RIP Fred Dean

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HanSenSE

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They had the great secondary (all went to the Pro Bowl in 1984) but they brought in gritty role players like "Big Hands" Johnson and Jack Reynolds.

Those teams were solid from 1-47.

Dean was a star but had never played with a great overall cast before.
 
When some asks for the greatest player ever and you can legitimately throw your QB and a DB into the conversation... that’s a pretty solid squad.
 
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When some asks for the greatest player ever and you can legitimately throw your QB and a DB into the conversation... that’s a pretty solid squad.
****... three. Forgot the WR.
 
All four DBs from the 1984 team went to the Pro Bowl. Roger Craig. Dwight Clark. Randy Cross. And unheralded Wendell Tyler rushed for 1,200 yards.

Amazing job of Walsh putting all that together. And then adding Jerry Rice.
 
The thing I remember about those DBs is they were so young in terms of NFL experience. The theory was to mature them together, and did it ever work.
 
Fred Dean was just cool as ****. Smoking cigarettes, cutting records, absolutely jacking up quarterbacks. He had the best segment of the Chargers LP. RIP Fred Dean

 
The thing I remember about those DBs is they were so young in terms of NFL experience. The theory was to mature them together, and did it ever work.

The thing that blew me away was meeting Ronnie Lott at a Warriors game one night. I was an inch taller and about the same weight as him but he played like he was 6-2, 225.
 
Thirty-nine years before the Titans did so Tuesday, Dean showed why practice isn't always necessary. San Diego traded him to the 49ers a few weeks into the 1981 season, and he suited up that Sunday against Dallas with only a handful of practice snaps. Bill Walsh told John Madden in the broadcast-production meeting the day before the game that Dean wouldn't play much. Then Dean played from start to finish and had two sacks, two more QB hits and a TFL.

"Before the day is done, you'll remember No. 71." Indeed. R.I.P.
 
All four DBs from the 1984 team went to the Pro Bowl. Roger Craig. Dwight Clark. Randy Cross. And unheralded Wendell Tyler rushed for 1,200 yards.

Amazing job of Walsh putting all that together. And then adding Jerry Rice.

Tyler had two 1,000 yard seasons with the Rams, including in their Super Bowl year. He was a damn good player.

As for Dean and the Niners, those 80s teams were amazing, and it took amazing teams like the Bears, Giants and Redskins to beat them. That NFC was something else back then.

RIP.
 
Dwight Hicks and the Hot Licks

Ronnie Lott
Eric Wright
Carlton Williamson

That's from memory.

And, Montana threw zero INTs in four SB.
 
Damn, way too young. Getting a stud like Dean seemed to legitimize the Niners in 1981 (this was after the Plunkett/OJ dark ages). Heard his first game for Niners was against the Cowboys and he had 2-3 sacks and other tackles for a loss. I recall his arrival and that game as a signal that Niners were for real. That 1981 secondary was special with Lott/Wright, two rookie CBs, Carlton Williamson, hard hitter, (maybe a rookie too) and the vet Dwight Hicks. The easy memory is about offense, Walsh/Montana/Clark, but it was really the D that made it a dominant team. The 3-4 with Dean rushing the edge, and that secondary. Great memories.
 

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