, then that contract could wind up sailing in even north of that Stafford-Jones-Prescott trio. If at that point he continues out-performing his deal, then the 49ers will be in a great spot to continue contending for a long time.

Will 49ers sign any more free agents?

Are the #49ers done making free agency additions? Sort of!

It sure looks like the 49ers might have their significant free agency additions all wrapped up. With less than a month until the draft it’s hard to find a spot on the 49ers roster where one of the top remaining free agents makes a ton of sense.

There are a handful of places where depth could be helped by a veteran presence. Defensive line is always a place teams need depth. So are cornerback and offensive line. For the 49ers specifically there were some questions about what they’d do at safety since they could use help there, but with Talanoa Hufanga on track to return during training camp from his torn ACL that need is diminished pretty significantly.

Some of this could change a little if the Lions wind up matching the offer sheet the 49ers agreed to with restricted free agent tight end Brock Wright. They could also decide veteran depth alongside Hufanga, Ji’Ayir Brown and George Odum is more valuable than a draft pick or third-year undrafted free agent Tayler Hawkins.

If Wright winds up back in Detroit the 49ers could, and probably should, bring in a veteran they trust to handle the backup TE duties. It’s notable that long-time 49er Ross Dwelley is still available.

San Francisco has also had meetings with veteran safeties, but made it clear a starting spot wasn’t guaranteed. Given where they’re salary cap-wise a rookie who can develop and play special teams might be more valuable long-term than a veteran who is more game-ready in 2024.

There will continue being tweaks and additions as the team enters its offseason program. There will also likely be some signings after the dust has settled on the draft and the 49ers can make their final adjustments to their 90-man offseason roster.

So, the 49ers aren’t necessarily done signing free agents, but they’re likely done making additions that are going to move the needle with any kind of significance. It’s all about the NFL draft and the start of their offseason program moving forward.

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Details emerge on offer sheet 49ers offered restricted free agent TE Brock Wright

Here’s the offer sheet the #49ers signed TE Brock Wright to:

The details on the 49ers’ offer sheet for Lions restricted free agent tight end Brock Wright emerged Saturday via ESPN’s Adam Schefter. Wright’s deal with San Francisco is for three years, and is worth up to $12 million with $6 million guaranteed. Detroit has five days to match the offer after tendering him at the right of first refusal level, which would have paid Wright $2,985,000 this season.

For the Lions, matching will simply be about value. They have more than $26 million in cap space according to Over the Cap, so adding Wright on a contract worth $4 million annually shouldn’t be an issue. It’ll simply be about whether they want to pay a backup TE that kind of money.

It would make sense for the Lions to try and bring him back, even with Sam LaPorta coming off a sensational rookie season. Wright has never been a regular starter in Detroit, but he never played fewer than 44 percent of their offensive snaps in the three seasons he was there.

That’s the same reason the 49ers are willing to pay him after letting TE Charlie Woerner walk in free agency. Wright is a multifaceted contributor in ways the 49ers haven’t really had behind TE George Kittle.

The best case scenario for the 49ers is Wright’s offer sheet isn’t matched by Detroit and they have their veteran TE. The worst case scenario is they match and the Lions have to pay a couple million dollars more for a TE they tried to get back on the cheap.

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