Drico
Player Valuation: £60m
I agree with this, I consider myself something of an amateur football historian, to the extent that I enjoy reading about the history of the game and have collected about 1,000 DVDs of old matches, highlights, etc, going back to the 1880s. I'm a nerd, basically. Your reference to Babe Ruth is utterly appropriate. Dixie is very much the pre-eminent British player of the first half of the 20th century. He is the embodiment of the term "legend". It's no coincidence that the famous Tiger/Roy of the Rovers comic strip story "Billy's Boots" is essentially a take on the legend of William Ralph "Dixie" Dean. The boy of the story is called Billy Dane - "Billy" being affectionate shorthand for "William" and "Dane" an anagram for Dean. What's more, the legend from the past whose magical boots Billy finds and transforms him into a goal machine was called Dead Shot "Keen", which, naturally, rhymes with Dean.He quite simply is THE football player of the pre-World War Two period. The greatest player and legend ever produced in the first 60 odd years of professional football in the land that gave the world the game. And you cant even think of another name that comes close.
Everton's early history is almost synonymous with the history of football itself. The club has so many firsts that are landmarks in the world game. Dean was quite arguably the first true legend of world football. The club, and English football as a whole, does not make enough of him. His goalscoring exploits mean his status matches that of other heroic legends like Gerd Müller. The word "icon" is bandied about these days, but Dixie is unquestionably an icon of world football and his story the very definition of legendary. We'd do far worse than name the new stadium after him. Other clubs would kill for a brand like that. We should be smothering ourselves in it.