Patrick Willis

Patrick Willis

Acting

Male

Born: January 25, 1985

Bruceton, Tennessee, United States

Biography

Born January 25, 1985, in Bruceton, Tennessee, Patrick L. Willis overcame abject poverty to become one of the greatest linebackers in NFL history. Working in cotton fields by age ten, Willis fled his alcoholic father's violence at seventeen, moving in with his high school basketball coach Chris Finley and his wife Julie alongside his three siblings. At Hollow Rock-Bruceton Central High School, he became the first player in Tennessee history nominated for Mr. Football Award honors as both a lineman and a back in the same season. Willis attended Ole Miss from 2003 to 2006, dominating the SEC with his tackling prowess. As a senior, he won the Butkus Award and Jack Lambert Trophy as the nation's top linebacker while earning consensus All-American honors and SEC Defensive Player of the Year. His impressive 4.56-second forty-yard dash at the NFL Combine elevated his draft stock, leading the San Francisco 49ers to select him eleventh overall in 2007. Head coach Mike Singletary immediately installed Willis as the starting middle linebacker, comparing him to Ray Lewis. Willis's combination of sideline-to-sideline speed, violent tackling ability, and exceptional coverage skills made him a three-down defender who dominated all facets of the game. November 25, 2007, showcased his athleticism when he ran down Cardinals receiver Sean Morey after a sixty-two-yard catch for the game-saving tackle in overtime as the 49ers won 37-31. His week sixteen performance against Tampa Bay featured twenty total tackles and two sacks in a showcase of relentless pursuit. His defining achievement came in 2011 when he anchored a defense that set an NFL record by not allowing a rushing touchdown for fifteen weeks, shattering the 1920 Decatur Staleys' previous mark. Through eight seasons, Willis compiled 950 total tackles, 20.5 sacks, sixteen forced fumbles, and eight interceptions while leading the NFL in tackles twice (174 in 2007, 152 in 2009). He became the first player in 49ers history to make the Pro Bowl in each of his first seven seasons, earning five First-team All-Pro selections and becoming the only rookie on the 2007 AP All-Pro squad. Willis retired March 10, 2015, at age thirty due to chronic toe injuries. He initially joined Silicon Valley tech company Open Source Storage as executive vice president, investing two million dollars, but sued his business partner for fraud in 2016. Willis disconnected entirely from football for several years while pursuing business ventures with his wife Shanda Baskett and two children in Brentwood, California. On February 8, 2024, Willis was inducted into the Pro Football Hall of Fame in his fifth year of eligibility.

Known For