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Brown's legendary work ethic

antdrewjosh

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Teammate calls Antonio Brown 'hardest-working dude in football'
The Associated Press Dec 24, 2015 4:37 PM
PITTSBURGH - Their lone off day of the week nearing an end, Darrius Heyward-Bey and Antonio Brown were plotting how to wrap up Tuesday night when Brown mentioned something about hitting the gym.

Heyward-Bey checked the time and shook his head.

''It was almost 10 o'clock,'' Heyward-Bey said with a laugh. ''I said, `You go ahead. I'm going to go home and sleep.'''

So away Brown disappeared for another solitary workout. Nearly five months into another season packed with GIF-generating touchdown celebrations and looks-like-a-typo numbers, the Pittsburgh Steelers wide receiver is still pushing, driven by a relentlessness that is nearing mythical status inside his own locker room.

''He's the hardest-working dude in football,'' Heyward-Bey said.

It sounds like a cliche, particularly in a league filled with overachievers. Yet the Steelers insist it's true. How else to explain how a sixth-round draft pick - one who at 5-foot-10 and 180 pounds hardly fits the prototypical mold of a gamebreaker in a league where bigger is almost nearly always better - becomes arguably league's most fluid player? Heading into Sunday's game at Baltimore, Brown is first in the NFL in yards receiving (1,586), second in receptions (116) and perhaps unmatched in sheer tenacity.

''(He) was kind of bound and determined to not just be the small guy who wasn't your typical wide receiver,'' quarterback Ben Roethlisberger said. ''I think that always pushed him, small school, multiple colleges, maybe people not always believing in him, just fueled his fire.''

One that is singeing opponents at a historic rate. Brown and Wes Welker are the only players with three consecutive seasons of 110 or more receptions. When Brown lit up Denver's No Fly Zone for 16 catches last week, he became the first receiver to put up two games of at least 15 grabs in the same year. His 4,783 yards (and counting) since the start of 2013 is the third-most productive three-year stretch ever, trailing only Jerry Rice and Calvin Johnson.

While it's easy to get caught up in Brown's showmanship - do a quick search for ''Antonio Brown celebration'' for a refresher on everything from the front flip into the end zone against Oakland in November to the goalpost splat against Indianapolis three weeks ago - it obscures the larger point: all that glitz comes with a heavy dash of grit.

Not that Brown wants to talk about it. If anything, he's become more selective with his words as his star has risen. He began his career sharing a corner of the locker room with fellow receivers Mike Wallace and Emmanuel Sanders (the self-described ''Young Money Family) only to migrate to one adjoining the equipment room, better for a quick escape on the days he doesn't feel like chatting. When pressed on the details of his training regimen, Brown offers only vague generalities.

He prefers not to talk about his rise from draft afterthought to perennial Pro Bowler, repeatedly stressing he is ''singularly focused'' on beating whatever team the Steelers happen to face that week and flashing a smile that indicates prying any further is pointless. It's as if he's protecting some sort of secret formula, even from the guys he lines up alongside.

''He's all about his business,'' Heyward-Bey said. ''It's like he turns on a switch. It's time to play ball.''

An ethos that isn't relegated to Sundays. Brown long ago started wearing his game pants during organized team activities. During training camp, he started running additional sprints with the defense even after the offense's five-minutes of oxygen-sapping dashes were done. Soon, running back Le'Veon Bell and the rest of the skill players were joining in. Brown treats every snap of every practice like it's overtime in the Super Bowl whether the ball is coming to him or not, an example that has trickled down through a group that includes Heyward-Bey, rising star Martavis Bryant and protege Markus Wheaton.

Brown's urgency combined with the ingenuity of offensive coordinator Todd Haley and the open-mindedness of head coach Mike Tomlin have created a system that has made Brown nearly unguardable. The Broncos came to Heinz Field last week with the NFL's best pass defense and Brown finished with 189 yards and two touchdowns, including the game-winner between two defenders late in the fourth quarter. Most of the production came after Haley started experimenting and lining Brown up in unfamiliar places to give the Broncos a different look.

''It was like an unscripted training camp scrimmage, if you will, in that second half, all of it in order to get him in some (favorable) spot,'' Haley said.

In other systems with other franchises, that might have never happened.

He fits the physical profile of a slot receiver, but matches it with the football IQ of a quarterback and a chip on his shoulder roughly the size of the Lombardi Trophy. Haley can't even remember if he gave Brown much consideration when Brown came out of Central Michigan in 2010 and Haley was coaching in Kansas City. When Haley arrived in Pittsburgh in early 2012 to take over as offensive coordinator, he wasn't exactly sure what he had on his hands.

''I'm looking at this 5-10 guy. Yeah, he's fast, (but) he didn't fit that prototypical big-dog receiver,'' Haley said. ''I learned pretty quickly not to place a ceiling on AB because he's going to shatter it.''
 
My favorite AB story was when foster was talking about a drill that AB rans with two Olinemen after practice all the time... one lineman thre him a jump ball on the sidelines and the other mauled him trying to keep him from catching it... ABs theory supposedly was that hed never face a CB capable of interfering with him more than an olineman would, and hed never get that bad of a pass from a real QB.... Really smart guy most of the time....
 
The results on sundays show his work ethic. I still think he is capable of taking it up a notch
 
Nice read. Thanks
 
The results on sundays show his work ethic. I still think he is capable of taking it up a notch
What more do you want from the guy? He returns punts, leading in yardage, only receiver to have two 15+ catches in two games. I think he is second in receptions and on and on. If Ben was not hurt i think he could have had one of the best all time seasons... He works hard shows up on Sundays i say pay the man. Time to buck tradition.
 
They need to find a renegotiation that keeps him in Black and Gold through to the end of Ben's time. If it costs the ability to keep Bell so be it. Bell is unbelievable but it is far easier to get a running back. AB is a generational player. I'd bet it took Rice time to ascend to his standing as well. Just because he didn't have the big physical tangible either.
 
They need to find a renegotiation that keeps him in Black and Gold through to the end of Ben's time. If it costs the ability to keep Bell so be it. Bell is unbelievable but it is far easier to get a running back. AB is a generational player. I'd bet it took Rice time to ascend to his standing as well. Just because he didn't have the big physical tangible either.
If this season ends with a 7th Lombardi in the South Side offices of the Steelers, the whole "pay da man" conversation takes on a different dynamic.
 
They need to find a renegotiation that keeps him in Black and Gold through to the end of Ben's time. If it costs the ability to keep Bell so be it. Bell is unbelievable but it is far easier to get a running back. AB is a generational player. I'd bet it took Rice time to ascend to his standing as well. Just because he didn't have the big physical tangible either.

It's relatively easy to find decent backs, but Bell is a special player. He's a lot like Marshall Faulk in that he's basically an extra WR in the passing game, in addition to being an absurdly smart, physical and elusive runner

They need to do whatever they can to keep him, Brown and Bryant together for the rest of Ben's career. Wheaton is likely gone after next season, but you cannot keep everyone.
 
You can't possibly sign AB and Bell to market value contracts with Ben on the books. That is simple math. Can't be done. You are best to re up Brown this year when you have leverage of getting his money now. You might be able to hold Bell for an extra season with the franchise tag and do some shell game business with Ben's contract. Impossible to have top qb, receiver and running back on the same payroll. Dallas showed that last year. And I would do what they did. Keep the qb and receiver. Let the running back walk. Pretty much done by 28 or 29 anyways. They will get a couple more good years.
 
You can't possibly sign AB and Bell to market value contracts with Ben on the books. That is simple math. Can't be done. You are best to re up Brown this year when you have leverage of getting his money now. You might be able to hold Bell for an extra season with the franchise tag and do some shell game business with Ben's contract. Impossible to have top qb, receiver and running back on the same payroll. Dallas showed that last year. And I would do what they did. Keep the qb and receiver. Let the running back walk. Pretty much done by 28 or 29 anyways. They will get a couple more good years.

You can as long as you sacrifice at other positions and they should be willing to do that.
 
What more do you want from the guy? He returns punts, leading in yardage, only receiver to have two 15+ catches in two games. I think he is second in receptions and on and on. If Ben was not hurt i think he could have had one of the best all time seasons... He works hard shows up on Sundays i say pay the man. Time to buck tradition.

It's not about "time to buck the tradition"; it's about doing business the right way.

The wise thing would be to be proactive -- if he threatens to hold out then you can't buckle; it opens Pandora's box. Seattle understood that with Earl Thomas.

However, I would pro-actively look to "extend" his contract -- similar to how they approached Tommy Maddox years ago. He was underpaid for a starting QB and they made a special exception. I have my own theories about what could have been for Maddox by the way; he's a perfect case study about entering the NFL too early and being at wrong place at wrong time (how the mental state of the human effects the physical state but that's a subject for another day).

Brown needs to be locked up and taken care of. In the end we should be able to sign him for less than he can get going into that final year and keep what should be a staple of this franchise for this generation for his career.
 
It's not about "time to buck the tradition"; it's about doing business the right way.

The wise thing would be to be proactive -- if he threatens to hold out then you can't buckle; it opens Pandora's box. Seattle understood that with Earl Thomas.

However, I would pro-actively look to "extend" his contract -- similar to how they approached Tommy Maddox years ago. He was underpaid for a starting QB and they made a special exception. I have my own theories about what could have been for Maddox by the way; he's a perfect case study about entering the NFL too early and being at wrong place at wrong time (how the mental state of the human effects the physical state but that's a subject for another day).

Brown needs to be locked up and taken care of. In the end we should be able to sign him for less than he can get going into that final year and keep what should be a staple of this franchise for this generation for his career.

For his part, AB may realize that he is better off staying here. Looking at how Mike Wallace did after leaving and how he did in the four games without Ben might have a bearing on his decisions.
 
It's relatively easy to find decent backs, but Bell is a special player. He's a lot like Marshall Faulk

Faulk didn't miss starting the first three games of rookie season with an injury....end his second with a season ender and miss 10 games of his third with a season ender. No brainer...pay Brown.

Oh and had to edit....miss the first games of his third season with a weed charge. Really? Is this a thing?
 
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You know what goes a LONG way to freeing up cap space... playing UFA's and low round draft picks... who can turn into Brown... if we do sign him to a monster contract, we better remember that we cant be overlooking the howard jones' of the world because they lack pedigree....
 
Impossible to have top qb, receiver and running back on the same payroll. Dallas showed that last year. And I would do what they did. Keep the qb and receiver. Let the running back walk. Pretty much done by 28 or 29 anyways. They will get a couple more good years.

And how is that working out for Dallas?
 
******, but you can't fool the salary cap. AB has earned his extension. He is bona fide best or near best at his positon and consistently delivers against big opponents doing their best to stop him. You can't pay all three. You cant You would be around 60 million tied up per season on three players. Can't work.
 
LEts not forget, the cap next year is expected to be from 150 to 160+ million dollars. handing out two major extensions might not be as bad as we would think...

Bens contract is moving closer and closer to the average. this year he was the 7th highest cap hit... Next year his new contract kicks in and he jumps to 4th, (still 5 million less than flacco, lol, but that's without the rest of the next gen contracts that will be coming in) the 14th highest next year is currently Alex smith, who will pull down 17.8 million... the 15th, Cutler, makes 17 million...the 16th Robert Griffin, is slated for over 16 million.... its not like we are committing that much more to the cap than others in the QB department... and the best RBs are slated to make just over 11 million, so signing bell now might actually get us a long term deal. Brown is the only real conundrum... Julius jones, the #2 wr in pay, makes just a hair under 16 million, while Calvin Johnson, the guy Brown wants to beat, I'm sure, makes over 24 million... that's a pretty big discrepancy from 1 to 2. Now I think the next set of wr contracts will even things out more, but I understand why the steelers want to put this off, if possible.
 
Most of Ben's upcoming seasons are in the 24 million per season range. If AB makes an escalating 18 million going to 22 or more. That is about 42 million there. And then I'd say the 11 million is low for Bell. But even so that is still about 53-58 million in between the three. I guess it is more do able than I thought leaving nearly 100 million for the rest. You need people to block and tackle.
 
This team is built around the passing attack. Letting brown go would be a huge mistake. While bell is a great player he is much more replaceable. Also he has had a couple pretty serious injuries already. Brown makes all the other receivers better by the amount of attention he draws. Take brown away bryant can be neutralized with deep help. Wheaton is ok, but i do not think he is that special. He is a very good #3 though. Bryant / Wheaton as 1-2 is not that scary.
 
We have a franchise QB he will make the whoevervthe WR's on the roster better. WR and running backs are dime a dozen especially when you have a great QB. I say you dont overpay for either that mobey can be used to add some pass rush on the other side of the ball or keeping quality OL in front of your franchise.
 
Not directly related, but there is a good article at SBnation, a "thank you to Mike Wallace" that is a fun read and a great reminder of how lucky we are how the Steelers handled that situation
 
I meet AB once. He's looks like regular guy, almost skinny. Kudos to him.
 
Not directly related, but there is a good article at SBnation, a "thank you to Mike Wallace" that is a fun read and a great reminder of how lucky we are how the Steelers handled that situation

Go back one further and think about this.... Santonio wanted a 10 million plus contract, and was a locker room cancer... we traded him for a fifth and traded that fifth for Bryant McFadden and the sixth they ultimately used on Brown.... then gave then gave Holmes' job to Wallace who eventually wanted the same kind of money, but they gave that to Brown instead....
 
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