San Francisco 49ers expected their rookie integration to go smoothly, but their fourth-round draft pick has created unexpected tension during the league-wide offseason.

What was supposed to be a routine contract signing has quickly become a bigger statement about leverage, value, and the rising expectations of incoming rookies.
The player at the center of the situation has still not signed his rookie contract, with the dispute reportedly centered on the guaranteed money in the deal.
“Rookies aren’t ignoring market shifts anymore,” a source said. “If the standard is changing, they want to be treated accordingly from day one.”
This tension stems from a growing precedent across the league, particularly affecting third- and fourth-round rookies in negotiations during the 2026 offseason.
For this rookie, the timing is critical, especially in a league where careers are short on average and financial security is a top priority.
His personal profile only complicates matters, because San Francisco did not draft him as a long-term project with limited expectations.
At 6’2″ and approximately 290-293 pounds, Gracen Halton possesses a compact, powerful interior defensive lineman build with quickness off the snap, strong hands, and disruptive burst.

His breakout college career at Oklahoma showcased versatile defensive skills: in the 2025 season, he appeared in 13 games (7 starts) and recorded 33 tackles, 7.0 tackles for loss, 3.5 sacks, plus a forced fumble returned for a touchdown, earning Second-Team All-SEC honors.
Across his career at Oklahoma, he totaled 84 tackles, 17.5 TFLs, and 8.5 sacks.
On film, he displays significant power as an interior disruptor, the ability to penetrate gaps, strong leverage and hand usage in pass rush, solid run defense, and a multi-dimensional role in the defensive front — factors that make him a complete threat in both run and pass situations.
For San Francisco, his role is clearly defined in the 49ers’ defensive system under coordinator Nick Sorensen (or current staff), emphasizing versatility, interior disruption, and supporting the edge rushers.
He is expected to compete for immediate snaps as a rotational defensive tackle or push for a larger role, while making major contributions in sub-packages and short-yardage/run-stop situations thanks to his durable style, gap-finding ability, and disruptive prowess.
His presence adds significant depth to the 49ers defensive line, which already features established players and recent additions. Halton has the potential to be an upgrade in the interior rotation, bringing power and flexibility to a unit that is evolving into a team strength.
But until the contract is finalized, his development and integration into the defensive system remain uncertain for the 2026 season.
Internally, the 49ers are now facing the challenge of balancing contract discipline with retaining a player they view as a strategic asset for the defense — especially as the front needs additional depth to support the pass rush and maintain a consistent defensive attack throughout the season.
Across the league, executives are watching closely, knowing that a successful resolution here could drive broader changes in rookie contract negotiations.
No agreement has been reached yet, and no timeline for resolution has been established between the two sides.
Only near the end of the story does the name Gracen Halton truly clarify things: the defensive tackle selected at pick 107 has become the face of San Francisco’s unexpected rookie contract dispute.
And in San Francisco, what should have been routine has quietly become one of the most closely watched contract situations of the offseason.