Commanders Miss Out After WR Reunites With 49ers
The Washington Commanders explored adding a veteran wide receiver who many insiders believed could slot right into their rotation. Instead, Kendrick Bourne went in another direction and chose to reunite with one of the NFC’s top contenders.
According to ESPN, Bourne agreed to a one-year deal worth up to $5 million with the San Francisco 49ers. Pro Football Rumors confirmed the move, which brings him back to the team where he launched his NFL career under Kyle Shanahan in his first season as head coach. As Hogs Haven noted, the veteran also visited Ashburn during his free-agent tour but left without a contract.
Bourne Was Long Viewed as a Fit
Bourne, 30, became available when the New England Patriots granted his release at the end of training camp. His resume includes nearly 300 career receptions for more than 3,700 yards and 22 touchdowns, production that stood out in a thin free-agent market. NFL insider Lake Lewis noted even before Bourne’s release that Washington would be a logical landing spot, citing his ability to line up across multiple receiver spots and his locker-room leadership.
The connection made sense when Bourne arrived in Ashburn, particularly because he was in the middle of one of his best statistical stretches before tearing his ACL midway through the 2023 season. In just eight games that year, he recorded 37 catches for 406 yards and four touchdowns. His recovery limited him in 2024, but the flashes remained enough to draw interest from multiple suitors.
Commanders Confident in Current WR Room
For Washington, missing out on Bourne reflects confidence in the group they’ve assembled. Terry McLaurin remains the centerpiece of the passing attack, while Deebo Samuel Sr. arrived in one of the offseason’s biggest trades to give rookie quarterback Jayden Daniels a versatile playmaker.
The supporting cast includes Noah Brown, who has flashed big-play ability but has also dealt with knee issues that limited him late in the preseason and into Week 1. Behind him, rookie Luke McCaffrey and second-year wideout Jaylin Lane round out the rotation in Kliff Kingsbury’s offense.
That context is why Bourne’s visit felt significant. His experience would have provided insurance if Brown’s availability remained inconsistent. Instead, the front office bet on its existing depth chart, trusting Kingsbury’s scheme to elevate the group around Daniels.
49ers Gain Reliable Depth, Washington Moves Forward
Bourne’s decision makes plenty of sense for San Francisco. The 49ers entered Week 2 with injury concerns at multiple skill positions, including Jauan Jennings and George Kittle. Adding a veteran who already knows Shanahan’s system provides immediate depth behind Brandon Aiyuk and Samuel. If Bourne regains his pre-injury form, the signing could be one of the offseason’s best low-risk additions.
For the Commanders, the outcome is more of a missed opportunity than a setback. Washington showed in its Week 1 victory that it can move the ball effectively when Kingsbury’s offense clicks. Daniels spread the ball across the field, and Samuel’s presence is already bearing fruit.
Bourne might have been a valuable addition, particularly with Brown working through injuries, but Washington’s ability to generate yards and points suggests the unit may be in stronger shape than some anticipated.
Packers’ Colby Wooden Fires Back at Critics After Dominant Run Defense Performance

Micah Parsons, a contrarian opinion had taken hold, too–the Packers defense would get chewed up in the running game.Three days before the Packers were to play the Detroit Lions in their 2025 opener, defensive lineman Colby Wooden got a phone call. It was his father. While much attention had been foisted on the Packers in recent days after the stunning trade for pass-rusher
The Packers had to trade away stalwart defensive lineman Kenny Clark to acquire Parsons, and the feeling was, that would be costly in the team’s efforts to handle the run. Detroit, after all, rushed for 2,488 yards last season, sixth in the NFL. Without Clark, surely the Packers would be in trouble.
Wooden, who is helping replace Clark in the middle, took the call from his dad, who said, “Do me a favor, shut ‘em up.”
And he, along with the entire Packers defensive front, did just that, holding the Lions to 46 yards on 22 carries, their lowest rushing output since Week 6 in 2023. Wooden, Devonte Wyatt and Karl Brooks held the line admirably in the middle all day for the Packers.
Colby Wooden: ‘I Took That Personal’
Wooden, for one, was insulted by the questions about the team’s inability to hold against the run.
“I for sure took that personal …” Wooden said. “So I just, did my job, went out there, stopped the run. I took it personal. Honestly, I felt like it was kinda disrespectful, like, ‘Oh, they gonna run the ball.’ So I made it my mission—we, excuse me—we made it our mission to shut them down.”
That’s not easy to do against the combo of Jahmyr Gibbs and David Montgomery, nicknamed Sonic and Knuckles.
“We know what they want to do,” Wooden said. “Last year, they wanted to run. They call them Sonic and Knuckles, or whatever. They want to run them 30 times. So we know they want to run that ball. We’ve got to do our job to stop the run so they can get back and let (Parsons) go get them.”
Packers Filling Roles With Micah Parsons on Board
Wooden said the effect of having Parsons on the field was obvious, and it works both ways. When offenses focus on corralling Parsons, the other Packers must step up.
“Everybody’s got a job to do, everybody got a role,” Wooden said. “Everybody’s got to buy into their role. We know what attention and what he comes with. And we know we got to stop that run, go help him out, if he is getting is getting chipped, doubled or whatever, now it’s somebody else’s turn to win their one-on-one.”
Packers Have Commanders Next
And despite the obviously encouraging results, Wooden is not getting ahead of himself. The Commanders will be next on the docket, with fearsome young quarterback Jayden Daniels on hand.
“It’s just one week,” Wooden said. “It’s Week 1. It’s great to start off with a win, dominate. But we’ve got to keep it going. We got a good team coming here on Thursday, we know we got to be ready to stop that run and contain that quarterback. So we just gotta keep going, keep getting better, keep jelling.”