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For the New Zealand soccer player, see Tim Brown (soccer player)
For the American football player of the 1960s and later actor, see Timothy Brown (actor)
Tim Brown (born July 22, 1966) is a retired National Football League player who was predominantly used as a wide receiver and also as a kick and punt returner early in his career. Brown was the Raiders' 1st round selection in the 1988 draft from the University of Notre Dame, where he won the Heisman Trophy as a senior in 1987. He was voted to the Pro Bowl nine times, in 1988 and 1991 as a kick returner, and in 1993-97, 1999 and 2001 as a receiver. In 2002 he passed Gene Upshaw to become the Raiders' all-time leader in games played with 224.

Brown was released by the Raiders before the 2004 season, as he did not want to accept a smaller role in the offense. Brown was signed shortly thereafter by the Buccaneers (coached by former Raider head coach Jon Gruden). The move was mildly controversial as Brown had always been a fan favorite in the Oakland area and was much admired by many current and former Raiders players and staff over the 15 years he spent with the Raider organization. However, Brown's declining performance in recent years may have contributed to the decision to release him, making the decision other than purely financial. Brown was the last of the Los Angeles Raiders to remain with Oakland.

On September 27, 2004, in his first game at Oakland since being signed by Tampa Bay, Brown crested 100 career receiving touchdowns, tying him (with Steve Largent) for 3rd on the NFL's all-time career receiving touchdown list (behind former teammate Jerry Rice (197) and Cris Carter (130).

In 2005, Brown signed a one-day contract with the Raiders to retire with the team he had played 16 seasons for. The July 18 news conference was attended by two Raiders' officials, and only one active Raider, wide receiver Jerry Porter. Brown retired with 14,934 receiving yards, the second-highest total in NFL history, 1094 receptions (3rd), and 100 touchdown catches (3rd-Tied). Brown also gained 190 rushing yards, 3,320 punt-return yards, 3 fumble-return yards, and 1,235 yards returning kickoffs. This gave him a total of 19,682 combined net yards, ranking him #5 among the NFL's all-time leaders in that category at the time of his retirement. He also scored 105 total touchdowns (100 receiving, 1 rushing, 3 punt returns, 1 kickoff return).

Brown is also rumored to be, in some role, involved with NASCAR's Drive for Diversity program, probably as a team owner.

Career records


  • Holds the NFL rookie-season record for most combined yards gained, with 2,317 yards (1988).
  • Holds the following team records with the Oakland Raiders:
    • Touchdowns scored (100 total, 99 receiving)
    • Receiving (14,734 yards, 1,070 receptions, 13.7 yard average)
    • Punt return (3,272 punt-return yards, 320 punt returns, 10.2-yard average)

External links


1966 births | Living people | American football wide receivers | Heisman Trophy winners | Notre Dame Fighting Irish football players | Los Angeles Raiders players | Oakland Raiders players | Tampa Bay Buccaneers players | AFC Pro Bowl players | NFL 1990s All-Decade Team

 

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