ANTONIO BROWN
TRADE MUST 'BENEFIT' TEAM
Amid the raging trade speculation
surrounding Antonio Brown and
the Pittsburgh
Steelers, the thought still remains: Could Pittsburgh keep Brown on
the roster, after all this, if the price isn't right?
According to Steelers general
Kevin Colbert, Brown's return to Pittsburgh still remains a possibility.
Colbert told reporters, that
while the Steelers do
intend to trade Brown, as the receiver's reconciliatory photo with Steelers owner
Art Rooney II from Tuesday stated plainly, Pittsburgh won't "give him
away. The Steelers have made it clear that the only way they trade Brown is if
the trade does not benefit the Steelers,
they won't trade him.
The Steelers GM
added Brown could return to the club if there is no trade that does not benefit
the team.
This is a major caveat to
Pittsburgh's purported insistence that it will seek a trade for or move on from
Brown. Of course a team would prefer beneficial compensation, but what does
Pittsburgh view as beneficial compensation?
Just one day ago, Brown tweeted
out that after finally meeting with Rooney, the two sides "agreed that it
is time to move on." That statement seemed to confirm a trade was
inevitable. But Brown and his team have no control over this situation. He's
currently under contract in Pittsburgh and, as his agent, Drew Rosenhaus, said
Tuesday on ESPN, Brown cannot negotiate his landing spot with potential
suitors.
Brown agent Drew Rosenhaus knows
that he doesn’t have permission to talk to teams or work on trade. That will be
something that the Steelers handle
directly with teams and when a team calls me, that's when Rosenhaus will do his
job.
Colbert confirmed that while
Brown will not dictate where he lands; there are teams to which Pittsburgh
would prefer not to trade him.
Until then, Pittsburgh will look
for compensation that benefits the team, whatever that entails.
When Brown was initially thought
to be on the market in January, Several media outlets reported Pittsburgh's
asking price was believed to be a second-round pick. Now, after a month of
speculation and drama, Brown will likely garner only a mid-round pick, as
several media outlets reported on Wednesday.
So far, Colbert said, trade talks
for Brown have not picked up yet, but when they do, the Steelers will
play hard to get.
One thing that you can be sure of
is the Steelers won’t move a significant player for less than significant
compensation.
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