
The San Francisco 49ers have taken meaningful steps this offseason to upgrade their wide receiver room, adding proven veterans Mike Evans and Christian Kirk alongside incumbent Ricky Pearsall. Yet even with that trio on the roster, one glaring need remains: a true No. 1 wideout who is either in his prime or just entering it.
Evans, while still productive, is in the twilight of a decorated career. Kirk and Pearsall, though talented, have battled significant injury issues that have limited their availability and consistency. For the 2026 NFL season, the 49ers can certainly compete with what they have — but “can compete” is no longer the standard in a conference where elite wide receiver play often decides playoff outcomes. A difference-making, young alpha receiver has become the clear priority.
Enter George Pickens.
The Dallas Cowboys placed the franchise tag on Pickens before the new league year opened, locking him into a one-year, fully guaranteed contract worth $27.2 million. On the surface, that move signals Dallas’s intent to keep the explosive playmaker. Yet CBS Sports analyst Garrett Podell has identified the 49ers as a team that should aggressively pursue him, arguing a trade remains very much on the table despite the tag.
Podell’s reasoning is rooted in precedent. Cowboys owner and general manager Jerry Jones has repeatedly insisted that star players are part of the franchise’s long-term plans — only to reverse course when negotiations grow difficult. Just last year, Jones made similar public commitments about All-Pro edge rusher Micah Parsons before shipping him to the Green Bay Packers one week before the start of the 2025 season. “Anything can happen when Jones gets backed up against the wall in contract negotiations with his star players,” Podell wrote in his April 7 column.
Pickens’s situation adds extra leverage for any interested team. The wideout is currently on the franchise tag, but his agent, David Mulugheta, has made it clear he has no intention of letting his client play out 2026 without a long-term extension in place. That tension creates a narrow window — and the 49ers appear poised to test it.
At the same time, San Francisco’s own wide receiver situation offers intriguing flexibility. Principal owner and CEO Jed York, speaking on March 30, left the door open for Brandon Aiyuk to return while making it equally clear the team will not give him away for nothing.
“Our job is to build a culture, and our job is to make sure that we bring talent into the building,” York said. “BA is a very talented guy. I would love to be able to bring him back into the fold, and if I think he’s a valuable asset that other people would want, we’re going to make sure that we get value and bring talent into our building.”
When pressed further, York added: “I think anything’s possible, right? We want to make sure that we have as talented a roster as possible. First and foremost, he needs to get healthy and be able to perform. I think once that happens, he’s a really, really good football player.”
NBC Sports Bay Area insider Matt Maiocco interpreted York’s comments bluntly on “The Rich Eisen Show” the following day. “If you want him now, come get him now,” Maiocco said. “The 49ers aren’t in any hurry whatsoever to get rid of him, and to allow him to control his own path. I think that was probably the message Jed York was sending to the 31 other teams. If you’re interested at all, you would have to really wait a long time for him. So if you want him, come get him now and give the 49ers something in return.”
That measured stance on Aiyuk only strengthens San Francisco’s hand in pursuing Pickens. The 49ers do not need to unload talent at a discount; they can afford to be patient — or decisive — depending on how the Pickens situation develops in Dallas.
In the end, the math is straightforward. San Francisco has the cap space, the draft capital, and now the public interest from at least one prominent analyst to make a serious run at George Pickens. Dallas’s history under Jerry Jones suggests that “long-term plans” can shift quickly when the price tag rises and an agent digs in. The 49ers’ wide receiver problem has a potential solution sitting in Dallas — and, for the moment, there is nothing stopping San Francisco from going after it.