Richie Lee has a script to see when stored procedures were last executed:
Quick script to get the last time a stored procedure was executed in the database. The reason for the seemingly over-engineered script is that different query plans can be generated, meaning that stored procedures can appear more than once in the list.
The query doesn’t quite work as-is, but making qs.execution_count into an aggregation and removing it from the GROUP BY would work. I’d probably rewrite it to look a bit more like:
WITH querystats AS
(
SELECT
OBJECT_NAME(qt.objectid) AS ProcedureName,
SUM(qs.execution_count) OVER (PARTITION BY OBJECT_NAME(qt.objectid)) AS ExecutionCount,
qs.creation_time AS CreationTime,
ROW_NUMBER() OVER (PARTITION BY OBJECT_NAME(qt.objectid) ORDER BY creation_time DESC) AS rownum
FROM sys.dm_exec_query_stats AS qs
CROSS APPLY sys.dm_exec_sql_text(qs.[sql_handle]) AS qt
WHERE
qt.[dbid] = DB_ID()
AND OBJECT_NAME(qt.objectid) LIKE '%%'
)
SELECT
qs.ProcedureName,
qs.ExecutionCount,
qs.ExecutionCount
FROM querystats qs
WHERE
qs.rownum = 1;