Jim Brown
Jim Brown was born in St. Simons, Georgia, United States on February 17th, 1936 and is the Football Player. At the age of 88, Jim Brown biography, profession, age, height, weight, eye color, hair color, build, measurements, education, career, dating/affair, family, news updates, movies, and networth are available.
At 88 years old, Jim Brown has this physical status:
James Nathaniel Brown (born February 17, 1936) is an American former professional football player and actor.
From 1957 to 1965, he was a fullback for the Cleveland Browns of the National Football League (NFL).
Brown, who was considered one of the best football players of all time, was named as the AP Most Valuable Player three times during his tenure in the league and retired with the Browns in 1964.
In eight of his nine seasons, he led the league in rushing yards in eight out of eight, and by the time he retired, he had set new rushing records.
In 2002, he was named by The Sporting News as the best college football player ever.Brown earned unanimous All-America honors while playing college football at Syracuse University in New York, where he was an all-around player for the Syracuse Orangemen football team.
He also excelled in basketball, track and field, and lacrosse.
His number 44 jersey was retired from the football team later this year.
In 1995, he was inducted into the College Football Hall of Fame. Brown carried the ball 2,359 times for 12,312 rushing yards and 106 touchdowns, which were all records when he retired.
He averaged 104.3 yards per game, and he is the only quarterback in NFL history to rush more than 100 yards per game for his career.
His 5.2 yards per rush is second-best among running backs.
In 1971, Brown was inducted into the Pro Football Hall of Fame.
He was selected to the NFL 75th Anniversary All-Time Team, which features the best players in football history.
The Browns have cut him off his number 32 jersey.
Brown made a name for himself in the 1970s, shortly before he began his football career.
Early life
Brown was born in St. Simons Island, Georgia, to Swinton Brown, a professional boxer, and Theresa Brown, a homemaker.
Brown earned 13 letters at Manhasset Secondary School, including football, lacrosse, baseball, basketball, and running track.
He led his basketball team to a 38-point average per game. Carl Yastrzemski of Bridgehampton, the former Boston Red Sox player, later broke the record.
Personal life and legal troubles
In September 1959, Brown married Sue Brown (née Jones). In 1968, she filed a divorce suit, charging him with "gross neglect." They had three children, twins Kim and Kevin, and Kevin (b). (b. 1960) and James Jr., his son. (Japan) 1962. In 1972, their divorce was finalized. Brown was ordered to pay $2,500 a month in alimony and $100 per week for child care.
Brown was arrested in his hotel room for assault and battery against Brenda Ayres, an 18-year-old man; he was later cleared of those charges. He denied paternity charges that he fathered Brenda Ayres' child a year ago.
Since model Eva Bohn-Chin was discovered underneath Brown's second-floor apartment's balcony in 1968, she was charged with assault with intent to murder. Since Bohn-Chin refused to cooperate with the prosecutor's office, the charges were dismissed. Brown was also fined $300 for assaulting a deputy sheriff who was involved in the investigation at the time. In Brown's autobiography, he said that Bohn-Chin was angry and jealous over an affair with Gloria Steinem, and that this led to the "misunderstanding with the police."
Brown was found not guilty of assault and battery in 1970, the charges stemming from a road-rage occurrence that occurred in 1969.
Brown introduced Diane Stanley, a Clark College undergraduate who lived in Acapulco, Mexico, in December 1973. In 1974, the couple broke off their relationship.
Brown was found guilty of misdemeanor battery for beating and choking his golfing companion, Frank Snow in 1975. He was fined $500, one day in jail, two years of probation, and a two-year sentence.
Brown was charged with raping a 33-year-old woman in 1985. The charges were later dismissed.
Brown was jailed in 1986 for assaulting his fiancée Debra Clark. Clark denied to press charges, though Brown was released.
Brown married Monique Brown in 1997; the two children have two children. Brown was arrested and charged with making terroristic threats against his wife in 1999. He was found guilty of vandalism for smashing his wife's car with a shovel later this year. He was sentenced to three years of probation, one year of domestic violence education, and 400 hours of community service or 40 hours on a work crew as well as a $1,800 fine. Brown denied the terms of his probation and was sentenced to six months in jail in 2000, which he began serving in 2002 after refusing the court-ordered counseling and community service. He was released after three months.
College sports career
Brown, the second-leading rusher on the team as a sophomore at Syracuse University (1954). He rushed for 676 yards (5.2 percent carry) as a junior. Brown, a consensus first-team All-American in his senior year in 1956, was a consensus first-team All-American. He finished fifth in Heisman Trophy voting and set school records for the highest season rush average (6.2) and the most rushing touchdowns in a single game (6). Despite Syracuse playing only eight games and scoring 14 touchdowns, he ran for 986 yards, the third-most in the country. He rushed for 197 yards, scored six touchdowns, and kicked seven extra points for a school-record 43 points in the regular-season finale, a 61-7 victory over Colgate. In the Cotton Bowl, he rushed for 132 yards, three touchdowns, and kicked three extra points, but Syracuse's third touchdown was the difference, as TCU defeated 28–27.
His success as a multisport athlete was perhaps more impressive. He excelled in basketball, track, and particularly lacrosse, in addition to his football exploits. He was the second-leading scorer for the basketball team (15 ppg) as a sophomore and received a letter from the track staff as a sophomore. He finished fifth in the National Championship decathlon in 1955. He averaged 11.3 points in basketball and was named a second-team All-American in lacrosse during his junior year. He was named a first-team All-American in lacrosse last year (43 goals in ten games to rank second in scoring nationally) during his senior year (47 goals in ten games). Brown was so dominant in the game that lacrosse laws were modified, requiring a lacrosse player to move the ball indefinitely when carrying it (rather than holding it near his body). In lacrosse, there is currently no rule that does not force a player to move his stick in place. He is in the Lacrosse Hall of Fame. Brown is depicted on an 800 square-foot tapestry depicting Brown in football and lacrosse uniforms, as well as the words "Greatest Player Ever" on the JMA Wireless Dome.
Brown served in the Reserve Officers' Training Corps while attending college. He was appointed as a second lieutenant after graduating. Brown maintained his military service as a member of the United States Army Reserve during his time in the NFL. He served for four years and was promoted to captain.
Professional football career
The Cleveland Browns selected Brown in the first round of the 1957 NFL draft, making him the sixth overall pick. He rushed for 237 yards against the Los Angeles Rams in his ninth game of his rookie season, setting an NFL single-game record that stood unbeaten for 14 years and a rookie record that has remained for 40 years.
Brown set a single-season rushing record in 1958, gaining 1,527 yards in the 12-game season, fewer than the previous NFL record of 1,146 yards set by Steve Van Buren in 1949. Brown led all players with a whopping 17 touchdowns scored, defeating Baltimore Colts wide receiver Raymond Berry by eight points in this MVP season.
He retired after nine years in football as the league's all-time record holder in single-season (1,863 in 1963) and career rushing (12,312 yards), as well as the all-purpose yards (15,549) leader. Despite the league's expansion to a 16-game season in 1978, he was the first player to reach the 100-rushing-touchdowns milestone, and only a few others have done so since (Brown's first four seasons were only 12 games, with five of them being 14 games).
Brown's record of scoring 100 points in only 93 games stood until LaDainian Tomlinson did it in 89 games during the 2006 season. Brown has the most seasons leading the NFL in all-purpose yards (five: 1958-191, 1964), and he is the only rusher in NFL history to rush more than 100 yards per game for a career. Brown was an excellent receiver out of the backfield, throwing 262 passes for 2,499 yards and 20 touchdowns, while still adding another 628 yards returning kickoffs.
Brown was voted into the Pro Bowl for the fourth season every season, and he made the game a success by scoring three touchdowns in his final Pro Bowl appearance. Despite not playing for the past 29 years of age, he maintained these records. Brown's six games with at least four touchdowns are an NFL record. Both Tomlinson and Marshall Faulk have five games with four touchdowns.
Brown led the league in rushing for the eighth time in a row. He was also the first NFL quarterback to rush for over 10,000 yards.
Brown's 1,863 rushing yards in the 1963 season was still a Cleveland franchise record. Out of all 32 NFL franchises, it is the highest franchise record for rushing yards. O. J. Simpson's 1973 season had his highest average of 133 yards per game this season. Although some have published more detailed results, when considering Brown's appearance in the game, his style of running must be considered alongside statistical methods. He was extremely difficult to tackle (shown by his leading 5.2 yards per carry), with some players requiring more than one defender to bring him down.
Brown retired in July 1966 as the NFL's all-time leading rusher after nine seasons. He had a record of 12,312 yards before Walter Payton broke it on October 7, 1984, during Payton's tenth NFL season. Brown is still the Browns' all-time leading rusher. Brown is currently 11th on the all-time rushing list as of 2018.
Cleveland won the NFL championship in 1964 and 1965, his rookie and final seasons, respectively, during Brown's career. Brown rushed 27 times for 114 yards and three passes for 37 yards in a 1964 championship game.
Acting career
Brown began his acting career before the 1964 season, playing a buffalo soldier in a Western action film called Rio Conchos. Brown and many of his coworkers were in attendance at the premiere of the film at Cleveland's Hippodrome theater on October 23, with Brown and many of his coworkers in attendance. The reaction was lukewarm. Brown, according to one reviewer, was a good actor, but the film's overcooked plotting and implausibility added to "a stumbling melodrama for the unsqueamish."
Brown was shooting his second film in London in early 1966. Robert Jefferson, one of 12 prisoners sent to France during World War II to assassinate German officers at a castle near Rennes in Brittany before the D-Day invasion, was depicted by MGM's The Dirty Dozen. Poor weather meant he missed at least the first part of the training camp on Hiram College's campus, enraged Cleveland Browns owner Art Modell, who threatened to fine Brown $1,500 (equivalent to $12,500 in 2021) for every week of camp he missed. Brown, who had previously stated that 1966 would be his last season, said no one would be fired during his three-year deal, but instead of that, he announced his resignation.
In a 1967 episode of I Spy called "Cops and Robbers," Brown went on to play a villain.
Dirty Dozen was a huge success, and MGM has signed him to a multi-film deal. Dark of the Sun (1968), Rod Taylor's second film for the studio, was an action film set in the Congo, where he portrayed a mercenary who was Rod Taylor's closest friend.
Zebra (1968) was also for MGM, an expensive adventure film based on Alistair MacLean's book in which Brown helped Rock Hudson, Patrick McGoohan, and Ernest Borgnine.
Brown appeared in The Split (1968), which was based on a Parker book by Donald E. Westlake, who appeared in his first lead role. He was paid $125,000 for the job.
Brown continued the fight with Riot (1969), MGM's prison film. Both it and The Split were huge hits at the box office. Brown credited him with becoming "the first black action actor" in the hit 1968 film Ice Station Zebra, according to biographer Mike Freeman.
Brown joined 100 Rifles (1969) in a 20th Century Fox. Brown was billed for a scene with Welch and Burt Reynolds, as one of the first interracial love scenes. Raquel Welch reflected on the event in Spike Lee's Jim Brown's Jim Brown's All-American.
Brown had a change of pace with Kenner (1969), an adventure film partly set in India, where Brown plays a man who befriends a teenage boy. He appeared in... tick... tick... tick (1970) which was another smash in the studio.
Brown appeared in The Grasshopper (1970), a drama for National General Pictures in which he played an ex-football player who became Jacqueline Bisset's lover. El Condor (1970), a Western shot fired in Spain by John Guillermin, was more typical, as well as for National General.
Brown appeared in numerous of the blaxploitation movies, including Slaughter (1972) for Columbia; Black Gunn (1973) for Columbia; and The Slams (1973), with Fred Williamson and Jim Kelly; In the role of "Slammer" in "I'm Gonna Git You Sucka (1988) and Hammer, Slammer, & Slade, a television pilot, he spoofed his own image.
With Williamson, he created a spaghetti Western, Take a Hard Ride (1975). The popularity of blaxplosion faded in the mid-70s and Brown made fewer films.
Brown debuted in Fingers (1978), James Toback's debut directorial debut.
The bulk of his appearances in the 1980s were on television. In the season-three premiere episode "Knight of the Drones," Brown appeared on several television shows, including Knight Rider. Brown appeared on The A-Team's episode "Quarterback Sneakers" alongside fellow footballer Joe Namath. Brown also appeared in CHiPs, episodes one and two as a pickpocket on roller skates.
In 1987's The Running Man, a Stephen King book adaptation, as Fireball, he appeared opposite Arnold Schwarzenegger, and in the spoof I'm Gonna Git You Sucka (1988).