A former assistant coach for UTSA’s first five seasons and offensive coordinator for four, Kevin Brown is in his third year overseeing operations of the football program. He was promoted to Assistant Athletics Director for Football in 2022 after a two-year tenure as Director of Football Operations.
Brown, who was an assistant coach under Larry Coker from 2011 to 2015, came to UTSA after spending two years as an offensive coordinator on the prep level. He is responsible for assisting the coaching staff with day-to-day operations of the program, coordinating practice schedules and team travel, assisting with summer camps, collaborating with campus organizations and organizing community service projects, among other duties.
In Brown's first year as UTSA's Director of Football Operations, the Roadrunners posted a 7-5 overall record, registered a runner-up finish in Conference USA’s West Division with a 5-2 mark and earned an spot in the 2020 SERVPRO First Responder Bowl, the program's second bowl appearance.
Brown returned to the Roadrunners after a stint as the offensive coordinator and quarterbacks coach at Boerne High School during the 2019 season. He helped the Greyhounds to a 7-4 record and a Class 4A Division I playoff appearance in his only season. Under his tutelage, the offense passed for 2,447 yards and 25 touchdowns and rushed for 919 yards and 10 TDs.
Prior to his time in Boerne, Brown was the offensive coordinator and quarterbacks coach at TMI Episcopal in San Antonio in 2018.
Brown spent the 2017 season as the wide receivers coach at Lamar, an FCS member of the Southland Conference. His position group combined to catch 160 passes for 1,876 yards and seven touchdowns. He also was responsible for the Cardinals’ kickoff return unit, which tallied 832 yards on 40 returns.
An integral part of the UTSA coaching staff during its startup era, Brown coached the Roadrunners’ tight ends during the inaugural 2011 campaign before being promoted in 2012 to offensive coordinator and quarterbacks coach, and he remained in that role through the 2015 season.
Brown’s offense produced the program’s first 1,000-yard rusher in 2015, as Jarveon Williams gained 1,086 yards and scored eight touchdowns on 173 carries. Additionally, tight end David Morgan II caught 45 passes for 566 yards and five TDs en route to becoming UTSA’s first All-American when he garnered second-team accolades from USA TODAY and honorable mention from SI.com. Morgan, a second-team all-conference choice that year, was the program’s first NFL Draft pick when the Vikings selected him in the sixth round the following spring. All totaled, the Roadrunners’ balanced attack tallied 4,347 yards of offense — 2,026 on the ground and 2,321 through the air — that fall.
In 2014, Brown's offense compiled 3,570 total yards. His quarterbacks combined for 2,069 yards and seven touchdowns on 202-of-355 passing and an additional 275 rushing yards despite battling numerous injuries throughout the season. Offensive guard Scott Inskeep, wide receiver Kam Jones and Morgan all garnered honorable mention All-Conference USA accolades.
In 2013, Brown helped lead UTSA to a 7-5 overall record, including finishing second in the West Division with a 6-2 mark in their first season in C-USA. He mentored an offense that averaged 417.8 yards (175.4 rush/242.4 pass) and 25.6 points per game, with his quarterbacks combining for 2,909 yards and 13 touchdowns through the air and 371 yards and seven scores on the ground. Inskeep collected second-team all-league honors, while Jones, offensive tackle Cody Harris, tight end Cole Hubble and quarterback Eric Soza all were named honorable mention all-conference.
Brown helped guide the Roadrunners to an 8-4 overall record and a 3-3 mark in its first and only season in the Western Athletic Conference (WAC) in 2012. The campaign was highlighted by historic wins against South Alabama, the program’s first road and FBS victory, and New Mexico State, its first conference win. The offense averaged 31.2 points and 390.2 yards (159.2 rush/231.0 pass) per game and scored 44 touchdowns. He tutored the quarterbacks to 2,772 yards and 23 TDs through the air against only six interceptions, as the group combined for a 141.46 efficiency rating. Inskeep collected second-team All-WAC accolades, while Jones, Harris, Hubble and running back Evans Okotcha received honorable mention.
The Waco native helped the Roadrunners to a 4-6 record in 2011 as the tight ends coach. The offense averaged 26.6 points and 364.5 yards (144.8 rush/219.7 pass) per game and scored 31 touchdowns during the inaugural campaign. UTSA’s tight ends accounted for 262 receiving yards and a pair of TDs, with Morgan tallying 214 and both scores on 13 catches as a true freshman.
Prior to his first tenure at UTSA, Brown served as the receivers coach at Texas State for four seasons, where he helped the Bobcats break numerous school records.
In 2009, wide receiver Da’Marcus Griggs recorded 80 receptions en route to earning second-team All-Southland Conference honors. All totaled, Brown’s wide receivers unit combined to catch 203 passes for 2,657 yards and 21 touchdowns that season.
A year earlier, Cameron Luke was named a third-team All-American after posting 73 receptions for two more records of 1,268 yards and 17 touchdowns. Luke broke the original record that he set in 2007 with 60 catches for 1,035 yards and 12 TDs and was named first-team all-conference.
Brown’s corps combined to catch 185 passes for 2,800 yards and 27 touchdowns in 2008, and a year earlier, his receivers hauled in 137 throws for 1,825 yards and 17 scores.
Prior to his time at Texas State, Brown was an offensive graduate assistant coach at TCU, his alma mater, for three seasons. Among his responsibilities at TCU were working with the Horned Frogs’ offensive linemen, film breakdown of opposing defenses and charting the opposition’s defense from the press box on game days.
During his playing career as a wide receiver at TCU from 1998-2002, Brown caught 39 passes for 567 yards, an average of 14.5 yards per reception. He hauled in 16 passes for 208 yards as a senior in 2002 and also had four touchdown receptions during his career.
Brown was a member of five bowl teams. The Horned Frogs defeated USC, 28-19, at the 1998 Sun Bowl and East Carolina, 28-14, in the 1999 Mobile Alabama Bowl. Brown capped his career as a member of TCU’s 2002 Conference USA championship team, which beat Colorado State, 17-3, in the AXA Liberty Bowl.
The Horned Frogs made three more bowl appearances while Brown served on the coaching staff. TCU downed Northern Illinois, 37-7, in the 2006 Poinsettia Bowl and edged Iowa State, 27-24, in the 2005 EV1.net Houston Bowl after falling to Boise State by a score of 34-31 in the 2003 Fort Worth Bowl.
Brown graduated from TCU in 2002 with a bachelor’s degree in business management and earned master’s degrees in education administration (2004) and liberal arts (2006) from TCU.
A former prep standout, Brown was a first-team all-state wide receiver at Waco Midway High School in 1997.
He is married to the former Erika Davis. The couple has one daughter, Naomi.
Brown, who was an assistant coach under Larry Coker from 2011 to 2015, came to UTSA after spending two years as an offensive coordinator on the prep level. He is responsible for assisting the coaching staff with day-to-day operations of the program, coordinating practice schedules and team travel, assisting with summer camps, collaborating with campus organizations and organizing community service projects, among other duties.
In Brown's first year as UTSA's Director of Football Operations, the Roadrunners posted a 7-5 overall record, registered a runner-up finish in Conference USA’s West Division with a 5-2 mark and earned an spot in the 2020 SERVPRO First Responder Bowl, the program's second bowl appearance.
Brown returned to the Roadrunners after a stint as the offensive coordinator and quarterbacks coach at Boerne High School during the 2019 season. He helped the Greyhounds to a 7-4 record and a Class 4A Division I playoff appearance in his only season. Under his tutelage, the offense passed for 2,447 yards and 25 touchdowns and rushed for 919 yards and 10 TDs.
Prior to his time in Boerne, Brown was the offensive coordinator and quarterbacks coach at TMI Episcopal in San Antonio in 2018.
Brown spent the 2017 season as the wide receivers coach at Lamar, an FCS member of the Southland Conference. His position group combined to catch 160 passes for 1,876 yards and seven touchdowns. He also was responsible for the Cardinals’ kickoff return unit, which tallied 832 yards on 40 returns.
An integral part of the UTSA coaching staff during its startup era, Brown coached the Roadrunners’ tight ends during the inaugural 2011 campaign before being promoted in 2012 to offensive coordinator and quarterbacks coach, and he remained in that role through the 2015 season.
Brown’s offense produced the program’s first 1,000-yard rusher in 2015, as Jarveon Williams gained 1,086 yards and scored eight touchdowns on 173 carries. Additionally, tight end David Morgan II caught 45 passes for 566 yards and five TDs en route to becoming UTSA’s first All-American when he garnered second-team accolades from USA TODAY and honorable mention from SI.com. Morgan, a second-team all-conference choice that year, was the program’s first NFL Draft pick when the Vikings selected him in the sixth round the following spring. All totaled, the Roadrunners’ balanced attack tallied 4,347 yards of offense — 2,026 on the ground and 2,321 through the air — that fall.
In 2014, Brown's offense compiled 3,570 total yards. His quarterbacks combined for 2,069 yards and seven touchdowns on 202-of-355 passing and an additional 275 rushing yards despite battling numerous injuries throughout the season. Offensive guard Scott Inskeep, wide receiver Kam Jones and Morgan all garnered honorable mention All-Conference USA accolades.
In 2013, Brown helped lead UTSA to a 7-5 overall record, including finishing second in the West Division with a 6-2 mark in their first season in C-USA. He mentored an offense that averaged 417.8 yards (175.4 rush/242.4 pass) and 25.6 points per game, with his quarterbacks combining for 2,909 yards and 13 touchdowns through the air and 371 yards and seven scores on the ground. Inskeep collected second-team all-league honors, while Jones, offensive tackle Cody Harris, tight end Cole Hubble and quarterback Eric Soza all were named honorable mention all-conference.
Brown helped guide the Roadrunners to an 8-4 overall record and a 3-3 mark in its first and only season in the Western Athletic Conference (WAC) in 2012. The campaign was highlighted by historic wins against South Alabama, the program’s first road and FBS victory, and New Mexico State, its first conference win. The offense averaged 31.2 points and 390.2 yards (159.2 rush/231.0 pass) per game and scored 44 touchdowns. He tutored the quarterbacks to 2,772 yards and 23 TDs through the air against only six interceptions, as the group combined for a 141.46 efficiency rating. Inskeep collected second-team All-WAC accolades, while Jones, Harris, Hubble and running back Evans Okotcha received honorable mention.
The Waco native helped the Roadrunners to a 4-6 record in 2011 as the tight ends coach. The offense averaged 26.6 points and 364.5 yards (144.8 rush/219.7 pass) per game and scored 31 touchdowns during the inaugural campaign. UTSA’s tight ends accounted for 262 receiving yards and a pair of TDs, with Morgan tallying 214 and both scores on 13 catches as a true freshman.
Prior to his first tenure at UTSA, Brown served as the receivers coach at Texas State for four seasons, where he helped the Bobcats break numerous school records.
In 2009, wide receiver Da’Marcus Griggs recorded 80 receptions en route to earning second-team All-Southland Conference honors. All totaled, Brown’s wide receivers unit combined to catch 203 passes for 2,657 yards and 21 touchdowns that season.
A year earlier, Cameron Luke was named a third-team All-American after posting 73 receptions for two more records of 1,268 yards and 17 touchdowns. Luke broke the original record that he set in 2007 with 60 catches for 1,035 yards and 12 TDs and was named first-team all-conference.
Brown’s corps combined to catch 185 passes for 2,800 yards and 27 touchdowns in 2008, and a year earlier, his receivers hauled in 137 throws for 1,825 yards and 17 scores.
Prior to his time at Texas State, Brown was an offensive graduate assistant coach at TCU, his alma mater, for three seasons. Among his responsibilities at TCU were working with the Horned Frogs’ offensive linemen, film breakdown of opposing defenses and charting the opposition’s defense from the press box on game days.
During his playing career as a wide receiver at TCU from 1998-2002, Brown caught 39 passes for 567 yards, an average of 14.5 yards per reception. He hauled in 16 passes for 208 yards as a senior in 2002 and also had four touchdown receptions during his career.
Brown was a member of five bowl teams. The Horned Frogs defeated USC, 28-19, at the 1998 Sun Bowl and East Carolina, 28-14, in the 1999 Mobile Alabama Bowl. Brown capped his career as a member of TCU’s 2002 Conference USA championship team, which beat Colorado State, 17-3, in the AXA Liberty Bowl.
The Horned Frogs made three more bowl appearances while Brown served on the coaching staff. TCU downed Northern Illinois, 37-7, in the 2006 Poinsettia Bowl and edged Iowa State, 27-24, in the 2005 EV1.net Houston Bowl after falling to Boise State by a score of 34-31 in the 2003 Fort Worth Bowl.
Brown graduated from TCU in 2002 with a bachelor’s degree in business management and earned master’s degrees in education administration (2004) and liberal arts (2006) from TCU.
A former prep standout, Brown was a first-team all-state wide receiver at Waco Midway High School in 1997.
He is married to the former Erika Davis. The couple has one daughter, Naomi.