I am who I am, and if you don't take the time to learn about that, then your perception is going to be your problem," said Jim Brown on ESPN Classic's SportsCentury series. After being tackled ...
This week marks the 58th anniversary of Jim Brown Farewell Day. On Jan. 29, 1967, thousands turned out for a program to honor Brown at Cleveland Arena. Brown would deliver an eloquent speech ...
Former Cleveland Browns offensive lineman John Wooten, who blocked for Jim Brown, was part of history in 1964. He offers valuable perspective now.
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Browns history: Legend John Wooten talks civil rights, Jim Brown, how the NFL has changed and so much moreIn coming to Cleveland, the franchise already had a superior rushing attack with Jim Brown and Bobby Mitchell as their primary runners with Milt Plum at quarterback. The offensive line was superb ...
Cleveland Browns running back Jim Brown's tough, tackle-breaking run against the Dallas Cowboys comes in as the No. 97 play in NFL history. "NFL 100 Greatest" counts down the top 100 characters in ...
Cleveland Browns running back Jim Brown's legendary catch-and-run touchdown against the Chicago Bears comes in as the No. 47 greatest play in NFL history. Los Angeles Rams head coach Sean McVay ...
An in-depth portrait of football legend and action movie star Jim Brown, including discussions about his childhood, his unequaled football career, his success in Hollywood, and his brushes with ...
It took a lot of tacklers to corral and bring down Jim Brown. Jim Brown is to running backs what Superman is to cartoon heroes. Standing 6-foot-2 and packing 230 hard pounds on his square ...
Wooten, then a veteran guard who blocked for Jim Brown, was at the White House on July 2 when President Lyndon Johnson signed the monumental Civil Rights Act of 1964. No, Wooten wasn’t inside ...
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