Chicago Sun-Times

Hall of Fame cornerback for Raiders establishe­d bump-&-run

- BY JOSH DUBOW AP Pro Football Writer

Willie Brown establishe­d the bump-andrun style of defense the Raiders used for decades, provided the iconic play in Oakland’s first Super Bowl title, and impacted nearly every player who suited up for the team over the past half-century.

Mr. Brown was the consummate Raider. The Hall of Fame cornerback who helped fuel the Raiders’ success during 12 years on the field before becoming an integral part of the franchise during his post-playing career died on Tuesday after a battle with cancer. He was 78.

“Willie Brown was a true Raider and one of the best cornerback­s that ever played the game,” Hall of Fame coach John Madden said. “It was a comfort to a coach to be able to have Willie Brown in the defensive backfield. Willie was a good guy, a team captain, and a true Raider from the day he joined our team in 1967, until he passed away today. He will be missed by me and the entire Raiders organizati­on.”

Mr. Brown played his college ball at Grambling under the great coach Eddie Robinson. He was undrafted and cut by the Houston Oilers in his first training camp in 1963. He then signed with Denver and became a starter midway through his rookie year. Al Davis acquired Mr. Brown for the Raiders in 1967.

Mr. Brown went on to have a brilliant career with Oakland, highlighte­d by his 75-yard intercepti­on return for a touchdown against Minnesota that helped the Raiders win their first Super Bowl following the 1976 season.

“His legendary performanc­e on the field changed the way the cornerback position was played and his valued guidance as a coach, mentor and administra­tor permeated the organizati­on and touched countless individual­s both on and off the field,” the team said in a statement.

Mr. Brown was one of the game’s best lockdown cornerback­s and fit perfectly in Davis’ preferred bump-and-run style of defense on the Raiders. He intercepte­d 54 passes, was a first-team All-Pro five times in the AFL and NFL and made the Hall of Fame in his first year of eligibilit­y in 1984.

“I didn’t play DB in college,” Mr. Brown told ESPN in 2013. “I just knew that if you beat the hell out of the receivers coming off the line of scrimmage, that was going to affect whether they could catch the ball or not.”

His most memorable play came in the Super Bowl against the Vikings on Jan. 9, 1977. With the Raiders leading the game 26-0 in the fourth quarter, Brown intercepte­d a pass from Hall of Famer Fran Tarkenton and raced for the score, prompting the iconic radio call from Raiders announcer Bill King: “He looks and throws . . . intercepte­d by the Oakland Raiders’ Willie Brown at the 30, 40, 50 . . . he’s going all the way! . . . Old Man Willie! . . . Touchdown Raiders!”

Mr. Brown retired two seasons later. He was an assistant coach for the Raiders from 1979-88, was head coach at Long Beach State in 1991, coached at Jordan High School in 1994 and returned to the Raiders when they moved back to Oakland in 1995 as director of staff developmen­t.

Owner Mark Davis called Mr. Brown “one of the greatest to ever play the game.” He thanked Brown for how he treated his mother and Al Davis’ widow, Carol Davis. Mark Davis said Brown always helped Carol Davis up and down the stairs on the plane, joined her for dinners on the road and came to her birthday and Mother’s Day dinners each year.

“It was Willie who was her best friend,” Mark Davis said. “We loved and will miss you Willie.”

 ?? SUN-TIMES LIBRARY ?? Willie Brown intercepte­d 54 passes in his AFL-NFL career.
SUN-TIMES LIBRARY Willie Brown intercepte­d 54 passes in his AFL-NFL career.
 ??  ?? Willie Brown in 2017
Willie Brown in 2017

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