After trading down twice in Round 1, the 49ers made a surprising pick to start the draft’s second night. San Francisco chose Ole Miss wide receiver De’Zhaun Stribling at No. 33. Stribling had not been viewed as a prospect worthy of that draft slot by most, but he made quite the impression on the top two 49ers decisionmakers late in the pre-draft process.
Even by early April, the 49ers viewed Stribling as a player who would be more of a late second-round pick or an early third-rounder, according to Sports Illustrated’s Albert Breer, who notes Kyle Shanahan and John Lynch going through evaluations together last month led to a Stribling rise. He became the sixth wide receiver chosen in this year’s draft, rising past higher-profile options like Denzel Boston and Germie Bernard.
Daniel Jeremiah’s NFL.com big board ranked Stribling 62nd, while ESPN’s Scouts Inc. was even less bullish, slotting him 76th. The 49ers have run into issues identifying receivers in the middle rounds; Day 2 draftees Dante Pettis, Jalen Hurd and Danny Gray did not pan out. But the team also received a quality run from second-rounder Deebo Samuel and identified Jauan Jennings in Round 7. First-rounder Brandon Aiyuk was also a hit for San Francisco, before a strange 2025 divided the parties ahead of an expected 2026 separation.
The 49ers are still waiting on 2024 first-rounder Ricky Pearsall to establish himself as a reliable presence, and his injury issues — along with Aiyuk and Jennings statuses — influenced an aggressive offseason at receiver. The team added Mike Evans and Christian Kirk in free agency. Stribling will join Pearsall as rookie-deal cogs vying for time alongside the vets. Demarcus Robinson also remains rostered. The 49ers are not expected to re-sign Jennings, whose asking price has not aligned with teams’ valuations.
San Francisco was not set on adding Stribling at No. 27, with Breer noting the team viewed him as a player who would not go in the first round. The 49ers had a group of players they would feel comfortable taking at 27, but in the event all were off the board, Breer adds the team had trade parameters worked out with the Dolphins days before the draft. The sides turned those talks into a swap, with Miami moving up for San Diego State cornerback Chris Johnson. The 49ers moved down once again, allowing the Jets to draft Omar Cooper Jr. at No. 30.
Cooper and Stribling figure to be compared to each other moving forward, at least in the Bay Area, given how much higher the draft community had the Indiana product compared to Stribling (Jeremiah ranked Cooper 17th; Scouts Inc. had him 24th). Stribling impressed at the Combine, running a 4.36-second 40-yard dash at 207 pounds. This came after he produced at multiple schools during a college career that finished with back-to-back 800-plus-yard receiving seasons (at Oklahoma State and Ole Miss). In 2022, Stribling was a key Cam Ward target at Washington State.
The 49ers did not make the pick without fielding more calls, as Day 2 reports about interest coming in for No. 33 turned out to be accurate. Trade offers did not appeal to the 49ers, and Breer adds the team worried other clubs viewed Stribling as a sleeper like they did; that led to Shanahan and Co. standing down and selecting the well-traveled WR at 33. The 49ers will attempt to prove draft experts wrong, and if Stribling proves a quick learner, the team will have a deep receiver cadre in 2026.

He may have been a reach, but I reached for Ben Rice in my FBB draft this season and look how that has turned out. :))
given Shanahan & Lynch’s draft history it is likelier that they reached as opposed to correctly assessing Stribling’s range. Probably should have traded down again.