SANTA CLARA, Calif. — The San Francisco 49ers dropped a nuclear bomb on the NFL free-agent market by signing veteran Mike Evans. Now, the ripple effects are tearing through their 49ers 2026 NFL Draft strategy. The franchise sits on the edge of Super Bowl contention with glaring needs at guard, tackle, and edge rusher. But a new Pro Football Focus simulator run just flipped the script, ignoring the trenches entirely in the early rounds to build an unstoppable aerial assault.
PFF stunned evaluators by mocking back-to-back wideouts to San Francisco. At Pick No. 27, they land Washington’s Denzel Boston. Standing 6-foot-4 and 212 pounds, Boston moves like a middleweight but hits like a heavyweight. Evans can take this big-bodied rookie under his wing immediately. Boston brings a massive catch radius to the Bay Area. He snatches the ball out of the air with incredible hand-eye coordination. If he learns to beat zone coverage consistently, he morphs into a devastating WR1.
The aggression continues at Pick No. 58 with Tennessee’s Chris Brazzell II. He flies down the field with long strides. NFL.com’s Lance Zierlein praises his ability to dominate above the rim. Brazzell needs to beat physical press coverage at the next level, but he brings instant explosive playmaking to an offense thirsty for deep threats.
The draft room in Santa Clara will smell like stale coffee and nervous sweat if the front office waits until Round 4 to draft an offensive tackle. Trent Williams turns 38 years old this summer. The clock ticks loudly. The 49ers finally address the trenches with a massive Day 3 haul.
PFF caps the simulator madness at Pick No. 139 with USC receiver Ja’Kobi Lane. In a real-world scenario, the 49ers sprint to the podium for a defensive back or edge rusher here. Lane dominates the red zone with elite length, but drafting a third receiver borders on pure fantasy football.
“When you add a monster like Mike to the room, the whole offense breathes differently. If we bring in young, hungry guys with that kind of size behind him, we dictate the terms every single Sunday. Defenses just can’t cover everyone.”
— Brock Purdy, 49ers Quarterback
This aggressive offensive investment means San Francisco is betting everything on outscoring opponents in the grueling NFC playoffs. Neglecting defensive edge depth early leaves the pass rush dangerously thin. Opposing quarterbacks will have time to throw if the defensive line gets tired. However, forcing defensive coordinators to cover Evans, Deebo Samuel, George Kittle, and two massive rookies simultaneously creates a mathematical nightmare. If this mock becomes reality, the 49ers either hoist the Lombardi Trophy in February or flame out entirely in a high-scoring shootout.