49ers 2021 Draft Still Carries One Massive What If

Despite high hopes and substantial investments, the 49ers' 2021 draft class features more stumbles than triumphs as it unfolds on the NFL stage.

Five years later, the San Francisco 49ers’ 2021 draft class still lives with one name attached to it: Trey Lance. That’s fair.

When a team trades three first-round picks to move up and take a quarterback, the whole class gets judged through that lens. But the full picture is bigger than that, and the rest of the group produced a mix of useful starters, strong late-round value, and a few misses that never really got off the ground.

The Lance pick is the one that sinks the class. San Francisco moved up to No. 3 overall, took him, and got just four starts out of the deal before sending him to the Dallas Cowboys for a fourth-round pick.

He’s now a valuable backup for the Los Angeles Chargers, but the return never came close to matching the price. That one earns an F.

There was better business later in the draft. Aaron Banks didn’t become a long-term answer in the Bay, but he did give the 49ers solid work after a quiet rookie season.

He started for three years, then left on a four-year, $77 million contract with the Green Bay Packers last offseason. Even with an underwhelming 2025 season, he’s set to be the Packers’ starting left guard again.

That’s a respectable outcome for a second-round pick, even if it didn’t fully blossom in San Francisco.

Trey Sermon never found his footing. Injuries, including a concussion and a sprained ankle as a rookie, combined with crowded backfields to keep him from carving out much of a role.

He’s been on four teams in five years and has never topped 170 rushing yards in a season. That’s a rough return, and it shows in the D- grade.

Ambry Thomas had a longer run with the 49ers than some of the other names in this class, logging more than 1,000 snaps, but he never turned that into lasting impact. San Francisco waived him in 2024, and although he hasn’t played since 2023, he’s now with the Philadelphia Eagles and expected to compete for a roster spot. That lands at a D.

Jaylon Moore has aged much better. He never became a Week 1 starter, but he’s been the kind of backup every team wants: dependable, available, and able to handle real work.

Over the past five seasons, he’s logged more than 180 snaps every year, and he just turned in his best season with the Kansas City Chiefs, playing north of 400 snaps while seeing time at both right and left tackle. For a fifth-round pick, that’s strong value and a C.

Deommodore Lenoir is the clear home run of the class. He’s been a reliable corner for San Francisco, piled up 4,621 career snaps, and became a key piece of the defense.

The 49ers rewarded him with a five-year, $88 million extension that runs through 2029. That’s an A+ pick, and it’s only looking better.

Talanoa Hufanga also gave the 49ers major value. He broke out with a first-team All-Pro season in his second year and became one of the class’s biggest success stories.

Injuries have kept him from sustaining that peak, and San Francisco eventually let him walk. He signed a three-year, $39 million deal with the Denver Broncos.

Even so, that’s still an A- for the 49ers.

Elijah Mitchell rounded out the class with a promising start that never fully held together. He exploded as a rookie with 1,100 all-purpose yards and six touchdowns, but injuries kept dragging him back.

He wasn’t re-signed after his rookie contract and has bounced around since. Still, one strong season is real production for a sixth-round pick, and that earns a B.

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