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2010 MEDIA GUIDE - Seahawks Online Media Packet

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Pro Bowl appearances in 2007 and 2008.<br />

Prior to Tampa Bay, he spent 10 seasons as an<br />

assistant coach at his alma mater, North Dakota<br />

State (1996-2005), including six as the assistant<br />

head coach (2000-05). He also served as defensive<br />

coordinator for the Bison from 1997-2002,<br />

and again in 2005.<br />

Under Bradley’s guidance, North Dakota<br />

State’s defense led the Great West Football<br />

Conference in scoring defense (13.7 ppg), pass<br />

defense (150.3 ypg), total defense (272.4 ypg)<br />

and turnover margin (+1) in 2005.<br />

He was the head coach at Fort Lewis College<br />

for four months (December 1995 - March 1996)<br />

and was defensive coordinator/linebackers<br />

coach at Fort Lewis for four seasons (1992-1995).<br />

Prior to Fort Lewis, he was a graduate assistant<br />

coach at NDSU for two seasons (1990-1991).<br />

Bradley played his college football at North<br />

Dakota State (1984-1988), where he was a free<br />

safety and punter, a four-time academic All-North<br />

Central Conference selection and a valuable<br />

member of the 1988 national championship football<br />

team.<br />

Earned bachelor’s degrees in business administration<br />

(1989) and physical education (1990)<br />

from North Dakota State as well as a master’s<br />

degree in athletic administration from NDSU in<br />

1992.<br />

He and his wife, Michaela, have four children,<br />

Carter, Anna, Eli and Ella.<br />

Joined Pete Carroll’s staff as wide receivers<br />

coach on February 4, <strong>2010</strong>, joining his seventh<br />

NFL team in a coaching career that dates to<br />

1978, including 14 years in the collegiate ranks.<br />

He joins Seattle after spending one month at<br />

the University of Tennessee in 2009-10 as its<br />

wide receivers/passing game coordinator for<br />

the Chick-fil-A Bowl, then serving as its interim<br />

head coach after the departure of Lane Kiffin.<br />

Brown coached wide receivers in the NFL<br />

from 2002-08, spending four years in Houston<br />

and three years in Detroit, most recently serving<br />

as the Lions Assistant Head Coach/Passing<br />

Game Coordinator in 2008.<br />

In 2007, the Lions wide receivers caught the<br />

second-most passes (268) and had the secondmost<br />

yards (3,370 yards) among wide receiving<br />

units in the NFL (second only to New England<br />

BRADLEY’S COACHING CAREER<br />

1990-91 North Dakota State<br />

Graduate Assistant<br />

1992-95 Fort Lewis College<br />

Defensive Coordinator/LBs<br />

Dec. ‘95- Fort Lewis College<br />

Mar. ‘96 Head Coach<br />

1996 North Dakota State<br />

Linebackers<br />

1997-99 North Dakota State<br />

Defensive Coordinator/LBs<br />

2000-02 North Dakota State<br />

Asst. Head Coach/D.C./LBs<br />

2003-04 North Dakota State<br />

Asst. Head Coach/Linebackers<br />

2005 North Dakota State<br />

Asst. Head Coach/D.C./LBs<br />

2006 Tampa Bay Buccaneers<br />

Defensive Quality Control<br />

2007-08 Tampa Bay Buccaneers<br />

Linebackers<br />

2009- Seattle <strong>Seahawks</strong><br />

Defensive Coordinator<br />

SEAHAWKS EXPERIENCE: 1st YEAR<br />

NFL EXPERIENCE: 17th YEAR<br />

in both categories). Detroit was the only team<br />

to have four players, all wide receivers, each<br />

with more than 650 receiving yards: Shaun<br />

McDonald (943 yards), Roy Williams (836<br />

yards), Calvin Johnson (756 yards) and Mike<br />

Furrey (664 yards). The Lions also became the<br />

first team with four wide receivers recording<br />

over 650 yards since Houston in 1990.<br />

In 2006, Detroit’s top two receivers combined<br />

for 180 receptions and 2,396 yards, more<br />

than doubling the output of the Lions’ top two<br />

receivers in 2005. WR Roy Williams, who led<br />

the NFC that season with a career-high 1,310<br />

receiving yards, was the second receiver<br />

coached by Brown to be named to a Pro Bowl.<br />

He also coached the conference’s receptions<br />

leader in Mike Furrey (98 receptions for 1,082<br />

yards). It was the first time since 1999 that two<br />

ASSISTANT COACHES 39

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