Mac Jones Just Reopened A 49ers Debate Fans Never Forgot

Mac Jones reflects on the twists of his NFL career, revealing how persistence and opportunity with the 49ers offer him renewed hope and stability.

Mac Jones’ road to San Francisco took a long way around, but the 49ers quarterback finally landed in the place that once hovered over his draft night from the start.

Jones revisited that whole 2021 saga on a recent episode of the Bussin' with the Boys podcast, where he talked through the months when the 49ers held the No. 3 overall pick and had to choose between him and Trey Lance. Jones said he knew San Francisco had moved up for one of two players, and he was one of them.

"I remember, like, all the hype leading up to it, but yeah, I think everything happens for a reason," Jones told hosts Will Compton and Taylor Lewan. "I'm here where I'm at now, and I did think they traded up for somebody, and I knew it was one of two people, and I was one of the people. So, I guess if you're a gambling man, it's a 50-50 shot at the start."

The 49ers went with Lance and paid a steep price to do it, sending the No. 12 pick, two future first-round selections, and a 2022 third-rounder to the Miami Dolphins to move up. Jones fell to the New England Patriots at No. 15, and he couldn’t resist poking at the cost of what might have been.

"You could have just picked me at 12," Jones joked with a grin. "I don't know if I'm worth three first-round picks, but s---, sign me up."

Even after that, San Francisco apparently never really moved on. Jones said the 49ers kept trying to bring him in, including when he was being traded from the Patriots to the Jaguars in 2024.

"I think, even the year I got traded, they were trying to get me back in San Francisco, from Patriots to Jaguars," Jones admitted. "So they were trying to get me to San Francisco then, but they ended up not doing it."

The deal finally got done before the 2025 season, when Lynch and Kyle Shanahan signed Jones to a two-year contract to back up Brock Purdy. That move turned into immediate insurance when Purdy went down with a severe turf toe injury.

Jones ended up appearing in 11 games and making eight regular-season starts. He threw 289 passes, completed a career-best 69.6 percent of them, and finished with 2,151 yards, 13 touchdowns, and six interceptions. He also went 5-3 as a starter, helping keep San Francisco in the NFC playoff picture.

That kind of season naturally put his name back into the offseason trade conversation, but the 49ers weren’t interested in letting him go cheaply. When other teams checked in, San Francisco reportedly set an "astronomical" price, and the talks stopped there.

For Jones, the bigger win is the continuity. Heading into training camp on July 26, he’s entering a second straight season in the same offense for the first time since his 2019-2020 run at Alabama.

"I'm still 27. I have some good scars and bad scars, but I know I can play," Jones said regarding his long-term starting aspirations.

"But I do want to get that chance again, to run a team and be the guy... It's hard when it's Brock's team-or any backup-I'm sure they deal with that."

He also pointed to Sam Darnold as proof that a reset in Shanahan’s system can matter, saying the division rival’s career resurgence after a year in Santa Clara gives him something to think about as he keeps chasing another shot.

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