2023 record: 12-5, won NFC West, lost Super Bowl LVIII
Draft picks per round
1st round: No. 31
2nd round: No. 63
3rd round: No. 94
4th round: No. 124 (from Cowboys)
4th round: No. 132 (compensatory)
4th round: No. 135
5th round: No. 176 (compensatory)
6th round: No. 211 (compensatory)
6th round: No. 215 (compensatory)
7th round: No. 251
Top needs
Offensive line
Interior defensive line
Cornerback
The weakness of the offensive line’s right side played a big role in the 49ers’ Super Bowl loss. They need an upgrade at right tackle and possibly a future answer at left tackle with Trent Williams nearing the end of his career at age 35. On the other side of the line, San Francisco cut longtime defensive tackle Arik Armstead and let Javon Kinlaw walk in free agency. That leaves a couple of big gaps in the interior. And because the team added free-agent edge rushers Leonard Floyd and Yetur Gross-Matos, it may be able to focus on cornerback and other needs in the draft.
Best first-round fits
Amarius Mims, OT, Georgia
Best Day 2 fits
Bralen Trice, EDGE, Washington
Max Melton, CB, Rutgers
How they did last draft
The 49ers received a D, partly because they had so few picks and didn’t have a selection until No. 87 overall. It was a bizarre draft class as the 49ers selected kicker Jake Moody in the third round. Moody wasn’t bad as a rookie, but it was still a curious decision to select him so early. The only other pick who saw significant action last season was another third-rounder, safety Ji’Ayir Brown, who filled in solidly as an injury replacement after Talanoa Hufanga went down late in the season.
Dream fantasy draft pick
The 49ers don’t have any glaring needs at the fantasy positions, and adding more mouths to feed would cause only problems (assuming Brandon Aiyuk stays). That said, Christian McCaffrey is coming off a 417-touch season, and Elijah Mitchell has been one of the most injury-prone players in the league (and will be a free agent in 2025). San Francisco has been mostly dreadful identifying backs recently in drafts (Tyrion Davis-Price, Trey Sermon), but the team could use a long-term upgrade at RB2. Given CMC’s huge 2024 workload and Kyle Shanahan’s terrific system, a rookie running back could easily emerge as a fantasy force in 2024. — Dalton Del Don
Source Agencies