Tim Brown, Millennium Hall of Fame
Richard Dunn
If Tim Brown has learned anything, it’s a sense of understanding
his fellow athlete and competitor -- from head to toe, inside and out.
These days, the former Newport Harbor High and University of Redlands
football star, later known as the “Surf Doctor” early in his chiropractic
career, operates Newport Spine and Sport along Mariner’s Mile on West
Coast Highway, travels the speaking circuit and is no longer one of
Newport Beach’s most eligible bachelors.
The epitome of beachcomber health and fitness, Brown became a world-class
surfer and beach volleyball player, following a collegiate football
career as quarterback of the NAIA powerhouse Bulldogs.
Brown’s life changed when he was studying for the Medical College
Admission Test and competing on the beach as a AAA-rated volleyball
player. As the Association of Volleyball Professionals Tour started to
grow in the 1980s, so did its players.
That’s when Brown opted to switch career paths and enter the chiropractic
field, as he became interested in the causes rather than the affects of
sports injuries, and began educating athletes on nutrition, conditioning
and prevention techniques.
Then, realizing his pro beach volleyball playing future didn’t stand much
of a chance against guys like Sinjin Smith and Karch Kiraly, he broke out
his adjusting table and served as an on-site chiropractor for the AVP
Tour.
“That became my forte,” he said, “and I was able to take those physical
(problems) and turn it into a positive, while working on their
imbalances, because as their injuries were healing, we would always be
working on something else.”
Brown, who played competitive volleyball from age 14 to 41, started
bringing his table to pro surfing events and soon became a fixture in the
competitor’s area, while gaining a reputation on the sand as the “Surf
Doctor.” He also worked on members of the Newport Beach Dukes in World
TeamTennis in the early ‘90s.
“Now, my practice is mostly pro and elite athletes, from pro football
players to extreme-sport athletes,” said Brown, who recently invented a
new taping technique, which has led to more speaking engagements,
including next month’s for the American Society of Orthopedic Ankle and
Foot Surgeons.
“It’s more than a clinic,” Brown said of his practice, “it’s kind of a
school for injured athletes. I take the skills I enjoyed as a teacher (at
Troy High for a semester out of college), and try to teach people how to
take better care of themselves. I try to educate them on how to stay out
of our clinic. It’s kind of what I always wanted as an athlete but never
got.”
A 1974 Newport Harbor graduate, Brown was honored in 1998 by the American
Chiropractic Association as its Doctor of the Year.
But it wasn’t always a smooth trail for Brown, who played football and
baseball at Newport Harbor, until he broke his left hand one year in
baseball and moved over to volleyball, a club team at the time where
“they needed anybody with two legs.” Brown played volleyball with a cast
on his left hand, then, once it healed and he could play with both hands,
he found another natural gift.
A two-year starter at cornerback who played on the Sailors’ Sunset League
co-championship football team in the fall of ‘73, Brown wanted to play
quarterback under Coach Don Lent, but instead was a backup to Steve
Bukich.
“That was my first really good lesson in politics and how things work in
the real world, so to speak,” Brown said. “It was discouraging and I
almost quit, but my dad would’ve pulled my surfing privileges. He
encouraged me to stay with it.
“It was a poignant time in my life and how the world can be. I really
wanted to get the (heck) out of there, but my dad encouraged me to learn
some good life’s lessons ... and it turned into a positive, because I was
able to continue my football career at Redlands.”
In four years, the Bulldogs never lost a conference game with Brown as
their quarterback. In his junior year, Redlands reached the 1976 NAIA
national championship game.
“We had a plethora of really good athletes who had no business being at a
small college,” said Brown, who added that he learned the most from his
father, Bill, and former Redlands football coach Frank Seraeo.
Bill Brown is a longtime Newport Harbor assistant football coach, “who
has touched more lives than I could ever imagine in my life as a doctor.”
Before deciding to enter medical school, today’s honoree in the Daily
Pilot Sports Hall of Fame played volleyball at Orange Coast College and
competed on Coach Laird Hayes’ national championship surfing team in
1980.
Brown, who “surfs daily” near 56th Street in Newport Beach, married
former Sailors volleyball standout Rebecca Sherwood in October and the
couple lives in Laguna Beach.
Sherwood, who also played at UC Berkeley, was a member of the Tars’ 1987
CIF Southern Section 5-A championship team.
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