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Born August 14, 1935, in Menlo Park, California, John Riley Brodie grew up in Oakland's Montclair district and attended Oakland Technical High School, where he excelled as a standout athlete. He played college football and golf at Stanford University, earning consensus All-American honors in football as a senior in 1956. Remarkably, Brodie rejected an athletic scholarship and played as a walk-on while also competing on Stanford's golf team, which kept him out of spring football drills. He nearly chose professional golf for his career, playing in several PGA Tour tournaments after college before committing to football. The San Francisco 49ers selected Brodie with the third overall pick in the 1957 NFL Draft. He saw limited action initially, sitting behind Y.A. Tittle for his first four seasons before becoming the full-time starter in 1961 following Tittle's trade to the New York Giants. Strengths included mastery of the screen pass—which legendary coach John Madden called the best he ever saw—exceptional passing ability, clutch performance under pressure, and strong leadership that earned respect throughout the league. Brodie's 1970 season stands as his masterpiece. He led the entire NFL with twenty-four touchdown passes, 223 completions, 2,941 yards, and a passer rating of 93.8 while taking just eight sacks as the 49ers went 10-3-1 and reached the playoffs for the first time in over a decade. He won the NFL Most Valuable Player Award and led San Francisco's offense to a league-leading 352 points. In the Divisional Round against Minnesota, Brodie's fourth-quarter touchdown plunge proved the difference in a 17-14 victory. During the final game of the 1972 regular season against the Vikings with a playoff berth on the line, Brodie came off the bench in the third quarter with his team trailing 17-6, engineered a ninety-nine-yard touchdown drive, and threw the game-winning touchdown pass with twenty-five seconds remaining in a dramatic 20-17 comeback victory. Brodie retired after the 1973 season ranked third in career passing yards with 31,548, behind only Johnny Unitas and Fran Tarkenton. He compiled 214 touchdown passes with a 74-76-8 record as starter and won three passing titles. The 49ers retired his number twelve jersey. After football, he worked as an NBC broadcaster, calling Super Bowl XIII, and competed on the Senior PGA Tour, winning once. Brodie died January 23, 2026, at age ninety.
Birthday: August 14, 1935
Death: January 23, 2026