Marin Independent Journal

49ers draft Pearsall at No. 31 in first round

Florida WR taken at No. 31 overall, while Aiyuk remains on roster

- By Cam Inman

Offensive players flew off NFL draft boards Thursday night, including one onto the 49ers' roster, which still includes Brandon Aiyuk.

Once their turn arrived at No. 31, the 49ers selected Ricky Pearsall, a wide receiver who finished his college career at Florida after starting it at Arizona State, which, ironically, is Aiyuk's alma mater.

Thus, the draft's ending resembled its start: only offensive players were taken in the first 14 picks.

The 49ers' offensive choice came without the same pressing concerns that's engulfing their NFL challenger­s.

After all, the Niners secured their franchise quarterbac­k two years ago in Brock Purdy, albeit with the 262nd and final pick. Plus, the 49ers have every other offensive starter under contract from last season, when they spawned the secondmost yards and third-most points en route to the Super Bowl, where they got outscored 25-22 in overtime to the Kansas City Chiefs.

Rather than trade Aiyuk, the 49ers' brass is, thus far, staying true to their word and keeping their leading wide receiver, presumably with a yet-to-be-consumated contract extension. He's entering the final season under

his rookie deal, a $14.1 million team option that is roughly half the market rate for a top-tier receiver.

Pearsall joins a wide receiver corps that also includes Deebo Samuel, Jauan Jennings, and the recently re-signed Trent Taylor.

This draft had several wide receivers projected to go in the first round, and three were taken in the top 10: Marvin Harrison Jr. (Arizona Cardinals, No. 4 overall), Malik Nabers (New York Giants, No. 6), and Rome Odunze (Chicago Bears, No. 9). Brian Thomas went at No. 23 to the Jacksonvil­le

Jaguars, and Xavier Worthy went at No. 28, once the Chiefs traded up with the Bills (rather than draft at No. 32 after the 49ers' pick).

Aside from those five wide receivers, the first round saw nine offensive linemen, six quarterbac­ks, five defensive ends, three cornerback­s, one defensive tackle and Napabred tight end Brock Bowers among those taken before the 49ers' choice at No. 31.

This also was the first draft since 2021 when quarterbac­ks went with the first three picks: Caleb Williams (Bears), Jayden Daniels (Commanders), and, Drake

Maye (Patriots). Three more were snatched up in the Top 12: Michael Penix (Falcons) in stunning fashion at No. 8 overall, J.J. McCarthy (Vikings) at No. 10, and, Bo Nix (Broncos) at No. 12.

Not only did that run on quarterbac­ks push down players at other positions on draft boards, it surely reminded the 49ers how peaceful it is to have Purdy, who passed for a franchiser­ecord 4,280 yards last season after throwing-elbow surgery last March.

Infamously, the 49ers thought they had their man in 2021, when they last

drafted in the first round and selected quarterbac­k Trey Lance at No. 3 overall. That spot cost them a trade package to Miami involving first-round picks from 2021-23. Lance followed Trevor Lawrence (Jaguars) and Zach Wilson (Jets) off the draft board, then after two faint seasons, the 49ers shipped him to the Dallas Cowboys last August for a fourth-round draft pick.

The 49ers didn't make their initial pick in the previous two drafts until the second round in 2022 (defensive end Drake Jackson) and the third round last year (safety Ji'Ayir Brown). Other first-round picks since coach Kyle Shanahan and general manager John Lynch arrived in 2017: defensive tackle Solomon Thomas (2017), linebacker Reuben Foster (2017), right tackle Mike McGlinchey (2018), defensive end Nick Bosa (2019), defensive tackle Javon Kinlaw (2020), and Aiyuk (2020).

Now Pearsall (6-foot-1, 189 pounds) joins a franchise that is coming off a Super Bowl overtime loss, but one still poised to return to that championsh­ip stage Feb. 9, when Super Bowl LIX is played in New Orleans. Over the past five seasons, the 49ers have reached the Super Bowl twice and the NFC Championsh­ip Game four times.

Pearsall is a Phoenix native who grew up in the suburb of Chandler, near Purdy's hometown of Queen Creek. After attending Corona del Sol High School in Tempe, Pearsall attended Arizona State for three seasons before transferri­ng to Florida for the past two seasons.

Leading into this draft, the 49ers focused on retooling their defense: Nick Sorensen got promoted to defensive coordinato­r, Brandon Staley joined the coaching staff, then defensive end Leonard Floyd and linebacker De'Vondre Campbell led a contingent of free agency arrivals.

In this draft, however, defenders were overlooked until Sacramento native Laiatu Latu got picked at No. 15, with fellow defensive ends selected in the ensuing alternatin­g picks at Nos. 17, 19 and 21.

 ?? MICHAEL CONROY — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS, FILE ?? Florida wide receiver Ricky Pearsall runs a drill at the NFL scouting combine on March 2in Indianapol­is. The 49ers on Thursday selected Pearsall in the first round.
MICHAEL CONROY — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS, FILE Florida wide receiver Ricky Pearsall runs a drill at the NFL scouting combine on March 2in Indianapol­is. The 49ers on Thursday selected Pearsall in the first round.

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