Brock Purdy's Supporting Cast Looks Elite Until One Concern Creeps In

As the San Francisco 49ers navigate player injuries, the strength of their revamped roster garners scrutiny as they aim to uphold their top-tier NFL status.

Brock Purdy’s supporting cast is back in the spotlight, and this time the 49ers are landing at No. 5 in ESPN’s Bill Barnwell rankings heading into 2026.

That’s a long way from the top spot San Francisco held going into 2024, when the roster looked loaded on paper after the previous season. But football has a way of humbling the best-laid plans.

Christian McCaffrey was supposed to be ready for Week 1 and ended up playing only four games. Brandon Aiyuk tore his ACL.

Deebo Samuel faded badly. The group around Purdy that had looked like a superteam got taken apart by injuries and disappointment.

Last season, Barnwell still had the 49ers near the top, slotting them fourth before what turned into another rough year for the offense’s supporting pieces. Aiyuk never made it back.

Ricky Pearsall couldn’t stay in the lineup consistently. Jauan Jennings ended up as WR1, which was never the kind of outcome San Francisco wanted, and the fact that he was still on the market months after free agency says plenty about how thin things got.

Now Barnwell has the Niners fifth, and the case starts with star power. “Between Christian McCaffrey, George Kittle and new addition Mike Evans, the 49ers can call on surefire Hall of Famers at each spot in the lineup for these rankings.”

He also points to the overhaul at receiver, with Jennings and Aiyuk replaced by Evans, Christian Kirk and second-round pick De’Zhaun Stribling. At running back, third-round pick Kaelon Black is in the mix behind McCaffrey, giving Kyle Shanahan another middle-round back to develop.

The question, though, is the same one that keeps hanging over this group: can these players actually stay on the field?

Kittle is coming off a season that was already being dented by hamstring and ankle problems before he tore his right Achilles in the playoffs. Evans was limited to eight games by hamstring and collarbone injuries.

McCaffrey did make it through a full season, but he has missed major time in three of his last six campaigns. All three are 30 or older.

Pearsall, meanwhile, missed nine games last season with a posterior cruciate ligament injury.

And yet there’s plenty of reason to see the upside. McCaffrey, Kittle and Evans have all shown elite form not long ago.

McCaffrey wasn’t as efficient as a runner in 2025 as you’d want, but he still piled up 924 receiving yards and posted his third 2,000-scrimmage-yard season. Kittle is reportedly deep into his rehab and could be ready for the opener.

Evans’ run of 1,000-yard seasons may have ended because of injury, but his consistency stretched across a decade, and he was still extremely efficient as recently as 2024. Pearsall, too, flashed with 2.0 yards per route run last season.

On paper, the 49ers have a No. 1 playmaker group. The catch is obvious: San Francisco needs that new core to fight off both age and injuries in 2026.

Evans is a clear upgrade over what the 49ers had before. Stribling brings the kind of field-stretching ability Jennings didn’t provide. Pearsall may be asked to handle a different role, but the hope is that he can finally hold up physically over a full season.

And beyond the headline names, the depth is better than it’s been in a while. The 49ers know what McCaffrey and Kittle bring.

There’s more speed in the room than they’ve had recently. Even the wild cards - Jacob Cowing and Jordan James - could wind up making more of an impact than expected, and that wouldn’t be a bad outcome at all.

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