Neal Brown

Neal Brown
Sport(s) Football
Current position
Title Head coach
Team Troy
Conference Sun Belt
Record 30–15
Annual salary $810,000
Biographical details
Born (1980-03-11) March 11, 1980
Danville, Kentucky
Alma mater UMass
Playing career
1998–2000 Kentucky
2001–2002 UMass
Position(s) Wide receiver
Coaching career (HC unless noted)
2003 UMass (TE/AOL)
2004 Sacred Heart (QB/WR)
2005 Delaware (WR)
2006–2007 Troy (IWR)
2008–2009 Troy (OC/QB)
2010–2012 Texas Tech (OC/QB)
2013–2014 Kentucky (OC/QB)
2015–present Troy
Head coaching record
Overall 30–15
Bowls 2–0
Accomplishments and honors
Championships
Sun Belt (2017)
Awards
Sun Belt Coach of the Year (2017)

Neal Harmon Brown (born March 11, 1980) is an American college football coach and former player. He is currently the head football coach at Troy University, a position he assumed in November 2014. Brown previously served as the offensive coordinator at Troy (2008–2009) and Texas Tech University (2010–2012) and the University of Kentucky (2013–2014).

Background

Brown attended Boyle County High School in Danville, Kentucky, where he was an all-state wide receiver, baseball, and basketball player.

He played football at the University of Kentucky under head coach Hal Mumme and his assistants, Mike Leach and Tony Franklin, before transferring to the University of Massachusetts Amherst.

Early coaching career

Brown started his coaching career as a graduate assistant at UMass. Before joining Larry Blakeney's staff at Troy to work under Tony Franklin, he spent one-year assistant coaching stints at UMass, Sacred Heart, and Delaware. Following Franklin's departure to Auburn at the end of the 2007 regular season, Brown was promoted to offensive coordinator at Troy. When he was hired, he became the youngest coordinator in all FBS football.

Texas Tech

On January 12, 2010, Brown was announced as the offensive coordinator at Texas Tech under new Red Raiders head coach Tommy Tuberville. During the 2010 football season, the Red Raider offense performed well. During his tenure at Texas Tech, Brown perfected his NASCAR spread offense. The offense created by Brown focused on players running to the line immediately after the play and quickly snapping the ball before the defense could get set. The offense requires speed at every position to be run the way Brown envisions it. The focus of the offense was to snap the ball 8 seconds after the previous play. The 2010 Red Raiders ranked 15th in the country in total offense, 6th in passing offense, and 72nd in rushing offense.[1]

For his coaching performance during the 2011 41–38 upset victory over the then-ranked #3 Oklahoma Sooners, he was recognized by Rivals.com as National Coordinator of the Week.[2]

Brown was considered for the head coaching job at his alma mater, UMass, following the 2011 season.[3] Brown was also considered for the school's head coaching job when it opened following the 2008 season.

Kentucky

On December 9, 2012 it was reported after several weeks of speculation that Brown would return to his home state to coach the offense at Kentucky under new coach Mark Stoops.

Troy

Troy announced Brown's hire on Sunday, November 30, 2014. In 2016 Neal Brown coached the Troy Trojans to their first 10 win season since joining FBS in 2001 and getting ranked in the AP top 25 for the first time in school history. [4]

Kentucky offensive coordinator Neal Brown, who had served in the same capacity at Troy from 2008–2009, was named the Trojans head coach on November 30, 2014.[5] In 2015, Brown's Trojans posted a 4–8 record.[6] Troy was ranked for the first time in the AP top 25 on November 13, 2016, they became the first team from the Sun Belt Conference to be ranked in the Top 25 and finished the year with a record of 10–3.[7] Troy capped of the 2016 season by winning the Dollar General Bowl in Mobile, Alabama.

In Brown's third season at the helm in 2017, he led Troy to a 3–1 start to begin the season. In the fifth game of the season on September 30, Troy faced #25-ranked LSU. With Troy leading in the third quarter by a score of 24–7, LSU began to mount a comeback in the fourth quarter by scoring 14 unanswered points and trailing just 24–21 with less than 30 seconds left in the game. LSU began to move the ball down-field before having only 8 seconds left on the clock. The very next play became an interception for Troy, which sealed the upset victory. The win over LSU snapped the Tigers' 46-game non-conference home winning streak, which was the longest such streak in the country at the time. The Trojans became Sun Belt co-champions after defeating Arkansas State in a thriller, 32–25. Troy's 10–2 overall record is the programs best regular season finish since joining the FBS in 2001.

Personal

Brown is a member of the Boyle County Baseball and Football Hall of Fame. He is married to Brooke Brown (née Stewart), and the couple have two daughters, Adalyn and Anslee, and a son, Dax.

Head coaching record

Year Team Overall ConferenceStanding Bowl/playoffs
Troy Trojans (Sun Belt Conference) (2015–present)
2015 Troy 4–83–5T–5th
2016 Troy 10–36–2T–3rdW Dollar General
2017 Troy 11–27–1T–1stW New Orleans
2018 Troy 5–23–0(East)
Troy: 30–1519–8
Total:30–15
      National championship         Conference title         Conference division title or championship game berth

References

  1. http://espn.go.com/college-football/statistics/team/_/stat/total
  2. Huguenin, Mike (October 23, 2011). "Doege was key in Raiders' upset victory". Rivals.com. Retrieved October 24, 2011.
  3. http://www.masslive.com/umassfootball/index.ssf/2011/12/umass_ad_john_mccutcheon_meets.html
  4. TROY ATHLETICS [@TroyAthletics] (November 30, 2014). "Fans … New Troy football head coach Neal Brown will land at the Troy airport at approx. 4:15 p.m.; come out & welcome him back to Troy" (Tweet) via Twitter.
  5. Thamel, Pete. "Troy hires Kentucky's Neal Brown to be next football head coach".
  6. "Archived copy". Archived from the original on October 3, 2016. Retrieved December 4, 2016.
  7. "Troy becomes first Sun Belt team ever in AP Top 25". November 13, 2016.
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