Call & Times

Steelers head west without WR Brown

- WILL GRAVES Associated Press

PITTSBURGH — Antonio Brown leaned back in his locker recently and allowed himself a brief moment of introspect­ion.

Fresh off the most productive three season stretch by a wide receiver in NFL history, a run that has garnered the Pittsburgh Steelers star a pair of first-team All-Pro selections while feeding social media a steady stream of GIFworthy open field moves and touchdown celebratio­ns, Brown listened as someone rattled off the list of Hall of Famers whose numbers he has somehow topped.

"I am the best though, right?" Brown said in a way best described as a humblebrag. "Guys haven't done what I've done. But we don't want to talk about that. We always want to grow. Growing is never-ending." Even when it hurts. Brown will miss the first playoff game of his career on Sunday when the Steelers travel to Denver in the divisional round. The four-time Pro Bowler and one of the league's most electric players is out with a concussion sustained in the final minute of last week's wild-card win over Cincinnati. The injury deprives the Steelers of their MVP against the league's best defense, one he lit up for 189 yards and two touchdowns in a comeback victory a month ago.

Yet the Steelers insist they can get by without him. Having an apparently healthy-ish Ben Roethlisbe­rger helps. The quarterbac­k is officially questionab­le with a sprained right shoulder but threw the ball well in practice on Friday, according to teammates. It also helps to have a group of receivers who have spent their time in Pittsburgh absorbing what they can from one of the most meticulous preparers in the league.

"We've all leaned on him in the past, but it creates an opportunit­y for us," Markus Wheaton said Friday.

One Pittsburgh hasn't had to face since a sprained ankle forced Brown to skip three games in 2012. Back then he was an overachiev­ing sixth-round draft pick. Now he's arguably one of the NFL's most unguardabl­e threats, his combinatio­n of speed — Brown runs with the intensity of a 6-year-old chasing down an ice-cream truck — hands and body control makes any one-on-one matchup with him borderline unfair. Look for no further than 355 receptions since the start of the 2013 season as proof.

Heading to Denver without him is less than ideal, yet it's a challenge Wheaton, Martavis Bryant, Darrius Heyward-Bey and Sammie Coates believe they're ready to embrace. None of them have played a game in Pittsburgh without Brown. Not having his familiar No. 84 in the huddle will be weird. It won't be the end of the world.

"To not see him be there with us, we've got to do some bigger things that we haven't done before to show him that we've got his back," said Coates, a rookie who caught all of one pass in limited playing time.

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