SANTA CLARA — The 49ers’ plan at wide receiver this season was draped in maroon and gold.
The Niners were supposed to ride into this postseason on the backs of two Arizona State products, a Tempe two-step atop the wide receiver depth chart designed to torment defensive coordinators from Seattle to Philadelphia.
Brandon Aiyuk (Arizona State 2018-19) was the established star, the alpha, the $30-million man. Ricky Pearsall (2019-21 before transferring to Florida) was the first-round heir apparent, the route-running savant.
Together, they were the Sun Devil pincer.
Instead, as the 49ers stare down the barrel of a win-or-go-to-Cabo playoff date with the Eagles this Sunday, the wide receiver depth chart looks less like a plan and more like a milk carton.
Yes, for the two biggest games of the year — last week’s do-or-die against Seattle and Sunday’s playoff clash — it appears, barring a surprising late-week change, that the Niners will have neither.
And amid all of the Niners’ other concerns, that could be their most significant undoing.
Related Articles
Kurtenbach: The 49ers offense was knocked down. This is how they get back up again A statistical analysis of the 49ers’ strange, stupefying and successful 2025 regular season 49ers’ dud vs. Seahawks means they must go ‘hard way’ in NFL playoffs Studs and Duds: 49ers offense, Purdy faceplant as Seattle dominates NFC West title game Kurtenbach: 49ers-Seahawks will be perfectly imperfect. My predictions for the game of the yearLet’s start with the one we know isn’t walking through that door: Aiyuk.
Remember him? The guy hasn’t snapped a chinstrap since Week 7 of the 2024 season, when his knee decided to call it a career in San Francisco a few years early. Since that catastrophe, Aiyuk has been the Invisible Man of Santa Clara. He hasn’t been seen at the facility in months.
Oh, he’s around. He’s been spotted in the Bay Area, living his life, presumably enjoying the microclimates and the ability to put the pedal to the metal on Tasman Drive. But as far as the 49ers organization is concerned, he’s gone.
On March 10, when the new league year begins, Aiyuk will be released.
He was supposed to be WR1 in a Kyle Shanahan juggernaut offense. Now he’s just a social media influencer and a line item waiting to be struck through.
Meanwhile, the Niners face the riddle of their new No. 1, Pearsall.
This situation carries a whiff of something… off.
Here’s the timeline: Pearsall sprained his PCL in Week 4 on a bad Brock Purdy throw. He pulled himself out of that game and then missed the next seven games. He came back, and in Weeks 16 and 17, against the Titans and Bears, he looked like the real deal — 11 catches, 181 yards.
He’s Purdy’s best friend against man coverage. He’s this offense’s X-factor — a critical cog of the machine that would have to carry the 49ers the remainder of the season.
Then came Week 18 against Seattle. Pearsall practiced all week. Limited, sure, but he was out there.
More importantly, he was in the game plan. Shanahan’s script was written, and Pearsall had a part.
Then Saturday rolled around, the team took the field, and… no Pearsall. He didn’t even warm up.
Then on Wednesday, Pearsall was a no-show at practice. He was missing from the locker room during media availability.
When asked if Pearsall re-injured himself in practice last week — the only logical explanation for practicing all week and then missing the game — Shanahan claimed:
“We didn’t do anything last week in practice, but it happened in the game versus Chicago.”
Wait. The Bears game? The one before the week of practice (or “nothing”) with him in the game plan?
Related Articles
49ers’ rookie defenders Stout, Collins are big factors in playoff debuts 49ers’ Bryce Huff has put negative Philadelphia experience behind him 49ers’ linebacker legacy falls to Kendricks, others for wild-card opener Major corporate donors helping to fund San Jose events around Super Bowl, World Cup 49ers mailbag: Does wild-card win hinge on stopping Saquon?An air of incredulity is deserved here. It’s January. In the NFL, “healthy” just means nothing is currently fully detached. Everyone is hurting.
Pearsall himself told reporters after the Dec. 14 game against the Titans — when he rolled his ankle and tweaked that PCL—that the rest of the season was strictly a “pain management” issue. He said he was equipped to handle it.
Apparently, the definition of “handle it” has been revised.
And, fair or not, I can’t help but contrast this with Jauan Jennings’ injuries.
Jennings has played this season through — and this is self-reported, so sprinkle the salt as necessary — five broken ribs and two sprained ankles. In the first half against Seattle, Jennings took a shot over the middle that made it look like he was knocked out cold.
When the Niners’ trainers ran out? He yelled at them. How dare they question if he was injured! Jennings is held together by tape, adrenaline, and pure spite.
He’ll be out there Sunday. You’d have to take a limb to stop him.
This perplexing Pearsall predicament particularly matters because the Niners are walking into a buzzsaw.
The Eagles’ pass defense is an elite operation. They have Quinyon Mitchell, arguably the best cornerback in the NFC, and they’re going to do exactly what Seattle did, and what teams did all last season to the Niners: Play man-to-man, crowd the line, and dare the Niners’ receivers to win.
Without Pearsall, this receiving core struggles to separate. At this point, it has been proven so often that it has to be considered a fact rather than a subjective observation. They lack the speed to scare opponents deep and the twitch to shake them short. They are workmanlike, but against Mitchell, “workmanlike” gets you three-and-outs.
Pearsall is the skeleton key. He’s an elite route-runner. He creates separation in tight spaces. He keeps defenses honest because if you leave him one-on-one, he wins.
But if Pearsall is in a hoodie on the sidelines Sunday, the Eagles don’t have to be honest. They can, like Seattle, play light on the outside and suffocate the middle of the field, where George Kittle and Christian McCaffrey do their work.
The 49ers built a wide receiver depth chart on potential and pedigree. But as they prep for the season’s defining moment, the potential is in the trainer’s room, and the pedigree is ghosting them.
So if the Niners’ offense stalls out on Sunday because no one can get open on passing plays, don’t look at Purdy. Look at the empty lockers where the former Sun Devils were supposed to be.
Hence then, the article about kurtenbach the 49ers have a sun devil of a problem going into the playoffs was published today ( ) and is available on mercury news ( Middle East ) The editorial team at PressBee has edited and verified it, and it may have been modified, fully republished, or quoted. You can read and follow the updates of this news or article from its original source.
Read More Details
Finally We wish PressBee provided you with enough information of ( Kurtenbach: The 49ers have a Sun Devil of a problem going into the playoffs )
Also on site :