The 49ers are heading into 2026 with a new voice running the defense, and the biggest question is a simple one: can they even get their best pieces on the field?
San Francisco made a major staff change this offseason after defensive coordinator Robert Saleh left to take over as head coach of the Tennessee Titans. The replacement is Raheem Morris, who has previous ties with Kyle Shanahan from their time together in Tampa Bay from 2004-05, Washington from 2012-14 and Atlanta from 2015-16.
Morris is now in a familiar job in a few different ways. He has held a defensive coordinator role in the NFL before, with the Los Angeles Rams from 2021-23, and he also served in that capacity in college at Kansas State in 2006. With him stepping in, attention has quickly turned to what the 49ers’ defense might actually look like in 2026.
Bleacher Report’s Gary Davenport laid out the best-case scenario, and it starts with something much more basic than schematic brilliance.
"As sad as it sounds, the best-case scenario for the San Francisco 49ers in 2026 may well be just being able to field their starting defense," Davenport wrote. "The team's top-two defenders (edge-rusher Nick Bosa and inside linebacker Fred Warner) both went down with serious injuries early last season, and while the Niners managed to patch things together fairly well, those losses proved to be too much to overcome in the postseason."
That was the story of San Francisco’s season on defense: survival mode. The unit fought through injuries last year, and the 49ers’ ceiling depends on finally getting healthier.
The downside is that there’s no guarantee that happens right away.
"Getting both of those players back at 100 percent to open the season isn't guaranteed, especially with Bosa, who tore his ACL for the second time last year," Davenport wrote. "There are also questions at the back end of the defense-cornerback Deommodore Lenoir is a capable veteran starter, but Upton Stout and Renardo Green are far less proven commodities. In the NFC West, a shaky pass-rush and/or secondary is a recipe for disaster-and the Niners could have both in 2026."
San Francisco’s front seven was difficult to watch at times in 2026, and the hope is that things will look better with Bosa, Warner and 2025 first-round pick Mykel Williams returning from season-ending injuries. Even so, the real issue remains the same: nobody knows exactly when they’ll be ready, or what they’ll look like once they are.
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Into that uncertainty comes the kind of speculative trade chatter that tends to follow a disgruntled star, and it comes with quarterback implications attached. Any move built around Aiyuk would force the 49ers to think beyond the receiver room and into their broader quarterback plan, especially with Mac Jones future in San Francisco already pointing toward a short stay and a possible eventual hunt for a starting job elsewhere. [Read more 🡒]
49ers Safety Battle Already Has One Newcomer On Shaky Ground
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One Under-the-Radar 49ers Addition Could Finally Settle Left Guard
The 49ers spent much of the offseason looking for reliable answers along an offensive line that has been in flux, and the left guard spot is still one of the cleaner training camp battles to watch. Chris Foerster has kept that competition open, with Robert Jones and Bret Toth among the names in the mix, while Toths value may stretch beyond one position since he is also expected to handle backup center duties no matter where he lines up.
For a team trying to make Brock Purdys life easier and keep the offense balanced around its established playmakers, that kind of stability matters as much as flashier additions on either side of the ball. Jones, in particular, has drawn attention as a low-profile pickup with the kind of experience and efficiency that can quietly settle a spot the 49ers have not fully locked down yet, even if the final call is still unresolved. [Read more 🡒]
