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Is this the 49ers' best chance at winning a Super Bowl?
San Francisco 49ers linebacker Fred Warner, quarterback Brock Purdy, offensive tackle Trent Williams, wide receiver Deebo Samuel, running back Christian McCaffrey, tight end George Kittle celebrate after winning the NFC championship. Kyle Terada-USA TODAY Sports

Is this the 49ers' best chance at winning a Super Bowl?

The San Francisco 49ers have been one of the NFL's best franchises in the Kyle Shanahan era, but they are still one big step away from the top of the mountain -- winning an actual Super Bowl championship. 

They will have another opportunity to reach that peak a week from Sunday when they play the Kansas City Chiefs in Las Vegas, and they may not get a better opportunity to win it all than the one they have in front of them.

If it does not happen this season, it might be fair to wonder if it will happen for this core group of players and this coaching staff.

Since the start of the 2019 season, the 49ers have been one of the league's model franchises in terms of success, compiling a 54-29 regular season record and reaching the NFC Championship Game in four of the past five seasons. That includes what is now two trips to the Super Bowl. 

As successful as they have been, the NFL is designed for teams to rise and fall and go through peaks and valleys. Teams don't tend to stay down for long, and they don't tend to stay on top forever. The salary cap, free agency and the league's quest for parity make championship windows very brief. Teams like the Tom Brady New England Patriots, and even the Patrick Mahomes Chiefs, are the exception, not the rule. 

Just because you are on top for now is no guarantee you will stay there or get back the next season.

The 49ers need to acknowledge that as they go into this year's game. 

Especially since almost everything has been aligned in their favor to put them in what might be the best possible position.

Along with having one of the league's deepest rosters on both sides of the ball, almost every variable has fallen into place for them. Their two biggest competitors in the NFC -- Philadelphia and Dallas -- were eliminated before they had to play them, resulting in the 49ers playing two younger, inexperienced teams (Green Bay and Detroit) that made big mistakes in crunch time.

They are also catching the Chiefs in a season where they are not quite as dynamic offensively as they have been in years past. The defense is great, and they still have Mahomes, but this Chiefs team has looked far more beatable than recent variations of the roster. 

The 49ers also have to accept the reality that their own roster may never be as good as it is right now. In the coming years, they are going to have to deal with core players getting another year older (Trent Williams, George Kittle, Christian McCaffrey, Nick Bosa), make big decisions on who they can re-sign and who they can not under the salary cap (Brandon Aiyuk?), while also dealing with a new contract for quarterback Brock Purdy. 

Right now they are getting strong quarterback play for the cost of a seventh-round draft pick. That gives a team massive salary cap flexibility in building out the rest of its roster. In another year or two Purdy could go from counting $1M against the cap to as much as $40M or $50M against the cap. That changes the math on all of the previous factors quite a bit. 

This is their chance. It might be their best chance for quite a while.  

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