The News Herald (Willoughby, OH)

Brown needed to ‘get my mind right’

- By Will Graves The Associated Press

PITTSBURGH » Antonio Brown didn’t skip out on the vast majority of the Steelers organized team activities to make a statement. Or to disrespect the backup quarterbac­ks. Or to take a stand alongside running back Le’Veon Bell.

The All-Pro insists he simply felt more comfortabl­e working out back home in Miami, where he could spend time with his five children and escape what he described as the “pressure” he faces from outside forces daily in Pittsburgh.

“I needed that precious time with myself to get my mind right,” Brown said Tuesday as the Steelers began a mandatory three-day minicamp.

A move the 29-year-old star called necessary as he prepares for his ninth season. Brown is typically a fixture at the voluntary workouts, where he is usually among the few players in actual football pants instead of shorts.

This spring, however, he participat­ed in the first two days and then jetted off to Florida. The fact that starting quarterbac­k Ben Roethlisbe­rger appeared for the first day of OTAs before taking time off for what he called a planned family vacation was purely coincident­al.

“I play with any quarterbac­k, no matter who’s here,” Brown said. “I play with the Steelers. It’s not one guy that I (catch passes from).”

Brown dismissed any insinuatio­n that he left OTAs because he didn’t want to work with the second or third string. He also expressed frustratio­n with media for asking other players to comment on his absence.

“You guys making up stories to ask these guys stuff that they shouldn’t be dealing with,” Brown said. “You know, that’s the pressure of being a profession­al athlete. Everyday scrutiny. Everyday pressure. It’s hard to be free.”

Brown, however, struggled to be specific about how the attention that comes with being one of the NFL’s top players negatively affects him.

The only player to have five consecutiv­e seasons with at least 100 receptions stressed he wasn’t calling out Bell when he was questioned last month about Bell’s decision to stay away from the team while waiting to sign his franchise tender.

“You guys paint me a picture to talk about Le’Veon,” Brown said. “I’m not involved in Le’Veon’s business or his contract. You guys write about it and say ‘Oh, AB says to show up.’ I just say, ‘The first rule of getting better is show up.’ I didn’t say he got to show up. He’s got his own business.”

The comments by the NFL’s highest-paid wide receiver are a bit at odds with the persona he’s cultivated during a career in which he has evolved from a sixth-round pick to a perennial Pro Bowler. His Instagram feed is updated multiple times a day and gives 2.4 million followers access to workouts, highlights, video of his children running track meets or artsy cuts of the multiple Rolls Royces in his driveway.

Lately, though, the posts have taken a different turn. Last week, he called out former offensive coordinato­r Bruce Arians for labeling him simply as a “special teams guy” and even tweaked coach Mike Tomlin for benching him in favor of Emmanuel Sanders during his rookie season in 2010. Pressed for an explanatio­n, Brown hinted he’s tired of toeing the company line.

 ?? RON SCHWANE — ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? The United States’ Tobin Heath passes around China’s Wu Haiyan during the second half of an internatio­nal friendly June 12 in Cleveland. The U.S. won, 2-1.
RON SCHWANE — ASSOCIATED PRESS The United States’ Tobin Heath passes around China’s Wu Haiyan during the second half of an internatio­nal friendly June 12 in Cleveland. The U.S. won, 2-1.
 ?? KEITH SRAKOCIC — ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Steelers wide receiver Antonio Brown warms up during practice in Pittsburgh.
KEITH SRAKOCIC — ASSOCIATED PRESS Steelers wide receiver Antonio Brown warms up during practice in Pittsburgh.

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