Jerry Rice
49ers Peak (1993-95) · 1993–1995
Rice's elite Peak Dominance (99) and elite Football IQ (98) define this era.
Scouting Report
Position ratings · 0-99 scale · Based on career data
Trophy Case
1989, 1990, 1995
Three rings with the 49ers — Super Bowl XXIII MVP (11 catches, 215 yards)
1989
11 catches, 215 yards, 1 TD in Super Bowl XXIII — the greatest performance
1987, 1988, 1989, 1990, 1991, 1992, 1993, 1994, 1995, 1996, 1998, 2002
13 selections — the GOAT receiver was a perennial star
1987, 1988, 1989, 1990, 1991, 1992, 1993, 1994, 1995, 1996
10 selections — the most by any wide receiver in history
2004
1,549 receptions, 22,895 yards, 197 TDs — records that may never be broken
The Story
The Records That May Never Fall
Jerry Rice holds virtually every meaningful receiving record: 1,549 receptions, 22,895 yards, 197 touchdowns. These numbers are so far beyond second place that they may stand forever. His nearest competitor in touchdown receptions is 40 behind. Forty.
The Greatest Receiver
Three Super Bowl rings. One Super Bowl MVP. Thirteen Pro Bowls. Rice played 20 NFL seasons and was still productive at 42. He set the standard for what a wide receiver could be — not just talented, but relentless, precise, and durable beyond comprehension.
The Hill
Rice's offseason workouts on a steep hill in San Carlos, California, became legendary. While other receivers partied in the offseason, Rice ran that hill until he threw up, then ran it again. His conditioning was so far beyond his peers that he was still burning past 25-year-olds at age 40.
Stickum Gate
Rice admitted in a 2015 interview that he used Stickum on his gloves early in his career — then quickly tried to walk it back. The revelation sparked debate about whether it mattered. Given that he was also the greatest route runner who ever lived, most agreed the Stickum was the least of defenders' problems.
Rumored · Never confirmed
In Their Own Words
“He was the greatest competitor I have ever coached, and I coached Joe Montana.”
— Bill Walsh, on Jerry Rice
Walsh coached both Montana and Rice — two of the greatest players in NFL history. He chose Rice as the greater competitor.
The Journey
Catching Bricks for His Father
B.L. Moor High School · Crawford, MS
Grew up in rural Crawford, Mississippi, catching bricks thrown by his father, a mason — building the hand-eye coordination that would make him the greatest receiver ever. His high school was so small it barely had a football program. Went virtually unrecruited by major colleges.
✓
recruited by majors
Division I-AA Record Breaker
Mississippi Valley State University · Itta Bena, MS
Attended tiny Mississippi Valley State, a Division I-AA school. Set 18 NCAA records, including most receiving yards (4,693) and touchdowns (50) in a career. Averaged 100+ receiving yards per game as a senior. His dominance at a small school made NFL scouts skeptical — but Bill Walsh saw something special.
50
career rec tds
4693
career rec yards
The GOAT Receiver — 20 Years of Dominance
San Francisco 49ers / Oakland Raiders / Seattle Seahawks · San Francisco / Oakland / Seattle
Selected 16th overall in 1985 by San Francisco. Won three Super Bowls with the 49ers, including a record 11-catch, 215-yard, 1-TD performance in Super Bowl XXIII. Set virtually every receiving record: 1,549 receptions, 22,895 yards, 197 touchdowns — records that may never be broken. His work ethic was legendary: ran a 2.5-mile hill every morning in the offseason well into his late 30s. Played until age 42.
13
pro bowls
3
super bowls
197
career rec tds
1
super bowl mvps
Signature Moments
Super Bowl XXIII — The Perfect Game
Rice caught 11 passes for 215 yards and a touchdown in Super Bowl XXIII, earning MVP honors despite Montana's legendary drive. His ability to get open against any coverage was on full display — the Bengals simply could not contain him.
The greatest receiver in the greatest Super Bowl. Rice's performance was the backbone of Montana's heroics.
Touchdown #127 — Passing Jim Brown
Rice scored his 127th career touchdown, passing Jim Brown for the all-time record on Monday Night Football. He would go on to score 70 more, finishing with 208 total touchdowns — 197 receiving.
Broke the record of the greatest football player who ever lived and kept going for another decade.
Record-Breaking Performances
The games and seasons that rewrote history
22,895 Career Receiving Yards
Jerry Rice's career records are considered the most unbreakable in the NFL. He has 5,403 more receiving yards than the #2 player all-time. He has 41 more receiving touchdowns than #2. He played 20 seasons and was productive into his 40s. No receiver in the modern era has come close.
All-time leader in receiving yards, receptions, and touchdowns. The gap between Rice and #2 (Larry Fitzgerald, 17,492) is 5,403 yards — larger than most Hall of Famers' entire careers.
Rice played most of his career before the pass-happy modern NFL. His numbers would be even more absurd adjusted for era. He did this in a run-first offense with Joe Montana and Steve Young.
Career Numbers
Career Rec Yards
NFL all-time leader
22895
Career Rec TDs
NFL all-time leader
197
Career Receptions
NFL all-time leader at retirement
1549
Yards Per Reception
Yards per reception
14.8
Career Targets
Estimated — targets not officially tracked until 1992
2537
Catch %
—
Yards Per Target
9
Rec Yards/Game
Receiving yards per game
75.6
100-Yard Games
NFL all-time leader
76
Career First Downs
824
20+ Yard Receptions
20+ yard receptions
361
Longest Reception
96
Career Total TDs
NFL all-time leader
208
Career Fumbles
33
Super Bowl Record
SB XXIII MVP
3-1
Playoff Rec Yards
NFL playoff all-time leader
2245
Playoff Rec TDs
NFL playoff all-time leader
22
Career Rush Yards
End-arounds and reverses
645
Career Rush TDs
10
Pro Bowl Selections
13
Games Played
20 seasons
303
22,895 vs 17,492
Receiving Yards: #1 vs #2 All-Time
22,895 career receiving yards — #2 (Larry Fitzgerald) has 17,492. The gap between #1 and #2 is larger than the gap between #2 and #15.
208
Career Total Touchdowns
208 career touchdowns (receiving + rushing + fumble recoveries) — 33 more than #2 all-time
14
1,000-Yard Receiving Seasons
14 seasons with 1,000+ receiving yards — his last one came at age 40
Season Stats · 49ers Peak (1993-95)
Engine Attributes
Fan Debate
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