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Reinstatement is only half the process before Martavis Bryant returns to the Steelers

By Chris Bradford for The 5 min read
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PITTSBURGH — The long and potentially arduous process of Martavis BryantĢƵ return to the Steelers has only just begun. Getting NFL commissioner Roger Goodell to reinstate Bryant is one step. But it will not be the last.

Following that, and just as importantly, Bryant will have to win back the trust of his coaches and teammates, most notably his quarterback.

That should not be a problem, according to BryantĢƵ agent.

“HeĢƵ in a good place mentally,” Brian Fettner said on Monday. “He doesn’t smoke anymore. There is going to be no more drama.”

That’ll be welcome news to the Steelers, who might have been playing for a Super Bowl had Bryant not been serving a one-year suspension for multiple violations of the leagueĢƵ substance abuse policy.

Since coming to Pittsburgh in 2014, Bryant has provided as much drama off the field as on it. He has electrified with a remarkable mix of size and speed, scoring a remarkable 16 touchdowns in just 24 games and averaging 17.3 yards per catch, but BryantĢƵ very real human foibles have nearly derailed his star-crossed career.

Bringing back the star receiver for 2017 is a high-risk, high-reward proposition for the Steelers.

Bryant, who is still under contract for two more years, is just another failed or missed test away from possible banishment. Asked about BryantĢƵ future in Pittsburgh during his season-ending press conference last week, coach Mike Tomlin said he was in “wait-and-see mode.”

Though heĢƵ been barred from the Steelers practice facility during his suspension, Bryant has kept in routine contact with his teammates. “He definitely isn’t AWOL from his boys,” Fettner said.

In September, veteran center Maurkice Pouncey said that, if reinstated, his teammates would welcome Bryant back with open arms.

“HeĢƵ a brother, we’re not going to leave that guy hanging,” Pouncey said. “Everyone in life, and I’m living testament of it, everyone makes mistakes and you grow from them. It doesn’t make you a bad person, it makes you a better person, if you learn from it in the right way. If you keep making the same mistakes over and over again, you have to check yourself. But at the end of the day, you can’t leave a man like that. He needs us. HeĢƵ our brother.”

Patching his relationship with Ben Roethlisberger might prove a little trickier.

Roethlisberger, who said he considered Bryant “like a brother” and kept in communication daily with his receiver when he served a four-game suspension to start the 2015 season, seemed personally disappointed by BryantĢƵ one-year ban.

“Looking me in my eye and denying everything, itĢƵ tough,” Roethlisberger said in July. “It disappoints you as a man and a guy who cared so much about him.”

Fettner said he wasn’t sure if Roethlisberger has been in contact with Bryant but in an interview with Sports Illustrated earlier this month, Bryant said of the quarterback: “I’m a grown man and heĢƵ a grown man. I’m not going up to another grown man and explain my business to him.”

At the time of his suspension last March, Fettner suggested that Bryant may have been suffering from depression, calling his clientĢƵ repeated failed tests “the biggest cry for help I’ve ever seen.”

Citing legal reasons, Fettner declined to get into the specifics of his clientĢƵ mental health on Monday, saying only: “Players are people too. He faces the same things that all of us do except that you put on pads and go out and play.”

Fettner says Bryant, who is expecting the birth of his third child, a son, to be born in a few weeks, is as happy as heĢƵ ever seen the 25-year-old. He is excited at the prospect of rejoining his teammates and resuming his career. Despite his personal troubles, Bryant is still a good person and worthy of redemption, according to his agent.

“To be honest, heĢƵ way more grounded than people would think he is,” Fettner said. “HeĢƵ not at the club, heĢƵ not punching his girlfriend. HeĢƵ never been arrested in his life. This isn’t public enemy No. 1 over here.

“HeĢƵ a shy guy. HeĢƵ a very ‘yes, sir’ or ‘no, sir’ guy. This isn’t like ‘Oh my God, he needs to go through behavioral, anger management kind of thing.”

BryantĢƵ only crime, he says, is smoking marijuana, a recreational drug that is decriminalized in 21 states.

The league has 60 days to review BryantĢƵ case and render a decision, though it has been known to take longer. Fettner is hopeful that a resolution will be reached by April and that Bryant can begin the NFLĢƵ off-season workout program in Pittsburgh with his teammates.

After moving from Los Angeles to Nevada at his agentĢƵ behest, Bryant has spent his time volunteering as a high school football coach in suburban Las Vegas. If, and when he does return to the Steelers, Fettner says heĢƵ already in great shape.

“HeĢƵ going to be back and heĢƵ going to be great,” Fettner said.

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