
The San Francisco 49ers are focusing on Day 2 of the NFL Draft for wide receiver prospects, indicating a strategic approach rather than targeting top-tier players. Several players are expected to be drafted, each with unique attributes.
INDIANAPOLIS, INDIANA - FEBRUARY 24: Chris Bell #WO03 Louisville speaks to the media during the 2026 NFL Scouting Combine at Lucas Oil Stadium on February 27, 2026 in Indianapolis, Indiana. (Photo by Lauren Leigh Bacho/Getty Images) | Getty Images
The San Francisco 49ers are either cooler on the top wide receiver prospects than many thought, or recognized that Day 2 of the NFL Draft is where the sweet spot is. Free agent investments also allow the team to be patient when it comes to selecting a wideout. There are about a dozen players who could get drafted on Friday at the position. They all come in different shapes and sizes.
Comparing prospects to NFL players often leaves a lot to be desired, as thereās usually no middle ground. We tend to gravitate toward high-end comps to paint a picture of a playerās ceiling.
Then there are others who canāt help themselves from hyperbole. āHe reminds me of Terrell Owens.ā āI see more of a Reggie Wayne.ā Or, any 5ā9ā receiver with a bit of physicality is often seen as the second coming of Steve Smith.
Weāll do our best to avoid comparing college kids to Hall-of-Fame-type players, but there are no promises. Today, weāre using NFL IQ to help us identify how prospects with similar measurables have panned out in the NFL.
Letās start with a player who should have been drafted in the first round if not for injury. He has proved that he can win in NFL ways and would be in the conversation for teams in the teens had he not suffered a hamstring injury.
You donāt have to worry about Bell catching the ball. His 10ā³ hands are in the 87th percentile. Bell had the fourth-highest target share in this wide receiver class, ran a route tree that had 32 percent of his routes down the field, and still only had four drops. It looks like that when he catches the ball. The pigskin doesnāt move when Bell gets his hands on it.
The 49ers are looking at a variety of wide receiver prospects, with about a dozen players expected to be drafted.
The 49ers are either less interested in top wide receiver prospects or believe Day 2 offers better value, allowing them to be patient.
Player comparisons can create unrealistic expectations, often highlighting high-end potential or leading to hyperbolic assessments.
Free agent investments and the depth of available prospects on Day 2 are key factors influencing the 49ers' drafting strategy.


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I asked NFL IQ how many receivers over 6ā1ā with at least 10ā of hand length had 1,000-yard seasons. The groupās gold standard is Michael Thomas. The former Saints wideout had 1,137 yards receiving as a rookie in 2016. That increased every year through 2019, where he peaked at 1,725.
Other examples include Alshon Jeffrey, Keenan Allen, JuJu Smitch-Schuster, Jordy Nelson, Jordan Matthews, Marin Jones, and Kelvin Benjamin. Thereās another example: a couple of inches taller, but a burner who ate up defendersā angles, just as Bell did in college. Demaryius Thomas is admittedly a bigger player, but it would not have been a surprise to see Bell come close to Thomasās 4.38 40, as heās already reaching 18 miles per hour:
Thomas had five consecutive seasons in which he surpassed 1,000 yards. He also had three consecutive seasons of 10+ touchdowns. You can spam targets to the players unbothered by contact at the catch point because their hands are the size of a skillet.
Donāt let Bell slipping to Friday deceive you into thinking he wonāt be successful in the NFL. Since 2014, there have been a plethora of wide receivers drafted in the second round who were successful. Tee Higgins, A.J. Brown, Davante Adams, Deebo Samuel, DK Metcalf, Alex Pierce, and Courtland Sutton were all drafted in this round.
Boston visited the 49ers in late March. Bostonās profile has been successful in the NFL. I wondered how many wide receivers over 6ā3ā³ with a vertical sub-36ā³ had 1,000-yard seasons as pros. Mike Evans is the ceiling comp for the Boston architect. He also jumped 37 inches, so he isnāt listed. Boston jumped 35ā³, which is in the 42nd percentile.
Seven-time Pro Bowler A.J. Green falls under this umbrella. The same with Mike Williams (1,000-yard season in 2021), Kelvin Benjamin, Tee Higgins, Courtland Sutton, and George Pickens.
Another player who falls into this category and makes some sense as a comp is former Detroit Lions wide receiver, Kenny Golladay. Iād call Boston a more refined Golladay.
Golladay had five red zone touchdowns on 16 targets during his breakout season in 2018. The next season, he caught seven touchdowns on 17 targets in the red area. That is the kind of threat the 49ers need and would rely on.
Boston isnāt as flashy as some other wideouts in the draft, but he knows how to win off the line of scrimmage, stay on his line, find the soft spot in zones, and is sneaky good after the catch. You can see Bostonās elite 3-cone time with his separation at the top of his routes and when itās time to get in and out of his breaks. Iām a fan and believe he should be viewed in the same group as the other top wideouts in this class.
Stribling is the next wide receiver on my board. Iām obnoxiously high on him. I have Bell WR2, Boston WR3, and Stribling WR6 behind KC Concepcion, but ahead of Makai Lemon and Omar Cooper Jr., two players drafted in the first round. To say Iām bullish on Stribling is an understatement. Heās the most Shanahan/McVay type of receiver in this draft.
Stribling caught 74 percent of his targets last season for 811 yards and six touchdowns. The majority of those came under ten yards, but you could see the NFL ability at the intermediate range. Stribling caught four of his six contested targets in this area and went on to force a pair of missed tackles.
He turns 24 in December, so being on the older side is why Stribling might fall to the third round. Heās over 6ā2ā³ and 200 pounds. The hands are 10ā³. Stribling ran a 4.36 with a broad jump in the 82nd percentile. He plays as he tests.
The athletic testing isnāt what sold me. It was his usage as a blocker and how Stribling imposed his physical will play after play. However, I used that athletic testing and narrowed the weight to 200 to 210 pounds to avoid specimens like Julio Jones.
Itās a unique physical profile, as only four wide receivers check every box across NFL IQās historical dataset. Two went on to have NFL careers: Marquez Valdes-Scantling and Christian Watson.
MVS was a fifth-round pick who had splashy plays early in his career, but never amounted to more than a WR3. Watson canāt seem to stay healthy, but youāve seen improvements in his game, and his big-play ability has flipped games for the Packers.
Weāll ignore Watson being 6ā4ā and use him as the closest comp for Stribling. Think of Stribling as if Watson had to do the dirty work for a team, like being the primary blocker on screens.
Next on the list is the king of the dig route, Germie Bernard. Heās 6ā1 1/4, but over 200 pounds. Bernard ran a 4.48, which is plenty fast. His 13th percentile arm length might be a concern, but he has big hands and had a 3-cone in the 87th percentile. Plus, and youāll notice a theme here, he has 82nd percentile mitts. Strong hands will help offset arm length.
Bernard lives in the intermediate portion of the field. He only caught 61 percent of his targets, but I watched the Ramsā new quarterback skip a couple of throws his way when Bernard was open by a couple of steps.
NFL IQ confirmed three players who fit this bill, who produced 1,000-yard seasons in the NFL. One of them is Julio Jones, one of the greatest receivers ever. The other two were Courtland Sutton and Alshon Jeffery.
And this is where these queries can be helpful. As somebody who would have no issues with Bernard, he would be an outlier if he were successful. Out of 25 players across 20+ years of Combine history who fit that size and agility profile, the list of three (12%) is concerning.
An argument in favor of Bernard doesnāt help when you look at the list of wide receivers that didnāt cut it. Here are a few recent ones:
Denzel Mims
JāMon Moore
Braxton Miller
Deon Cain
Jehu Chesson
Chad Hansen
Every situation is different, and itās difficult to fail in a Shanahan offense, but these studies make me want someone else to be right about Bernard.
Next up, we have a receiver over 6ā4 but with 9ā³ hands. Fieldsā athletic testing could cause him to slip into Day 3. His vertical jump was in the 78th percentile, but he ran a 4.61 and had a shuttle time in the 20th percentile.
You can see some of the issues pop up athletically when Fields needs to create separation on a slant, or avoid contact early in the route. Heās much better later in the route, is generally engaged as a blocker, and has some juice once the ball is in his hands. Fields is probably best after the catch, which is why he shouldnāt be somebody we ignore.
So what umbrella does Fields fall under? If Drake London is the president of this family tree, then Fields is the local sheriff. There is a place for him in the NFL, even if the ceiling might be a high-end WR3.
For Fields, I used his height, 40, and vertical to see how many players have had 1,000-yard seasons. The answer is zero.
The closest player we have is Allen Lazard, who went undrafted in 2018. He found a home in Green Bay and had several useful seasons, but topped out at 788 receiving yards. To his credit, Lazard was a factor in the red zone for the Packers.
Unfortunately for Fields, this profile does not exist in the NFL, meaning youāre betting against history by selecting him.
The 49ers met with Hurst twice. Once at the Senior Bowl and another at the Combine, suggesting thereās interest. Hurst is another wideout over 6ā4ā³ and 200 pounds. He has nearly 10ā³ hands, ran a 4.42. The most impressive testing number mightāve been his 135ā³ broad jump, good enough for the 97th percentile.
Hurst is as linear an athlete as it gets, but the explosiveness speaks for itself. Heās exclusively played at small schools. Before Georgia State, he spent two seasons at Valdosta State. He was a yard shy of 1,000 yards in 2025. Of those, 595 were air yards. Drops have been an issue. He has 11 in the past two seasons and caught āonlyā 81 percent of his on-target throws.
Hurst is a receiver who will live on the vertical route tree. The gaudy Combine numbers spit out Christian Watson and some guy named Calvin Johnson.
When you add in the 40 time, and thereās about a 20-pound weight difference here, you get a player who is the high-end comp. Thatās Chase Claypool, who took the league by storm as a rookie. Claypool had the receiving yards to match a season later, but the touchdown production fell off a cliff. After his second season, Claypool never amounted to much.
I passed on Antonio Williams, Deion Burks, and Skyler Bell because Iām not in the business of taking wideouts sub 200 pounds in the second round. Between Ricky Pearsall, Jacob Cowing, and Jordan Watkins, that type of wideout already exists on the 49ers roster. Why add to a logjam of players who already struggle to get on the field?