Manhandles receivers. Gets in their heads.
He brought a physical style of play on a level that we had never seen before and some call him the original member of the Legion of Boom.
He will be called for penalties, though. That's the trade off you have to make with a player that is that physical. He will not back down from anyone.
But he struggles with speed receivers. I remember when Mike Wallace was with the Steelers, he torched Browner all day. Browner was never able to jam him at the line and he couldn't keep up. So that's something to watch. Over his last year, with the suspensions and injuries, he did not seem like the same player. He seemed a step slower and Byron Maxwell outplayed him by a good margin. He would have lost his starting job even if he had stayed with us another year.
But if your coaches can scheme to put Browner in the best situation possible for his skills (as ours did) you will love him.
Despite the penalties, we loved what he brought to the field.
One of my favorite Browner moments of all time was him taking on Greg Jennings—or rather, Greg Jennings trying to take on Browner (from the "Fail Mary" game). This is the type of penalty you will see from him that is totally worth it: