Incumbent 49ers quarterback Alex Smith remains unsigned, but it appears Tim Tebow isn’t going to be his replacement.

The 49ers had been mentioned as a possible trade partner for Tebow, but 49ers owner Jed York squashed those rumors outside team headquarters Tuesday, telling reporters “Tebow’s not coming here.”

Last week, Peyton Manning emerged as a 49ers candidate. Now that Manning officially signed a five-year, $96 million deal with the Denver Broncos on Tuesday, even Tebow’s name had been entering the 49ers’ picture, if purely by speculation.

Asked to comment on the 49ers’ quarterback situation as he left the facility Tuesday, 49ers general manager Trent Baalke said “Later. I’ve got to get to a meeting. I’m in a hurry.”

Tebow became a cultural phenomenon last season as he led the Broncos’ captivating charge into the AFC playoffs and produced a 29-23 win over the Pittsburgh Steelers. Tebow was a first-round draft pick in 2010, and “Tebow-mania” drew extra attention through his outgoing religious faith and unorthodox quarterbacking style.

The Jacksonville Jaguars and Green Bay Packers also were named as potential suitors by Schefter. The Miami Dolphins and New England Patriots could also be interested. The league’s tampering rules preclude teams from openly commenting about players under contract with other teams.

Outside the 49ers facility Monday, York reiterated last week’s stance that the 49ers have a standing offer to Smith and it is up to him whether to accept it.

“We have a contract on the table and it’s up to him,” York said. “We’d like for him to be here and we’ll see where it goes.”

The only other quarterbacks on the 49ers’ roster were two rookies from last season: Colin Kaepernick, a second-round draft pick out of Nevada, and Scott Tolzien, who the San Diego Chargers cut after the exhibition season.

Then again, the 49ers and other teams might not be looking at Tebow as a quarterback but rather as a multi-dimensional offensive threat, perhaps at tight end.

Smith, in his playoff debut, keyed a 36-32, come-from-behind win over the New Orleans Saints for the 49ers’ first playoff win in nine years. Smith completed 24-of-42 passes for 299 yards and three touchdowns in that win. In a 23-20 loss to the Giants in the NFC final, he was 12-of-26 for 196 yards with two touchdown passes.

The victory over the Saints was the 49ers’ sixth last season via a fourth-quarter comeback, including four on the road and a regular-season home triumph over the eventual Super Bowl champion New York Giants.

Smith threw 17 touchdown passes in starting every regular season game with only five interceptions in 445 regular-season attempts. He lost only two fumbles all season, and he had no interceptions since Thanksgiving, including 68 passes in the two playoffs games.

Overall, Smith threw for a career-high 3,144 yards, completed 61.4 percent of his passes and recorded 17 touchdown passes. However, he did get sacked a league-high 44 times, and the 49ers ranked 29th in passing yards per game.

Last season’s 13-3, NFC West-winning campaign lifted Smith’s record as a starter to 32-34.