49ers Season May Come Down To One Familiar Problem Again

As the 49ers gear up for 2026, pivotal contributions from new signings and seasoned veterans could make or break their season hopes.

The 49ers are headed into 2026 with the kind of roster that can make a team look both terrifying and fragile at the same time. San Francisco has no shortage of big names, future Hall of Famers, and Pro Bowl talent, but that doesn’t make the path any clearer.

A Super Bowl push is absolutely on the table. So is a disappointing finish that leaves them fighting just to stay above water.

For all the star power, this season may come down to a handful of players who sit right at the center of the team’s biggest questions.

Christian McCaffrey is the biggest one of all. At age 30, he enters the year carrying all the usual concerns that come with a heavy workload and a long injury history.

Last season, he piled up 413 touches, the most among running backs, and that kind of usage tends to come with a warning label. He’s one of the league’s clearest high-risk, high-reward bets.

If the football gods somehow promised him 17 healthy games, San Francisco would probably be in good shape for another playoff trip. But that’s not the world the 49ers live in, and multiple missed games would hardly come as a shock.

Ricky Pearsall is the other major swing factor in the passing game. Entering his third season, he has the kind of opening that players dream about, but he still has to turn that opportunity into production.

Pearsall has never played double-digit games in a season and has mostly flashed rather than sustained anything. Still, the runway is there.

San Francisco let Jauan Jennings walk in free agency, which leaves Pearsall as the No. 2 pass catcher behind Mike Evans, who is 32 and coming off an injury-riddled season. Brock Purdy can’t be expected to lean only on Evans and George Kittle, who turns 33 in October, so Pearsall’s role matters in a major way.

On the offensive line, Robert Jones could end up being a quiet but crucial fix. The 49ers brought him in to handle the hole next to Trent Williams, and he’s basically the lone real question mark up front.

Jones hasn’t taken a snap in a full season after sitting out last year with a broken bone in his neck, but before that he posted a 2.9 percent blown-block rate. San Francisco didn’t invest major draft capital into the line, which means the team is counting on Jones to settle in quickly and give Kyle Shanahan something close to what he had before the injury.

Defensively, the spotlight falls on Osa Odighizua and Nick Bosa. Odighizua is the newest tackle in a rotation that’s been in flux since Arik Armstead left, and he may be the biggest defensive addition of the offseason.

The 49ers finished dead last in sacks last year, a startling place for a team that has long lived off elite pass rushing. Odighizua is expected to help change that.

He ranked sixth among defensive linemen in pressures last season, according to PFF, and with a healthy Bosa next to him, he’ll be asked to create more heat inside.

Bosa, though, is the one who has to lead the whole thing. His sack numbers have dropped in each of the last four seasons, and CBS recently placed him 94th among players in the league, which is a brutal number for someone of his standing.

He’s still only 28 and should be in his prime, but the 49ers need more than reputation now. They need the version of Bosa that once helped drive two Super Bowl appearances in five years.

If he can’t rediscover that early-career force, there aren’t many other answers waiting on the roster.

In Other News...

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Kyle Shanahans run in San Francisco has produced plenty of familiar stars, but the conversation around the 49ers often leaves out the players who made the whole thing work a little smoother. Emmanuel Sanders helped steady a young receiving group, Matt Breida gave the backfield burst and intrigue, Arik Armstead spent years taking on the kind of interior work that rarely shows up in highlight packages, and Dre Greenlaw became one of the defenses defining presence in the middle of the field.

Kyle Juszczyk sits in that same conversation for a different reason. His role has never been easy to pin down with basic numbers, which is part of why he can be overlooked even after nine seasons of being so useful in so many ways, and the case for him only gets stronger when the 49ers are being measured against the NFLs best teams. The broader point in ranking the most underappreciated players of the Shanahan era is that San Franciscos success has been built not just on headliners, but on a handful of trusted pieces whose value becomes obvious only when they are missing. [Read more 🡒]

John Lynch Could Be Weighing A Surprising 49ers Trade Before Week 1

With Week 1 approaching, the 49ers are still in the kind of roster-shaping period when one phone call can change the equation. John Lynch has shown in the past that he will listen if a move helps the bigger picture, and this group has a few spots where San Francisco has enough depth to at least consider whether a veteran or a younger player might bring back value before the season gets rolling.

The clearest intrigue sits in the secondary and behind center, where the 49ers have bodies and competition that could make a deal more realistic than it first appears. Nothing feels imminent, and no one around the team is treating a move as the most likely outcome, but if another club comes calling with the right offer, Lynch may have a decision to make before the opener. [Read more 🡒]

John Lynch May Still Have One More 49ers Upgrade In Mind

With the offseason still offering a chance to nudge the roster in the right direction, John Lynch is again being linked to the kind of trade market the 49ers have not been shy about exploring. The speculation is straightforward enough: San Francisco has needs to weigh, and the front office has long shown a willingness to scan around the league for help if the price and fit make sense.

Among the names floated are a possible addition at safety and another option at running back, along with a more ambitious pass-rush swing that would be harder to pull off. For a team that has spent years trying to keep its window open, the interesting part is not whether Lynch will look, but how far he is willing to go to land one more upgrade before next season gets here. [Read more 🡒]