结果

NCAAF 11/18 17:00 1 [49] Dartmouth v Brown [51] L 38-13
NCAAF 11/11 17:30 1 [57] Brown v Columbia [103] W 21-14
NCAAF 11/04 16:00 1 耶鲁 v Brown L 36-17
NCAAF 10/27 23:00 1 [59] Brown v Pennsylvania [14] W 30-26
NCAAF 10/21 17:00 1 Brown v Cornell L 14-36
NCAAF 10/14 16:00 1 Princeton v Brown W 27-28
NCAAF 10/07 16:00 1 罗德岛 v Brown L 34-30
NCAAF 09/30 16:00 1 中央康涅狄格州立 v Brown W 20-42
NCAAF 09/22 23:00 1 [47] Brown v Harvard [44] L 31-34
NCAAF 09/16 20:00 1 Brown v 科比 W 29-25
NCAAF 11/19 18:30 1 Brown v Dartmouth L 7-30
NCAAF 11/12 17:00 1 Columbia v Brown L 31-24

Wikipedia - Brown Bears football

For information on all Brown University sports, see Brown Bears

The Brown Bears football program is the intercollegiate American football team for Brown University located in the U.S. state of Rhode Island. The team competes in the NCAA Division I Football Championship Subdivision (FCS) and are members of the Ivy League. Brown's first football team was fielded in 1878. The Bears play their home games at the 20,000-seat Richard Gouse Field at Brown Stadium in Providence, Rhode Island. The team's head coach is James Perry, who was hired on December 3, 2018.

History

In the middle of the 1926 season, the “Iron Men” came into being when the same 11 players played against Yale for 60 minutes and a 7–0 win. The next week the same 11 players played without substitution against Dartmouth and won 10–0. Two weeks later the Iron Men played 58 minutes against Harvard, but in the last two minutes the substitutes came in to earn their letters. Brown won all its games that year until the Thanksgiving game against Colgate ended in a 10–10 tie. The famed “Iron Men” were Thurston Towle ’28, Paul Hodge ’28, Orland Smith ’27, Charles Considine ’28, Lou Farber ’29, Ed Kevorkian ’29, Hal Broda ’27, Al Cornsweet ’29, Dave Mishel ’27, Ed Lawrence ’28, and Roy Randall ’28. In the 1948 season, Brown fans were the originators of the popular "de-fense!" chant that spread to the NFL in the 1950s. Following the 1981 season, the Ivy League was reclassified to Division I-AA, today known as the Football Championship Subdivision (FCS), Brown moved to Division I-AA play with the rest of the league. Brown has 607 wins, making them tied for 72nd all time in wins among division one football programs.

In 1997, Phil Estes began a twenty-one year tenure as Brown's head coach, resulting in three Ivy League championships. In 2018, after two consecutive winless seasons in the Ivy League, Estes announced that he would be stepping down.

Before the start of the 2020 season, the Ivy League announced that no sports would be played until January 1, 2021, at the earliest, because of the COVID-19 pandemic. It has not yet been determined whether the football season will take place in the spring 2021 or not at all.