Aiyuk done in San Francisco - Commanders Emerging as the next destination ?
After almost two full years of nonstop contract drama that started in the 2024 offseason and has now bled deep into 2025, the San Francisco 49ers finally appear to have reached their breaking point with star wide receiver Brandon Aiyuk. According to multiple high-level ESPN sources, Kyle Shanahan and John Lynch are actively fielding trade calls and have internally discussed the possibility of a post-June 1 release next offseason if no long-term agreement is reached before the deadline. What once felt like posturing now looks like the beginning of the end. The red-and-gold era for Aiyuk is closing faster than anyone anticipated.

Suddenly, the Washington Commanders have vaulted to the top of the list. This isn’t random noise. General manager Adam Peters spent nearly a decade as John Lynch’s trusted lieutenant in San Francisco and was intimately involved in the 2020 draft process that brought Aiyuk to the 49ers in the first round. Peters didn’t just scout him — he helped mold him. Few, if any, front-office executives in the entire league understand Aiyuk’s route-running nuance, release package, and ball skills better than the man now running the Commanders.
The real X-factor, however, is second-year quarterback Jayden Daniels. The chemistry he built with Aiyuk at Arizona State from 2018–2019 was borderline telepathic, and multiple sources confirm the two have remained in constant contact. Daniels has reportedly been privately recruiting his college target, selling the vision of turning Washington’s already explosive offense into an absolute nightmare for defenses with Aiyuk as the true WR1 alongside Terry McLaurin.
Should this reunion actually happen, the Commanders would immediately boast the youngest, most electric QB-WR battery in football. At 26 and 25 years old respectively, Aiyuk and Daniels are both entering their athletic primes at the exact same time. Add McLaurin and emerging weapons like Ben Sinnott and you’re looking at a potential top-3 passing attack overnight. With north of $45 million in projected 2026 cap space and a treasure chest of draft capital, Washington has both the financial flexibility and the assets to make San Francisco an offer they can’t refuse.
For now it remains in the rumor mill, but every credible breadcrumb leads straight to the nation’s capital. Brandon Aiyuk could soon be catching passes from his best friend, orchestrated by the general manager who first believed in him at the NFL level. If the 49ers officially pull the plug, expect Adam Peters and the Commanders to strike quickly and decisively. A legitimate blockbuster is brewing — and it could drop any day.













