Sometimes the smartest "free-agent splash" isn't a splash at all—it's going back to what already worked. Going back to a productive familiar face. And for the San Francisco 49ers, a Dre Greenlaw reunion checks just about every box: scheme fit, locker-room fit, and a cost that should land well below what it would take to chase a similar talent on the open market.
Let's rewind to last offseason. Greenlaw chose a fresh start in Denver on a three-year deal reportedly worth $31.5 million, even with a last-ditch push from Kyle Shanahan and John Lynch to keep him in San Francisco playing next to the best in the business, Fred Warner. That pairing mattered. In this defense, Warner is the Batman—Greenlaw has long been the perfect Robin, the tone-setting sidekick who is a punishing hitter.
The Broncos didn't get the full version of Greenlaw right away, and the context matters. 2025 marked his first full season after that bizarre non-contact Achilles injury he suffered on the Super Bowl stage with the 49ers. In Denver, he started seven games and recorded 43 tackles, including a sack. And when the postseason arrived, his impact was more muted: no solo tackles, and just 10 assists. Fair or not, that kind of stat line makes front offices start looking at dollars and alternatives.
Denver ultimately decided to pivot on Monday. Reports noted that the contract included a built-in $2 million opt-out, allowing the Broncos to move on before additional money became guaranteed, saving $6 million in salary cap space in the process. They took that route, in turn, then reinvested at linebacker by bringing back Justin Strnad (three years, $18 million) and Alex Singleton (two years, $15.5 million).
Why the 49ers need to target free agent Dre Greenlaw
The 49ers already know what Greenlaw looks like when he's right: fast-triggering, violent downhill, and comfortable playing in space when the structure demands it. In back-to-back seasons (2022–2023), he posted 75-plus combined tackles each year, thriving as the complementary force to Warner's all-around brilliance. That's not just production; he's the perfect option for depth at the position and a security blanket if injuries occur.
And the fit now is even cleaner than it sounds. A linebacker room featuring Warner, Greenlaw, and Dee Winters would give San Francisco one of the better trios in football—range, instincts, and matchup flexibility all in one group.
For me, this isn't a matter of nostalgia. If Greenlaw is healthy—and another year removed from that Achilles makes that bet more reasonable—he can slide back in without skipping much of a beat. For a team that lives in a Super Bowl window, familiar excellence is often the best kind to buy.
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