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College Hall of Famer Tom Brown, a Minnesota great, dies at 89

By Thomson Reuters Mar 18, 2026 | 8:33 PM

Tom Brown, the Minnesota two-way standout whose 1960 season remains one of the defining years for a lineman in college football ​history, died March 12 at age ‌89.

Brown played guard and on defense for the Golden Gophers from 1958-60 and became the rare interior lineman who didn’t just anchor a championship team, he helped drive ‌it. ​Minnesota went from the bottom ⁠of the Big Ten ⁠the year before to a national title and a Rose Bowl berth in 1960, with Brown at the center of everything.

“Tom Brown was ​a dominant player on the field, but just as important, he carried himself with humility ⁠and took great pride in ⁠wearing the Maroon and Gold,” National ​Football Foundation chairman Archie Manning said in a statement. “His ​1960 season remains one of the greatest ever ‌by a lineman, and his place in the NFF College Football Hall of Fame is a testament to his remarkable achievements.”

That year, Brown earned ⁠unanimous first-team All-America honors, won the Outland Trophy as the nation’s top lineman and finished second in Heisman ⁠Trophy voting — ‌still the highest finish for an ⁠interior lineman.

Inducted into the College Football ​Hall ‌of Fame in 2003, he later ​built an ⁠equally respected pro resume in the Canadian Football League with the B.C. Lions from 1961-67, including a Grey Cup championship in 1964, and was enshrined in the Canadian Football Hall of Fame in 1984.

–Field ​Level Media