Inside Kyle Shanahan & John Lynch’s early 2026 San Francisco draft roadmap

5 May 2026 • 3:49 AM MYT
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Image from: Inside Kyle Shanahan & John Lynch’s early 2026 San Francisco draft roadmap
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Kyle Shanahan’s most telling remark after the draft was also his most straightforward.

He noted, “It will be a challenge for all eight of these guys to make our team,” which speaks to how the 49ers prioritised roster depth and long-term planning over immediate rookie contributions.

The 49ers left the draft weekend with eight picks, two more than they started with, and the front office kept repeating that this was about value, not reacting out of need.

Shanahan mentioned there were times they passed on a position simply because the player wasn’t better than what’s already on the roster.

For a team still looking to compete now, that’s telling. San Francisco wasn’t plugging immediate gaps; they were looking to add stability for the future.

Image from: Inside Kyle Shanahan & John Lynch’s early 2026 San Francisco draft roadmap
Photo by Ezra Shaw/Getty Images

Rookies will have to earn it against veterans

John Lynch echoed that sentiment from a different angle, noting that the team had ‘gotten up there in numbers’ at spots like linebacker. That depth gave San Francisco the flexibility to trade while still feeling comfortable about adding future assets.

For rookies, that means camp will be less about ceremonial development and more about beating out veterans who already fit what the staff wants. A strong 90-man roster sounds healthy, but it also squeezes the margin for late-round newcomers.

Throughout the draft, the team put an emphasis on players capable of filling multiple roles. Jaden Dugger was mentioned as someone who could line up at MIKE, WILL or SAM, while Carver Willis is expected to begin his pro career inside after playing tackle in college.

San Francisco’s draft picks have a lot to prove

This approach makes sense for a team with a deep roster. For rookies looking to make an early impression, showing flexibility might be their best path onto the field.

The 49ers are still trying to contend, which means they cannot afford to gift roster spots to players who are not ready.

Shanahan’s honesty was a reminder that not every draft is about instant roles. Some are about making sure the next two seasons stay connected.

This group may still produce contributors early, but it looks like San Francisco picked with an eye on maintaining a roster where new arrivals need to earn their place.

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