For all the buzz around Maxx Crosby and the San Francisco 49ers, July has come and gone without a move. That silence may not be an accident.
Former 49ers defensive coordinator Robert Saleh offered a pretty clear clue on a recent podcast, pointing to Alfred Collins as a player who has already earned serious trust inside the building.
"Alfred [Collins], I know he was a second-round pick and all, but he's still probably the biggest surprise to me in terms of just how much better he got from training camp... His mindset, his work ethic, he's only going to get better, and when it triggers for him, he's going to be a bear to stop," Saleh said on a recent podcast.
That kind of praise helps explain why San Francisco may be content to stay patient instead of chasing a splashy edge-rushing addition. Collins was not a finished product last season - PFF ranked him 123rd among 134 players at his position - and the 49ers finished with just 20 team sacks, dead last in the NFL. But he is young, and the organization appears to believe the best is still ahead.
Saleh didn’t stop with Collins, either. He also singled out Mykel Williams and C.J.
West, two other young defenders from the 2025 class. Taken together, that trio points to the same message: the 49ers may be betting on internal growth rather than an outside fix.
That approach may frustrate fans who see a roster built to win now, especially with Nick Bosa and Fred Warner healthy this season. But Saleh’s comments suggest the coaching staff views the front seven as a group that could be close to turning the corner after last year’s rough showing.
There’s also a practical reason for hesitation. San Francisco’s track record on major trades has been uneven at best. The Christian McCaffrey deal worked out beautifully, but the rest of John Lynch’s biggest swings have left scars.
Fans still remember the Jimmy Garoppolo trade, when Lynch moved quickly and made him one of the richest quarterbacks in the league after just 100 days. Garoppolo helped carry the roster to a Super Bowl appearance, but he never became the long-term answer the team hoped for.
Then came Trey Lance in 2021, a move that still stands out as one of the worst trades in NFL history. Lynch sent away three first-round picks to move up to No. 3 overall, and the gamble nearly blew up before Lance’s career even got going.
So if the 49ers are slow-playing the Crosby chase, there’s a logic to it. Between their belief in the young defenders already in place and the baggage that comes with another huge swing, San Francisco may prefer to see what it has before making another blockbuster move.
In Other News...
49ers Fans Can Feel This Blockbuster Defensive Dilemma Building
Maxx Crosbys name is back in the trade conversation, and for a team like the 49ers, that kind of buzz always lands with extra weight. He remains with the Raiders after a previous deal was rescinded, but the idea that he could be on the move before the NFL trade deadline has only added to the intrigue around one of the leagues most disruptive edge defenders.
Crosbys appeal is obvious. Even in an injury-shortened 2025 season, he still produced at an elite level with 10 sacks and 28 tackles for loss, the kind of impact that can reshape a defense. The question for San Francisco is less about fit than cost, because a player with that resume is going to come with a steep price and the 49ers have to decide how much they are willing to give up to chase that kind of upgrade. [Read more 🡒]
49ers Have One Quiet Bargain And One Growing Cap Problem
The 49ers are heading toward 2026 with a rare bit of financial breathing room, sitting on nearly $72 million in available salary cap space and planning to roll some of it over because of the way several contracts are structured. In that kind of setup, the margins matter, and one of the clearest wins on the roster comes from Mike McKivitz, whose play has outpaced his price tag and made him look like a true bargain for a team that has spent plenty elsewhere.
The tougher side of the ledger is Brandon Aiyuk, whose deal has become the kind of cap issue teams try to avoid. If the 49ers decide to move on, they would not be getting much return from the contract itself, which is why his situation stands out as the roster's biggest financial headache even with all that projected space. [Read more 🡒]
