49ers’ Undrafted Icon Expresses Desire to Return: "I’m Not Done Writing My Story in San Francisco"
Santa Clara, California – Just one day after being waived by the Detroit Lions to make room for cornerback Arthur Maulet, Ross Dwelley — the tight end who spent six seasons with the San Francisco 49ers — has suddenly become the center of attention. As he moves through the 24–48 hour waiver window, Dwelley made it clear that his heart still belongs to the place where his NFL journey began.
At age 30, and known primarily for his blocking and special teams work, Dwelley isn’t the type of headline free agent that dominates transaction headlines. His 2025 season with the Lions included 11 games played, only 2 catches for 7 yards, and a role focused almost entirely on supporting the run game. Yet despite Detroit’s own injury crisis at tight end, roster needs on defense forced his release.

Still, within the 49ers Faithful, Ross Dwelley is far more than a depth player. He is the undrafted tight end who appeared in 84 games for San Francisco — the most by any undrafted TE in franchise history. Surviving long enough to reach 112 NFL games is almost unheard of for a UDFA, making Dwelley one of the league’s most durable and enduring underdog stories.
When asked about the possibility of returning to San Francisco, Dwelley didn’t hide his emotions. He delivered a line that immediately spread through 49ers social media:
“I grew up as a player in that building — from the meeting rooms to every yard I fought for on the field. If I get a chance to go back, I want to give everything I have left and finish the story I never considered ending.”
With the 49ers dealing with depth concerns at tight end following several roster shifts, Dwelley’s potential return isn’t just sentimental — it’s practical. His blocking ability, which once helped him step in for George Kittle during the 2020 season and support Christian McCaffrey’s breakout in 2023, makes him a rare “low-cost, high-value” option. His résumé — 112 career games, a 245-yard season in 2020, and a 52-yard touchdown in 2022 — proves he can contribute when called upon.
Beyond stats, Dwelley brings something few depth tight ends offer: deep familiarity with Kyle Shanahan’s offense, versatility across receiving, blocking, and special teams, and the ability to plug in seamlessly during injury stretches. As the 49ers push toward the postseason, a reliable, steady veteran like Dwelley could help stabilize key moments when depth is tested.
Many analysts believe that if he clears waivers, a reunion with San Francisco’s practice squad is a realistic possibility. And given what he’s meant to the team — from the run to Super Bowl LIV to years of quietly essential contributions — such a reunion could be meaningful for both sides.
While the league waits for the waiver wire to settle, the bigger story isn’t simply where Ross Dwelley will land. It’s the message he delivered: he wants to finish what he started in San Francisco — the place where an undrafted unknown became one of the most enduring tight ends in 49ers history.












