Full name: William Ralph Dean
Date of birth: 22/01/1907
Date of birth: 22/01/1907
Early Career
William Ralph 'Dixie' Dean was born on 22nd
January 1907 in Birkenhead, Merseyside. He began his professional
football career at Tranmere Rovers in 1923, where he showed early signs
of his remarkable ability, scoring 27 goals in just 29 appearances for
the club. Two years later he moved across the River Mersey to Everton,
the club he loved and is most famously associated with, for a fee of
£3000.
Dean’s impact at the Toffees was immediate. He scored
32 goals in his first full season at the club. But his illustrious
career almost never came to be. Dean was involved in a motorcycle crash
with his girlfriend in June 1926. He broke his jaw and fractured his
skull in the accident, and doctors told him he would never play football
again. Just 15 weeks later, Dean defied the odds and returned to
playing football for Everton.
Astonishingly, Dixie proved to
be an even greater goalscorer after his accident than he had been before
it. He played the last 27 games of the 1926/27 season, scoring 21
goals. But it was during the next season, 1927/28, that the name of
Dixie Dean would go down in footballing legend.
Record Breaker
In
the first nine games of the season, Dean scored 14 goals, including
five in one match against Manchester United. By January he had scored 39
goals, breaking Everton’s club record for most goals scored in a season
by a single player, previously held by B.C. Freeman.
The next
record in Dean’s sights was the First Division goalscoring record,
which stood at 43. He broke that record in mid March. With 13 league
games remaining, Dean was 17 goals away from breaking George Camsell’s
record for most league goals in a single season in English football
(59).
It was not going to be easy for Dixie. He went through
an uncharacteristically dry spell of four games without a goal. His
international call-ups meant he had to score 17 goals in the last seven
games of the season. Incidentally, Dean made 16 appearances for England,
scoring 18 goals, including two hat-tricks.
A return to the
scoring trail left Dixie going into the last game of the season, against
Arsenal, needing to score a hat-trick to break the record. Everton had
already been crowned First Division champions due to title rivals
Huddersfield losing a few days earlier. Over 60,000 fans packed into
Goodison Park to see Dean’s passage into legend.
Things didn’t
go according to plan, with Arsenal scoring first. But Dean would not be
denied, and straight from the kick-off, equalised for Everton from
twenty yards. One down, two to go. Midway through the first half, Dixie
was brought down in the penalty area. No-one else could possibly step up
to take the penalty, and sure enough, Dean slotted home from the spot.
One more.
But Arsenal still weren’t following the script, and
an own goal saw the sides go into half time at 2-2. Minutes felt like
hours during the second half, and it seemed like Dixie’s 60th goal would
never come. Then, five minutes from the end, he rose in the area to
head home from a corner, and Goodison Park was sent into rapture. Dixie
Dean was officially a legend.
Later Career
Despite
being relegated into the Second Division in 1930, Dean stood by his
beloved Everton, for whom he was now captain. His goalscoring prowess
did not falter, and his 39 goals in 37 games helped propel Everton
straight back into the top flight as Second Division champions.
Everton
went on to win the First Division title in 1932, and the FA Cup in
1933, Dean playing a major part in both campaigns. Indeed, he scored in
every round of the 1933 FA Cup besides the semi-final. Numbered shirts
were introduced for the first time in the 1933 FA Cup final; Dixie Dean
became Everton’s first number 9, the reason why Evertonians still hold
the number 9 shirt in high esteem.
By the time Dean left
Everton for Notts County in 1937, he had scored 383 goals in 433
appearances. To this day, he remains Everton’s all-time leading
goalscorer. That, along with his record for 60 goals in a season, looks
unlikely to be beaten any time soon.
Dixie was as respected
for his sportsmanship as he was for his goal scoring record. He was
never booked or sent off in his entire career, despite coming under such
intense provocation that he actually lost a testicle during a match.
Once
he left Everton, Dean’s career began to wind down. After Notts County
he enjoyed a spell with Sligo Rovers in Ireland before ending his career
at Hurst FC in 1939. He scored ten goals in seven appearances for Sligo
Rovers, and helped them on the way to the FAI Cup final, which they
eventually lost to Shelbourne. Dean scored five goals in a 7-1 win over
Waterford, which still remains a Sligo Rovers' record for most goals
scored in one match.
Post Football
After
retiring from football, Dixie continued to work for a living. It should
be noted that in his day, professional footballers did not acquire the
same wealth as those who play in the modern game. He owned and ran his
own pub, the Dublin Packet in Chester, and also worked as a porter for
Littlewoods Pools at their offices in Walton, Liverpool. Despite his
status as an English footballing legend, his co-workers remembered him
as a “quiet, unassuming” man.
Ironically, Dixie is believed to
have despised the nickname Evertonians had given him (due to his dark
complexion and curly brown hair) and preferred to be known as Bill.
Befitting
of a man so famously associated with Everton FC, Dixie Dean passed away
at Goodison Park on 1st March 1980, just minutes after the final
whistle of a Merseyside Derby match. He was 73 years old.
Individual Honours
- BBC Radio Merseyside’s 4th “Greatest Merseysider”: 2003
- Inducted into the National Football Museum Hall of Fame: 2002
- Football Writers’ Association inscribed silver salver: 1976
- Hall of Fame Trophy: 1971
- Lewis’s Medal to commemorate 200 league goals in 199 appearances
- Sunday Pictorial Trophy for 60 league goals: 1928
Player Statistics
Period | Team | Appearances (Goals) |
---|---|---|
1923-1925 | Tranmere Rovers | 30 (27) |
1925-1937 | Everton | 399 (349) |
1938-1939 | Notts County | 9 (3) |
1939 | Sligo Rovers | 7 (10) |
1939 | Hurst F.C. | 2 (1) |
1927-1932 | England | 16 (18) |
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