Controversial Ex-Seahawks Star Lands on Wrong Side of NFL History

Brandon Browner’s football career reached its peak as one of the original members of the Seattle Seahawks’ Legion of Boom.

Its final chapter could hardly have looked more different.

Pro Football Focus named Browner’s 2015 season with the New Orleans Saints the lowest-graded qualifying cornerback campaign since the outlet began grading NFL players in 2006. Bradley Locker of PFF highlighted Browner’s 27.5 coverage grade and staggering total of 23 assessed penalties.

The designation gives the controversial former Seahawks defender another unwanted distinction more than a decade after he played his final NFL snap.

It also illustrates how quickly Browner’s career unraveled after he left a Seattle secondary that helped change the way NFL teams evaluated size and physicality at cornerback.


Brandon Browner’s Saints Season Ended His NFL Career

Browner played 1,023 defensive snaps for New Orleans in 2015, according to PFF, but his availability did not translate into dependable coverage.

Penalties became the defining problem.

PFF counted 23 assessed flags against Browner, marking his third NFL season with at least 15. ESPN reported during that campaign that 10 of his penalties were for defensive holding, while three were for pass interference and three more were face-mask violations. Those infractions had already cost the Saints 198 yards with several games remaining.

Browner eventually broke the recorded single-season individual penalty mark, which had stood at 22. One additional flag was declined, leaving him with 23 assessed penalties and 21 that were accepted.

New Orleans finished 7-9 and allowed the most points in the NFL that season. Browner never appeared in another regular-season game after 2015.

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PFF’s retrospective therefore does not isolate a temporary slump in the middle of a productive tenure. It identifies the season that effectively closed Browner’s NFL career.


Browner Helped Establish the Legion of Boom

That ending remains striking because of where Browner started.

The Seahawks identify Browner, Richard Sherman, Kam Chancellor and Earl Thomas as the four defensive backs who initially carried the Legion of Boom nickname. The label eventually expanded to represent Seattle’s entire championship defense, but it originated with that imposing secondary.

At 6-foot-4, Browner gave Seattle an unusually large and aggressive outside corner. He intercepted six passes during his first Seahawks season in 2011 and earned the only Pro Bowl selection of his NFL career.

Browner was part of the Seahawks organization that won Super Bowl XLVIII, although a suspension prevented him from participating in Seattle’s postseason run. He then joined the New England Patriots and won another championship the following season.

By the time he arrived in New Orleans, however, the physical style that had helped make him effective was producing increasingly damaging consequences.

The distinction matters when looking back at the Legion of Boom. Browner was not as decorated as Sherman, Thomas or Chancellor, but he was not a peripheral player attached to the nickname after the fact. He helped form the original group.

That makes his post-Seattle decline a more notable piece of Seahawks history.


Browner’s Story Became More Troubling After Football

“Controversial” also extends well beyond Browner’s performance with the Saints.

In December 2018, Browner pleaded no contest to attempted murder and two misdemeanor counts of cruelty to a child. A Los Angeles County Superior Court judge sentenced him to eight years in state prison. The case stemmed from an attack on a former girlfriend while her children were present, according to the Los Angeles Times.

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Those events should not be conflated with a poor football season. They are far more serious than anything that happened on an NFL field.

They do, however, complicate how Browner is remembered by Seahawks fans. His place in the franchise’s greatest defense remains part of the historical record, just as his dramatic professional decline and subsequent criminal conviction remain inseparable from his broader public legacy.

PFF’s new designation adds another football-specific lowlight to that difficult post-Seattle story.

For an original member of one of the NFL’s most celebrated secondaries, Browner’s final season now occupies the opposite end of PFF’s record book.

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This article was originally published on HEAVY


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