2024-09-03 20:45:02
By Dianna Russini, Matt Barrows and David Lombardi
San Francisco 49ers All-Pro left tackle Trent Williams is ending his more than month-long holdout as the 11-time Pro Bowl selection returns to the Bay Area to finalize a deal Tuesday, per league sources.
Williams’ return comes as the 49ers resume practice Tuesday morning following a four-day break for Labor Day weekend. Shortly after their last session on Thursday, the 49ers finally struck a deal with Brandon Aiyuk on a four-year, $120 million extension to end his hold-in amid months of contentious contract discussions. Tuesday expects to be Aiyuk’s first practice with the team since before the Super Bowl in February.
The tenor of the Williams talks never reached the level of Aiyuk’s, who over the last month was granted permission to seek a trade. While the 49ers seemed exasperated at times with the Aiyuk situation — “At some point, you’ve gotta play,” general manager John Lynch a day before agreeing to the deal with Aiyuk — the 49ers never expressed concern about reaching an agreement with Williams.
“I’m optimistic that things will work out with Trent,” coach Kyle Shanahan said Wednesday. “I’m not sitting here knowing what day it’ll be. … When two sides want to get a deal done, usually it happens.”
GO DEEPER
Kawakami: Weirdest negotiation ever got the 49ers and Brandon Aiyuk a fair deal
Williams still had three years remaining on the six-year, $138 million contract he signed in 2021, but there was no more guaranteed money on that contract. He had been due a base salary of just over $20 million this season and the biggest chunk of money remaining on that initial deal wasn’t slated until the 2026 season, when Williams will be 38.
With Williams still performing as the best offensive tackle in football — he’s been a first-team All-Pro the last three seasons — he was seeking a pay raise that at least brings him closer to the top of the market, plus some additional guarantees.
Williams’ new deal should help mitigate the roughly $4 million in fines he accrued by missing all of training camp and the three preseason games. Those fines are not forgivable according to the league’s Collective Bargaining Agreement; fines can only be waived for players still on their rookie contract.
Getting Williams back on the field is a massive boost to the offense. He remains one of the league’s best pass protectors, and even at 36, he still has elite movement skills to get down the field on the 49ers’ vaunted wide-zone runs. Even with Williams back in the fold, the 49ers are threadbare at offensive tackle with just two — Jaylon Moore and Colton McKivitz — on the active roster and no one with any NFL game-day experience on the practice squad either.
GO DEEPER
As 49ers’ roster comes into focus, so do the weak spots for the upcoming season
Williams, however, is more than just physically gifted. He’s the most revered player in the locker room. Not only do young offensive linemen gather around him and eat up every word of advice, but also he has the same effect on defensive linemen. He and Nick Bosa have regular, long conversations about the arts of pass blocking and pass rushing, especially after games. Williams’ arrival should further boost the team’s confidence and, along with Aiyuk’s signing, begin to change the narrative on what has been a disjointed, distracted summer session.
Re-signing Aiyuk means the 49ers look to be even more loaded at the skill positions than they were as the NFL’s No. 1 offense in 2023. Quarterback Brock Purdy has Aiyuk, Deebo Samuel Sr., Christian McCaffrey, George Kittle, Jauan Jennings and rookie Jacob Cowing now at his disposal. That group should be able to generate enough separation to allow Purdy to release the ball quickly, but he’ll still need some semblance of good protection in front of him — and Williams is the most qualified candidate to deliver it on his blind side.
GO DEEPER
Why Brandon Aiyuk’s fit with Brock Purdy was too good for 49ers to trade away
The 49ers’ biggest offensive weakness ahead of the season opener on Monday against the Jets lies in the pass protection of their offensive line. They ranked in the 20s across the spectrum of pass-blocking metrics last season, and that was with Williams doing a great job anchoring his position. It’s easy to see disastrous results without him. The three games that Williams missed last season were all 49ers’ losses in which they scored only 17 points in each.
Ending Williams’ holdout doesn’t erase all the 49ers’ concerns up front. They still seem precariously thin at center, where starter Jake Brendel has been managing knee tendinitis and the only backup with experience at the position, Jon Feliciano, is on injured reserve. And none of the other spots along the offensive line protected well last season. Perhaps rookie Dominick Puni will change that at right guard, but that remains to be seen. Williams, on the other hand, is a walking first-ballot Hall of Famer. And that’s worth its weight in gold — as evidenced by this lucrative renegotiation.
(Photo: Kevin Sabitus / Getty Images)
Kareena Kapoor is working with Raazi director Meghna Gulzar for her next film. The project,…
2024-11-09 15:00:03 WEST LAFAYETTE -- Daniel Jacobsen's second game in Purdue basketball's starting lineup lasted…
2024-11-09 14:50:03 Rashida Jones is remembering her late father, famed music producer Quincy Jones, in…
2024-11-09 14:40:03 A silent German expressionist film about vampires accompanied by Radiohead’s music — what…
Let's face it - life can be downright stressful! With everything moving at breakneck speed,…
Apple’s redesigned Mac Mini M4 has ditched the previous M2 machine’s SSD that was soldered…