The San Francisco 49ers and Trent Williams would like to keep a good thing going. The offensive tackle has loved his year with the team, and the Niners have loved the stability offered by the athletic 320-pound lineman—one of the best in the game.
Williams is days away from becoming a free agent, though. If he reaches the open market, he will be among the most sought-after players and could earn a hefty payday. The 49ers don’t want it to get to that point.
“I’m wondering if the Chiefs are going to be in play for Trent Williams because the Chiefs need help at tackle,” Mike Garafolo told Andrew Siciliano on Friday during NFL Now. “A lot of teams could use help at left tackle. The San Francisco 49ers would like to retain their left tackle in Trent Williams. I’m told they’ve made strong offers for him so far in their negotiations and are hopeful that something will get done, perhaps before the start of the league year.”
The 49ers reportedly had “extensive” contract talks with Williams’ agent before the team’s regular-season finale, but the discussions obviously did not result in a new deal.
Player representatives can begin negotiating new deals with other teams on Monday. San Francisco has sole negotiating rights until then. However, once Wednesday hits, anything goes. That’s when Williams becomes a free agent, contracts can be finalized, and the offensive lineman will be free to sign anywhere.
Not counting the two-year, $10.1 million deal recently agreed upon by cornerback Emmanuel Moseley, and after restructuring center Weston Richburg’s deal, San Francisco has nearly $31 million in salary-cap space.
As a show of good faith, the 49ers opted out of being able to use the franchise tag on the eight-time Pro Bowler when they reworked the final year of his deal after trading for him last year. The only remaining option is a long-term deal.
“It’s not going to be any hometown-discount-type scenario,” Garafolo added. “Not that the 49ers are expecting that. They are trying their best to get this deal done, I am told. So, we’ll see if it winds up happening before he hits the free-agent market.
“But Trent Williams, after that situation in Washington, and how he sat out a year, and he had a medical scare, the fact that he came back and played so well, he definitely wants his value. So, we’ll see if that value is back in San Francisco.”
According to Pro Football Focus, Williams allowed four sacks this season, but none came after Week 5. He finished the season as the analytics site’s highest-graded tackle and second-highest-graded offensive lineman.
More San Francisco 49ers News
Rosenthal expects 49ers tackle Trent Williams to be the highest-paid player in free agency
By David Bonilla
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Could offensive tackle Trent Williams be one-and-done, too? Last year, San Francisco traded for Williams to replace the retiring Joe Staley, giving up draft capital in the process. Williams is the most prominent name among the 49ers’ long list of impending free agents.
NFL Network’s Gregg Rosenthal recently ranked his top 101 free agents in 2021. Williams came in
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The worst-case scenario for the 49ers this offseason would be seeing All-Pro left tackle Trent Williams leave in free agency. Last offseason, the team sent a 3rd-round pick to the Washington Football Team to acquire Williams, and then restructured his deal to give him a small pay bump and included language in the contract that stated they would not use the franchise tag on him in 2021.
Looking at the pending free agents at the tackle position, it’s easy to see that Trent Williams is far-and-away the best player available. Williams has stated that he would like to return to the 49ers, which is good news, but he also wants to test the market to determine his value, which could be bad news. There are enough teams flush with cap space, even with a cap-tightened season, and a need
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Kyle Juszczyk is just a couple of weeks away from hitting free agency, and from the discussion on Monday’s The Pat McAfee Show, it sounds like the San Francisco 49ers fullback believes he will get to test the market.
This is the second time Juszczyk will be a free agent. He signed a four-year, $21 million deal with the 49ers in 2017 after four seasons with the Baltimore Ravens.
“Honestly, there really is so much that goes into it,” Juszczyk told Pat McAfee. “Money, without a doubt, is one of the biggest things. I’m not going to be the guy that sits here and tells you that no, money doesn’t matter because this is life, man. It’s a business. Money is probably the No. 1 factor, but it’s not the only factor. There’s a lot.
“Things like, can this
49ers’ Kyle Juszczyk explains why start of free agency may not be typical signing frenzy
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Kyle Juszczyk remains on course to become a free agent in about a week-and-a-half. Something could develop with the San Francisco 49ers before then, but it sounds like the fullback expects to hit the open market for the second time in his NFL career.
Typically, the start of the new league year kicks off free agency with a bang—with a signing frenzy that results in announcements within minutes of players becoming available. That NFL created a two-day window, referred by some as the “legal tampering period” before the start of free agency, allowing player representatives time to negotiate with teams before making deals official when the new league year begins.
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