SANTA CLARA, CA — The San Francisco 49ers are currently on the clock, scouting the next generation of talent for the 2026 NFL Draft. But if they need a reality check on how easily a “narrative” can ruin a draft board, they only need to look at the name freshly etched onto their 10-year wall: George Kittle.
Nine seasons, 8,008 career receiving yards, and 52 touchdowns later, the man once labeled a “frat guy” by Iowa staff has become the heart of the 49ers franchise. Just last month, Kittle proved his value off the field again, reportedly playing a lead role in recruiting Mike Evans to sign a three-year, $42.5 million contract with San Francisco. Not bad for a fifth-round pick who teams were told “liked to party too much.”
From Jack Sparrow to Seven Pro Bowls
In the spring of 2017, the draft buzz around Kittle was muted. Scouts saw a skinny kid with knobby knees. Kyle Shanahan, however, saw something different. While reviewing film of Iowa quarterback C.J. Beathard, Shanahan kept pausing to watch No. 46. He saw a tight end who could uncoil like a spring and block with a ferocity that didn’t match his 200-pound frame.
The internal reports were less kind. Iowa ran a rigid, old-school program. Kittle, with his WWE-inspired energy and irreverent humor, didn’t fit the mold. Critics called him a social butterfly. They said he was rowdy. They questioned if he was serious about the professional grind. Lynch and Shanahan chose to trust the film over the feedback. They drafted him 146th overall. Today, Kittle has seven Pro Bowl nods and a legitimate case for the Hall of Fame.
The Michigan State Connection
LeVar Woods, now the Assistant Head Coach at Michigan State, was one of the few Iowa coaches who saw the vision early. Woods initially tried Kittle at outside linebacker before realizing the kid only knew one speed: forward. Woods recently noted that some “character” reports come from a lack of communication between scouts and the coaches who actually know the players. Kittle wasn’t a distraction; he was the lifeblood of the locker room.
Kittle’s legendary scout team antics—using tape and markers to mimic opponent helmets—weren’t signs of a lack of focus. They were signs of a player who loved the game enough to make a Tuesday practice feel like a Super Bowl. That energy eventually birthed Tight End University, which now hosts 75 of the league’s best players every summer.
What’s Next for the 49ers
As the 49ers evaluate the 2026 class, the Kittle story remains the gold standard for their “Draft Integrity” meetings. With Mike Evans joining a receiving corps that already features a dominant Kittle, the San Francisco offense looks like a juggernaut heading into the new season. The lesson is simple: don’t let a “party animal” label distract you from a generational blocker who can close a $42 million deal with a single phone call.

