When the 49ers walked into Hulk Hogan’s memorial service, no one knew they were coming. There were no announcements, no media coverage, and not a single piece of NFL branding in sight. Just suits. Just silence. Just respect.
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Among them stood Brock Purdy — the young quarterback from Iowa now carrying the weight of the Bay Area’s football future. He moved with quiet reverence, approaching a framed photo of Hulk Hogan surrounded by white lilies. But what he did next turned a solemn farewell into a moment that left the entire room breathless.
Purdy reached into his coat pocket and pulled out a single folded sheet of paper. Without a word, he placed it beneath the frame of Hogan’s portrait. No one paid much attention—until someone nearby leaned down to look.

Seconds later, they froze.
The note wasn’t from Brock.
It was from Hulk Hogan.
Signed. Addressed. And dated.
But here’s the part that stopped everyone cold — the letter was written to “a young quarterback from California” and dated years before Brock Purdy ever entered the league.
“Did he know?” one mourner whispered.
George Kittle was seen later shaking his head in disbelief, repeating a single word under his breath: “Unreal.”
Was it a strange coincidence? A forgotten memento rediscovered at the perfect moment? Or something else entirely?

The letter’s contents haven’t been publicly released, but according to whispers inside the chapel, it wasn’t just motivational fluff. It was personal. Prophetic. Almost eerie.
Even in death, Hogan’s larger-than-life persona continues to cast a shadow across arenas far from the wrestling ring. And for one quiet moment, a football team from the West Coast became part of something that felt bigger than the game.