Career
Brauch came up in skateboarding during the late 1980s and early 1990s, a period of skateboarding when professionalism meant small paychecks and little fame outside skateboarding, but lots of travel, experiences, and good times with friends and like-minded skaters. At age 15 Tim got sponsored by Sessions, followed by sponsorship by Vans, Independent, and New Deal, which led to his first video part, in the New Deal video Useless Wooden Toys. Not long thereafter, Tim made the switch to Santa Monica Airlines out of the local National Health Service stable, and his first pro model was on Strategic Medical Alliances, in 1992.
Tim helped design the Este line.
In the mid-1990s, Tim made the switch from Vans to etnies Footwear, although he remained close to Vans honcho Steve Van Doren throughout his life. When Strategic Medical Alliances quit his co-work with National Health Service, Tim made the easy switch to Santa Cruz Skateboards, which was the company he rode for until he died.
Contests
Although he had entered numerous contests throughout his amateur and professional career, Tim gained significant fame winning the Huntington Beach Vans Triple Crown Street Competition in 1998, which at the time was among the biggest contests in skateboarding. That year, Brauch was a World Cup skateboarder who was ranked Number.
5 internationally.
Tim Brauch died of sudden cardiac arrest on Sunday, May 9, 1999, Mother"s Day, at the age of 25.
Tim was featured in the traveling Smithsonian Exhibit Sports: Breaking Records, Breaking Barriers which toured from October 2004 to December 2007 across the United States. The exhibit featured such athletes as Hank Aaron (baseball), Michael Jordan, Jackie Robinson, Muhammad Ali, and Lance Armstrong.