Antonio Brown trade proved to be addition by subtraction for Steelers

Kirby Lee-USA TODAY Sports

The Pittsburgh Steelers received a mere third and fifth-round pick in the off-season trade that sent All-Pro receiver Antonio Brown to the Oakland Raiders. The deal was so lopsided that the Madden franchise wouldn’t approve it.

Given Brown’s historical success in the Steel City, this didn’t seem to make Pittsburgh any better. After all, he had averaged 115 receptions for over 1,500 yards and 12 touchdowns over the previous six seasons.

Months later, that has not proven to be the case.

The big picture: Brown is currently away from Raiders training camp while dealing with a foot injury. According to various reports, he has not been in contact with the Raiders’ brass since pretty much going AWOL earlier in the summer.

How we got here: Brown’s rift with Ben Roethlisberger is by now well known. It’s what helped expedite the receiver’s departure from Pittsburgh. Sure this feud didn’t paint Big Ben in the best of lights, but the Steelers chose right in taking the quarterback’s side.

Brown remains a head case: Remember, this is the same receiver who did not report to the start of Oakland’s off-season program, even after signing a new deal.

Addition by subtraction: Having boasted only three head coaches over the past half-century, the Steelers have been the representation of continuity around the NFL.

The JuJu factor: Even last season, Smith-Schuster was better than Antonio Brown. It’s hard to ignore that fact.

Circling back to Brown: The current situation between this seven-time Pro Bowler and his new team can’t be seen as a good thing.

It’s hard to argue that a team is better off without one of the top receivers in modern NFL history. But that’s exactly what we did here.

Pittsburgh needed to move on from the drama of last season. If selling Brown on the cheap was the cost, so be it. The past several months have proven this to a T.

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