Albuquerque Journal

From toes to head, Brown is a problem

Now, he’s the Raiders’ problem as he insists on wearing his old helmet

- BY DIETER KURTENBACH

A bizarre foot injury might not be a wedge in the new relationsh­ip between star wide receiver Antonio Brown and the Raiders.

But apparently, his helmet is.

Brown has worn one type of helmet, a Schutt Air Advantage, for his entire nine-year NFL career. According to ESPN, he is threatenin­g to never play football again unless he can continue to wear that model, which is no longer approved by the league.

The saga is, from head to toe, deeply strange and so unnecessar­ily dramatic.

But don’t feel sorry for the Raiders. While, yes, this story is beyond the realm of our general sense of normalcy, this is par for the course with Brown, and the Raiders should have known that when they signed him this offseason.

NFL Network’s Mike Silver posted a long, fascinatin­g Twitter thread on Friday about Brown’s efforts to wear the now-unapproved helmet. According to Silver, Brown, at one point, instead of wearing a new, league-approved helmet in a spring practice, opted to wear his Air Advantage,

which was painted with colors “approximat­ing — but not completely mimicking” the Raiders’.

The ESPN report claims that Brown believes the NFL’s new helmet requiremen­ts single him out and that different helmet models limit his vision. It should be noted that several other NFL players, including Tom Brady and Aaron Rodgers, have been forced to change helmets as a result of the new requiremen­ts.

We all have our quirks. But this is next-level; Brown reportedly met with the NFL for two hours regarding the helmet on Friday. He is genuinely willing to let his career die on this hill.

You should take him seriously: Brown claimed in an ESPN interview in February that he doesn’t “even have to play football if I don’t want. I don’t need the game. I don’t need to prove nothing to anyone. If they want to play, they’re going to play by my rules.”

Brown has made more than $70 million to date and will be a Pro Football Hall of Famer when his career ends. His finances and legacy should be secure.

But if he does quit over a helmet, he’d walk away from $30 million in guaranteed money and as much as $50 million overall, all while he was still one of the best players in the game.

That would be a bold and strange decision, no? It certainly could make you question if his helmet had been working properly over the last few years.

It’s important to note that Silver also reported Friday that Brown has been late to several Raider team meetings and rarely focused when he did arrive. (You might have noticed him standing in the back during the opening team meeting in the first episode of HBO’s documentar­y series Hard Knocks, which is following the Raiders’ training camp this season.)

Add all of this preseason drama to his unexpected foot injury — one that was reportedly suffered not on a football field but in a cryogenic chamber and had him leave Raiders training camp in Napa to see foot specialist­s — and you have an unforgetta­ble hot mess of a situation.

All while the Raiders’ regular-season start is still a month away.

Training camp is a critical time for NFL teams — it’s a few weeks of focused work meant to prepare teams for 16 games. But in a league that treats “distractio­ns” like a plague, Brown’s past few weeks have been a swarm of locusts, and that cannot be helping the Raiders’ preparatio­n.

It surprised many fans when the Raiders were able to trade for him this past offseason and only had to forfeit a third- and a fifth-round pick to acquire him. That’s nowhere near normal value.

But it was the best offer the Steelers — Brown’s former team — received.

The rest of the NFL knew what the Steelers had been dealing with in AB: an insanely talented player who was a major problem for opposing defenses on Sunday and for his own team Monday through Saturday.

In Pittsburgh, Brown was mercurial and outspoken. He acted out when he had grievances, which, in his final year with the Steelers, seemed to be all the time, and with nearly everyone. Brown, in that sit-down interview with ESPN, said his feuds with the Steelers were “all about respect.” That same accusation is now being levied toward the NFL in regard to the helmet.

According to reporters in Pittsburgh, he was also habitually tardy to meetings and showed a lack of focus in them when he actually arrived. Perhaps as a direct result, while he was one of the best players in the league, he was accused of winging it on the field. Steelers quarterbac­k Ben Roethlisbe­rger publicly called out Brown for running wrong routes multiple times last season.

This reputation is probably why Gruden has been visibly frustrated when he’s been asked about the now-absent Brown in recent press conference­s. It’s the Steelers’ saga all over again — only this time without all the winning.

Eventually, one of the bestrun organizati­ons in the NFL decided one of the best players in the NFL wasn’t worth the trouble anymore, so they took on a salary cap hit of $21 million for this season and traded him to the Raiders.

Right now, that looks like a pretty good deal for Pittsburgh.

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