The 49ers may already have a familiar answer waiting if Trent Williams misses time again in 2026, and it comes from a name most fans still don’t know well: Austen Pleasants.
That’s the same kind of path Jaylon Moore took before cashing in with the Kansas City Chiefs in the 2025 offseason. Moore’s value came from doing the job when Williams was out, and he did it well enough over a five-game stretch in 2025 that hardly anyone had reason to complain. For an unheralded lineman, that kind of quiet work can be the difference between staying anonymous and landing a lucrative deal.
San Francisco hasn’t locked down its next swing tackle yet, but Pleasants is very much in the conversation. Rookie Enrique Cruz Jr. is in the mix, and veteran Brandon Parker is there too. Still, if the 49ers lean toward continuity, head coach Kyle Shanahan could decide Pleasants is the safest reserve option behind Williams and right tackle Colton McKivitz.
There’s a case for that. Cruz may be the long-term bet, but the athletic, raw rookie might need close to a year of development before he’s ready for real responsibility.
And with Williams, the need for a capable backup is hardly theoretical. He has missed at least one start in every San Francisco season since 2020, including a seven-game absence in 2024 because of injuries.
Turning 38 this summer only adds to the concern.
Pleasants already had a meaningful role in the 49ers’ depth chart last season. He played in 15 games, made one start, and while most of his work came on special teams, he was part of the mix when San Francisco needed bodies. That kind of familiarity could matter to Shanahan when the competition heats up in training camp.
The financial side makes the decision even easier if the 49ers decide to go younger. Pleasants has no guaranteed money attached to his deal, and he’s on the roster at a veteran’s minimum. That means he’d be a low-cost option now and an easy cut in September if Cruz or someone else wins the job.
So if Williams misses more time in 2026 and Pleasants sticks around, 49ers fans could end up learning his name in a hurry. Just like they did with Moore.
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Demarcus Robinson is the veteran most affected by the reshuffling. He is set to make $4 million, and with San Francisco leaning toward cost-effective depth and a crowded pecking order forming, his standing is suddenly much less secure. Ricky Pearsall, Christian Kirk and possibly Jordan Watkins are part of the mix pushing ahead of him, which is why Robinsons place on the roster has become one of the more interesting camp questions to watch. [Read more 🡒]
