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Brown returns to practice facility

By Jim Wexell for The 6 min read
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PITTSBURGH — Antonio Brown returned to the Pittsburgh Steelers’ practice facility on Tuesday for a meeting with Mike Tomlin, and again on Wednesday for a full day of meetings and practice.

“He and I met yesterday for an extended period of time,” Tomlin said. “There was discipline involved for his missed meeting. Some of the other things we talked about extensively, he’ll speak for himself on some of those things.”

Brown is expected to talk to the media Thursday, but on Wednesday the offensive captains did the talking for him after his tantrum on the sideline Sunday led to a missed meeting Monday.

Brown was fined by Tomlin for missing the meeting, but his mid-game tantrum that was directed at offensive coordinator Randy Fichtner didn’t seem to bother teammates.

“I’m not worried about AB,” said Maurkice Pouncey. “ABĢƵ the ultimate competitor. He loves playing football. He cares about winning. AB don’t just care about stats. You can tell by the way he plays he loves winning football games. He loves making an impact. And whenever you’re a competitor like that and things aren’t going the way the whole team wants, things sometimes are going to flare up.

“ItĢƵ totally fine. It happened last year and we went all the way and had a bye week. The guyĢƵ a competitor.”

“I think heĢƵ the best in the world,” said Ben Roethlisberger. “When you’re the best in the world, you want to help, you want to win football games. We’re all a little frustrated because we want to win right now.”

The Steelers, of course, lost to the Kansas City Chiefs, 42-37, but BrownĢƵ outburst occurred at the time James Conner was scoring the fourth touchdown on four consecutive Steelers possessions.

ConnerĢƵ touchdown ultimately tied the game, 28-28, but BrownĢƵ outburst seemed to suck the air out of the Steelers. The Chiefs scored touchdowns on their next two possessions to put the game away. The Steelers, meanwhile, gained only 29 yards on their next two series, which included only one catch for 11 yards by Brown.

Brown finished the game with 9 catches (17 targets) for 67 yards as he and Roethlisberger struggled to connect on deeper patterns. After the game, Brown stormed out of the locker room, and the next day, when a former Steelers employee tweeted an opinion that Brown was lucky to be drafted by a team with Roethlisberger, Brown responded “Trade me letĢƵ find out” and didn’t show up for work.

Roethlisberger wasn’t offended by BrownĢƵ tweet.

“He didn’t attack me or anything like that,” Roethlisberger said. “I think he was more attacking someone that wanted to get a rise out of him. So, I know Antonio didn’t feel that way.”

Roethlisberger avoids social media, and has advised teammates to do the same. “There’ve been times I’ve just told guys, ‘Hey, try and be smart,'” he said. “Because isn’t that the point of trolls? People who just sit behind their computer in their momĢƵ basement or wherever, they are trying to bait you into saying things. I just think you have to be smart and rise above it at times.”

Because of the 0-1-1 start, and because of the disorganization on defense Sunday, the teamĢƵ perception — compounded by BrownĢƵ tantrum and Le’Veon BellĢƵ continued absence — is taking a beating. The Steelers have been ridiculed for lacking discipline and have been called a “circus,” among other things. Roethlisberger was asked what he would do to eliminate the distractions.

“I love this franchise, this organization,” Roethlisberger said. “It starts at the top with the Rooneys. Art is a great leader for all of us, and thereĢƵ a reason that thereĢƵ only been a few coaches here. If there were issues at that level, we would have a lot more turnover there. I think at some point the coaches have to do their thing but it also comes down to players doing theirs.”

What would that entail?

“ItĢƵ just about being about your business, about your job, and going out there to practice, to meetings, being on time, and making sure you hold guys accountable.”

“HeĢƵ not the only guy who gets frustrated in games,” Roethlisberger added. “We all get frustrated. Like I said, when you’re the best in the world, you might get a little more frustrated than others. ABĢƵ a very passionate football player. I think we all know that. The fans know that. And thatĢƵ what makes him special — his passion for this game and the passion to be great. So we don’t want to take that away from him. When heĢƵ getting frustrated in games, I just tell him to stay with me, talk to me, communicate with me, let me know if I missed you on something. If thereĢƵ a way you’re getting open and I didn’t see it, letĢƵ just talk and communicate. And he does a great job of doing that.”

NOTES: David DeCastro tried to practice with his broken hand but left practice in pain after, teammates said, he fired his helmet into the ground. “I’m pretty sure he’ll be fine,” Pouncey said. “I think he was more mad than anything. He probably didn’t cover it enough. We’ll see. DaveĢƵ tough, man, trust me. He injured that in the first game and played two more quarters. HeĢƵ really, really tough. If Dave can be out there, he can be out there.” Pouncey said DeCastro fired his helmet one other time during a practice. “Last year we got into a fight out there with one of the D-lineman and he threw it. HeĢƵ OK. Trust me.” … But are Marcus Gilbert (hamstring) and Ramon Foster (knee) OK? Gilbert believes his injury had to do with playing back-to-back 80-snap games, one in the rain. “And we’ve got a lot of miles on the tires,” Gilbert said. “As you get older, you need (rest) days like this. Come Monday, I think the guys will be able to play.”

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