ALAMEDA, Calif. -- Tim Brown will end his
prolific NFL career with the Raiders after all.
"Tim will sign a one-day contract and retire as a Raider," team
spokesman Mike Taylor said Wednesday.
A news conference is planned for later this month to recognize Brown,
the former Heisman Trophy winner and longest-tenured player in franchise
history.
Brown was released last August when he refused to accept a greatly
diminished role in coach Norv Turner's offense. He signed with Tampa Bay
to play for former Raiders coach Jon Gruden in what turned out to be
Brown's last season.
Brown, who turns 39 on July 22, played the first 16 of his 17 seasons
with the Raiders, and always hoped to be remembered as the
organization's greatest receiver. He was the last former member of the
Los Angeles Raiders and the person young players turned to for advice.
Tim Brown made all but 24 of his 1,094 career catches as a member of the Raiders.
(Getty Images)
The self-proclaimed "Mr. Raider" holds most of the club's receiving
records, and his 240 games with the team are the most in franchise
history.
Brown was a first-round draft pick in 1988 out of Notre Dame.
The Raiders are happy he's part of the team again, even if he's no
longer on the field hauling in passes.
"I'm glad to hear that," fullback Zack Crockett said. "When you hear Tim
Brown's name, you hear nothing but Oakland Raider. You don't hear Tampa
Bay. We followed in his footsteps with the Raiders. That's excellent for
him. He's one of those guys who paved the way for everybody."
With the Raiders, Brown had 1,070 catches for 14,734 yards and 99
touchdowns. Last year with the Buccaneers, he had just 24 catches for
200 yards and one touchdown.
Brown is tied for third with Steve Largent on the career receiving
touchdown list with 100 and second all-time behind Jerry Rice for career
receiving yards with 14,934. Brown's 1,094 career catches ranks third.
In his final season with Oakland, he had 52 catches for 567 yards and
two touchdowns. Brown also helped the Raiders reach their first Super
Bowl in 19 years after the 2002 season.
The team is planning to honor him before training camp opens at the end
of this month in Napa.
"We hoped he would wait until training camp to do something formal, but
he has something pending that necessitates he make a formal announcement
now," Taylor said.
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