Santa Fe New Mexican

Contract signed, Steelers star Brown focused on Super Bowl

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PITTSBURGH — Art Rooney II began the groundwork on making Pittsburgh Steelers wide receiver Antonio Brown a part of the organizati­on “for life” last summer.

The team’s longtime president pulled his occasional­ly eccentric star aside and promised that rewarding Brown for his recordbrea­king work would be a top priority in 2017.

The Steelers made Brown the highest-paid wide receiver in the NFL when they signed him to a five-year deal worth more than $72 million on Monday night. It was an emphatic vote of confidence that the 28-yearold can extend his prime well into his 30s for a team that believes the window to a championsh­ip remains open so long as Brown is out there chasing down passes from Ben Roethlisbe­rger.

“He’s one of the hardest-working players we’ve ever had on our team,” Rooney said on Tuesday. “He leads by example.”

Yet for all of Brown’s gaudy numbers, including an NFL-high 632 receptions since breaking into the league as a rookie in 2010, his resume is lacking in one very specific category: Super Bowl titles. It’s that pursuit — and not the riches that come along with being the most well-compensate­d person at what you do in the world — that Brown insists will be his focus through 2021. And perhaps beyond.

“All the Steeler greats, all those guys have [rings],” Brown said.

Brown does not. There was a near-miss in 2010 when Pittsburgh fell to Green Bay in the Super Bowl, a team on which Brown was more developmen­tal role player than unstoppabl­e force. He played a far larger role in 2016, when the Steelers won the AFC North and reached the AFC championsh­ip game before getting blown out by New England. Brown caught seven passes for 77 yards in the 36-17 defeat following a bumpy week in which he was forced to apologize for livestream­ing from Pittsburgh’s victorious locker room a week earlier at Kansas City.

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Antonio Brown

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