Brock Purdy #13 of the San Francisco 49ers leaves the field after the game against the Arizona Cardinals at State Farm Stadium on Nov. 16, 2025 in Glendale, Arizona. (Photo by Norm Hall/Getty Images)

A mandate from the football gods usually arrives written in complex hieroglyphics — tiebreakers involving strength of victory, common opponents, and the phases of the moon.
But for the San Francisco 49ers, the message couldn’t be simpler.
Win, and you’re in.
That’s it. That’s the math. If the Niners manage to win a single game over the final four games of the season, they’ll have 10 wins total and a ticket to the dance.
And considering they come off the bye week to face the Tennessee Titans — a franchise currently serving as the NFL’s designated “get right” game for struggling offenses — that playoff berth feels like a formality.
The bar is so low in San Francisco right now that the team might trip over it, sure.
But I don’t expect that to happen, and you shouldn’t either.
After months of scrapping — just surviving — the Niners are going to achieve their goal with weeks remaining on the schedule.
But here is where the absurdity of this NFL season truly kicks in; here is where we stop looking at the floor and start staring at the ceiling.
Because if the Niners can effectively clinch a spot by dinner time on December 14, why on earth would they stop there?
Why aim for survival when you can aim for supremacy?
After three months of catastrophic injuries, identity crises, and the kind of week-to-week roster shuffling that usually ages a fan base in dog years, the 49ers are no longer just fighting for oxygen. They are staring down a legitimate, realistic path to the No. 1 overall seed in the NFC.
Yes, seriously. Stop laughing.
The road to the Super Bowl in Santa Clara might go through… Santa Clara.
Now, achieving this requires the Niners to treat the next month not as the end of the regular season, but as the playoffs starting early. It won’t be easy, because nothing in this league is easy — not even a game with the Titans.
But look around the NFC. Do you see a juggernaut? Do you see a dragon that cannot be slain?
Or do you see a collection of flawed rosters holding on for dear life?
Why can’t the 49ers — who have shown incredible survival skills for months — be that conference’s regular-season champion?
San Francisco has as good a shot as anyone to grab that top seed, the playoff bye week, and the three home games that could follow.
And considering Kyle Shanahan’s 49ers have required the NFC’s top seed to reach the Super Bowl in their previous two trips, the Niners should do everything in their power to take full advantage of this shocking possibility.
Let’s look at the slate. It’s a four-course meal that I’d argue is surprisingly digestible: The Titans, at Indianapolis, Chicago, Seattle.
If they run the table—win all four—they are probably the top seed.
I know, I know. “Just win four straight games, the last three being playoff squads,” is easier said than done.
But let’s be honest about the opposition: The Titans are going to pick No. 1 overall again. The Colts on Monday Night Football (Dec. 22) is arguably the trickiest hurdle, but depending on which version of Indianapolis shows up, the Niners could be favored on the road — these are not the same Colts as we saw earlier in the season.
Then you get the Bears and Seahawks at home to close out the year.
If you can’t get up for that, you don’t deserve the bye. And frankly, I’d expect the Niners to be favored in both of those final two games.
Let’s pause on that Week 18 game against Seattle.
The final game of the season. The NFC West is on the line. The No. 1 seed is hanging in the balance. Where have we heard this before? Time is a flat circle, folks.
So, the Niners can win out. No guarantees, but even I, cynic No. 1, am not going to tell you that can’t be done.
That is within their control. Here is the part that isn’t:
The Packers need to lose again. The Eagles need to lose again. The Seahawks need to beat the Rams on December 18.
Is that outlandish? Have you watched the Philadelphia Eagles lately? They are the bad-vibe kings of the NFL, a team that seems to dislike playing good football almost as much as they dislike each other. Would you rather bet on them running the table or on them imploding in a cloud of sideline shouting matches?
And the Bears? They are the current No. 1 seed, sure. They’ve never been in a situation like this before. Let’s see how that holds up when the pressure mounts. They have two games left with the Packers and that one with the Niners. Week 13 might be their high-water mark.
And the Niners have already beaten the Seahawks once this season, and while I have the utmost respect for the Seattle defense and some of their offensive stars, in a big game, you find me the person who would take Sam Darnold over Brock Purdy.
Seriously, find that person, and I’ll show you where they stood in the Darnold family reunion photo.
The reality is that the NFL conversation has been slow to adjust to the Niners’ status. The national narrative is still stuck on “the 49ers are injured and struggling.” The last time they thought of the Niners, San Francisco was leading at halftime against the Panthers despite Purdy’s three-interception half. (No one in the eastern time zone actually watches the second half of Monday Night Football.)
These talking heads aren’t looking at the regionally broadcast games or the standings, and they certainly aren’t looking at the trend lines.
But as we enter a fundamentally different stage of the football season, the Niners arrow is pointing up.
The time for style points is over; it’s all about survival from this point onwards for any team in the playoff hunt.
And who has more practice at that kind of football than the Niners, who have been surviving since September?
The Niners just spent three months walking through hell to get to this moment. Now they’re ready to hand out the maps.
Originally published at Dieter Kurtenbach