Daily Democrat (Woodland)

Offseason decisions now loom

Playoff hopes dead for SF

- By Dieter Kurtenbach

A team without a real shot at the playoffs saw even their imaginary chances disappear Sunday.

The 49ers season had been unofficial­ly over for weeks, but with their ninth loss on Sunday, the end became official.

But don’t think these final games — once unofficial­ly meaningles­s to the standings and now officially meaningles­s to the standings — don’t have meaning elsewhere.

No, these games are final auditions. In fact, you can argue that the auditions have been underway for a few weeks now.

And after Sunday’s 41- 33 loss to the Cowboys, some players are not going to land a role with this company next year.

San Francisco has a whopping 25 unrestrict­ed free agents heading into this offseason. Additional­ly, they have 14 more earlyright­s and restricted free agents. On top of that, there are players — such as Jimmy Garoppolo — with contracts the Niners can purge at little or no cost.

With the salary cap likely to stay flat year- over- year, at best, there is going to be plenty of pruning come early 2021, and the final two games of a lost season might carry outsized importance. Recency bias is a difficult thing to avoid.

Of those unrestrict­ed free agents ( restricted free agents and ERFAs carry little risk of exiting and should be treated as if the Niners have team options on all of their contracts), there are four that the Niners cannot afford to let leave.

It starts with left tackle Trent Williams, who has been as good as advertised in his first season with San Francisco. Whether the Niners have Garoppolo, a rookie, or an establishe­d NFL veteran at quarterbac­k next year, the Niners are going to want Williams at left tackle — the drop off between him and whomever the Niners could get to replace him would not be worth the cost savings ( if there would be any).

Cornerback Jason Verrett, nickel back K’Waun Williams, and fullback Kyle Juszczyk are the other three must- retains. Each of those players has proven to be an irreplacea­ble ( at least for the Niners) player — a winner — and so long as the prices aren’t exorbitant, Kyle Shanahan and John Lynch would be fools to not have them in red and gold next season.

There are also some players that the 49ers have already written off for 2021. Tevin Coleman, Jerick McKinnon, and others will be thanked for their service and sent away once the season ends on Jan. 3.

But there’s a whole mess of players that aren’t in either category — yet.

Mike McGlinchey might not be a pending free agent, but the

Niners have to make a decision on his fifth- year option before the start of next season. After another game full of viral lowlights Sunday, it’s hard to see what the once- stout right tackle could do to have that option, worth an estimated ( and fully guaranteed, come 2022) $ 13 million, exercised. But he’ll have two more games to show that he’s “still here”.

There’s so much to be decided, and an eighth of a season — two games — isn’t an insignific­ant sample size, even if the contests themselves are only significan­t, from a team standpoint, for draft position.

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