Jed York is coming out of the shadows. That’s terrible news for the 49ers

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Eight years ago, 49ers CEO Jed York stood at the lectern in Levi’s Stadium and declared “I own this football team. You don’t dismiss owners.”

It was a moment of defiance born of years of incompetence—a stretch during which the 49ers had fired three head coaches in three seasons and had only 15 total wins.

And it looks like York is pulling rank once again.

That’s terrible news for the 49ers.

York, who was given the team president job by his parents at 28 and two years later became the team’s top decision-maker, had been making his presence known in the years prior to that quote.

After a down 2014 season, York fired Jim Harbaugh — you’ll never get me to say they “mutually agreed to part ways.” He then hired the woefully overmatched Jim Tomsula to replace Harbaugh, comparing the defensive line coach to Steve Kerr in the process. He fired him a year later, only to bring in Chip Kelly, whose “innovations” made a bad situation worse.

It wasn’t until the Niners were at rock bottom that York moved to the side. His hail mary heave to land Kyle Shanahan—handing a first-time head coach not only a six-year contract (two years longer than the standard) but also full personnel control, a la Bill Belichick—connected. Shanahan’s hire relegated York to the periphery—he spent his time dabbling in politics and buying soccer teams—and the Niners were unquestionably better for it.

Within three years, San Francisco was playing in the Super Bowl. Four years and three NFC Championship Games later, they were back.

But after a six-win 2024, York is seemingly up to his old tricks and making his presence known again.

And if that proves to be anything more than bluster, it’s a harbinger of more losses to come.

There really is a simple rubric: the more involved York is on the football side of the team’s business, the worse the team becomes.



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