LEE BROWN enjoyed one hell of a career in the Football League.
Two Wembley wins, more than 400 EFL appearances and a reputation as one of football’s nice guys.



Starting out at QPR, he really made a name for himself at Bristol Rovers, scoring a dramatic 92nd minute winner on the final day of the 2015-16 season to secure back-to-back promotions for The Gas.
He moved across to Portsmouth in June 2018, winning the EFL Trophy at Wembley the following sesaon in front of 80,000 fans, before returning to his London roots and finishing his career at AFC Wimbledon.
At 33, Brown rejected a new deal at Plough Lane, instead opting to pursue “other business interests”.
Dubbed ‘Lee from football‘ wherever he went for his bubbly personality and jokey antics on the pitch, Brown has now lifted the lid on the man behind the mask in a candid new interview.
Speaking to the Portsmouth News’ chief reporter Neil Allen, the former Pompey man revealed football “had to go” as two worlds collided.
He admits he could have easily carried on playing, and was still a regular in the AFC Wimbledon defence, but behind the scenes all was not well.
He said: “I had to quit for my own sake. I was in a dark place, I’d had a mental breakdown, something had to give.
‘I could no longer juggle football full-time and run a full-time business.”
Now 34, Brown runs a thriving property business called B3 Homes. He employs 20 staff, and boasts an impressive portfolio of luxury pads, with many selling for well in excess of £1million.


Among the current projects are a £1.3million house in Purley, a plot of three more houses in the same area and an ultra-modern detached family home in Warlingham.
It all started when, at 26, he used his £25,000 savings pot to buy a house in the Filton area of Bristol, and built another house in its garden.
He had no money left to pay people to help build the house for him, so ended up doing it in his spare time while still playing League One football!
Brown continued: “I’d never held a tool in my life, but I have this obsessive nature where I need to learn about everything.
” If I was doing the plumbing, I would research how to be a plumber and, all of a sudden, knew how to run pipes. I would sit there until 3am until it sunk in.”

The business grew and grew, but eventually Brown reached breaking point.
He recalled former working from as soon as training finished until extremely late at night, and working again before hitting the training pitches the following morning.
But it all became too much for him, and football had to go.
“I was building six houses over in Purley, two in Cobham, while training every day and playing matches on a Saturday.
“I lived in a pressure cooker, rocking in the chair at points because of so much stress.
“I could not cope, physically or mentally. I had to give up football – or I would have been a goner.”
Brown admits he shut off those around him, and the tipping point was when he broke down in tears in AFC Wimbledon boss Johnnie Jackson’s office.

Ex-Spurs and Charlton man Jackson gave Brown a fortnight off, regularly checking in on the veteran defender.
He returned to the Wombles team in November 2024, making a further 22 appearances before bidding football farewell at the end of the season.
Now almost a year into his post-football life, Brown is back to his bubbly self and is reaping the rewards of his hard work.
He finished: “I had to sacrifice my football career after biting off more than I could chew. But, sitting here now, I am good.
Actually, I’m more than good. I’m happy.”