Tim Brown talks Notre Dame in interview with Houston TV station

Tim Brown speaks about his time at Notre Dame.

If you win a Heisman Trophy, you’re a legend. Win one at Notre Dame, and the achievement is magnified. Tim Brown is one of those players, and he was asked about his time with the Irish during an interview with Greg Bailey, sports director at Houston ABC affiliate KTRK-TV. The 12-and-a-half-minute interview, which Brown did in advance of appearing at an upcoming local charity event, shifts to Notre Dame at the 7:29 mark.

Brown mentions how his high school team went 4-25-1 during his time there, so it baffled people that Notre Dame would take a chance on a player whose program was in a bad place. Longtime Irish fans with a good memory might remember that in 1984, Brown fumbled the opening kickoff in his first game before making a play that vindicated the second chance he got in that game. The Irish eventually gave Brown the opportunity to be on his first team that finished with a winning record. Given that Brown had played football since seventh grade, that first winning team was a long time coming.

Brown also fondly talks about Notre Dame during his Heisman season in 1987. The Irish that year got off to an 8-1 start and were very much in the national championship conversation. Instead, a one-point loss to Penn State put an end to those dreams, making the following game against Miami irrelevant, though the Irish also lost that game. Regardless of what had to be a bitter ending to his collegiate career, Brown clearly holds everything that happened on and off the field at Notre Dame in high regard, and that’s all any Irish fan can ask for.

Notre Dame Product A.J. Pollock is World Series Champion with Dodgers

For the first time since Brad Lidge with the Philadelphia Phillies in 2008, a former Notre Dame player has won a World Series title.

For the first time since Brad Lidge with the Philadelphia Phillies in 2008, a former Notre Dame player has won a World Series title. That player is Los Angeles Dodgers outfielder A.J. Pollock, whose team won its first championship since 1988 on Tuesday. Though he had only one double and one walk in seven plate appearances during the Fall Classic, he’ll surely take a ring in his second season in Los Angeles.

Pollock’s seven seasons with the Arizona Diamondbacks included an All-Star selection and Gold Glove in 2015. After reaching the playoffs only once during that time, he took his talents to Chavez Ravine for a four-year, $55 million deal beginning in 2019. During the pandemic-shortened regular season, he tied with Mookie Betts for the team lead in home runs with 16. He also posted a slash line of .276/.314/.566 and had 34 RBIs over 55 games.

Congratulations to A.J. for playing a role in making the City of Angels the city of champions in 2020.

81 days until Notre Dame football returns!

In 81 days Notre Dame football returns to the gridiron. Count down the days now by looking back at Notre Dame’s last Heisman Trophy winner.

81 days from now will be much different.  We’ll all be gathered around televisions getting set to watch Notre Dame start off their 2020 campaign for the first time in Annapolis as they play Navy.

Until then though we’re left counting down the days and remembering some of the best players, coaches, seasons and moments that have helped make Notre Dame football as legendary as it is today.

Today, with 81 days to go until kickoff, it’s a pretty easy guess where we’re going.

81:  1987 Heisman Trophy winner Tim Brown’s number at Notre Dame

Tim Brown won Notre Dame’s last Heisman Trophy in 1987.  Although some have been finalists and taken the trip to New York’s Downtown Athletic Club since, no Fighting Irish player has won one since.

Brown was a tremendous receiver that went onto a fantastic NFL career with the Raiders before one season with Tampa Bay.  At Notre Dame however, his junior year was statistically better than his Heisman winning senior season.

Brown totaled 174 more yards from scrimmage his junior year (1164 to 990) and scored the two more touchdowns (nine to seven).  That’s what happens when teams blanket you in coverage do everything possible to not let you get the ball and instead let someone else beat them.

Brown’s pair of punt returns for scores against Michigan State in ’87 stand out as his biggest highlight of the memorable year.

[youtube=https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9T67HDocsEY&w=560&h=315]

And in Tim Brown days from now we’ll be watching Notre Dame take on Navy.

Let’s go!