Marshawn Lynch wasn’t the only former superstar to get a late-season look from an NFL team.
Antonio Brown, whose whirlwind 2019 season began in Napa at Raiders training camp, on Friday worked out for the New Orleans Saints. The free agent wide receiver posted a picture of a tryout waiver with the message “back to business” on his Instagram account, though the image was removed after several hours.
Unlike Lynch, who came out of retirement this week to help fill the Seattle Seahawks’ need for healthy running backs in the playoffs, it doesn’t look like Brown will be back on the field any time soon.
Saints coach Sean Payton said “not now” when asked by reporters following the workout if there were plans to add Brown to the roster. But he didn’t completely rule out a deal, either.
Payton told reporters the team wanted “clarity” from the league if Brown would be eligible for the playoffs if the Saints signed him.
So, as with anything AB related, stay tuned for further developments.
The notion of Brown playing for another team caused ripples on sports talk and social media Friday.
Brown, 31, has been out of the league since the New England Patriots released him in September amid a lawsuit citing sexual assault. That was shortly after a head-scratching training camp with the Raiders, who traded for the former Steelers star during the offseason but parted ways before he played in a regular season game.
ESPN’s Adam Schefter, who first reported the news about Brown’s workout with the Saints, said New Orleans officials are “doing their due diligence.” He tweeted the “Saints take big WR swings” and pointed to Dez Bryant last season as an example.
The Saints, who could capture the NFC’s No. 1 seed this weekend if they beat Carolina, the 49ers lose to Seattle and the Lions beat the Packers, are definitely looking for depth at receiver, especially with star Michael Thomas slowed by a hand injury. But Brown still has to be cleared by the league before he can return to the field, and there is no telling when that might be.
The seven-time Pro Bowl selection is not on the Commissioner’s Exempt list, but the league earlier this season stated that if Brown “is signed by a club, such placement may become appropriate at any time depending on the status of the investigation.”
Schefter also reported Friday that along with Brown, the Saints worked out a group of six receivers that included former Washington receiver Maurice Harris.
About the Author