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  • I don't like this article on AJ at all


    Is A.J. Brown the Eagles’ next T.O.?


    By JosephSantoliquito Jun 25, 2022, 1:18pm EDT
    89 CommentsShare this storyPhoto by Mitchell Leff/Getty Images
    Eagles fans loved Terrell Owens, and many still do. He was flamboyant on and off the field and made the 2004 Eagles look unbeatable until they met Tom Brady and New England Patriots in Super Bowl XXXIX.

    Owens, in time, also tore apart the Eagles during the 2005 season and in two years was done in Philadelphia.

    Don’t look now, but another big personality is upon Eagles’ fandom in 6-foot-1, 224-pound A.J. Brown, who the Eagles acquired on draft night by trading the 18th overall pick to the Tennessee Titans for Brown, who was then rewarded with a new four-year, $100-million deal by the Eagles.

    He’s not afraid to speak his mind. He’s not afraid to poke fun at the hated Dallas Cowboys (making him an instant fan favorite) and he’s not afraid to tell anyone how good he is—because he is.

    All traits Owens possessed in abundance. It’s a built-in byproduct that comes with most prima donna wide receivers.

    Brown, who has 185 receptions for 2,995 yards and 24 touchdowns in three NFL seasons, is probably the best wide receiver deep threat the Eagles have had since Owens—and he’s still improving.

    The one glaring distinction between Brown, 24, and Owens is when they became Eagles. The 2004 Eagles were on the verge of a Super Bowl. This team is not. Owens put the Eagles over the top. Brown is a glaring missing piece that will make the Eagles NFC East contenders, but is he willing to grow as this young team grows?

    He walked into a winning situation in Tennessee. He did not have to be a leader. They were already built into the Titans, who made the playoffs each of the three seasons Brown was there, compiling a 32-17 regular-season record and winning two AFC South Division titles and two playoff games. The Eagles, in contrast, have gone 22-26-1 with one NFC East division title and no playoff victories during that same span while looking to re-establish an identity after winning Super Bowl LII.

    Owens created much of the friction that eventually led to his ouster in Philadelphia. He openly criticized Donovan McNabb, he caused dissention within the team, and everything fell apart to a point where then-head coach Andy Reid and then-team president Joe Banner felt obligated to release Owens in March 2006, having played only one full season with the team.

    Brown off the field doesn’t appear to be nowhere near the headache Owens turned out to be. For one, Brown is close with Eagles’ quarterback Jalen Hurts, which is a monumental help. Secondly, he does not appear to have the over-sized ego Owens had—not yet anyway. T.O. came to the Eagles as an established star. Brown is working his way towards that.

    In mid-April, Brown received blowback for not attending the Titans’ offseason program, not afraid to voice that he wanted a better deal. “I’m a diva and a bad teammate all of sudden, lol ok,” Brown tweeted. “Do what you have to do then and so will I.”

    Titans’ fans will tell you Brown and TO have much in common—on and off the field; that Titan management got rid of him at the most opportune time before he shredded the fabric of the Titans like Owens ripped apart the 2005 Eagles.

    The Eagles and their fanbase will need to find that out for themselves, depending upon the Eagles’ success with Brown.

    Paired with DeVonta Smith, Brown can be part of the best receiving tandem in the NFC. They’re already the best in the NFC East, and they haven’t played a down together.

    The Titans have Derrick Henry. Although he played in only eight games last season due to injury, the Titans still did not throw the ball that much in 2021: 535 times.

    The Eagles threw fewer (an NFL-low 494).

    That changes this season.

    So could a new chorus that once flowed throughout Lincoln Financial Field 18 years ago ring again, when Eagles’ fans regaled TO with melodic praise “T-O, T-O, T-O!”

    How does, “A-J, A-J, A-J” sound?

    Joseph Santoliquito is an award-winning sportswriter based in the Philadelphia area who has written feature stories for SI.com, ESPN.com, NFL.com, MLB.com, Deadspin and The Philadelphia Daily News. In 2006, he was nominated for an Emmy Award for a special project piece for ESPN.com called “Love at First Beep.” He is most noted for his award-winning ESPN.com feature on high school wrestler A.J. Detwiler in February 2006, which appeared on SportsCenter. In 2015, he was elected president of the Boxing Writers Association of America.


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    "Hey Giants, who's your Daddy?"

  • #2
    Seems like a stretch. Don't think Brown's personality is anything like TO's -- in fact seems about the opposite, in all the good ways. He did want big bucks, and the Titans were not willing. The deal he signed was big, though the reported numbers were inflated a bit with money late in the contract, and is quite reasonable given some of the other deals given out. He did not really break new ground in WR salaries (though certainly benefitted from that happening earlier in the year), so he was more looking for a market contract and the Titans weren't coming close even before the escalation. So, he wasn't happy about not being paid at least ballpark market value. Titans should have ponied up earlier -- although, they now have Robert Brooks at WR as well, and maybe did not want to pay both, with the benefit to the Eagles. We will see if the Eagles can afford two high-priced WRs in a couple of years (though it helps to stagger those contracts).

    Comment


    • #3
      I hope that you're right FO. I think that paragraph must have had at least some truth to it. "Titans’ fans will tell you Brown and TO have much in common—on and off the field; that Titan management got rid of him at the most opportune time before he shredded the fabric of the Titans like Owens ripped apart the 2005 Eagles". I haven't heard anything about him but I sure don't follow the team. Scary thought anyway
      "Hey Giants, who's your Daddy?"

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      • #4
        This is a reach big time. I am very happy with Brown’s attitude. Owens gave it everything. I expect Brown to do the same. And we made him a very rich man. He can be content!!
        You know Darren if you'd have told me 10 years ago that someday I was going to solve the world's energy problems I'd have said your crazy.... now lets drop this big ball of oil out the window.

        Comment


        • #5
          AJ can't complain about Hurts since he knew what was here. I also think this article is just looking to stir the pot.

          Comment


          • #6
            Originally posted by Eagle60 View Post
            I hope that you're right FO. I think that paragraph must have had at least some truth to it. "Titans’ fans will tell you Brown and TO have much in common—on and off the field; that Titan management got rid of him at the most opportune time before he shredded the fabric of the Titans like Owens ripped apart the 2005 Eagles". I haven't heard anything about him but I sure don't follow the team. Scary thought anyway
            Here is one article from a Tennessee beat writer from before the draft; they don't seem to have any history of stuff like that.
            Up until Brown's tweet, I’d never once – even for a second – considered him a diva or a bad teammate. In three seasons covering Brown in Tennessee, I’d never heard anyone even come close to describing him in those terms. Best I can tell, he has been exactly what you’d want one of your best players to be, on and off the field.
            He was certainly agitating for a new deal, which was understandable (and supposedly the Titans were not offering anything near the new market value), but beyond that doesn't sound like any issue at all. Only risk is if the contract changes his work habits, to me. I'm sure that some Titans fans had some sour grapes during that process, but it sure seems like the Philly writer either took that at face value or just likes stirring the pot.

            Comment


            • #7
              Originally posted by FairOaks View Post

              Here is one article from a Tennessee beat writer from before the draft; they don't seem to have any history of stuff like that.


              He was certainly agitating for a new deal, which was understandable (and supposedly the Titans were not offering anything near the new market value), but beyond that doesn't sound like any issue at all. Only risk is if the contract changes his work habits, to me. I'm sure that some Titans fans had some sour grapes during that process, but it sure seems like the Philly writer either took that at face value or just likes stirring the pot.
              "Hey Giants, who's your Daddy?"

              Comment

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