The San Francisco 49ers made some gutsy moves in the NFL draft. They traded back from No. 27 with the Miami Dolphins, then stepped completely out of the first round with the New York Jets.
This Marin County blog digs into what those trades might signal for the 49ers’ strategy. It also looks at how John Lynch and Kyle Shanahan explained their choices, and what football fans from San Rafael to Sausalito—and honestly, the whole Bay Area—should expect as the draft keeps rolling.
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Draft Day Strategy: A Double Trade-Down That Shaped the Bay Area Conversation
General manager John Lynch and head coach Kyle Shanahan said they’d planned this sequence for about a week. Lynch confirmed they’d locked in the Miami deal and stayed in touch with the Jets, hinting they might still trade if something tempting comes up.
Shanahan called the move from 27 to 33 “a huge success.” He mentioned that even if they’d stayed at 30, they could’ve grabbed players they liked anyway.
The front office wanted more picks but didn’t want to miss out on their top targets. That was the main goal.
Prospects on San Francisco’s Radar: Who Might Have Been On the Clock
The double trade-down came from holding a short list of prospects they wouldn’t budge for. They figured most of the players they liked would be gone by 27.
Names like Caleb Lomu, Omar Coopper Jr., and Keldric Faulk kept popping up as the clock ticked. When San Diego State’s Chris Johnson went at 27, it felt like a sign that cornerback wasn’t a pressing need at that moment. The 49ers could look at a wider range of players later on.
KC Concepcion got special praise from Lynch for his playmaking and character—qualities the 49ers love. Other names floating around—Dillon Thieneman, Malachi Lawrence, and Max Iheanachor—were reportedly on their board but ended up going in the early 20s.
That just made the trade-down approach look even smarter. Shanahan and Lynch admitted they were surprised by some early picks, like the Rams grabbing a quarterback at 13. Still, they felt pretty good about the players left at 33.
For fans across the Bay Area, from Tiburon to Corte Madera, this strategy isn’t about making one flashy pick. It’s about building depth and flexibility over several picks.
That focus on value—rather than just chasing a headline—kind of fits the local vibe, doesn’t it? Around Marin County, people appreciate a patient, practical approach, especially when it comes to football and homegrown talent.
Marin’s Take: Local Fans, Local Coverage, and a Bay Area Draft Narrative
As the 49ers work their way through the draft, Marin County’s sports readers in San Rafael and nearby towns are picking apart every move. In Mill Valley and Sausalito, you’ll hear folks at coffee shops talking about whether trading down and grabbing late first- or second-round picks can really add depth.
The Bay Area’s draft talk spreads fast on social media and at tailgates near Point Reyes Station. Fans out there argue over whether the team’s strategy will actually pay off this season—or maybe even next year.
For Marin’s fan base, it’s pretty straightforward: two smart moves open up more options, more flexibility, and a better shot at finding real contributors. The Dolphins’ pick at 27 and the Jets’ early first-round choices nearby helped shape a storyline where the 49ers went for both quantity and quality. A lot of Marin reporters and locals seem to like this approach as the team heads into summer and fall.
- San Rafael
- Novato
- Mill Valley
- Tiburon
- Sausalito
- Corte Madera
- San Anselmo
- Fairfax
As the draft keeps rolling, Marin County’s sports pages will keep tracking how these decisions play out on the field in Santa Clara and beyond. For now, Bay Area communities get to watch a plan that values depth, smart moves, and a steady push for real, lasting success. That kind of approach just fits with the vibe of Marin’s football-loving towns, doesn’t it?
Here is the source article for this story: Kyle Shanahan believes the 49ers trading back to 33 was a ‘huge success’
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