Monterey Herald

Report: 49ers' Gould says he'll be elsewhere in 2023

- By Jerry McDonald

The 49ers could be looking hard at place kickers in free agency and the NFL Draft.

Robbie Gould, who arrived in 2017 the same year coach Kyle Shanahan and general manager John Lynch took over, plans on playing somewhere else in 2023 according to a report by ESPN's Adam Schefter and confirmed by NBC Sports Bay Area.

In six seasons with the 49ers, Gould converted 161 of 184 field goal attempts (87.5 percent) and 379 out of 383 extra point attempts (99 percent).

More impressive­ly, Gould, 40, has never missed a place kick in 16 postseason games with the Chicago Bears, New York Giants (one season) and 49ers going 29-for-29 on field goal attempts and 39-for-39 on extra points.

On the day the 49ers cleaned out their lockers following a 31-7 championsh­ip game loss to the Philadelph­ia Eagles, Gould gave mixed signals as to his intentions. He said it would be “awesome” to if the 49ers brought him back for a seventh season while also noting that “unique” opportunit­ies awaited himself elsewhere entering his 19th season.

Either way, it was clear Gould was not contemplat­ing retirement. He has tested free agency twice in his career, signing with the Giants in 2016 and the 49ers in 2017.

“I was 35-of-40 (on field goal attempts) with two blocks. I kicked off at 40 years old, which I want to say is unheard of, but usually doesn't happen that often. I still have some pop left.”

The 49ers could in theory place a franchise tag on Gould at a price of $5.39 million for the season. They used that tactic in 2019, with Gould refusing to sign the tender and asking for a trade. He was eventually signed to a contract which was renegotiat­ed the following season.

The 49ers paid Gould a $4 million salary in 2022 with a prorated bonus number of more than $1.5 million for a cap number of $5,509,313 according to overthecap.com. They currently have just under $6 million under the cap.

Included in the 49ers' offseason plans is a contract renegotiat­ion for Nick Bosa which would make him the NFL's highest paid defensive player but lower his current cap number of $17.859 million as well as bringing back several free agents. Money can also be created under the cap by renegotiat­ing current deals to establishe­d players.

The deadline for teams to use the franchise tag is Tuesday.

Assuming the 49ers don't go that route, Gould is free to sign with another team when the free agency negotiatin­g period begins on March 13.

Other veteran kickers are expected to be available in free agency.

 ?? JOSE CARLOS FAJARDO — BAY AREA NEWS GROUP ?? The San Francisco 49ers' Robbie Gould (9) kicks a 47yard field goal against the Dallas Cowboys in the second quarter of their NFC divisional-round playoff game at Levi's Stadium in Santa Clara on Jan. 22.
JOSE CARLOS FAJARDO — BAY AREA NEWS GROUP The San Francisco 49ers' Robbie Gould (9) kicks a 47yard field goal against the Dallas Cowboys in the second quarter of their NFC divisional-round playoff game at Levi's Stadium in Santa Clara on Jan. 22.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States