Jim Brown, legendary NFL running back, dead at 87
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[May 20, 2023]
By Bill Trott
(Reuters) -Jim Brown, one of the greatest running backs in the
history of the National Football League who quit the game at the
height of his career to act in Hollywood movies and add his voice to
the civil rights movement, has died. He was 87.
Brown died on Thursday night, his wife Monique Brown said on
Instagram.
"To the world he was an activist, actor, and football star. To our
family, he was a loving and wonderful husband, father, and
grandfather. Our hearts are broken," she wrote.
As an explosive fullback for the Cleveland Browns, Brown combined
power, speed, intensity and size (6 feet 2 inches, 230 pounds) in a
way not seen in the NFL before he joined the league in 1957. He
announced his retirement in July 1966 while in London filming his
second movie, "The Dirty Dozen."
He was a prominent figure in the Black Pride movement of the 1960s
and a friend of Malcolm X and Louis Farrakhan as well as Huey
Newton, co-founder of the militant Black Panthers group.
Brown was dogged by allegations of violence against women over the
decades though never convicted. Brown admitted in his 1989 memoir to
slapping women.
"In a perfect world, I don't think any man should slap anyone,"
Brown wrote. "I don't start fights, but sometimes I don't walk away
from them. It hasn't happened in a long time, but it's happened, and
I regret those times. I should have been more in control of myself,
stronger, more adult."
Brown led the NFL in rushing in eight of his nine seasons and was
voted the league's most valuable player four times. He held 20
league records when he retired at age 30, including most rushing
yards and most rushing touchdowns. In 1999, the Sporting News put
him atop its list of the 100 greatest players of the 20th century.
Brown summed up his style by saying: "Make sure when anyone tackles
you he remembers how much it hurts."
"I didn't retire because I was broken down and slow," Brown told
Sports Illustrated in 2015. "I retired because it was time to retire
and do other things."
NFL Commissioner Roger Goodell said in a statement on Friday that
Brown was one of the most dominant players to ever step on any
athletic field and also a cultural figure who helped promote change.
"During his nine-year NFL career, which coincided with the civil
rights movement here at home, he became a forerunner and role model
for athletes being involved in social initiatives outside their
sport," Goodell said.
"He was certainly the greatest to ever put on a Browns uniform and
arguably one of the greatest players in NFL history," Browns owners
Jimmy and Dee Haslam said in a statement.
BLACK ACTIVISM
In 1967, Brown joined other activist athletes such as basketball's
Bill Russell and Lew Alcindor, who later changed his name to Kareem
Abdul-Jabbar, in supporting Muhammad Ali's refusal to be drafted
into the U.S. military.
Brown also sought to empower the Black community by starting the
Negro Industrial Economic Union in the 1960s to help African
Americans in the business world and in the 1980s founded Amer-I-Can,
a program to help ex-convicts and former gang members by focusing on
job skills and nonviolence.
"I was basically a proponent of economic development as a way to
equality, social equality," Brown told the Cleveland Plain Dealer in
2013.
Brown was one of the first U.S. athletes to parlay his on-field
accomplishments into another full-time career, which included more
than 40 movies and television shows. His rugged good looks and quiet
charisma made him a natural for tough-guy roles and he made his
first movie, the Western "Rio Conchos," in 1964 while still with the
Browns.
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Former Cleveland Browns running back and
actor Jim Brown arrives at the 2nd Annual NFL Honors in New Orleans,
Louisiana, February 2, 2013. REUTERS/Lucy Nicholson/File Photo
In addition to "The Dirty Dozen," (1967) his early
works included "Ice Station Zebra" (1968) and 1970s "blaxploitation"
films such as "Three the Hard Way" (1974), "Slaughter" (1972) and
"Black Gunn" (1972).
Brown's 1969 movie "100 Rifles" featured a rare interracial sex
scene with Raquel Welch. He posed nude for Playgirl magazine and
wrote frankly about his busy sex life in his 1989 book "Out of
Bounds."
Later movies included the blaxploitation spoof "I'm Gonna Git You
Sucka" (1988) and Spike Lee's "He Got Game" (1988).
VIOLENCE AGAINST WOMEN
Brown was accused of violence against women multiple times including
a 1965 case in which he was acquitted of assaulting an 18-year-old
woman. In 1968, he was accused of throwing a girlfriend from a
balcony in an argument but she told police she fell.
Battery charges in an incident involving two women were dropped in
1971 and a rape charge was dismissed in 1985 due to inconsistent
testimony from the accuser.
In 1999, his second wife, Monique, told authorities Brown had
threatened to kill her. She later recanted and he was convicted only
of smashing the windows of her car. Brown took a six-month jail term
because he considered an alternative sentence that included
counseling, community service and probation to be unfair. He served
less than four months.
He later told the Los Angeles Times he curbed his violence through a
self-improvement program that operates in California prisons.
In 1978, he was convicted of assaulting professional golfer Frank
Snow in a dispute on a golf course.
James Nathaniel Brown was born on St. Simons Island, Georgia, on
Feb. 17, 1936, and spent his early years with his great-grandmother
after his father left the family and his mother moved away to work
as a maid.
He rejoined his mother in Manhasset, New York, and became a
four-sport star in high school. He won a scholarship to Syracuse
University where he was an all-American in lacrosse as well as
football and a star on the basketball team.
The NFL this year honored Brown by renaming the league's rushing
title the Jim Brown Award. Some critics said it was disgraceful for
the NFL to honor a man accused of violence against women.
"To champion Brown as some kind of hero is as brutal a blow as the
ones he was repeatedly accused of delivering," USA Today sports
columnist Nancy Armour wrote.
Looking back, Brown said he was not concerned about public
perceptions.
"I'm not interested in trying to work on people's perceptions,"
Brown said in a 1999 documentary on ESPN Classic. "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."
(Reporting by Bill Trott; Additional reporting by Matthew Lewis,
Paul Grant, Brendan O'Brien and Frank Pingue; Editing by Will
Dunham, Diane Craft and Rosalba O'Brien)
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