San Francisco, CA
San Francisco 49ers 2025 schedule: Will a last-place schedule help produce a bounce back?
The NFL will release the 2025 schedules for all 32 teams at 8 p.m. (ET) Wednesday. Here is what we know about the San Francisco 49ers’ schedule so far.
The 49ers will play each team from the NFC South and AFC South, as well as the 2024 fourth-place teams from the NFC North, NFC East and AFC North. San Francisco also will see its NFC West division rivals twice, once on the road and once at Levi’s Stadium, as part of its 17-game schedule.
Here is the lineup of home and road opponents, listed alphabetically.
| Home | Road |
|---|---|
|
Arizona Cardinals |
Arizona Cardinals |
|
Atlanta Falcons |
Cleveland Browns |
|
Carolina Panthers |
Houston Texans |
|
Chicago Bears |
Indianapolis Colts |
|
Jacksonville Jaguars |
Los Angeles Rams |
|
Los Angeles Rams |
New Orleans Saints |
|
Seattle Seahawks |
New York Giants |
|
Tennessee Titans |
Seattle Seahawks |
|
Tampa Bay Buccaneers |
The 49ers went 6-11 in 2024 as injuries and a Super Bowl hangover again got the best of them. San Francisco has reached the Super Bowl twice in Kyle Shanahan’s eight seasons, and both times followed up that appearance with a last-place finish (the 49ers went 6-10 in 2020 after losing quarterback Jimmy Garoppolo and defensive end Nick Bosa to early-season injuries).
After a roster reset this offseason ahead of Brock Purdy’s anticipated massive contract extension, the 49ers, with the benefit of playing a last-place schedule, will need to show they can bounce back and re-establish themselves as one of the NFC’s contenders.
Come back Wednesday night for the 49ers’ week-to-week schedule, plus season analysis and predictions.
(Photo of Brock Purdy: Ezra Shaw / Getty Images)
San Francisco, CA
People We Meet: Ranjit Brar’s ‘horrible’ road led him back to San Francisco
“Imagine this, right? There’s a fork in the road where down one road is like — how would I explain this,” Ranjit Brar muses for a moment. “Dead trees. You see rocks, or a road that’s potholes. It’s just horrible.”
The other road in the scenario looks beautiful, Brar says, but seemed “so far-fetched” that for years, he didn’t choose it.
Instead, he found himself selling drugs, stealing cars, committing identity theft, anything — just to buy more heroin or pay for a place to sleep at night. He’d catch charges, post bail, skip town to the next county.
“It’s easier to stay in something that feels more secure, even though it’s a miserable life,” Brar says. Today, he sits at a conference table, with his work ID and key fob hanging off a lanyard around his neck, his goatee neatly trimmed. A tattoo on his throat peeps over the top of his T-shirt.
One fork in the road came 12 years ago, when Brar found himself 32 years old and addicted to painkillers after a shooting at his home in Florida left him severely injured. He told a Daytona Beach news outlet in an interview at the time about his pain and the various medications he was taking to ease it.
Eventually, his doctors cut him off the pills, and he found his way to heroin. Before he knew it, his family was in shambles.
Feeling “empty inside,” Brar left behind his children and relationship and hit the road back to the Bay Area. “San Francisco, it’s the best place if you want to change your life around,” Brar says. “And it’s the worst place if you want to destroy your life.”
Brar had spent his early years here, and his adoptive father still lived in the area.
“I came back to California … to reconcile [with] my father, try to see if I could salvage the relationship,” Brar says. “Any connection to family at this point, that’s what I wanted.”
When that family connection fell through, Brar continued to find comfort in drugs. As he bounced around the Bay Area, committing petty crime, all roads seemed to lead back to San Francisco, his home base and the city where he was born.
“I’d come here, Tenderloins. I knew how to survive in the streets, how to sell drugs, the homies are here,” Brar says. “For about ten years, I struggled with trying to get clean. And I couldn’t do it on myself.”
Brar’s “rock-bottom,” he says, was the day he was arrested and realized he had no one to reach out to.
The loneliness was jarring. It reminded him of trying to connect with his father, or being shipped off to boarding school in India as a child — an experience he has now learned to see differently.
“Even though it was a lonely time in my life, everything is something to learn from,” he says. He learned Hindi and Punjabi, and got to travel and see the Himalayas with his grandmother.
In a similar way, Brar today finds a different kind of solace in the Tenderloin.
He attended rehab in custody and after he was released, and began volunteering with St. Anthony’s. Brar now works there as a full time volunteer coordinator. He has an apartment nearby and another he shares with his girlfriend.
As we walk out the door, we run into one of his best friends, with whom he does everything from attending Narcotics Anonymous meetings to going on vacation together. He clarifies that this person is “not a homie, a friend.”
Brar connects with other people in the throes of addiction and lets them call him if they need support.
And beyond the neighborhood, his children are grown up and successful, one surfing in Australia, another working as an electrician in Florida, and a third attending college in New York.
Brar, though, still finds his comfort in San Francisco. Reflecting, he says that rehabilitating in the same place where he used drugs has only made his recovery stronger. “It keeps me grounded.”
San Francisco, CA
Fielder may resign from Board of Supervisors, possibly over illegal leak
San Francisco, CA
Trump floats sending federal agents to San Francisco to tackle crime
President Donald Trump was once again floating the idea of sending federal agents to San Francisco to tackle crime.
It happened during a cabinet meeting on Thursday. The president praised Mayor Daniel Lurie’s efforts to lower crime but said he can do it more effectively.
“San Francisco, I know, they have a mayor who’s trying very hard. He’s a Democrat, but he’s trying very hard, but we can do it much more effectively, because he can’t do what we do. He can’t take people out from the city and bring them to back to the country, from where they came, where they were in prisons,” Trump said.
“He’s trying. He’s doing okay, but we could do much better. We could make it a lot safer than it is. San Francisco, a great city, was a great city, could quickly become a great city again. But, you know, they’re going very slowly,” he continued.
The president implied that the mayor needs federal help to battle crime, saying immigrants are responsible for the lawlessness. However, according to a 2025 study by researches at UCLA and Northwestern, arresting and deporting undocumented immigrants was not associated with reduced crime rates.
Gabriel Medina, executive director of La Raza Community Resource Center In San Francisco agrees.
“I think we need to make sure that our city does not also try to play this game of making up ideas about always associating crime with immigrants, when immigrants commit less crime, so that’s really bad,” Medina said.
In response to the president comments, the mayor released a statement that reads: “In San Francisco, crime is down 30%, encampments are at record lows, and our city is on the rise. Public safety is my number one priority, and we are going to stay laser focused on keeping our streets safe and clean.”
This isn’t the first time President Trump has mused with the idea of sending federal agents to the Bay Area; last October, agents were staged at a military base in Alameda, but Trump called off the plan after talking with Lurie and Bay Area tech leaders.
“We cannot normalize what this president is saying from San Francisco, that crime is associated with immigration. We need to stop conflating that,” Medina said.
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