"DeAndre Smelter caught a pass on a wide receiver screen to the left side and showed nice burst after the catch," said Joe Fann of 49ers Media on Monday. "[Garrett] Celek did well to seal off the sideline while Joe Staley pulled to lead the first-year receiver up-field."
Grant Cohn of the Press Democrat said that Smelter played split-end and made three catches during drills on Monday. "First, he beat Jimmie Ward with a quick slant," said Cohn. "Then, he beat Kenneth Acker with a quick slant. And then he caught a tunnel screen pass thrown by Colin Kaepernick. By the end of practice, Smelter was playing with the starters. He seems to be Quinton Patton's primary competition for the starting split-end job."
"[Smelter] looked to be full go on Sunday and came up with a catch from Thad Lewis," reported Matt Barrows of the Sacramento Bee following Sunday's practice. "At 220-plus pounds, Smelter is by far the most powerful receiver on the squad and he looks it when he's on the field."
The 49ers wide receivers group recently ranked second-to-last by Pro Football Focus. The emergence of someone like Smelter could do a lot to bolster what could be a young but underrated group.
There was some speculation if Smelter would even emerge from deep within the 49ers' depth chart. Most figured that the competition for the wide receiver spot across from Torrey Smith would come down to Patton, Bruce Ellington, and perhaps former CFL hopeful Eric Rogers. If Smelter is starting to make some noise during practices, it could be a huge benefit for the 49ers offense – even if he does not end up at the X-spot.
After spending his rookie season recovering from surgery to repair his torn ACL, Smelter was an unknown commodity for the 49ers. Early on, he drew comparisons to Anquan Boldin, who is now with the Detroit Lions. Smelter's 11-inch hands were the largest of his draft class and he has the size to be a physical threat at receiver for the team. He was a fourth round selection out of Georgia Tech in 2015.
In 2014, he had 35 receptions for 715 yards and seven touchdowns through 10 games at Georgia Tech. That's an average of over 20 yards-per-catch.
More San Francisco 49ers News
-
49ers' Week 16 opponent loses starting quarterback
The Jacksonville Jaguars defeated the Indianapolis Colts 36-19 on Sunday, further dimming Indy's playoff hopes. A significant setback compounded the loss—quarterback Daniel Jones is out for the season after suffering a torn Achilles during the Week 14 defeat. Jones had... -
49ers legends Jerry Rice and Steve Young to coach 2026 Pro Bowl Games
NFL Communications provided the following information. NEW YORK — The NFL announced today that Pro Football Hall of Famers Jerry Rice and Steve Young will be the head coaches for the 2026 Pro Bowl Games powered by Verizon. Rice will coach the NFC while Young will lead the... -
49ers' Kyle Shanahan confirms Brandon Aiyuk's absence, addresses uncertain future
Over the weekend, the San Francisco 49ers announced they placed wide receiver Brandon Aiyuk on the reserve/left squad list, officially ending his season—and potentially his future with the team. NFL insider Matt Maiocco reported that the 49ers have been unable to keep tabs on... -
The Most Faithful: How 49ers Fans Dominate Home and Road Games
Having home-field advantage is important in all sports. The Boston Garden, home of the Boston Celtics, was famous for its lack of air conditioning and the team's playoff record. College stadiums have nicknames that proclaim the difficulty of winning there as an opposing team....