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A native
of Atlanta, Richard Dent made his mark on the football history
of Tennessee State University before heading to the NFL. Dent
was recruited by coaching legend John Merritt and played for
TSU from 1979 until 1982.
While at the University, Dent lettered in football every year
and received All-American honors twice. He held the quarterback
sack career record of 39.5 and set a single-game sack record
of 4.5 in 1982. He finished his TSU career with 158 tackles,
39.5 sacks, 6 fumble recoveries and was drafted in the eighth
round by the Chicago Bears in 1983.
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Dent went on to have one of the most celebrated careers of
an NFL defensive lineman. He was known for his dominating
play throughout his 14-year professional career. Dent played
in every game as a rookie and started in three. The following
year, he became a permanent starter at right end and recorded
17.5 sacks, which was the most of any defender in the NFC.
Appropriately, he earned All-Pro honors and went to his first
Pro Bowl.
During
his career, he was named All-NFC five times and played in
four Pro Bowls (1985, 1986, 1991 and 1994).
For Dent, the 1984 season was the beginning of a remarkable
10-year period during which he had double digit sacks in eight
of the next ten seasons. His NFC leading 17.5 sacks in 1984
was immediately followed up with an NFL best 17. That year,
the Bears trounced the New England Patriots in Super Bowl
XX. Dent's Super Bowl performance - three tackles, 1.5 sacks,
and two forced fumbles - earned him Most Valuable Player honors.
He is only one of five defensive players in Super Bowl history
to earn the MVP honor.
Before
his retirement in 1997, Dent played one year each for San
Francisco, Indianapolis and Philadelphia.
Dent's 137.5 career sacks places him third on the NFL records
list and he remains the Bears all-time sacks leader. Today,
he operates the "Make a Dent" Foundation and sits
on the boards of several civic organizations, including the
National College Foundation and the Illinois College Hall
of Fame. Dent makes his home in Chicago and is a partner of
First Communications, a telecommunications company.
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