Michael Dean Perry's older brother, William "The Refrigerator" Perry, got far more attention than he did. "The Fridge" had size, charisma, and a coach who would occasionally play him at fullback.
Not to mention a Super Bowl ring, too.
However, the younger brother was the better NFL player. He was an All-Pro defensive tackle who played for Cleveland and Denver Broncos, had a cup of coffee with the Kansas City Chiefs and, for some reason known only to voters, can't get the attention of the Pro Football Hall of Fame.
Never was that more evident than when the Hall-of-Fame seniors committee's list of 12 semifinalists was released last week. Perry's name wasn't on it. Nor was it on its semifinalist list of 31, either. So, what's new? Hall-of-Fame voters have never seriously considered Perry. He wasn't a semifinalist as a modern-era candidate, and he's gotten no traction as a senior. Hopefully, that changes in the future.
It should, and here's why: Even though he didn't have huge sack numbers (he ended his career with 61), Perry was a superb pass rusher, drawing double-and-triple teams. When he played with the Browns, they didn't have elite edge rushers who required extra attention or another interior rusher who was an elite pass rusher.
Michael Dean Perry was the Browns' pass rush, and we have the proof.
In 1993, a company called STATS, LLC., (now Stats Perform) introduced a bundle of unique statistics, including something called "stuffs" -- their name for a tackle for loss on a play other than a sack. But those numbers didn't find their way into mainstream articles or player bios, so they drew little attention. Plus, they didn't cover players prior to 1993.
However, it's easy to reproduce what STATS did and backdate what it called "stuffs." And when you do (and researchers have), it reveals something intriguing about Michael Dean Perry. It confirms what people saw -- namely, that he was in the backfield spilling running backs for losses as often, if not more, as anyone in football.
He was a supreme run stuffer. In his second year he had 11-1/2 of the so-called stuffs. The next year he had another 11-1/2. In 1991, it was 10-1/2. All three years he was third in the NFL. In 1993, he had a career-high 14 stuffs, and in his 10 NFL seasons he totaled 78.
So how does that compare to his contemporaries who are in -- or on their way into -- the Hall of Fame? Let's take a look:
-- Cortez Kennedy— 58, with a high of 14.
-- Warren Sapp— 61-1/2, with a high of 8-1/2.
-- John Randle— 44, with a high of 8.
-- Bryant Young— 82, with a high of 9.
-- Aaron Donald— 83, with a high of 13-1/2.
Perry had such rare quickness for a man of his size (6-1, 285 pounds) that football insiders ranked his take-off up there with Alan Page, Mike Reid, Sam Adams and Aaron Donald. In short, among the best of the best. Perry's anticipation allowed him to penetrate the line of scrimmage and make plays that most defensive tackles could not.
"Quickness is my best asset," Perry said. "It is not something you learn. It's God-given."
So people noticed.
Perry was a first-team Sporting News (TSN) All-Pro five consecutive years, and that's significant. TSN's All-Pro team was the only one that wasn't a poll of sportswriters. It was determined by players, coaches and NFL personnel execs -- and still is. Furthermore, its All-Pro team is listed in the NFL's official encyclopedia, giving it the same imprimatur as the AP, PFWA, NEA and others.
What TSN's All-Pro team illustrated was that people connected to the NFL respected Perry's game.
And why not? In all, Perry was first-team All-Pro in 1989 (AP, PFWA, NEA, TSN), 1990 (AP, PFWA, NEA, TSN), 1991 (TSN), 1992 (TSN) and 1993 (TSN). He was also second-team All-Pro in 1994 (AP) and second-team All-AFC in 1995 (UPI) and 1996 (UPI), which means he had some sort of postseason honor in every season but his first and last.
And remember: He was All-Rookie in his first.
In 1989 he was the AFC Defensive Player of the Year. It was his first year as a starter when he totaled 71 tackles, including the 11-1/2 stuffs. He also had seven sacks, deflected seven passes, forced a pair of fumbles, recovered two and led the team in pressures with 49.
All as an interior rusher. Plus, he drew 16 holding penalties.
Sixteen.
"And who knows how many more they didn't call or didn't see," said his offensive-line coach, John Teerlinck.
Offensive linemen couldn't block him from his cocked defensive tackle position -- something Browns' coach Bud Carson had done in previous stops with Joe Greene and Joe Klecko. Carson tinkered with it the following year, allowing Perry to flop sides, and the results speak for themselves: He had 86 tackles, two more forced fumbles and led the team in pressures again. But he also had 11-1/2 sacks, as well as another 11-1/2 run stuffs -- producing a rare double-digit finish in both categories.
Perry, Carson said, had "reached another dimension" in his game.
Unfortunately, so had the Browns, and it wasn't a good one. Carson was fired after the 1990 season. So his attacking, 4-3 stunting scheme was gone, and successor Bill Belichick's read-and-react 4-3 was in. Though not stylistically suited for two-gapping, Perry still performed at a high level ... even though he wasn't always happy about the new defense.
"Anyone—offensive or defensively—wants to play in a scheme where they are used properly," he said. "Don't take away my attributes; that is getting off the ball, penetrating, causing chaos and making plays."
Then, realizing it was no good to quarrel with his head coach, he added, "Sometimes you have to sacrifice individual goals to aid the team."
In 1993, Belichick gave Perry some relief by signing massive Jerry Ball to play over the center so that Perry could be "used properly". His career-high 14 stuffs and six sacks were the result, evidence that ... at least in this case ... the player may have been right and the coach wrong.
The reviews were glowing:
-- Pro Football Weekly's Joel Buchsbaum, always plugged into NFL scouts, wrote that Perry was "the quickest defensive interior lineman in football."
-- Another annual publication with credible sources called Perry "an utter terror inside in a 4-3 front, using superb explosion and instincts to consistently beat his man off the ball."
-- The following year the same publication wrote that "(Perry is the) owner of the quickest two first steps in football. He has no peer in shooting the guard/tackle gap. On occasion, he reaches the ball carrier before the handoff ... his swim-and-spin moves are state-of-the-art."
However, the knee issues that troubled him early in his NFL career became more of an issue as his career wore on. Perry gutted through them, undergoing surgical procedures but still missing little time. In seven seasons with Cleveland, he missed only three games.
Unprotected and unclaimed in the 1995 expansion Perry was a Browns' cap casualty in 1995 subsequently signing a three-year, $7.2-million contract with the Broncos and giving them two solid years. But injured knees didn't allow him to play at his usual level in the final year of his deal, and he was waived the last week of the 1997 season -- thus missing out on a Super Bowl ring when Denver won its first Lombardi Trophy.
It wasn't one knee injury that short-circuited Perry's decline. It was a series of less severe ones that became chronic and eventually ended his career after 10 seasons.
Hall-of-Famers with shorter careers that ended abruptly by injuries have been given a pass by voters lately, with Terrell Davis, Kenny Easley and Tony Boselli examples. Maybe for candidates like Perry, who had chronically bad knees, the same lens can be applied for longevity.
All I know is that in his 10 years, he was a five-time All-Pro (twice consensus), six-time Pro Bowler and an AFC Defensive Player of the Year. He was the complete player. Few, if any, defensive tackles of his era tackled more running backs behind the line of scrimmage, and he routinely drew double-and-triple teams -- as well as holding calls -- on pass plays.
Perry is in the Clemson Athletic Hall of Fame, the South Carolina Football Hall of Fame and the State of South Carolina Athletic Hall of Fame. That's because he was a two-time All-ACC selection, a 1987 All-American selection and that year's ACC Player of the Year. Not just the top defensive player, but the top player in the conference regardless of position.
Now it's time the Pro Football Hall-of-Fame voters take a closer look at the better of the football-playing Perry brothers and one of the quickest defensive tackles in pro football history.
From Brian wolf ...
ReplyDeleteBoth you and Andy Piascik give a great argument for Perry. Andy championed him when the talk was on getting Bryant Young into the HOF. He may make it eventually but unless an interior lineman has a high number of sacks, which seems to be helping Steve McMichael now, the voters dont seem to notice run stuffing ability.
Another question I keep bringing up time and again--haha--is will a pure nose tackle ever make this HOF?
Curley Culp was ideal for the position but played half of his career with another tackle. Can a pure nose/shade tackle like Fred Smerlas get his chance? These guys have to to absorb the interior blockers while legally(back then)getting clipped on numerous plays. John Madden felt they were the most undervalued position on a football team.
McMichael is getting a sentimental push for the HOF but the voters need to look at his case carefully. The Bears already have two members of its defensive line in the HOF and five players overrall, with McMichael, Hilgenberg and Marshall with cases as well for a one-time champion.
Hard to know on nose tackle...Smerlas has case. Wilfork probably has as goo a chance because of the rings on top of his "alls" plus I am sure good testimonials could be found.
DeleteAs far as Perry, I don't think even Cleveland people champion him--they are more behind Matthews, I think. That's my sense of it, anyway.
I fully agree with andy and john t. on perry 100% he has a legit hof case no doubt
Delete.....once upon a time the Browns had an interior defensive lineman (usually in the "A" gap, or head up on the center where he destroyed blocking schemes, and refused to stay blocked.....his name of course is Bill Willis, and while MDP is not Bill Willis....he made similar plays as Willis. Excellent article by Mr. John Turney.
ReplyDeleteBW ...
DeleteIs this comment from Coach Troup? Is Willis considered one of the first celebrated MG/NT? Was he underrated compared to Len Ford or did they complement what each player was doing? Did he drop into coverage or backpedal as a prototype MLB?
Excellent post John on a very much overlooked player. It's strange how some players never get any traction in media circles during their careers even though they're every bit as good (or better) than their peers. I've commented on here about Steve Watson and Tim Krumrie in the same way.
ReplyDeleteJust a quibble-I always thought pre-knee injury Keith Millard was just as quick if not quicker.
PS-has anyone on here ever done a write-up on Paul Hofer? I'm convinced he would have been the first 1000yd rusher/receiver in a season if not for a serious knee injury. One of the great what might have been players.
I will take your suggestion on Hofer...I don't know if he'd have 1,000-1,000--he wasn;t running the ball often enough, not quite the bellcow, but one cannot say it couldn't have happened. But, 1,000 receiving, yeah, that was well within his reach...Walsh seemed to like to rotate his backs and so I wonder if he'd have even gotten 200-220 carries...maybe...
DeleteBW ...
DeleteI am a big Paul Hofer fan myself Sam. Had the Genius left him out of a rain-soaked, meaningless game against Houston in 1981, Hofer and Montana might have put on a show in the SB. Instead, he gets hurt and his career is over.
Walsh admitted feeling guilty about it in his book. Niners fans can only imagine what Paul might have achieved without that terrible knee injury in Dallas, in 1980 ?
BW ...
DeleteNot to get away from the great career of Perry but another thing about Hofer, which shows where the 49ers were at as an organization in 1980. Hofer had that bad knee injury in the game against Dallas, the teams sixth game of the season. Instead of operating immediately afterward, the team and its physician, Dr. Fred Behling, waited until the end of the season, ten games later!
Hofer was upset, felt the doctor was negligent and sued him rather than the team. Had he gotten surgery after the injury, his 1981 season would have been even more memorable.
Excellent post on a very much overlooked player. It's strange how some players never get much traction in media circles even though they're as good or better than their peers. I've commented on here about Steve Watson and Tim Krumrie in the same vein.
ReplyDeleteJust a quibble-I always thought pre-knee injury Keith Millard was as quick or even quicker.
fair point on Millard...he was right there, for sure
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