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Keith Browner, former USC linebacker and member of a large NFL family, dies at 63

A football player in a white jersey run toward another player in a black jersey with a referee running in the background
Former USC and NFL linebacker Keith Browner, left, shown playing for the San Diego Chargers in 1988, died Tuesday at age 63.
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  • Keith Browner, a former USC linebacker and five-year NFL veteran, died Tuesday at age 63, apparently while preparing for hospital care.
  • The Warren, Ohio, native was the fifth of six brothers to play college football, with four of them reaching the NFL.
  • His son, Keith Browner Jr., also played college and pro football, continuing the Browner family tradition across generations.

Former USC and NFL linebacker Keith Browner died Tuesday morning in San Leandro, the Alameda County Sheriff’s Office Coroner’s Bureau confirmed Wednesday. He was 63.

Keith Browner Jr. told TMZ that he talked to his father Monday night when the elder Browning was having stomach problems, vomiting and feeling tired. Browner Jr. said his father told him he would go to the hospital the next morning.

Browner was getting ready to go to the hospital Tuesday morning, according to TMZ, “when he curled over the side of a chair and collapsed to the floor next to his girlfriend.” TMZ also reported that “it appears” Browner suffered a heart attack and that his death was “unexpected and sudden.”

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Alameda County authorities provided no cause of death Wednesday.

The Rams are hopeful star wide receiver Puka Nacua escaped serious injury after he took a shot to his ribs while running a jet sweep against the Saints.

Born in Warren, Ohio, Browner was the fifth of six brothers, all of whom played college football and four of whom went on to play in the NFL. A second-round pick (30th overall) for the Tampa Bay Buccaneers in 1984, Browner also played for the San Francisco 49ers, Los Angeles Raiders and San Diego Chargers during a five-year NFL career.

Oldest brother Ross Browner spent 10 years in the NFL, playing for the Cincinnati Bengals and Green Bay Packers. Jimmie Browner Jr. played two years with the Bengals. Joey Browner was a six-time Pro Bowl player who spent nine seasons with the Minnesota Vikings and one with the Buccaneers.

Browner Jr. followed in his father’s footsteps as a college and pro football player. A standout defensive end at Dorsey High, Browner Jr. played three seasons at California and one season with the Houston Texans.

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A nephew, Ross Browner’s son Max Starks, played nine years for the Pittsburgh Steelers and one for the St. Louis Rams.

Nick Mangold, a two-time All-Pro center who helped lead the New York Jets to the AFC championship game twice, has died after announcing he had kidney disease.

Browner — who was 14 when his father, Jimmie, died of cancer at age 49 — said his mother Julia was the driving force behind her sons’ passion for the sport.

“She’s the one who always urged us to play,” he told the Dayton Daily News in 2023, “and sometimes she’d be right out there with us in the yard when we were having pick-up games.”

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A three-sport standout at Warren Harding High, Browner spent four seasons at USC (1980-83), overlapping with brother Joey for the first three. He was named a captain for his final season and finished his college career with six interceptions in 34 games played.

Browner made the NFL’s all-rookie team in 1984. After three years with the Buccaneers, he split the 1987 season between the 49ers and Raiders before spending his final NFL season with the Chargers.

Hours after the Tampa Bay Buccaneers selected USC linebacker Keith Browner with the 30th pick of the 1984 draft, Chicago Bear scout Jim Parmer called it the worst choice of the day.

He finished his NFL career with 10.5 sacks, four interceptions (including one returned 55 yards for the Chargers against the Seattle Seahawks in 1988) and five fumble recoveries, then played two seasons in the Canadian Football League and six in the Arena Football League.

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Browner is survived by his son and four daughters.

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