The San Francisco 49ers come into the NFL Draft cycle with a chance to propel the team over the top to win the Super Bowl. After the offense was shutdown by the Seahawks in the Divisional Round, it became clear that the team needed to get Brock Purdy more help. Between George Kittle’s injury that could keep him out for 2026 and Brandon Aiyuk’s strange disappearance, this team has some flaws.
Signing Mike Evans on a rather team-friendly deal was a major step in the right direction, but this team does need more firepower. The 49ers don’t own their 3rd Round Pick due to the Osa Odighizuwa trade, making their first two picks pivotal in building up this team.

In a move that immediately reshaped the narrative around the franchise, San Francisco used those two high-value selections to address the exact areas that had stalled their offense in recent seasons. The result is a roster that now looks deeper, more versatile, and far less dependent on any single player — effectively closing the book on the prolonged Brandon Aiyuk saga once and for all.
27. San Francisco 49ers: KC Concepcion – Wide Receiver – Texas A&M
The 49ers offense has taken a hit over the past two offseasons with the loss of Deebo Samuel and the Brandon Aiyuk situation. Add in that players like George Kittle, Christian McCaffrey, and Ricky Pearsall have dealt with injuries, the team needs to continue adding weapons for Brock Purdy to continue growing with.
KC Concepcion would be an almost perfect complement to what the 49ers added with the Mike Evans signing. Concepcion is a dynamic weapon that can operate out of the slot, creating big plays after the catch while he could even play a similar role to the one Deebo Samuel played.
At 27th overall, Concepcion gives Purdy a true YAC threat who can win underneath, stretch the field vertically, and create mismatches in the middle of the defense. Paired with the veteran presence and red-zone dominance of Mike Evans, the new receiving corps suddenly projects as one of the most balanced and explosive units in the NFC. The days of wondering whether the offense would stall without Aiyuk’s availability are over.
58. San Francisco 49ers: Chase Bisontis – Guard – Texas A&M
One of the biggest holes in the 49ers offense is at left guard where John Lynch described the battle as “wide open.” The 49ers struggled running the ball at times which should lead to competition on the interior being brought in via the draft. Bisontis was dominant last season, allowing just 1 sack on 441 pass blocking snaps while he has the quickness to be great as a pulling guard.
By adding Bisontis in the second round, San Francisco shores up the interior line with a player who already proved he can handle NFL-caliber pass rushers while providing the athleticism required for Kyle Shanahan’s outside-zone and gap schemes. A stronger, more consistent left guard means better protection for Purdy and clearer lanes for Christian McCaffrey — two non-negotiables if the 49ers intend to return to the Super Bowl.
Taken together, the Evans signing, the Concepcion selection, and the Bisontis addition represent a deliberate, surgical reset. The team no longer has to hope for health from aging or injury-prone stars; it has proactively rebuilt the supporting cast around its young quarterback. The Brandon Aiyuk chapter — once a lingering distraction and roster question mark — is now irrelevant to the 2026 outlook.
For the rest of the NFC, the message is unmistakable. The 49ers didn’t panic. They didn’t overpay. They simply executed — one smart trade that cleared draft capital, two precise picks that filled glaring needs, and a veteran addition that instantly elevated the ceiling. The dynasty wasn’t rebuilt with flash; it was reinforced with substance.
San Francisco is not just back. It is reloaded, rebalanced, and once again the team every other NFC contender must measure itself against. The path to the Super Bowl just got a lot clearer for the red and gold — and a lot steeper for everyone else.