The San Francisco 49ers ultimately decided the No. 27 overall pick in the 2026 NFL Draft wasn't worth the prospects available at that spot late in Round 1.
No one should be surprised.
Ultimately, general manager John Lynch opted to trade down from the pick, sending the 27th and 138th overall picks to the Miami Dolphins in exchange for Nos. 30 and 90 overall, keeping the Niners' crop of picks from the original six but adding another in the top 100.
Terms of the trade: 49ers get picks Nos. 30 and 90; Dolphins get Nos. 27 and 138 https://t.co/tocXhTwcgw
— Matt Barrows (@mattbarrows) April 24, 2026
Then, Lynch doubled down by trading with the New York Jets, sending No. 30 overall for the first pick in Round 2, No. 33 overall, plus No. 179 overall.
Meanwhile, Lynch and Co. should still have plenty of likable targets when San Francisco is next on the clock to kick off Round 2 on day two of the draft, and getting a few more draft assets in the process isn't exactly a bad thing for a team that boasts an older core and is in need of workable depth.
If anything, fans and analysts should have seen this coming all along.
John Lynch telegraphed 49ers' plans to trade down in NFL Draft
In his pre-draft presser, Lynch acknowledged this year's class lacked elite blue-chip talent and was short on prospects who'd otherwise receive Round 1 grades. He did, however, acknowledge the class' depth.
Last year, Lynch said the 49ers had first-round grades on 20 players and had 200 draft-able players. This year? The overall number is roughly the same but the first-round number is down. (He declined to give a specific number)
— Matt Barrows (@mattbarrows) April 20, 2026
This jives with many analysts' takes on the 2026 draft class being relatively lackluster, especially toward the top, meaning a low-end Round 1 pick certainly wouldn't be worth as much to a team like the 49ers that only boasted six picks in total, four of which were in Round 4.
So, why not take advantage of other teams' interest in getting up higher in the first round?
And it doesn't change the Niners' overall plans much anyway, rather, it nets another day-two pick that'll come in handy.
Instead, San Francisco stockpiles more ammunition with the hope a few of those extra picks turn into key players to bolster a roster in need of some fresh talent.
