Brock Purdy agrees to 5-year, $265 million extension with the 49ers, AP source says
A person familiar with the deal told The Associated Press that the sides reached agreement Friday on the contract that includes $181 million in total guarantees. The person spoke on condition of anonymity because the team hadn't announced the deal yet.
NFL Network first reported the deal.
Purdy has made less than $1 million a year for his first three seasons and was set to get a small raise in 2025 to about $5.2 million under the league's proven performance escalator for making the Pro Bowl last season before reaching this new deal that puts Purdy in the top 10 in quarterback contracts.
After several lengthy contract disputes in recent years, the Niners got this deal done with Purdy with no drama. He reported to the start of the offseason program and now has his new contract before on-field practices start later this month.
Purdy's journey from the final pick of the 2022 draft to agreeing to this new contract has been a remarkable one that saw him take over as starter late in his rookie season, become an MVP finalist on the way to leading the 49ers to the Super Bowl in 2023 and then solidifying his position last season.
Purdy's success helped rescue the Niners from a potentially catastrophic mistake after they traded three first-round picks to draft Trey Lance third overall in 2021 only to watch him struggle before getting traded away in 2023.
The Niners took Purdy 262nd overall in the 2022 draft — Mr. Irrelevant as the last pick — and even before his first exhibition game as a rookie, coach Kyle Shanahan had told owner Jed York that Purdy was the team's best quarterback.
He got the chance to prove that late in his rookie season in 2022 after Lance and Jimmy Garoppolo had gone down with season-ending injuries. Purdy won the final five starts of the regular season and the first two rounds of the playoffs before suffering a serious injury to his throwing elbow early in an NFC title game loss to Philadelphia that season.
But the 108 passer rating, 16 TDs and only four interceptions he had that season proved he was capable as long as he was healthy and he backed that up with a sensational 2023 season.
Purdy had one of the most prolific passing seasons in team history when he finished fourth in the NFL in MVP voting. He set a franchise record for yards passing (4,280) and became the first Niners QB in more than two decades to throw at least 30 TD passes (31). Purdy led the NFL with a 113 passer rating and his 9.6 yards per attempt were the most in the NFL for a qualifying QB since Kurt Warner had 9.9 in 2000.
He helped lead comeback wins over Green Bay and Detroit in the playoffs before falling short against Kansas City in overtime in the Super Bowl.
That success was harder to come by in 2024 as Purdy was hampered by injuries to key offensive players like Christian McCaffrey, Trent Williams and Brandon Aiyuk. His passer rating dropped nearly 17 points to 96.1, he had only 20 TD passes and 12 interceptions on the season, and also came up short in several late-game scenarios when the 49ers had a chance for a comeback win.
Purdy's play was part of a team-wide downturn that led to a 6-11 record and the first missed playoff appearance for San Francisco since 2020.
But he didn't lose the support of Shanahan, York or general manager John Lynch, who all expressed a strong desire to make sure Purdy remained the team's long-term answer at quarterback.
___
AP Pro Football Writer Rob Maaddi contributed to this report
___
AP NFL: https://apnews.com/hub/nfl

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Washington Post
27 minutes ago
- Washington Post
White Sox unveil statue of Mark Buehrle at Rate Field
CHICAGO — Mark Buehrle posed for several pictures with his new statue. By himself. With his family. With a large contingent of his former teammates from one of the greatest years in Chicago White Sox history. Everyone wanted to hold on to the moment. A sculpture of Buehrle in his pitching motion was unveiled at Rate Field on Friday night as part of a celebration of the 20th anniversary of Chicago's 2005 World Series championship. The left-hander watched as his family pulled a black tarp off the statue in right field, cheered on by a crowd of 25,084 dotted with No. 56 Buehrle jerseys and shirts.


Forbes
32 minutes ago
- Forbes
Laila Ali Names Her Price To Consider Fighting Claressa Shields
Laila Ali-Claressa Shields If fight fans and boxing powerbroker Turki Alalshikh want to see Laila Ali and Claressa Shields in a ring, it's going to cost them a pretty penny. Ali was a part of Netflix's streaming crew for Friday night's historic, all women's boxing event headlined by Katie Taylor and Amanda Serrano's third fight. Ali did a fantastic job with her analysis and her presence was great considering the role she played as a pioneer of women's boxing. While Ali spoke about Taylor-Serrano and the other fights on the card, you knew boxing media wouldn't let her escape without bringing up the possibilities of a fight between her and Shields. According to Ali who spoke to reporters from FightHype, it would take $15-$20 million dollars to get her to consider returning to the ring. Here's a look at the interview. A fight between Ali and Shields would do huge numbers. The two women are arguably the most popular women ever in the sport, and the real-life beef would only make this a stronger draw. Alalshikh is probably the only person on the planet with the means and potential interest to fund such an event. NEW YORK, NEW YORK - OCTOBER 16: Claressa Shields attends the 2024 Women's Sports Foundation's ... More Annual Salute To Women In Sports at Cipriani Wall Street on October 16, 2024 in New York City. (Photo byfor WSF) Shields has notoriously beefed with most of the big names in women's boxing, including Serrano. And as I wrote earlier this year, it's been good for the sport. According to Yahoo! Sports' Shanelle Genai, who chronicled the beef between the two icons, the Shields-Ali tension stems from a mentor-turned-rival dynamic that soured as the two stars grew apart. Shields has openly voiced her frustrations about how Ali has downplayed her accomplishments, while Ali has suggested that Shields needs to 'humble herself.' Those words stung hard enough that Shields once called Ali 'the most hated' woman in boxing. Ali is 47 and Shields is 30. Considering the massive age gap and the fact that Ali hasn't competed in 18 years, I'd still call this an unlikely occurrence. However, the kind of money Ali mentioned changes things. Women's boxing is on a historic rise—and no one commands headlines like these two. Just the idea of a super-fight between generations has already stirred the pot. And with Netflix, Alalshikh, and other financial power players proving they'll invest in spectacle, the money might not be as far-fetched as it once seemed. We'll see what Shields has to say in response to Ali's asking price, or if it's something she ignores while preparing for her next fight on July 26 against Lani Daniels. In case you missed it, here is a look at all of the results from Netflix's huge all-women's boxing event. Full Taylor-Serrano 3 Card Results


Forbes
39 minutes ago
- Forbes
Success Of Ryan Poles, Ben Johnson Is Tied To Caleb Williams
Chicago Bears general manager Ryan Poles, right, speaks as head coach Ben Johnson, left, listens ... More before introducing new players Drew Dalman and Dayo Odeyingbo at Halas Hall on March 13, 2025, in Lake Forest, Illinois. (Chris Sweda/Chicago Tribune/Tribune News Service via Getty Images) Patience has indeed proven to be a virtue with Ryan Poles, the Chicago Bears' fourth-year general manager. He was hired for a four-year term in 2022 and is being rewarded with a contract extension that runs through 2029. This gives Poles an eight-year commitment from Bears ownership and president Kevin Warren despite his having produced a 15-36 record in his first two seasons. His predecessor, Ryan Pace, had a 48-65 record over seven seasons, including a 22-27 mark in his final three. ESPN's Adam Schefter reported on Friday Poles is receiving an extension that gives him the same timing on his deal as head coach Ben Johnson, who Poles hired in January after making Matt Eberflus the Bears' first-ever coach fired in midseason. Poles had hired Eberflus on his third day on the job after inheriting a coaching search that had been run at the same time Chairman George McCaskey was searching for a new GM to replace Pace. It was a dubious process that did little other than to allow the Bears to assemble talent through the draft in the Eberflus years, biding their time in hope of becoming relevant again. That time arrives in 2025, with the Bears hoping for at least a winning season in the deep NFC North. The success of quarterback Caleb Williams, who was taken with the first overall pick in the '24 draft, is critical for both Poles and Johnson, who chose to sign with Chicago after earning respect while building an explosive offense behind Jared Goff in Detroit. Poles has proven to be a skilled negotiator in seemingly upgrading the roster. He rebuilt the offensive line after Williams was sacked 68 times in his rookie season, adding Chiefs All-Pro guard Joe Thuney at the cost of only a fourth-round pick while also signing free agent center Drew Dalman and trading for guard Jonah Jackson. His signature move was the trading of the first overall pick to Carolina in '23, which at the time committed a third season to struggling quarterback Justin Fields, whom Poles had inherited from Pace. Rather than draft Bryce Young or C.J. Stroud, he took wide receiver D.J. Moore and a package of draft pick to allow the Panthers to move from ninth to first overall. Poles turned those picks into Williams, tackle Darnell Wright, cornerback Tyrique Stevenson, punter Tory Taylor and wide receiver Luther Burden III. "Yeah, I feel pretty good," Poles said after selecting Burden in the second round last April. 'I think it's worked out for us.' The moves have certainly worked well for Poles, who had worked in the Chiefs' front office before being hired by McCaskey. The hope is they also work out for the franchise and its fans. Leila Rahimi, the insightful talk show host for WSCR, summed up the feeling in Chicago nicely. 'You just got paid for winning an offseason, not a season,' Rahimi said. 'I want to see a season.'