Is the 49ers’ Super Bowl window shut?

It’s about time we went back to the mailbag.

In fact, let’s make this a regular occurrence.

If you want a question answered, hit me up via email [dkurtenbach@bayareanewsgroup.com], text [510-479-0932], or whatever the worst people in the world call Twitter these days [@dieter].

Is the 2024 season likely to be the last realistic chance the 49ers have of winning a Super Bowl before they have to deal with salary cap issues? – @giants_niners

» The NFL salary cap is fake, and it will continue to rise at an absurd level for years to come, just like it dramatically rose this season. That’s good news for the Niners — I predict the league will have a $300 million cap well before the next decade.

That said, the Niners’ Super Bowl window has at least two years remaining.

That’s how long Brock Purdy will make less than one-half of one percent of the salary cap. If the 49ers cannot put a championship team around a quality quarterback making that little, then I have a very hard time believing they can win a championship once Purdy is paid.

And while there’s a long time between now and that Purdy contract—a million things could happen—I wouldn’t bet on him taking a hometown discount.

If Purdy really is the second coming of Kirk Cousins, as Kyle Shanahan believes, then the Niners have every reason to be afraid of the hard-ball negotiations that will come their way.

You could do a lot better than Cousins on the field, and you could do a lot worse, too.

But no one secures the bag like Cousins. That’s a great model for Purdy and a possible nightmare for the Niners.

As for the 2024 Niners, the window doesn’t seem as open as it once was.

The salary cap inflation has led to an inflation of free-agent player salaries. Funny how that works. So, while the Niners might have money to spend and plenty of places they need to bolster, every other team has cash to burn, too. That’s why guards are getting $20 million a year and prospect defensive ends can land $50 million contracts.

So, in a way, the salary cap crunch is already here.

We saw that with the Leonard Floyd signing, which I can’t endorse. Now, I have no problem with a middle-class pass rusher — that’s about all the Niners can afford, given the number of holes they need to fill (this team doesn’t have anyone to start next to Javon Hargrave in the middle of the defensive line) — but Floyd was aggressively mediocre with Buffalo last season. He had one sack in his last eight games and was a no-show against the Chiefs in the playoffs. And I thought I was taking crazy pills reading all the praise for his run defense. (It’s fine, at best.)

Perhaps playing opposite Nick Bosa changes things, but as things stand on Monday night, the Niners will rely on rookies to play big roles on defense, which a first-time coordinator now leads. That’s a big red flag to me.

Luckily, they have an excellent quarterback.

How realistic is it that Klay takes a pay cut to stay with the Warriors, and what can they do to bolster their team to win another championship? – @zstrong12

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