Brown breaks silence to explain frustration and why he apologized to teammates
A.J. Brown on Wednesday afternoon sliced through the throng of reporters who had collected around his locker stall at the NovaCare Complex and moved his chair out of the way.
âGolly!â Brown said. âOK, let me get comfortable.â
Then he really broke his silence.
But before he did that, Brown on Wednesday morning apologized in a team setting.
âI apologized to my teammates today because they shouldnât have to answer questions on my behalf,â Brown said. âIâm a man. I can speak for myself.â
The Eaglesâ 26-year-old star receiver had declined interview requests since Christmas Day after the Giants game. In a nearly 13-minute interview on Wednesday, Brown explained his silence, his frustration in the fourth quarter of Sundayâs loss, why he apologized to his teammates and his relationship with Nick Sirianni, among other things.
âHonestly, the reason why I didnât speak to the media after the game (was) because I didnât want to be negative,â Brown said. âI had already transitioned to the mindset where we were going through a tough time and so me personally, the person I am, who just know I just have to go back to work. Ainât nothing I can do about it. Like I said after the (Giants) game, how I was raised, if I had nothing nice to say, Iâm not going to say nothing at all.Â
NFL
âIâm not about to compound the negative with the negative so you guys can write more negative stuff. You guys watched the game too so you guys already know. So thatâs why I was like, thereâs nothing more that I can say. Iâm not trying to make it worse than what it is. And then on top of that, everything that I do, if I say something, if I do anything, Iâm classified as a monster. Honestly. And itâs honestly the opposite.â
After a 3rd-and-19 screen attempt failed in the fourth quarter in the 35-31 loss to the Cardinals on Sunday, Brown was captured by a FOX camera shaking his head in frustration.
Without hearing from Brown himself, there were plenty of theories about that frustration, many of which centered around the thought that he was displeased by the play call or the lack of targets he saw on that series and late in the game. Brown on Wednesday offered a different explanation, saying he was upset because DeVonta Smith got his ankle rolled up on the play. Brown said he knows some people wonât buy that explanation but he also said he doesnât care.
âYou saw my frustration on the field,â Brown said. âIt wasnât about the play call, it wasnât about none of that. It was about my guy getting banged up. Weâre going to need, Iâm going to need Smitty moving forward. But that was it.â
Brown doesnât understand why his frustration gets singled out. He said that every player in the locker room is frustrated. The Eagles (11-5) have lost four of their last five games and have gone from potentially landing the No. 1 seed to likely starting their playoff run on the road as a wild card team.
This isnât the first time Brown has felt vilified because of the way he expresses his emotions. Â
âJust because Iâm shaking my head? Iâm showing emotion?â Brown said. âYou can look at everybody in the stadium has bad body language. Theyâre frustrated. And so I wanted to clear that up because itâs not about me. Weâre all frustrated. I wanted to clear that up.â
And Brown also wanted to clear up any chatter about him and head coach Nick Sirianni. Brown on Wednesday said he and the head coach have a strong relationship.
Sirianni has publicly and privately defended Brown as a player and as a teammate in recent weeks.
âPeople say Iâm beefing with Nick. Iâm not mad at Nick,â Brown said. âIâm not mad at nobody. We have a great relationship. Iâve got a ton of respect for Nick because he takes up for us when it be us.â
Brown gave an example too. According to Brown, Sirianni tried to cover for his players by saying a play call late in the Seattle game was because the Eagles were trying to draw a defensive pass interference. Brown said that wasnât the case and that the Eaglesâ receivers freelanced on the play. âHe really made himself look like a fool for us,â Brown said.
Brown doesnât like that he gets labeled as a diva. He admitted on Wednesday â just like he did last season â that he always wants the football. He said if he gets it 105 times, heâll want it 106 times.
But he also said he doesnât demand the football during the game, even jokingly acknowledging that Smith is a squeakier wheel when it comes to that but no one notices.
âI donât say nothing during the game. I donât ask for the ball,â Brown said. âBut if a wide receiver says anything, oh, heâs classified as a diva and he wants the ball. Maybe Iâm holding my teammates accountable. Like we have those tough conversations. But if a quarterback does it, then donât nobody say nothing. But if a receiver says something then itâs the end of the world. That is what it is and I canât control that. I know who I am and I try to push my teammates and Iâm not going to change who I am and thatâs what it is.â
The one thing Brown didnât deny on Wednesday is that he is frustrated.Â
Of course he is.
âYeah, because I want to win. I want to win,â Brown said. âAnd Iâm trying to do everything in my power to win. I wake up before the sun come up, I go home hours after the sun goes down. This is our life. We dedicate our whole entire life to this sâ. But itâs serious to us. It comes with frustration.â
And sometimes, you just have to let it out.
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