Mike Evans Can't Hide This Troubling 49ers Reality

Despite new additions, the 49ers face a critical turning point with aging stars and declining rankings clouding their championship prospects.

The 49ers are still getting respect in one key area, but the direction of travel is impossible to ignore.

ESPN’s Bill Barnwell released his annual rankings of every team’s skill players, and San Francisco came in at No. 5.

That’s a strong number in a vacuum. It’s also a step back from where the 49ers sat a year ago at No. 4, and a bigger drop from the No. 1 spot they held the year before that.

For a team that once looked loaded with game-breakers, the slide tells its own story. San Francisco entered the 2024 season with Brandon Aiyuk and Deebo Samuel forming a dangerous receiver tandem, and the offense had four different skill players top 1,000 all-purpose yards the season before. That was enough to make the top of the league’s rankings feel natural.

Now the picture looks different. Mike Evans was added to help replace a major share of the production lost with Aiyuk and Deebo, but that move doesn’t magically erase the bigger issue.

Evans is 32, and there’s only one of him. He can raise the floor, but he can’t turn back time.

The age curve is doing plenty of damage on its own. Christian McCaffrey is now 30.

George Kittle is still working his way back from a torn ACL. And when you stack those realities together, a top-five ranking starts to feel less like a baseline and more like the ceiling.

That’s the real problem for Brock Purdy. Too many of the names around him come with the same asterisk: if he stays healthy.

If every running back, tight end, and wide receiver can make it through a full 17-game season, the 49ers still have the kind of talent that can put up huge numbers. But that’s the catch.

The core is getting older, and the window isn’t looking as wide as it used to. Unless general manager John Lynch can find a way to refresh Purdy’s supporting cast soon, this group is headed in one direction.

The ranking is still solid on paper. The trend behind it is the part San Francisco can’t afford to miss.

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What it should not do, at least based on what is known, is be read as official confirmation of any health-related concern tied to the current site. San Franciscos injury history is more plausibly explained by the usual football mix of older and injury-prone personnel, training considerations, the violent nature of the sport and plain bad luck, even if the facility chatter is bound to keep old theories alive for another round. [Read more 🡒]