DL / DE

Fred Dean

Class of 2008

All-Pro selections

2

Pro Bowls

4

Seasons

11

"I want to live with myself and soul/I want to be able for myself to know/I want to stand and see the sun/And not hate myself for the things I’ve done/I want to be able as days go by/To always look myself straight in the eye/And feel that I never have to lie/To myself.”

Enshrinement Speech

Career Highlights

Fred Dean excelled as an All-Southland Conference linebacker during his collegiate football career at Louisiana Tech. The San Diego Chargers selected him in the second round, 33rd player overall, of the 1975 NFL Draft.  Dean was moved immediately to the defensive line where he starred during his entire NFL career, first with the Chargers (1975-1981) and later with the San Francisco 49ers (1981-1985).

Dean’s quickness, speed, and strength made him one of the league’s most feared pass rushers during his 141-game career.  Although the sack did not become an official NFL statistic until 1982, if numbers tallied by the teams were included with his official sack count, Dean’s career sack total would stand near 100. 

His role as an impact player became apparent very early in his career.  As a rookie for the Chargers in 1975, Dean recorded seven sacks, 93 tackles (63 solo, 30 assists), and four fumble recoveries.  With Dean doing his part on defense and combined with the Chargers’ high-flying offense, the team became a strong playoff contender.  In 1978, he recorded 15.5 sacks as the Chargers posted a winning record.  He followed that season by adding nine sacks in 1979 and 10.5 in 1980 as San Diego claimed two straight AFC Western Division championships.

Early in the 1981 season, Dean was shipped to the San Francisco 49ers were he continued to demonstrate his extraordinary talent.  Dean contributed 12 sacks in 11 games for the 49ers en route to the team’s first Super Bowl victory.

Dean’s finest year came two seasons later when he led the NFC with a career-high 17.5 sacks.  Included in that total was a then NFL record six sacks in one game.  He set the mark during the 49ers’ 27-0 shutout of the New Orleans Saints on November 13, 1983.

In all, Dean played on five division winners.  He played in three NFC championship games and in two of San Francisco’s Super Bowl victories (Super Bowls XVI and XIX).  Dean earned all-conference honors four times – twice with the Chargers and twice with the 49ers.   

He was also named to four Pro Bowls (1980-1982, 1984) and selected All-Pro twice (1980-1981).   
 


 

Pro Football Hall of Famer Dick Butkus passed away early Thursday at his home in California at the age of 80.'Gentle Giant' Fred Dean: 1952 - 2020

 

Pro Football Hall of Famer Fred Dean died Oct. 14, 2020 at the age of 68. 

Hall President David Baker stated after his passing, "He exemplified many of the values learned from this great game – commitment, integrity, courage – over the course of his life. Our thoughts and prayers are with Fred’s wife, Pam, and their entire family. We will forever keep his legacy alive to serve as inspiration for future generations."

Read the full tribute article and watch a video honoring Dean here.

 

Year Team
G
1975 San Diego
14
1976 San Diego
14
1977 San Diego
11
1978 San Diego
15
1979 San Diego
13
1980 San Diego
14
1981 San Diego/San Francisco
14
1982 San Francisco
9
1983 San Francisco
16
1984 San Francisco
5
1985 San Francisco
16
Career Total
141
     
Additional Career Statistics: Sacks: 28.0 (since 1982); Interceptions: 1-22, 1 TD; Fumble Recovery for TD: 1

 


Championship Games 

1980 AFC - Oakland Raiders 34, San Diego Chargers 27
Dean started at right defensive end.  He recorded nine tackles and 1.5 sacks in the game.

1981 NFC - San Francisco 49ers 28, Dallas Cowboys 27
Dean played but did not start. He recorded one tackle assist in the game.

1983 NFC - Washington Redskins 24, San Francisco 49ers 21
Dean played but did not start. He recorded two tackles and one sack in the game.

1984 NFC - San Francisco 49ers 23, Chicago Bears 0
Dean played but did not start. He recorded one tackle, two assists and one sack in the game.

Super Bowls

Super Bowl XVI - San Francisco 49ers 26, Cincinnati Bengals 21
Dean started at defensive end. He recorded one tackle and one sack in the game.

Super Bowl XIX - San Francisco 49ers 38, Miami Dolphins 16
Dean played but did not start. He recorded one tackle and one assist.

 

All-Pro: 1980 (AP, PW), 1981 (AP, PFWA, SN, PW)

All-Pro Second Team: 1981 (NEA)

All-AFC: 1979 (UPI, SN, PW), 1980 (PW)

All-NFC: 1981 (UPI, PW), 1983 (PW)

All-AFC Second Team: 1980 (UPI)

All-NFC Second Team: 1983 (UPI)

(4) - 1980, 1981, 1982, 1984

At time of his retirement following 1985 season

[1st] Most Sacks, Game - 6 (vs. New Orleans, Nov. 13, 1983)

49ers' records held by Dean
Records through the 1985 season, Dean's final season with San Francisco

[Tied for 1st*] Most Sacks, Game - 6 (vs. New Orleans, Nov. 13, 1983)

*The record this mark is tied for occurred in 1976. Sacks did not become and official stat until 1982.

NFC Statistical Championships
Sack Titles: 1983 SF

Team Statistical Championships
Sack Titles: 1981 SF, 1982 SF, 1983 SF

SF - San Francisco 49ers

1981 NFC Defensive Player of the Year (UPI)

Year Team
W
L
T
Division Finish
1975 San Diego Chargers
2
12
0
(4th)
1976 San Diego Chargers
9
8
0
(3rd)
1977 San Diego Chargers
7
7
0
(3rd)
1978 San Diego Chargers
9
7
0
(4th)
1979 San Diego Chargers
12
4
0
(1st)
1980 San Diego Chargers
11
5
0
(1st)
1981 San Francisco 49ers
13
3
0
(1st#)
1982 San Francisco 49ers
3
6
0
(11th*)
1983 San Francisco 49ers
10
6
0
(1st)
1984 San Francisco 49ers
15
1
0
(1st)
1985 San Francisco 49ers
10
6
0
(2nd)
* NFC regular season finish in strike-shortened season.
# Also played in three games with Chargers before trade to 49ers. San Diego had a 10-6-0 record and won the division.

 

 

Full Name: Frederick Rudolph Dean

Birthdate: February 24, 1952

Birthplace: Arcadia, Louisiana

High School: Ruston (LA)

Elected to Pro Football Hall of Fame: February 2, 2008

Enshrined into Pro Football Hall of Fame: August 2, 2008

Presenter: Eddie DeBartolo Jr., former San Francisco 49ers owner

Other Members of the Class of 2008: Darrell Green, Art Monk, Emmitt Thomas, Andre Tippett, Gary Zimmmerman

Pro Career: 11 seasons, 141 games

Drafted: 2nd round (33rd player overall) in 1975 by San Diego Chargers

Transactions: October 2, 1981 – Dean traded from San Diego Chargers to San Francisco 49ers for 2nd round draft pick in 1983.  Note: On April 22, 1983 – the 49ers reacquired that 2nd round draft pick in a trade that had Chargers send two 2nd round draft picks in 1983 to the 49ers in exchange for a 1st round draft pick in 1983 (Billy Ray Smith, LB, Arkansas, 5th overall). San Francisco dealt their reacquired 2nd round pick in another trade and used the newly acquired Chargers 2nd round pick in 1983 (Roger Craig, FB, Nebraska, 49th overall).

Uniform Number: 71 (San Diego); 74 (San Francisco)

 

Pro Football Hall of Fame Field at Fawcett Stadium
August 2, 2008

Video marks by Eddie DeBartolo, Jr.:
Bill Walsh came to me and we discussed the Chargers. He said Fred Dean was available and what did I think. I said the man's a great football player. And if the Chargers are willing to get rid of Fred, absolutely. He was just such a gifted athlete. And he was so quick and he had such great instincts that the sky was the limit. Fred Dean was so versatile. He could do and play anywhere where the coaches wanted him to play.

He had the absolute unbelievable ability to be just an unbelievable speed pass rusher. Actually, nobody could stop him no matter how big or how small his opponents were. He used their own leverage against them. And that's how he used to get around. He'd either super pass rush them and go around them or he would just bull rush them and use their own strength against them.

Off the field, Fred Dean was a quiet, reserved gentleman. That was Fred's mentality. He was just a great, great football player that didn't make waves. He didn't make headlines. He just played football. And he played it as good as anybody that ever lived.

I think him being elected to the Hall of Fame and justly being elected says everything. It's just a great testimony to a man that comes from a small Louisiana town and worked his way through and up to the NFL and became such a dominant figure in such a short period of time. I got a call from Fred. He asked me if I would present him and without question I said it would be my great honor.

Chris Berman (emcee):
Ladies and gentlemen, to present Fred Dean for enshrinement into the Pro Football Hall of Fame please welcome Eddie DeBartolo, Jr.

Eddie DeBartolo, Jr.: 
Thank you so much. I am honored and humbled to be with this great class today and with the other enshrines that have come back to the Hall of Fame this weekend.

While it cannot be said that Fred Dean's greatness as an NFL player began when he came to the 49ers in 1981, I can say as the owner of the team that the greatness of the 49ers began with Fred Dean's arrival in San Francisco.

The 49ers won just eight games in Bill Walsh's first two seasons as our head coach. But going into 1981, there was a fresh sense of hope. On offense our young quarterback Joe Montana had taken charge. On defense, a spectacular rookie Ronnie Lott anchored our secondary. But we had yet to get the quality wins that give a team confidence to believe that it can be a champion. And we lacked that explosive pass rusher who could blow up offenses in those critical moments that determine the outcome of games.

Enter Fred Dean. When Bill Walsh learned that the Chargers were willing to trade Fred, he came to me like a kid with his eye on the niftiest possible Christmas present. You see, Bill had something different in mind for Fred, something downright revolutionary.

He would take this every down Pro Bowl defensive end and turn him into a dynamic situational pass rusher. Nothing like this has ever been done before. ‘Wait until you see what we do with Fred tomorrow,’ Bill told me the night before Fred's first game with us. Tomorrow we were playing the dominant Dallas Cowboys at home.

The funny thing was while Bill was telling me how significant Fred would be against Dallas in that wonderful manipulative way of his he put out the word that Fred would be a nonfactor. In fact, he told John Madden, who was doing the game, that Fred wouldn't play much, if at all. Oh, did he play. He sacked Danny White three times.

And we won 45-14.

Two weeks later we played the NFC West powerhouse Rams at home. Fred sacked Pat Haden five times and we also won that game. Now, you didn't have to be a rocket scientist to figure out that something different was going on down on that field with Fred Dean in a 49er uniform. We finished the season 13 3. We beat the Cowboys in the NFC championship game.

And we went on to win our first Super Bowl. The amazing thing is Fred was this destructive force on sheer quickness, technique and pure talent. He didn't even lift weights. Fred Dean was truly the natural. You know Fred never said much. He was a quiet giant. But when the defense needed him to make a big play, we looked to Fred and never let us down. Never. No matter what the situation was.

Every player on our second Super Bowl team recognizes that he gave us the shot in the arm we needed to win that championship. Fred was the leader in the way it counted most, with his play. The National Football League has been the great love of my professional life. I was blessed to have had the magnificent good fortune to be represented by an organization of players, coaches and executives that won five Super Bowls. He we wouldn't have won five if we hadn't won the first two. I assure you we would not have won the first two if it weren't for Fred Dean.

We look back today and it comes time to put Fred Dean spectacular career in historical perspective. First off, he was a pioneer. He was the forefather of the great hybrid jet pass rushers. He led the way for players like Derrick Thomas, our own Charles Haley, and the great Andre Tippett, who is being inducted today with Fred. Also, this era's Dwight Freeney and Jason Taylor.

Most importantly, Fred now joins my very dear friend Reggie White and Deacon Jones and Lawrence Taylor on that Mount Rushmore of pass rushers who have earned immortality on this, our sports, sacred ground.

And so, ladies and gentlemen, it is my great honor which I carry out with enormous personal pride to present for induction into the Pro Football Hall of Fame, the quiet giant, the natural, the great Fred Dean.

Fred Dean:
First and foremost, I'd like to say thank God. I give God all the glory and the praise, because without him none of this would be possible. And I'd like to thank Mr. Eddie D for the kind words. And I know the one thing I've learned from Mr. Eddie is that not only does he talk the talk, he walks the walk. And I hope to one day see him in this position of the enshrines.

I say that because I know a man's heart like his. He's very supportive of my family and his generosity is beyond belief. He may be a little short in size, but, believe me, he is as big as all of this. And to the Hall of Fame family, the executive director, Steve Perry, Joe Horrigan, to Tammy, Judy, Dave, Bill, the board members and all the staff, I just want to say thank you.

Thank you to those who voted for me and the ones that didn't (laughter). I'd like to give a special shout out to Ira Miller and Nancy Gay. You see, sometimes I know that it takes a woman's touch. And to my fellow enshrinees, Darrell, Art, Emmitt, Andre, Gary, I couldn't have selected a better group of guys had I have selected them myself.

And I'd like to say to the returning a lot of vintage players, well rounded players, I'm honored to be here, to be with such an elite group of guys is so important to me. And the bottom line is I know I'm not going to cry, because I know there's a wager waged somewhere (laughter).

And I did, fellows, I practiced on it. I practiced holding the tears back, because I know what's inside. And if I can hold that back, I can achieve a lot of things. And I'd like to say there is so much for me to say. And in saying that I once heard a preacher say that if I preached too long, somebody grab my coattail, but if you're not close enough, I say Mr. Steve, would you please say amen Pharaoh and I know to let your people go (Laughter). You see, this election into the Hall of Fame has taken me back into time. I remember people and places that I haven't seen in a long time. And I haven't seen in a long time, so if you will walk with me for a moment now down memory lane.

You see, God put people in your life that have an impact on it. Both spiritually and physically. For me, mom and dad were two of those people. See, I was a little boy, when I was born in Arcadia, Louisiana. But I grew up in Ruston, Louisiana. A time during the change in our country.

Lincoln High School, an all black school, was my first attendance. And you know I was small in size. And being small in size, I know that there are a lot of you you got bullies around you sometimes. And they want to take advantage of a situation. But I'm here to tell you now, even though I was small, I got into a few incidents. And one day a coach walked up to me. And his name happened to be Coach Robert Smith. And he said to me, why don't you take some of that energy to the field? And I proceeded to take the energy to the field, as he had asked.

I think the coach liked what he saw but I don't know that he had other plans for me because those were some pretty big guys. But the bottom line is it all worked out for the best. Thank you, Coach.

From there I went to Ruston High School where things changed for me. I met a lot of great people. My coach there was Coach Horace Gary. He was a great man and through the experience with him I continued my walk. I'd like to say thank you to all the players at that time, from that high school, also, that were very instrumental in my life because I know that through God's plan, all of us have someone to follow, an example. And for me at that time it was my example.

You know, so from there I went to Louisiana Tech. And at Louisiana Tech it was Coach Lambrite. He allowed me to have a twinkle in my eye at that time. And I want to set the record straight, finally. I was a defensive end then and I wanted to be a defensive end. So I wasn't a linebacker. I was a defensive end. So when I went to the Chargers, after the draft, they had drafted me as a linebacker. But I told Coach Prothro I didn't want to play linebacker; I wanted to be a defensive end.

You know, when you get used to it, you get used to getting down in the dirt, getting your clothes dirty and wallowing a little bit, it makes everything come out right when you can stand up out of the mud and feel comfortable.

So I said to myself, ‘Hmm, I like the dirt.’ And if I can beat somebody in this dirt, it's going to be a good thing. (Laughter) and another thing that I knew is that when you tried to talk about me, when I was coming up, I was small in size, but I tell you dirt can't talk about dirt. (Laughter) so we need to understand that out of all of that I ended up with the San Francisco 49ers.

And to me that was a dream come true. I could consider it being born by the Chargers but having a renewal life with the 49ers. And being with the 49ers, I found that on the other side of that bridge, on the other side was my rainbow, the true ending of a rainbow. Not financially, but (laughter) but with all the people there. You see, my richness came from my father, who is in heaven, and it was with you all. I loved it all. I loved the game of football.

I said to myself, I didn't dream about playing football. I didn't dream about being in the Hall of Fame. But I always heard and we always talked about the great vintage players that were in the Hall. And it was really an eye opening thing for me. But yet and still I didn't plan it. You see, what I found is sometimes in our lives we can sit down and write out our aims and goals, but whether we know it or not, God already has the aim and goal set for you.

And in that direction is the direction in which you will end up going. You probably ask me why do I say that and how do I know? It's because I got a connection with the father. You see I look at myself as being the prodigal son I went astray for a while because mom and dad always raised us up to love and appreciate the things that we had and the people surrounding us. I always wondered why, when I'd go out and pick a whole thing of peas and shell them and mom and dad would give half of them away. I'd kind of be upset. But it was a lesson to be learned.

It was the giving, because I learned about the rich man who didn't make it. But I can say this: That all of the things that have happened for me and to me it's for a greater good. The Hall of Fame has been the elite part of a great thing for me. You know what I'm saying? What I did, I went off and left my glasses and I can't see my words. (Laughter after Hall of Famer Lem Barney walked to podium and handed his own glasses to Dean). I think that's going to work (laughter).

But I can tell you, it was under the guidance of Coach Bill Walsh and Mr. D and for the Chargers that drafted me. I want to say thank you. I want to say thank you to Dean been net loss and his family. I want to say thank you to Dr. York and Denise DeBartolo York and the 49ers organization and special thanks to Sydney and Shannon.

You know, when you play the game of football for so many years it becomes a part of your life. And when you leave the game, you really don't understand that you are hanging up your pads for good sometimes. It's a hard transition. But I had to get the understanding that God had something else for me at another plan.

Being raised up in that church by mom and dad, being disciplined through their actions. Some people would consider it abuse. (Laughter) but I called it unconditional love.

So I don't want to hold you any longer. And I see that there's no one going to tell me amen Pharaoh. But what I do want to tell you, I want to say to my wife, I love you and I ain't going to cry right now. I want to say to my father, you know the thing I had to say about my father my father, he was with my brother one day and you know this is the way he is. And he was going down the road and evidently they got out. And he was going off the curb and he fell. You see my father is 88 years old. And being that age, you know you kind of get a little frail.

I feel it now, dad, and I ain't 88. (Laughter) but my father he fell and he said we sat there and I said are you all right father? He said yes. I asked him are you hurt? He said no. But he said, you know what, when I fell I fell so hard it shook like thunder. And you know I couldn't help but think about the things he used to say to me. The old cliches. It's like boy if you ever want to make it on the road to success, get off that dirt road to failure. And my father, with that pavement of success, I feel that I finally got there, dad.

To my mom, she left us in 2003. But I want to give her a hand clap of praise because my mom carried a big, big, big stick. (Laughter) Because dad wouldn't really whoop us. I loved dad for not whooping me, but mom, she disciplined me.

And I'd like to say to my children, my daughters, oh God, hmm, I'd like to say to all my loved ones, to all

those that are here from Louisiana Tech, from Ruston High, and from UTS Bible College, my friends, I just want to say I love you. And I want to say to all my brothers and sisters in Christ, I love you, too.

So as I go to my seat, I want to say Mason, Frederica, Freida, Woodrow, mom, Sharon, Cory, David, Coach Bill, Mrs. Smith, I better start naming, brother Johnny, James, I just want to say to you all, Dave, Ms. Jackson, Sister Jackson, I just want to say to you all, I love you and God bless you all. Thank you.

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