San Francisco, CA
49ers benefiting from a full offseason heading into combine
SANTA CLARA, Calif. — One day after the San Francisco 49ers’ season ended, running back Christian McCaffrey stood before a crowd of reporters and reflected on the extensive frustrations it had wrought. After missing 13 games with right knee and bilateral Achilles injuries, McCaffrey provided a succinct summary of a year that had begun with Super Bowl dreams and finished with the disappointment of a 6-11 record.
“I think we’re all pissed off in the right ways,” McCaffrey said. “And I think that’s a good place to be.”
Unlike previous letdowns sparked by postseason heartache, the anger left in the wreckage of the 2024 season has much longer to fester.
The 2023 season ended with a loss to the Kansas City Chiefs in Super Bowl LVIII on Feb. 11, 2024. From there, the 49ers had 18 days before the NFL scouting combine and 29 days before the start of free agency’s early negotiating window.
This year, however, the 49ers have had plenty of time to assess what went wrong, how they intend to fix it and to implement those plans. When the combine opens on Thursday, they will be 53 days removed from the end of the season with the early free agent window opening 64 days after their season-ending loss to Arizona.
And while the Niners would prefer the smaller windows that come with a deep postseason run, there’s value in getting a longer break to mentally and physically recover and set a course for the offseason.
“It gives you more time to figure things out,” coach Kyle Shanahan said. “It gives you time to go through the things like the cutups and stuff. You can finish most of that stuff all before the Super Bowl. And then you’re ready to go to other stuff like the draft and free agency and all that as soon as the Super Bowl ends. So just being a lot more ahead of that is real exciting.”
In one significant way, having the full offseason to work with has already been beneficial for the Niners. When Shanahan decided to fire Nick Sorensen and seek a fourth defensive coordinator in as many seasons, he quickly pointed out that such a move might not have made as much sense if the 49ers had played deep into January or February.
Shanahan knew well how the pool of qualified coordinator candidates could be limited on the heels of a longer season. In 2023, DeMeco Ryans left to take the Houston Texans head coaching job on Jan. 31. Shanahan eventually hired Steve Wilks to replace Ryans on Feb. 9.
When Shanahan decided to move on from Wilks after a Super Bowl run, that didn’t happen until Feb. 14, 2024. Sorensen was promoted in early March after Shanahan went through an extended interview process.
This time, however, Shanahan was able to make a quick decision and zero in on the coordinator he wanted: Robert Saleh. While there was interest in Saleh for multiple head coaching jobs, he was a clear target for the 49ers from the beginning. If they had again advanced to the latter stages of the playoffs, there’s a real chance he wouldn’t have been available.
Instead, the Niners hired Saleh on Jan. 24. That’s five days earlier than their final game of the 2022 season and 18 days earlier than their last contest of the 2023 season.
“It’s a little bit harder in February, which the last two were,” Shanahan said. “Just being the last team to finish last year and before that, being the second-to-last team to finish makes it a lot different.”
Of course, filling out a coaching staff with more viable candidates available isn’t the only benefit of having more offseason time. While it remains to be seen just how much it will help in 2025, it was no surprise that the 49ers were one of the most banged-up teams in the league in 2024 after playing a combined nine playoff games in the three previous years.
The toll of those seasons seemed to catch up to the Niners in 2024 when they played big chunks of the season without McCaffrey, left tackle Trent Williams (left ankle), defensive tackle Javon Hargrave (torn right triceps), receiver Brandon Aiyuk (torn right ACL), linebacker Dre Greenlaw (left Achilles/right calf), safety Talanoa Hufanga (wrist) and punter Mitch Wishnowsky (back).
Defensive end Nick Bosa, tight end George Kittle, receiver Deebo Samuel Sr., quarterback Brock Purdy, cornerbacks Charvarius Ward and Deommodore Lenoir and guard Aaron Banks also missed games with shorter-term issues.
All of it contributed to a season that, when it was over, left various players planning to take some time to rest and reflect on how quickly the league can get the better of them.
“When you have a lot of success for a couple years in a row and then you get humbled quick, it’s a good reminder of what it takes to be good in this league,” McCaffrey said. “Not that we needed a reminder, but I’m just excited for the offseason to get everybody a little bit of rest, get healthy again, and come back ready to go with a full year in front of us.”
Of course, the most important steps in this offseason still sit in front of the 49ers. They’ve revamped the coaching staff with Saleh and new special teams coordinator Brant Boyer, and they added another experienced defensive coach in Gus Bradley.
But tough roster decisions remain. In the coming weeks, they will prepare for a free agency that will see them release Hargrave with a post-June 1 designation, potentially trade or release Samuel and look to re-sign some of their own key free agents such as Greenlaw, Hufanga and Banks.
Depending on where the cap falls, the 49ers will have around $50 million in space, though some of that will be earmarked for a Purdy extension and a NFL draft class led by the No. 11 overall pick. With significant needs on the offensive and defensive lines, as well as help needed in nearly every other position group, every move will matter if the 49ers are going to return to contention in 2025.
“We can go more in depth this year,” general manager John Lynch said. “I think you always try to look for the positive in situations, and there isn’t a whole lot of positive of not being in the playoff run. You have to make it a positive because we have this time, how are we going to use it? And I think we can focus a little bit more on where we want to go, where we want to evolve in both personnel, scheme, all these things.
“And that’s what we’ll do, we’ll take advantage of the time. In a sense, it kind of energizes you to come back and have this time to really put our minds and our staff’s minds together to come out with the best, to give us the best opportunity to compete going forward.”br/]
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San Francisco, CA
Retired San Francisco firefighter dies from lung cancer after Blue Shield denies treatment claims
SAN FRANCISCO (KGO) — The retired San Francisco firefighter at the center of a bitter insurance fight has lost his battle against cancer.
Ken Jones passed away Saturday, 14 months after being diagnosed with stage four lung cancer.
PREVIOUS REPORT: City asked to intervene after SF firefighter’s stage 4 lung cancer treatment denied by Blue Shield
We first told you about Jones in January — when the 17-year veteran and supporters asked the City Commission for help.
The Fire Department’s insurance carrier, Blue Shield, denied coverage for some of his recommended treatments.
Ken Jones was 70 years old.
SF firefighters rally for retiree denied cancer treatment by Blue Shield as more come forward
“After we got some publicity, thank you, a Blue Shield physician reached out to Ken’s physician, and they worked out a different plan that Blue Shield would cover. It’s still an incomplete plan,” said Helen Horvath, Jones’ wife when ABC7 Eyewitness News spoke to her in January, 2026.
Since then, Jones’ story has led to an investigation into other cases, with the city’s mayor vowing to support firefighters.
According to San Francisco’s Health Service Board, about 5,000 city employees and retirees are insured by Blue Shield. Now, city leaders are asking anyone who has been denied cancer treatment to speak up.
Tony Stefani with the Cancer Prevention Foundation said firefighters with a cancer diagnosis have a 14% higher chance of dying than other cancer patients in the general population.
“Current statistics tell us that 65% of the men and women in our profession are going to contract some form of cancer in their lifetime. Some of them will be fatal,” Stefani said.
In a Statement Blue Shield said, in part: “For Medicare members, health plans must follow medical policy established by the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS).”
Copyright © 2026 KGO-TV. All Rights Reserved.
San Francisco, CA
What’s Worth More Than Cash in San Francisco Real Estate? Anthropic Stock
Few things are more valuable in the Bay Area than real estate. In San Francisco, the median house price is now over $2 million. Last month, at least seven houses in the city sold for $1 million over the asking price, and buyers regularly offer to pay in cash or waive contingencies to stay competitive. Yet there is one thing that remains even more valuable than a house, and possibly more valuable than money itself: stock in Anthropic or OpenAI.
Last week, 160 Noe Street, an Edwardian home in San Francisco’s desirable Duboce Triangle neighborhood, was listed for sale at $2.9 million—or the equivalent amount in Anthropic or OpenAI shares, as based on those companies’ current valuations. Rachel Swann, the listing agent, says she was inspired to set these unusual terms after meeting several Anthropic employees at an open house for a different property. “These people have a lot of paper wealth, but they don’t always have the liquidity to do things they want,” Swann says. Some of these employees were expecting to come into as much as $50 million from their Anthropic shares, and wondered if they could use that as leverage to buy a house, according to Swann. “This kept coming up over and over again.”
Swann’s listing is unconventional, but not singular. In April, an investment banker named Storm Duncan offered to exchange his Mill Valley home and an adjacent parcel of land for Anthropic shares. And in May, Vijay Chattha, who owns an agency that does PR for tech companies, listed his Healdsburg home for $2.5 million, or $2 million in Anthropic stock. “I want to sell my house, and I want to invest in Anthropic,” Chattha says. “Why not combine the two?
Chattha’s house—a three bed, three bath with a pool and a bocce court in a part of Sonoma County that abuts some of the region’s most famous wineries—also comes with coveted short-term rental status, allowing the owner to list it on platforms like Airbnb. Only a handful of properties in Healdsburg come with that status, and only about a dozen come up for sale in a given year.
Chattha is offering a $500,000 discount to Anthropic employees because he believes the value of Anthropic shares will grow faster than any other investment, and his vacation home in wine country is the best bargaining chip he has to try to access them. “If you look at Anthropic’s growth last year, it’s insane,” he says, noting the $380 billion valuation the company claimed in February. “Now they’re raising at $965 billion. That’s three X in like three months.” He added that he was open to exchanging the house for shares in Anthropic, but not OpenAI, because he prefers using Anthropic’s products.
The real estate listings come at a time when investors are salivating at the record-high valuations of Anthropic and OpenAI, and even those considered wealthy by Bay Area standards are feeling FOMO about the affluence that could come from these companies’ debuts on the stock market. (On Monday, Anthropic submitted paperwork for its initial public offering; OpenAI is also reportedly preparing to file in the coming months.) Despite the unprecedented valuations of these companies, many people believe their stock prices will only go up, and that anyone who gets a piece now could win the jackpot.
People are clamoring to buy equity in OpenAI and Anthropic on the secondary market, leading to a frenzy of transactions that may or may not be legitimate. As a result, Anthropic updated its policy around “unauthorized Anthropic stock sales” this spring, which notes that “if someone purports to sell Anthropic shares without proper board approval, that transaction is invalid.” A spokesperson for Anthropic pointed back to this policy when asked about the possibility of exchanging company shares for real estate.
San Francisco, CA
Live Updates: San Francisco Primary Election 2026
Welcome to our running tally of Election Night results. Or, as this is California, well beyond tonight, as results continue to trickle in.
The first batch of results should arrive at 8:45 p.m., with three more to follow tonight. The Department of Elections has the breakdown.
San Francisco is voting in three special elections, for District 2 and District 4 supervisors and for a Board of Education member. Both supervisor races are referendums on housing, especially District 2, while the main backdrop of the D4 race is all the hot feelings around the fate of the Sunset Dunes Park (nee Great Highway).
The winners of all three special races will have to compete again in November for their seats.
Keeping it local, SF is also voting on four ballot measures. Prop A is for a bond to pay for an emergency water-system. B is for term limits. C and D are dueling measures related to the “overpaid CEO” tax. (Links go to our reporting on each race or issue; or click here for our Election 2026 page.)
Vote local, think national: Which two candidates will advance to the November election to replace Nancy Pelosi?
Statewide races include the primaries for governor, education superintendent, lieutenant governor, and much more.
Polls close soon. If you haven’t voted yet, find your polling station here.
Tuesday, June 2, 5:40 p.m.
Two and a half hours until our polls close. Before we go down the local rabbit hole, a reminder that other states have primary action today: New Jersey, Iowa, New Mexico, South Dakota, and Montana.
Why does it take so long to get results in California? CalMatters has you covered on that story. We shouldn’t expect a call tonight on the governor’s race.
The last big election was November 5, 2024. (Remember?) Ten days later, there were still races to call in San Francisco.
So if you’re waiting for the pundits (and maybe even us) to tell you What It All Means, you might have to wait a while.
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