49ers Suddenly Face One More Big Question At Wide Receiver

Could adding veteran Stefon Diggs be the final piece to transform the 49ers' offense into a powerhouse for the upcoming season?

The San Francisco 49ers already made a major push to upgrade their wide receiver group this offseason, but one former NFL executive thinks they should keep going before camp.

Mike Tannenbaum made the case on ESPN’s "NFL Live" that San Francisco ought to add free agent Stefon Diggs, arguing the team still has room for another veteran target even after bringing in six receivers this offseason.

“I look at San Francisco, and even though they added Mike Evans and drafted (De'Zhaun) Stribling in the second round, I still think if they brought in one more veteran receiver for a team that's in a win now mode, I think you’d get one year out of Stefon Diggs and San Francisco has done that over the years," Tannenbaum said. "He’s past his prime, but come on in while Stribling develops, see what you have in (Ricky) Pearsall who’s been hurt, I think Diggs can help the 49er passing attack.”

The 49ers’ offseason additions of Evans, Christian Kirk and De'Zhaun Stribling are expected to give Brock Purdy and the offense a boost after some uneven stretches throwing the ball during the 2025 campaign. Still, Tannenbaum believes Diggs would give the unit another proven option.

Diggs is 32 and has already built a long NFL résumé. He played at Maryland from 2012-14 and earned All-Big Ten honors once before the Minnesota Vikings selected him in the fifth round, No. 146 overall, of the 2015 NFL draft. Since then, he has spent five seasons in Minnesota, four with the Buffalo Bills, one with the Houston Texans and last season with the New England Patriots.

Across 11 NFL seasons, Diggs has totaled 942 catches for 11,504 yards and 74 touchdowns. He has also made four Pro Bowls and earned two All-Pro selections.

If San Francisco did make the move, Diggs would likely slot behind Evans on the depth chart, pushing Pearsall and Kirk into the third and fourth spots. That would leave Jordan Watkins, Demarcus Robinson and Jacob Cowing battling for what could be the fifth receiver role.

And if the 49ers were to open the 2026 season with Evans, Diggs, Pearsall, Kirk and one of those three fighting for the final spot, it would be a receiver room with a chance to stack up with the best in the league, assuming everyone stays healthy.

In Other News...

49ers Are About To Get A Brutal Answer On Brock Purdy

The 49ers have spent the offseason making a clear statement about where they believe their future sits, shifting the roster and payroll toward Brock Purdy and the offense after years of leaning on defense as the foundation. San Francisco has added veteran help at receiver and elsewhere to give Purdy more support, while the front office has accepted a different kind of risk by letting the other side of the ball get younger and less proven under new coordinator Raheem Morris.

Now comes the hard part: the schedule will show quickly whether that gamble was smart or simply bold. Early matchups against top-tier opponents will put Purdy, the revamped passing game and an inexperienced defense under immediate pressure, and the results should tell a lot about whether this version of the 49ers is built to contend or just built to score. [Read more 🡒]

One Young 49ers Linebacker Is Suddenly A Trade Name To Watch

Nick Martin has barely had a chance to establish himself in San Francisco, and that alone makes his training camp worth watching. The second-year linebacker was limited last season and then lost the rest of it to a concussion, while the 49ers also added Jaden Dugger, another move that only tightens the competition around the back end of the roster.

Still, Martin has enough pedigree that he is not just another camp body, especially with Robert Salehs past interest in him lingering in the background. If Martin flashes in camp or the preseason, the conversation could shift quickly, and a joint practice later this summer would give teams a natural setting to at least explore whether there is a fit worth discussing. [Read more 🡒]

49ers Fans Wont Love What One Scout Thinks About Mike Evans

Mike Evans arrives in San Francisco with a rsum that still commands respect, but his most recent season was a reminder that even proven veterans can hit an unfamiliar dip. He played in only eight games and finished with 30 catches, 368 receiving yards and three touchdowns, a rare step back for a receiver who had built his reputation on steady production and big-play reliability.

For the 49ers, the appeal is obvious: if Evans can rediscover his usual level, he gives Kyle Shanahan another dependable target and Brock Purdy another seasoned option in an offense that likes to spread the ball around. The question now is whether the new setting can help him rebound from a year in which he fell short of the benchmarks that had defined the rest of his career. [Read more 🡒]