The San Francisco 49ers are doing everything in their power to make another Super Bowl run in 2024 — and their potential future success will largely depend on their ability to keep their star players on the roster.
Brandon Aiyuk emerged as one of the most underrated wide receivers in the NFL last season and has clearly solidified himself as one of the top pass-catchers in the NFL.
Aiyuk finished the regular season with 1,342 receiving yards, a career-high for the San Francisco 49ers star, and seven touchdowns.
Those numbers were enough to see Aiyuk, named a second-team All-Pro last week, selected as a breakout player of the year by Pro Football Focus.
There is a case to be made that Brandon Aiyuk’s breakout came last year, when he topped 1,000 yards for the first time and scored eight receiving touchdowns.
Entering the last year of his contract, Aiyuk has been linked to several trade rumors and there’s been a legitimate feeling from several NFL Insiders the 49ers would move their star WR to free up cap space.
San Francisco 49ers Not Accepting Trade Offers For Brandon Aiyuk According To John Lynch
The Brandon Aiyuk trade rumors started flying with the first waves of free agency but are starting to slow down. Reports have surfaced about the Jaguars and Steelers both being interested in Aiyuk, but 49ers general manager John Lynch on Monday at the NFL owners meetings denied any report that San Francisco has had talks about trading the 26-year-old All-Pro.
According to NBC Sports Bay Area’s Matt Maiocco, Lynch said the 49ers are in talks with Aiyuk about an extension and that any reports of trade discussions are false. Lynch also noted the 49ers would be fine letting Aiyuk play out the fifth year of his rookie contract with no long-term extension.
Accoring to Yahoo Sports, problem isn’t whether the San Francisco 49ers would let Brandon Aiyuk play out the deal. It’s whether Aiyuk would be willing to take the field without an extension. San Francisco holds most of the power here since skipping a year would also lose a year of service for Aiyuk, putting him right back in the same spot next season.
However, the 49ers aren’t likely to want Aiyuk playing on that fifth-year option for a couple reasons. First, that may sever the long-term relationship entirely if they make him play without any kind of long-term security. Second, his $14.2 million cap hit this year could actually be reduced via a longer-term deal.
This is where the contract negotiation part of this comes in and it’s why the 49ers should have some optimism about getting a deal done. It’s in their best interest to give Aiyuk what he deserves, and it’s in Aiyuk’s best interest to get that deal signed so he can go into 2024 with the proverbial bag in hand.
Lynch could very easily be lying about the trade talks and the willingness to let Brandon Aiyuk play on the fifth-year option. If Aiyuk’s camp is looking for a deal north of what the 49ers are willing to pay, then a trade will have to be on the table if they want to recoup anything for the WR.
All of this should happen relatively quickly though. If the San Francisco 49ers brass believes they’ll have to trade the receiver, they’ll want to do so before this year’s draft to ensure they’re going to get quality draft capital that can help this year.
If a trade doesn’t materialize, then we can expect this to go well into the offseason and even into training camp. That’s how the 49ers have typically done business, and it appears they’re on track to follow the same path they’ve followed with Fred Warner, George Kittle, Nick Bosa and Deebo Samuel in recent seasons.