Kyle Shanahan’s offense has never been shy about making life easy on its quarterback, and the 2025 numbers say the 49ers did that better than anyone in football through the screen game.
Charting data from FTN Fantasy, via @NutshellSports on X, showed San Francisco leading the NFL with 0.239 expected points added per play on screen passes during the regular season. No other team got over the 0.2 mark. The 49ers did it on 40 screens, a relatively small total that tied for fifth-fewest in the league, but the returns were as explosive as any offense could hope for.
Behind San Francisco, the New England Patriots finished at 0.203 and the Detroit Lions at 0.202. The Indianapolis Colts checked in at 0.163, while the Tampa Bay Buccaneers posted 0.131. At the other end of the spectrum, the Cincinnati Bengals were the league’s worst screen team by a huge margin, finishing at -0.560 EPA per play on 46 attempts - almost a point-and-a-half swing from the 49ers on the same concept.
That success fits neatly with the way San Francisco has been throwing the ball. Brock Purdy ranked 30th in the NFL in intended air yards last season, and backup Mac Jones was right behind him at 31st. Purdy’s intended air yards per attempt came in at 7.3, while Jones sat at 7.5, a clear sign that this offense is built to pile up yards after the catch instead of hunting chunk plays downfield.
That’s where the screen pass becomes more than a wrinkle. In Shanahan’s system, it works like an extension of the run game, leaning on spacing, timing and playmakers who can turn a short throw into something bigger. Christian McCaffrey and George Kittle are two of the names that fit that mold, and the setup is why the 49ers’ screen package matters so much to their overall identity.
The report also noted Mike Evans in that conversation after he averaged 12.3 yards per reception in 2025, a figure that was higher than the 49ers’ top targets from last season.
With a run-heavy structure and a quarterback room that isn’t built to live deep down the field, the screen game gave San Francisco a clean way to stay on schedule. Last season, it was the best version of that idea anywhere in the league.
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49ers Look Loaded Everywhere Except The One Unit Fans Still Fear
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The one area that still stands out as a concern is the secondary, which Sharp slots 26th and which remains the lone below-average unit on the roster. San Francisco is bringing back all of its starters there, including Deommodore Lenoir, Renardo Green and Upton Stout, while also adding veterans Nate Hobbs and Jack Jones, so the group has both continuity and new faces. Even with Raheem Morris now coordinating the defense and Osa Odighizuwa joining the mix up front, the back end is still the part of this team that feels most likely to decide how far it can go. [Read more 🡒]
Brandon Aiyuk Just Sent 49ers Fans A Loud Message About His Future
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Aiyuk has made it clear he is looking for a fresh start, and that has kept this story alive even without any official movement. For the 49ers, it is a reminder that one of their most talented pass catchers is still at the center of uncertainty, with speculation building while the team waits for the next real development. [Read more 🡒]
Kyle Shanahan May Already Be Bracing For Another Staff Loss
Klay Kubiak has spent the past few seasons climbing quickly inside the 49ers building, and the latest chatter around him suggests that ascent may not stop in San Francisco. Since joining the staff in 2021, he has moved into the offensive coordinator role and held it through 2026, a sign of how much trust Kyle Shanahan has placed in him as the offense has continued to function at a high level.
The bigger question now is how long the 49ers can keep him in the fold. Bleacher Report has already pointed to Kubiak as a possible head-coaching candidate for 2027, and his name carries obvious weight in coaching circles given his family background and the success of his brother, Klint, with the Raiders. For Shanahan, the challenge is familiar: develop assistants, lean on them heavily, and then try to keep them from becoming the next attractive hire elsewhere. [Read more 🡒]
