Ken Browning
Ken Browning

Player Profile
Position:
Assistant Coach/Running Backs

Experience:
14th Season at UNC

The longest tenured assistant coach at North Carolina, Ken Browning will coach running backs in 2006. It is his second stint on offense at UNC. He coached tight ends from 2001-04 and defensive tackles from 1994-2000 and 2005-06. Butch Davis is the fourth head coach Browning has worked under at North Carolina. Browning also oversees Carolina's camps and clinics.

One of the state's most decorated high school coaches, Browning joined the Tar Heel staff in 1994 as the defensive tackles coach and has coached in some of the most memorable Carolina football games in his 13 years on the staff. He has been a part of seven bowl games at UNC and was on the staff in 1996-97 when UNC had a combined record of 21-3 and finished ranked in the top 10 both seasons.

In four seasons as tight ends coach, Browning developed several standout players, including Zach Hilton, Bobby Blizzard and Jon Hamlett. Under Browning's tutelage, Hilton blossomed into a solid NFL prospect and played three seasons in the NFL. Blizzard earned honorable-mention All-ACC acclaim in 2002.

Browning has developed a number of outstanding defensive players also, including first-round NFL draft picks Vonnie Holliday, Marcus Jones and Ryan Sims and second-round picks Rick Terry and Russell Davis. Sports Illustrated selected North Carolina's defensive tackles in its positional "Dream Team" in its 1998 preseason college football issue. Nearly every defensive tackle Browning coached at UNC has been drafted by or signed by an NFL franchise. That continued in 2005 when Chase Page was selected by the San Diego Chargers. In 2002, Sims, who played under Browning for three years, was selected by the Kansas City Chiefs in the first round with the No. 6 pick.

Browning is no stranger to success on both sides of the ball. As a defensive assistant, the Tar Heels led the ACC in total defense from 1995-97 and finished No. 2 in the nation in yards allowed in 1996 and 1997. The Tar Heels were third in the country against the run in 1996 allowing 73.9 yards per game. In 1997, Carolina was fourth in the nation stopping the run as the opponents averaged 77.9 yards per contest. UNC held opponents to less than 50 yards rushing in six games and less than 100 yards in nine of 12 games.

Promoted to defensive coordinator in 2000, Browning directed a UNC squad that set a school record with an ACC-best 53 sacks. Carolina finished 19th in the nation against the run, allowing just 103.5 yards per game, and was second in the league and 30th in the nation in total defense.

Browning was the head coach and athletic director at Northern High School for 18 years. He posted a 178-35 record and won the 1993 4-A state title and Shrine Bowl. Over his last three years, Northern built a 43-2 record and he was named the North Carolina Coach of the Year by the Associated Press in 1992 and 1993. He became only the third coach to win both the state title and Shrine Bowl in the same year.

Browning and his wife, Susan, have three sons - Chuck, John and Joe.

The Browning File
Date and Place of Birth: Born March 2, 1946 in Durham, N.C.
Family: Wife, Susan; sons, Chuck, John and Joe
Education: Guilford College, 1968
Playing Experience: 1964-67, Guilford College
Coaching Experience: 1968-69, Patrick Henry High School, Va.; 1969-70, Martinsville High School, Va.; 1971-75, Ledford High School, N.C.; 1976-93, Northern Durham High School, N.C.; 1994-1999, North Carolina (assistant coach/defensive tackles); 2000, North Carolina (assistant coach/defensive coordinator/defensive tackles); 2001-04, North Carolina (assistant coach/tight ends); 2005-06, North Carolina (assistant coach/defensive tackles); 2007-present, North Carolina (assistant coach/running backs)