Antonio Brown 's time with the Buccaneers ended when he stormed off the field during a game.NFL insider Ian Rapoport reported that Brown was thrown out after saying he was too injured to play.
With the Buccaneers trailing in the second half, Brown stripped down to his pants, waved goodbye to the crowd, and walked off the field and into the locker room.
—Field Yates (@FieldYates) January 2, 2022
On Monday, NFL Network's Ian Rapoport reported that Brown's outburst wasn't random. It was a response to a conflict with the Buccaneers coaching staff.
Rapoport said Brown, dealing with an ankle injury for weeks, told the Buccaneers that he was too injured to reenter the game. The Buccaneers called for him to head out onto the field anyway.
"The response from the offensive coaches and from
—Ian Rapoport (@RapSheet) January 3, 2022
Rapoport added that the situation between Brown and the Buccaneers had been deteriorating for some time.
—Ian Rapoport (@RapSheet) January 3, 2022
Rapoport's report brought up some questions for the Buccaneers coaching staff. Players who believe they are too injured to play have every right to let their coaches know and sit out.
But speaking with reporters on Monday after Rapoport's report, Buccaneers head coach Bruce Arians shared his version of events.
When asked whether he could fire a player who wouldn't go into the game because he was injured, Arians said, "I don't know that he was."
When asked whether Brown had told him that he was injured, Arians offered a flat no.
"It's pretty obvious what happened," Arians said. "He left the field, and that was it."
"We had a conversation, and he left the field," he continued.
Arians said he didn't talk to Brown after he left the field and hadn't communicated with him or his team since the incident.
Arians refused on several occasions to discuss the details of the conversation he had with Brown before he departed from the sideline.
There's still a disparity between Rapoport's report and Arians' comments. If Brown raised the issue of an injury and was told he either had to play or go, that's different from Brown independently deciding to tear off his pads and head for the door.
Until either Arians or Brown opens up about the conversation they shared on the sideline before the incident, it may be tough to figure out what happened in the moments leading up to Brown's exit.