Brandon Aiyuk’s name has shifted from contract centerpiece to cautionary tale, and the change has been fast enough to make your head spin.
Just two years ago, the 49ers handed him a new deal after he put together a career-best season with 1,342 receiving yards, earned All-Pro honors, and helped San Francisco reach the Super Bowl the year before. At the time, the move made perfect sense. Aiyuk was one of the league’s top non-quarterback talents, the kind of receiver teams pay to keep in place, and the Niners clearly believed he and Brock Purdy could keep them in the mix for years.
That feels like ancient history now.
Aiyuk played only half of the season after signing that extension, then tore up his knee midway through the 2024 campaign and disappeared from the team picture entirely in 2025. Since then, the public side of his story has only gotten stranger. In one recent Instagram story, he appeared in a closet and tossed money on the ground in what looked like another shot at the 49ers over the money he’s made from them.
Brandon Aiyuk’s latest IG story shows him in a closet, tossing a bunch of money on the ground as another reminder to the 49ers of the money he’s made from them. https://t.co/N4u3O0W9fj
- Ari Meirov (@MySportsUpdate) June 25, 2026
That post is just one piece of a longer run of alarming behavior. Aiyuk has posted videos of himself driving at Jose Canseco speeds, called the Niners stupid, demanded that the team cut him so he can sign with the Washington Commanders, and threatened to whip the organization with a belt.
“They running from that belt that’s on the way. It’s inevitable.
It’s coming. Stop running.”
He has also taunted Bay Area law enforcement to arrest him, fired his agent because of that agent’s relationship with Niners GM John Lynch, posted cryptic messages aimed at the NFLPA over the same issue, and accused Lynch of showing up at his house unannounced.
The pattern is what stands out. This isn’t just the usual star-receiver frustration that leaks onto social media now and then. It’s a stretch of behavior that has moved from maddening to genuinely unsettling, and it has made him radioactive around the league.
NFL teams have tolerated plenty over the years. The source of that tolerance is usually simple: either a player is too valuable to move on from, or he’s not worth the trouble at any price.
Aiyuk appears to have landed in the second group. San Francisco has already partially voided his deal, and no other team has shown interest in taking him on.
That’s what makes the situation feel so final. If there were any sign that his mental state was improving, another roster would probably have stepped in by now. Instead, the silence around him has only grown louder.
The league has made room for all kinds of dysfunction, but Aiyuk’s case has crossed into a different category. Whatever is happening here, the NFL seems to want no part of it.
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