In an alternate reality, the San Francisco 49ers may have entered the playoffs at full strength against the Seattle Seahawks. Instead, the version that took the field Saturday night at Lumen Field was one battered by injuries and missing several cornerstone players.
Without key contributors such as Fred Warner, George Kittle, Nick Bosa, and others, the 49ers were overmatched in a 41–6 blowout loss to their NFC West rival in the Divisional Round of the playoffs.
One 49ers defender believes the outcome would have looked much different had San Francisco been healthier. After the game, cornerback Deommodore Lenoir said the result would have been a "landslide" in the opposite direction with better injury luck.
"To have them guys back, it's going to be a totally different game," Lenoir added. "But we can't make no excuses. We had enough guys in here to get the job done, so I feel like it just didn't go in our favor today."
Deommodore Lenoir said tonight's game would have been a "landslide" if the 49ers had been healthy.
"To have those guys, [it would have been] a totally different game. But I mean we can't make no excuses. We had enough guys in here to get the job done." pic.twitter.com/G9vOZ8eQgr
— KNBR (@KNBR) January 18, 2026
H/t to Angelina Martin of NBC Sports Bay Area for the find.
Despite navigating injuries throughout the season, San Francisco still won 12 games and earned a playoff berth. The 49ers knocked off the defending Super Bowl champion Philadelphia Eagles in the Wild Card round before showing they were no match for a healthier and well-rested Seattle team in the Divisional Round.
Saturday marked the third meeting between the 49ers and Seahawks this season. Each team won on the road during the regular season, but in the postseason, it was Seattle that emerged and advanced to the NFC Championship Game.
Lenoir wasn't alone in believing the outcome might have been different with a fully healthy roster. Veteran left tackle Trent Williams was asked what it would take for the 49ers to overcome a defense like Seattle's in the future—and he didn't mince words.
"It ain't going to take s--t," Williams said. "Obviously, we down the best tight end in the world. It's a lot of things that we're up against, not just Seattle. We split the games—they won one [in Week 18] during the season. We came down here with a healthy team [in Week 1], and we won. I think that's what we can be.
"Obviously, when you're playing with guys that you're signing off practice squads, guys that you're taking off the street, you've got to temper your expectations a little bit."
Quarterback Brock Purdy echoed that belief, making it clear he remains fully confident in the 49ers' long-term outlook if they can catch a break on the health front. He "100 percent" believes his team can win a Super Bowl in the near future.
"I really do believe that we have the right guys, man," Purdy said. "Obviously, didn't end the way we wanted it to, but I really do think that with some guys getting healthy and what we stand for and how we always bounce back. I feel like our backs were against the wall, really, all season with guys going down, but we always found a way.
"And so I think once we're 100 percent and feel good about ourselves and learn, and then we'll be just fine."