Jason Brown Ex-NFL Player Who Made $25 Million Quit Football At Age 29 To Become A Farmer

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Ex-NFL Player Who Made $25 Million Quit Football At Age 29 To Become A Farmer

  • NOV. 19, 2014, 1:36 PM
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In 2009 Jason Brown signed a five-year, $37.5-million contract with the St. Louis Rams that made him the highest-paid center in the NFL.

Five years later, after earning more than $25 million of that contract, Brown is a farmer who's helping to feed the hungry.

CBS News caught up with Brown in Louisburg, North Carolina, where he runs a 1,000-acre farm after learning how to grow crops on YouTube.

Brown was drafted 124th overall in 2005 and played nine seasons in the NFL before getting cut by the Rams in the spring of 2012.

At age 29, he still had plenty of NFL years ahead of him. He wasn't playing at the level he was in 2009, but his career was far from over. He had interest from a number of teams, including an offer from the Baltimore Ravens.

But he walked away from the game. The NFL world was surprised, and ESPN ran a story with the headline, "The Curious Case Of Jason Brown."

"My agent, he told me, 'You're making the biggest mistake of your life,'" Brown told CBS. "And I looked right back at him and I said, 'No I am not.'"

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CBS





Brown is doing this to help the less fortunate. He grows sweet potatoes and other vegetables, and donates his harvest to food pantries. According to the New & Observer, he has given away 46,000 pounds of sweet potatoes and 10,000 pounds of cucumbers this fall.

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CBS





"When you see them pop up out of the ground, man it's the most beautiful thing you could ever see," he said of harvesting the sweet potatoes.

It does look pretty fun:



CBS


Brown went to school at the University of North Carolina. He had no idea how to farm back in 2012. He learned on YouTube.

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CBS





It's a great story about life after football. Watch the entire CBS report here:



Read more: http://www.businessinsider.com/jason-brown-quit-football-farmer-2014-11#ixzz3JZ34HJD8

 

Couth

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Thats cool. I want a simple life one day too. But at like 50 not 30.

And if he really wanted to help people he should invest that money and make some moves. HE could bring in a big return on 25 million and that would feed a lot more poor people then his farm.
 

Egomaniacal1

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the potential parkinsons and body break down seems to me like a good trade off

Potential parkinsons? Thats what we doing, leaving multi-million dollar jobs because of what might potentially happen??? shyt ppl get parkinsons everyday b :manny:

But i disgress, i didn't hear him say thats the reason he quit anyway. He's doing it on seemingly religious grounds and so my statement stands, he couldn't have played football for the money and still farmed in the off-season? Or even hired ppl to do it during the season and still helped tons of ppl both with the food and with his money?

SMDH, i hate these type of stories that seem to undervalue the importance of money in general but shytloads of money in specific. I want to see how this worked out for him in 30 years.
 
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