Trent Brown Bio
Trenton Jacoby Brown (born April 13, 1993) is an American professional football offensive tackle for the Houston Texans of the National Football League (NFL). Standing 6 feet 8 inches tall and weighing around 363 pounds during his college years, Brown is one of the largest linemen in modern NFL history and has built a decade-long career around rare size, long arms, and surprising mobility. He played college football at Georgia Military College and for the Florida Gators before being selected by the San Francisco 49ers in the seventh round of the 2015 NFL Draft. A Super Bowl champion and former Pro Bowl selection, Brown has also spent time with the New England Patriots, the Oakland/Las Vegas Raiders, and the Cincinnati Bengals.
Early Life and Background
Brown was born in Bastrop, Texas, on April 13, 1993, and later moved to Albany, Georgia, where he attended Deerfield-Windsor School before transferring to Westover Comprehensive High School. He played basketball during his first two years of high school and did not move to football until his junior year, a late start that he has often credited with keeping him fresh and hungry once he finally focused on the sport. Brown graduated from Westover High School in 2011, and by that point his size had begun to attract attention from college recruiters looking for projectable offensive linemen.
After high school, Brown chose the junior college route, enrolling at Georgia Military College in Milledgeville, Georgia, in the fall of 2011. He played two seasons for the GMC Bulldogs, where the running game averaged 188 yards per game and his physical tools became more refined. His play at the junior college level earned him second-team NJCAA All-American honors in 2012, and he was recruited by a long list of major NCAA Division I programs, including Arizona, Arkansas, Florida State, Georgia, Kansas, LSU, Oklahoma, Ole Miss, Mississippi State, and Texas A&M.
Path to the NFL
Brown eventually chose to continue his college career at the University of Florida, signing a National Letter of Intent in December 2012 and enrolling in May 2013. At 6-foot-8 and 363 pounds, he was the biggest offensive lineman at Florida since Max Starks in 2003 and remained the heaviest player to wear a Gators uniform until Desmond Watson in 2021. In his first year with the Gators, he was used mainly on field goals and short-yardage jumbo packages before taking over the starting tackle job following an injury to Tyler Moore. He moved into a starting guard role at the beginning of the 2014 season, polishing his technique in both spots before declaring for the NFL Draft.
On May 2, 2015, Brown was selected by the San Francisco 49ers in the seventh round with the 244th overall pick. His unusual frame, long arms, and athletic movement made him an intriguing late-round project, and coaches around the league quickly took notice of his upside as a pass protector.
Trent Brown Career
San Francisco 49ers (2015–2017)
Brown started the last two regular-season games of his rookie season and appeared in five total games, easing into a developmental role behind more experienced linemen. By 2016, he had locked down the right tackle job and started all 16 regular-season games for the 49ers, showing the kind of length and power that opposing pass rushers struggled to get around. Denver Broncos linebacker Von Miller, then the reigning Super Bowl MVP, called Brown one of the better tackles in the NFL after facing him in practice, citing his size, arm usage, and movement skills.
In 2017, Brown started 10 games at right tackle before a shoulder injury sent him to injured reserve on December 16, cutting his third season short. Even with the injury, his three years in San Francisco had been enough to establish him as one of the most physically gifted young tackles in the league.
New England Patriots, First Stint (2018)
On April 27, 2018, Brown was traded, along with the 143rd pick in the 2018 NFL Draft, to the New England Patriots for the 95th pick. His arrival was part of head coach Bill Belichick’s push to build one of the heaviest rosters in the league for a power-running offense. After playing right tackle in San Francisco, Brown moved to starting left tackle in New England and started all 16 regular-season games. With Brown protecting the blind side, the Patriots reached and won Super Bowl LIII against the Los Angeles Rams, earning him a championship ring in his first year with the team.
Oakland/Las Vegas Raiders (2019–2020)
On March 13, 2019, Brown signed a four-year, $66 million contract with the Oakland Raiders, with $36.75 million guaranteed, making him the highest-paid offensive lineman in the league at the time. Head coach Jon Gruden announced that Brown would play right tackle opposite Kolton Miller, forming one of the tallest tackle duos in the NFL. In his first 11 games with the Raiders, Brown allowed only one sack in 326 pass-blocking snaps, and on December 17 he was named a Pro Bowl selection for the first time in his career. A day later, he was placed on injured reserve, ending his 2019 season early.
His second season in Oakland was marked by health setbacks and the COVID-19 pandemic. Brown was placed on the reserve/COVID-19 list on October 21, 2020, and again on November 5, and he was briefly hospitalized after a pregame IV caused air to enter his bloodstream. He finished the 2020 season in Las Vegas after the Raiders relocated, but his time with the team ended shortly thereafter.
New England Patriots, Second Stint (2021–2023)
On March 17, 2021, Brown was traded back to the New England Patriots along with a 2022 seventh-round pick in exchange for a 2022 fifth-round pick. He was named the Patriots’ starting right tackle but suffered a calf injury in Week 1, missed the next three games, and was placed on injured reserve on October 9 before being activated on November 13. On March 21, 2022, he was re-signed to a two-year, $14 million deal. Originally slated to play right tackle, the team moved him back to left tackle during the 2022 preseason, the position he had previously held during New England’s Super Bowl run.
Cincinnati Bengals (2024)
On March 19, 2024, Brown signed with the Cincinnati Bengals and was named the starting right tackle to begin the season. During a Week 3 loss to the Washington Commanders, he went down with a torn patellar tendon and was placed on season-ending injured reserve two days later, limiting his 2024 campaign to just a handful of games.
Houston Texans Era (2025–Present)
On March 24, 2025, Brown signed a one-year, $3 million deal with the Houston Texans, joining a roster looking to add veteran depth and size to its offensive line. He was released on August 26 as part of final roster cuts and re-signed to the practice squad, before being signed back to the active roster on October 3. His return to an NFL active roster marked another comeback for one of the league’s most physically unique linemen.
Driving Style and Strengths
Brown’s game is built around rare physical traits: a 6-foot-8 frame, long arms, and the foot quickness to mirror edge rushers in pass protection. Coaches have consistently praised his ability to use his length and wingspan to absorb contact and reset the line of scrimmage in the run game, even if technique and conditioning have occasionally been the focus of coaching staff.
Notable Events and Milestones
Brown’s career milestones include winning Super Bowl LIII with the New England Patriots, earning his first Pro Bowl nod in 2019, and signing the richest contract ever for an offensive lineman at the time of his 2019 deal with the Raiders. He has also been one of the tallest and heaviest linemen ever to play in the modern NFL, regularly drawing praise from elite pass rushers like Von Miller for his movement skills at that size.
Trent Brown Career Wins
Brown’s career win résumé is anchored by team success rather than individual statistics, with his most prominent title coming at the highest level of the sport. His lone Super Bowl ring and lone Pro Bowl selection both occurred during a four-season stretch in which he played for three different franchises, a testament to his value on the open market.
NFL Highlights
Brown’s most celebrated season came in 2018, when he started every game at left tackle for a New England Patriots team that allowed the lowest points total in the league and went on to win Super Bowl LIII against the Los Angeles Rams. His 2019 campaign with the Oakland Raiders, in which he allowed just one sack in his first 11 games, earned him his only Pro Bowl selection before injury ended his year. Across his stops in San Francisco, New England, Oakland/Las Vegas, Cincinnati, and Houston, he has served as a starting tackle and a key pass protector in both power- and zone-based schemes.
Other Wins and Performances
At the college level, Brown earned second-team NJCAA All-American honors at Georgia Military College in 2012 and went on to start at both tackle and guard for the Florida Gators. He has been credited as one of the physically unique offensive linemen of his generation, ranking among the tallest and heaviest players to start an NFL game at the tackle position.
Trent Brown Family
Personal Life
Brown is widely known by his full name, Trenton Jacoby Brown, and has spent much of his professional career based in the United States around his NFL team locations. Public information about his immediate family, marital status, and children has not been widely reported, and details beyond his birthplace of Bastrop, Texas, remain limited in verified sources.
2025 Season Performance
Brown’s 2025 storyline has been defined by perseverance. After signing a one-year, $3 million deal with the Houston Texans on March 24, 2025, he was released on August 26 as part of final roster cuts and re-signed to the team’s practice squad, a sign that the Texans valued his veteran presence even when trimming to the initial 53-man roster. On October 3, Brown was signed back to the active roster, returning to game availability midway through the season.
With Houston, Brown has been used as additional offensive line depth behind younger starters, and his experience at both left and right tackle gives the Texans flexibility along the front five. His ability to step in for spot duty and protect the pocket has been the clearest on-field impact of his 2025 campaign.
Looking ahead to the rest of 2025, Brown’s role is likely to remain situational, with his biggest value coming as a reliable swing tackle and a steadying locker-room presence. Should injuries hit the Texans’ offensive line, he is well positioned to return to a starting role and add to a career that already includes a Super Bowl title and a Pro Bowl nod.

