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Twins Chase, Sydney Brown Living Football Dream At Illinois

CHAMPAIGN, Ill. (AP) — Chase and Sydney Brown are living a football dream at Illinois.

Growing up, the identical twins from London, Ontario, often dreamed about playing college football together. That aspiration was put on hold in 2018 when they went to different schools but rekindled briefly last year when Chase Brown, a sophomore running back, transferred from Western Michigan to rejoin his brother at Illinois.

Chase Brown played four games in 2019 but redshirted for the remainder of the season before returning to the lineup full-time this year. Illinois (2-3) has won two straight games going into Saturday's showdown at home against No. 3 Ohio State (4-0).

JoJo Domann, Chase Brown
Illinois running back Chase Brown (2) runs past Nebraska linebacker JoJo Domann (13) during the first half of an NCAA college football game in Lincoln, Neb., Saturday, Nov. 21, 2020. (AP Photo/Nati Harnik)

"This is what we dreamt about as kids," Sydney Brown said during a videoconference this week. "Having him come here has been like having a piece of home here in Illinois."

Chase Brown, a 5-foot-11, 195-pounder, is coming off consecutive 100-yard performances. After rushing for a career-high 131 yards in 23-20 win over Rutgers on Nov. 14, Brown ran for 115 yards and two TDs as Illinois got past Nebraska 41-23 victory last weekend.

Brown has rushed for a team-high 357 yards on 61 carries (5.9-yard average) and two TDs.

Sydney Brown, a 6-foot, 200-pound junior starting defensive back, had five tackles (three solo, half a tackle for a loss) against Rutgers before recording six tackles (one solo) in a win at Nebraska. He has 33 tackles (18 solo, the half-tackle for a loss) and a forced fumble this season.

Illinois Rutgers Football
Illinois defensive back Sydney Brown (30) tackles Rutgers running back Isaih Pacheco (1) during the first half of an NCAA college football game on Saturday, Nov. 14, 2020, in Piscataway, N.J. (AP Photo/Adam Hunger)

After starting their high school careers in London, the Browns transferred to Bradenton, Florida, helping St. Stephen's Episcopal School win consecutive Sunshine State Athletic Conference titles. After receiving upwards of 25 NCAA scholarship offers, Chase Brown settled upon Western Michigan because of its aviation program. Something didn't feel right, so he put his name in the transfer portal.

"When I got the Illinois offer, I knew I wanted to come here because I had an opportunity to play with my brother," he said, according to the Canadian Press. "When I finally enrolled here I just felt like I was at home. We're so close, he's my best friend and I don't even have to think twice about that."

There's very little physically that distinguishes the two. Sydney Brown is slightly bigger but Chase Brown is the older of the two, by about 2 minutes. In full gear, the only way to tell them apart on the field is by their numbers - Chase Brown wears No. 2 while Sydney dons No. 30.

Early in their football careers, Sydney Brown played running back while Chase Brown lined up along the defensive line. Predictably, there's no doubt in Sydney Brown's mind about who's the bigger offensive threat.

"Me, obviously," he said. "No, Chase is doing a great job right now. It's been real exciting to see him go out on Saturday and show off his talent on the field and show everybody what I know he can do."

While the two brothers are best friends and roommates, a sibling rivalry exists.

"We always want to outperform the other," Chase Brown said. "It could be a look, it would be words ... sometimes it gets chippy but that's just the competitive nature of the sport and us."

During games, the 20-year-old brothers pay attention to what the other is doing on the field and feed off each one another's accomplishments.

"If Chase scores a touchdown, I'm going to try to score a touchdown on defense or make a big play to help the team," Sydney Brown said. "It's cool having somebody just like you on the other side of the ball making plays and helping his team win.

"Of course, we push each other. It's just the twin rivalry that we've had with each other since we were kids. It's great to have someone like that to push you in practice each week."

Copyright 2020 The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

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