The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

STEELERS WON’T TAG BELL; OPEN TO TRADING BROWN

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Le’Veon Bell is free to go. Antonio Brown, maybe not so much.

The Pittsburgh Steelers have no plans to place a transition tag on Bell, allowing the star running back to reach the open market when free agency begins next month. And while the team will explore moving Brown, general manager Kevin Colbert stressed Wednesday the Steelers will not cut the talented but turbulent star wide receiver just to appease him.

“By no means are we going to make a trade or any type of move that will not be beneficial to the Pittsburgh Steeler organizati­on,” Colbert said. “We will not be discountin­g (Brown) on the trade market, and we certainly will not be releasing (him).”

Brown began openly campaignin­g for a new team shortly after Pittsburgh finished 9-6-1, upset after being made inactive for the regular-season finale against Cincinnati for failing to provide coach Mike Tomlin with an update on his status after Tomlin sent Brown home from practice a couple of days before the game to nurse an injury.

The Steelers won but missed the playoffs. Brown has spent most of the past two months thumbing his nose at the organizati­on via social media in an effort to assure he wouldn’t be welcomed back, including calling out quarterbac­k Ben Roethlisbe­rger for having an “owner mentality” and questionin­g Tomlin’s integrity.

Yet Colbert said he doesn’t believe Brown’s erratic behavior will hurt his trade value and didn’t even rule out a chance that Brown returns to Pittsburgh for a 10th season in 2019. Brown met with Colbert, team president Art Rooney II and vice president Omar Khan in Florida on Tuesday to clear the air. Though both sides agreed “looking into a trade would probably be the best course of action,” Brown and Rooney posed for a picture afterward, a gesture Colbert called more indicative of Brown’s character than the drama that’s surrounded him at times during his prolific rise from sixth-round pick to the most productive wide receiver of his generation.

The team has not yet entered into active trade talks for Brown, the only player in NFL history with six straight seasons of at least 100 receptions. That figures to pick up with free agency set to begin March 13 and Brown due a $2.5 million roster bonus March 17.

“He believes there will be demand and hopefully for our situation there’s a demand that can satisfy anybody,” Colbert said.

What “satisfy” means is up to the Steelers and not Brown, who along with agent Drew Rosenhaus will be kept in the loop but will not be given freedom to go seek their own deal. Colbert declined to get into specifics on what the team is looking for, pointing out it could be a draft pick or an establishe­d player or perhaps some combinatio­n. The Dallas Cowboys gave the Oakland Raiders a 2019 firstround pick for Amari Cooper last fall.

Brown, who turns 31 in July, has three years left on the $68 million extension he signed in the spring of 2017.

Rather than engage in another standoff with Bell — who sat out all of 2018 after declining to sign his oneyear, $14.4 million franchise tender — the Steelers will let him go via free agency.

Pittsburgh had the option of placing the transition tag on Bell, but the machinatio­ns involved and the money and time it would tie up during the early days of free agency proved prohibitiv­e. Colbert said the team would rather use in other areas the salary-cap space created by not tagging Bell. The Steelers appear set at running back with James Conner and Jaylen Samuels but could need help at wide receiver if Brown is traded.

“Le’Veon is still a great player, but we can’t afford to use any type of tag with other needs that we have,” Colbert said.

■ In a widely anticipate­d move, the Chiefs are expected to apply the franchise tag to outside linebacker Dee Ford. According to a report from NFL Network, the organizati­on is expected to keep Ford around as new defensive coordinato­r Steve Spagnuolo converts the Chiefs’ defense from Bob Sutton’s 3-4 scheme to his own 4-3.

■ The Jets have declined contract options on safety Terrence Brooks, defensive tackle Mike Pennel and linebacker Kevin Pierre-Louis. The moves Tuesday will make all three players free agents when the NFL’s new calendar year begins March 13.

■ The Cardinals have signed veteran tight end Charles Clay to a one-year contract. The 30-year-old Clay has played eight NFL seasons, four each with Buffalo and Miami. He has 339 receptions for 3,361 yards and 23 TDs.

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Le’Veon Bell Antonio Brown

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