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3 things we learned from the 49ers’ 2024 draft

Trent Williams isn’t going anywhere.

In the weeks leading up to the NFL draft, the 49ers telegraphed that they would take a tackle — Trent Williams’ successor, presumably — with the team’s first-round pick.

But when the start of the first round seemingly featured only quarterbacks, receivers and offensive tackles, taking some presumed viable options for the 49ers off the board well before the team went on the running clock, San Francisco pivoted.

And when the Niners didn’t trade for Washington tackle Roger Rosengarten in the second round, the message sent was unequivocal.

Williams, 35, has flirted with retirement in recent seasons, but is under contract to play three more seasons with the Niners.

By not taking his heir apparent in this draft, San Francisco told the league they thought they would get at least two of those seasons from Williams.

Otherwise, they would have taken a tackle and given him a season to learn from the master before taking over in 2025.

This is not a team that messes around in the draft regarding positions of need. But they drafted two guards who can be swing tackles at best this week. There are no heirs apparent on the list.

The Niners clearly don’t think they’ll need him until this time next year, at the earliest.

And as for Colton McKivitz, the team’s publicly maligned right tackle — you can do better, you can do worse, and the Niners like him a lot more than the public does. Those two guards they chose? Both come from the McKivitz/Dan Brunskill school of versatile offensive linemen.

McKivitz may not be the long-term option, but he will be the man for the job in the short term.

The 49ers aren’t just building around Brock Purdy; they will also change their attack for him.

California Daily Newspapers

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