Notable Athletes
The Bears have produced many athletes. One of Brown's most famous athletes is John Heisman, namesake of the Heisman Trophy. Before finishing college at the University of Pennsylvania, Heisman played college football at Brown as a lineman.
- Bill Almon – professional baseball player, #1 pick in the 1974 Major League Baseball draft
- Mark Attanasio (Class of 1979) – financier and owner of the Milwaukee Brewers
- Curt Bennett (Class of 1970) – professional ice hockey player, St. Louis Blues and Atlanta Flames
- Thomas A. Barry (Class of 1902) – All American running back, head coach of The University of Notre Dame and University of Tulane football programs
- Don Colo (Class of 1950) – professional American football player, All-Pro who played for the Cleveland Browns
- Yann Danis (Class of 2004) – professional ice hockey player, Montreal Canadiens and New York Islanders
- Zak DeOssie (Class of 2007) – professional American football player, Pro Bowl longsnapper for the Super Bowl XLII and XLVI champion New York Giants
- Mark Donohue (Class of 1959) – professional racing driver, 1972 Indianapolis 500 champion
- Tommy Dowd – professional baseball player
- Brian Eklund - retired professional hockey player, Stanley Cup Champion
- Dave Fultz (Class of 1898) – professional baseball player
- Cory Gibbs (Class of 2001) – professional football (soccer) player, Chicago Fire
- Lindsay Gottlieb (Class of 1999) - head coach of University of California women's basketball
- Irving "Bump" Hadley (Class of 1928) – professional baseball player, pitcher for the Washington Senators and New York Yankees
- John Heisman – college American football player and coach; namesake of the Heisman Trophy
- Fred Hovey (1890) – professional tennis player, U.S. Open Men's Doubles Champion (1893) and Men's Singles Champion (1895)
- Steve Jordan (Class of 1981) – professional American football player, 6-time All-Pro tight end who played for the Minnesota Vikings
- Jamie Koven (Class of 1995) – US national rower, World Champion in single scull 1997 France
- Ed Lawrence (Class of 1928) – American football player, member of the 1926 "Iron Men" football team
- Sean Morey – Special Teams Captain of 2005 Super Bowl XL Champion Pittsburgh Steelers
- Joe Paterno (Class of 1950) – quarterback and cornerback for the Bears, head coach of the Penn State Nittany Lions from 1966 to 2011
- Jimmy Pedro – most decorated American Judo athlete; Judo World Champion (1999), two-time Olympic bronze medalist (1996, 2004)
- Fritz Pollard – First African-American NFL coach and one of the first two African American players.
- Lee Richmond – professional baseball player, first major league player to throw a perfect game
- Earl Sprackling, Brown quarterback, 1909–11; named the deserving retrospective recipient of the Heisman Trophy for 1910 by "ESPN College Football Encyclopedia: The Complete History of the Game".
- Norman Taber (Class of 1913) – track and field athlete, member of the 1912 Olympic gold medal-winning 3,000-m relay team
- Fred Tenney – professional baseball player
- Thurston Towle (Class of 1928) – American football player, member of the 1926 "Iron Men" football team
- Wallace Wade (Class of 1917) – American football coach at the University of Alabama and Duke University, namesake of Duke's football stadium
- Chazz Woodson (Class of 2005) – Major League Lacrosse player currently with the Chicago Machine
- Denis Žvegelj (Class of 1997) – Slovenian Rower, Brown Crew Varsity Eight 1994, 1995, 1992 bronze medalist in Men's Coxless Pairs
- Porter Collins (Class of 1998) – American Rower, Brown Men's Crew Varsity Eight, 1996 and 2000 Olympian, 1999 World Champion in US Eight
- Xeno Müller – Swiss Rower, Brown Men's Crew, 1996 Gold Medalist and 2000 Silver Medalist in Single Scull at Olympic Games, 3x Silver Medalist in Single Scull at World Championships
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Famous quotes containing the words notable and/or athletes:
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—For the State of Florida, U.S. public relief program (1935-1943)
“The quality of American life is an insult to the possibilities of human growth ... the pollution of American space, with gadgetry and cars and TV and box architecture, brutalizes the senses, making gray neurotics of most of us, and perverse spiritual athletes and strident self-transcenders of the best of us.”
—Susan Sontag (b. 1933)