Kyle Juszczyk has never been short on confidence, and he made that clear again in a recent sit-down with NBC Sports Bay Area’s Matt Maiocco at the 2026 American Century Championship in Lake Tahoe.
The 49ers fullback, who rarely gets the spotlight because he doesn’t touch the ball often, has become something of the team’s go-to voice. He’s the guy they lean on when they need someone to speak for the group, and he usually seems happy to talk about everybody else. But this time, the conversation turned to him - and to how he sees his own value.
That started with Tight End University, where George Kittle invited Juszczyk for the first time this year. The connection made sense on a personal level, since the two are close friends, but Juszczyk also believes there’s a football case for it too.
“Am I a tight end? Am I not a tight end?
I don't know," Juszczyk said recently to NBC Sports Bay Area's Matt Maiocco. "That's a great question.
Unfortunately, I think I'm a tight end and not a tight end at all the wrong times. I'm a fullback when it comes to contract negotiations, which hurts, but then I'm a tight end on game day."
He doubled down a moment later.
“You’ve watched me play for a long time," Juszczyk continued. "I play everywhere. I play in that tight end position a lot."
The reality, though, is a little less flattering than Juszczyk’s self-assessment. He does not line up like a true tight end very often, mostly because at 6-2 and 235 pounds, he’s not built for that role on the line of scrimmage. Sometimes he shows up as an H-back, but rarely as an actual tight end.
Still, his career earnings tell the story of a player who carved out a valuable niche. Juszczyk has made $46 million so far, almost all of it because he’s been a fullback. In a league where that role has basically vanished, he’s one of about seven players who can handle it well.
If he were forced into a full-time tight end job, the picture would look very different. He wouldn’t be a starter. He’d be more of a journeyman backup H-back, and his career earnings likely would have landed under $20 million.
That’s because his game is built more around versatility than production. He’s not a line-of-scrimmage blocker in the tight end mold, and he’s not a big receiving threat either.
Across his career, he has never topped 354 yards from scrimmage in a season. Most of the time, he’s the guy defenses can afford to forget about - until he catches a pass or helps spring something else.
So yes, he’s a decoy at times, a blocker at others, and the 49ers’ designated talker when someone needs to step up and speak. And by the end of this year, he’ll have earned nearly $50 million in his career before his contract expires and, most likely, he retires at 36.
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That matters in San Francisco because Williams availability has been an issue for years, with at least one missed start in every season since 2020. Pleasants also comes at minimal cost, sitting on a veteran minimum deal with no guaranteed money, which gives the team flexibility but also underscores how thin the margin is if the 49ers are forced to lean on that spot again. [Read more 🡒]
