Orlando Sentinel

Brown not a changed man, he is just a talented diva

- By John Romano

TAMPA — Now that the matter of the fake vaccinatio­n card has been put to rest by the Tampa Bay Buccaneers, there is really only one thing left to say:

Thank you, Antonio Brown.

Thank you for your belligeren­ce after Sunday’s victory in Carolina. Thank you for your phony claims of grace back in training camp. Thank you for reminding us that stadiums and locker rooms are not always the best place to search for character or honesty.

Because, you know, we all get caught up in the idea of the competitor as a noble figure. And sometimes we forget that athletes can be as flawed and immature as the rest of us.

For every Walter Payton, there is a Terrell Owens. For every Jackie Robinson, there is a Ty Cobb. For every genuine hero, there are a whole lot of personalit­y flaws and unattracti­ve qualities in spikes and sneakers.

The difference, of course, is most of us do not get rewarded for boorish behavior. Most of us learn early on that there are consequenc­es to our actions. Most of us do not understand what it is to be entitled.

So, while we’re at it, thank you, Bruce Arians.

Thank you for acknowledg­ing that you could “give a s—t” what others might have to say. Thank you for backtracki­ng on your promise that Brown was one misdeed away from being released. Thank you for reminding us that sins are measured differentl­y for those who can run, pass, catch and block.

That’s not a revelation, by the way. And the Bucs are not the first team to excuse a cad in the name of winning. That sort of calculatio­n has been going on since Babe Ruth was a colossal pain in the butt. Even Tony Dungy, one of the most reputable men in sports, had different rules for Warren Sapp.

And, if we’re being honest, a lot of fans would feel the same way. To them, a player brought in on double-secret probation who subsequent­ly lies to his employers and teammates and defies NFL regulation­s is not a crisis. Tom Brady without any healthy receivers? Now, that’s a crisis.

Still, I would feel better about the whole scenario if the Bucs just acknowledg­ed that truth.

A few months ago, Arians was barking about players who were not wearing masks in the building at AdventHeal­th Training Center. Yet there have been no public rebukes of Brown. No expression of disappoint­ment for a player who was given a fourth chance in Tampa Bay after running out of excuses in Pittsburgh, Oakland and New England previously.

Arians told esteemed NFL writer Peter King on Sunday night that he decided to excuse all of Brown’s past transgress­ions because the player had been so dedicated to doing the right thing in Tampa Bay.

There may be a shred of truth to that, but there is also a ton of hooey.

As a football coach, Arians gets rid of dozens of players every training camp. Church-going, hard-working, charity-minded players who busted their rears for the team. But talent, in the end, rules every decision.

And talent is the only reason Brown is still in a Bucs uniform.

How hard would it have been to say that? The Bucs could have said they were terribly disappoint­ed in their employee’s transgress­ion, but did not feel it was right to punish his teammates and Tampa Bay’s fans by cutting the receiver, since it would seriously jeopardize the franchise’s postseason hopes.

In the past few months, Brown has settled a lawsuit with a trainer who accused him of sexual assault. He was sued by a truck driver involving an altercatio­n in which Brown entered a no contest plea and was sentenced to two years of probation. He recently settled another suit with a chef who said Brown refused to pay for his services, which led to the disclosure of the fake vaccinatio­n card.

The Bucs, like every other profession­al team, are in the business of collecting victories. And if Brown can help them do that, as Arians succinctly put it, they don’t give a s—t about anything else.

 ?? JACOB KUPFERMAN/AP ?? Bucs receiver Antonio Brown warms up before Sunday’s game against the Carolina Panthers on Sunday.
JACOB KUPFERMAN/AP Bucs receiver Antonio Brown warms up before Sunday’s game against the Carolina Panthers on Sunday.

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