After reflecting on the San Francisco 49ers’ 2025 campaign — a stunning rebound from a dismal 6-11 record in 2024 to 12-5, a road playoff win over the Philadelphia Eagles in the Wild Card Round, but a crushing Divisional Round blowout loss (41-6) to the Seattle Seahawks — Hall of Fame quarterback and longtime team voice Steve Young didn’t dwell only on the injuries, resilience, or the overachievement amid adversity. Instead, the 49ers legend honed in on roster construction flaws exposed in the lopsided playoff exit, where offensive struggles, defensive inconsistencies, and high-cost veterans failed to deliver in critical moments.

According to sources familiar with Young’s thinking, the Super Bowl-winning icon delivered a candid message to General Manager John Lynch: the team’s core of young talent like Brock Purdy, young defenders, and emerging pieces gives San Francisco a real window to contend, but maintaining that requires bold financial moves and accountability on inefficient contracts. Young believes the 49ers can gain crucial flexibility by parting ways with three veterans whose 2025 production (or lack thereof due to injury, scheme fit, or decline) didn’t match their cap hits — paving the way for reinforcements around the stars.
“If you want to turn this momentum into sustained deep playoff runs and another Super Bowl push, you have to be willing to make the tough decisions on players who aren’t delivering value commensurate with their cost — even if it stings.”
The first name tied to that view is Bryce Huff (edge rusher). Acquired via trade to bolster the pass rush after a strong early stint with the Eagles, Huff started hot but faded with limited sacks post-midseason and questions about consistency in the 49ers’ scheme. His 2026 cap hit is approximately $17.1 million (with none guaranteed), and a cut would save roughly $17 million (dead cap near $0 or minimal). This move stands out as a prime candidate to free significant space for younger edge talent or extensions for core players like Nick Bosa.

The second involves Demarcus Robinson (wide receiver). Signed as depth and a veteran presence, Robinson provided some contributions but didn’t emerge as a reliable target amid injuries and competition in the receiving room. His 2026 cap hit is around $4 million, with dead cap about $2 million if released. A straightforward cut could net $2-4 million in savings — allowing reallocation to bolster the WR group around Brandon Aiyuk, Deebo Samuel (if retained), or Jauan Jennings, especially after offensive inconsistencies in the playoffs.

The third is Jake Brendel (center). The veteran anchor of the offensive line dealt with age-related decline and inconsistencies in pass protection, contributing to late-season struggles. His 2026 cap hit approaches $4.1-4.2 million, with low dead cap if cut post-June 1. Releasing him could save $4 million — helping prioritize youth and upgrades along the O-line to better protect Purdy and support the run game.
Combined, these three decisions could open over $20-25 million in cap space for 2026 — money that could help navigate the team’s tight situation (projected around $40-50 million effective but with heavy dead cap from prior restructures), facilitate extensions or restructures for stars like Trent Williams or Bosa, invest in offensive line depth, or add defensive pieces to avoid another injury-plagued exit. To Young, this isn’t about assigning blame; it’s about efficiency and alignment in a cap-strapped league where holding onto underproducing contracts can derail championship aspirations.
The 2025 season highlighted the 49ers’ grit under Kyle Shanahan — never losing two in a row, overcoming massive injuries — but the brutal playoff finish underscored the price of inefficiency with veterans. In the NFL, as Young knows from leading dynasties, true contention requires hard, proactive choices to keep the window wide open.