On a video conference call with reporters after the game, Arians implied the team would release Brown.
“He is no longer a Buc,” Arians said. “That’s the end of the story. Let’s talk about the guys that went out there and won the game.”
The episode was the latest in a string of infractions and incidents in Brown’s 12-year N.F.L. career. He returned to play last week from a three-game suspension that resulted from an N.F.L. investigation that found he gave the team a fake Covid-19 vaccination card. After he caught 10 passes for 101 yards last week against the Panthers, Brown brashly refused to answer a reporter’s question about his suspension, saying: “I don’t want to talk about that. You guys is all drama. It’s all about football.”
The Buccaneers added Brown in the middle of last season, after he had served an eight-game suspension the N.F.L. had levied for his role in a battery and assault in 2020, and for sending threatening texts to a woman who had accused him of sexual misconduct. Despite his tumultuous exit from the Pittsburgh Steelers in 2019, which followed months of Brown’s public criticism of quarterback Ben Roethlisberger, the Oakland Raiders signed the receiver that year. His tenure in Oakland was marked by unusual circumstances, including his absence from training camp with a frostbite injury. He was released without having played in a game after an altercation with Raiders General Manager Mike Mayock.
The New England Patriots signed Brown days later, in part because Tom Brady, in the quarterback’s final season with the team, lobbied on his behalf. Three days after Brown’s addition, he was accused in a lawsuit of sexual assault, a case that has since been settled. Brown played in one regular-season game for the Patriots before Sports Illustrated reported that he had sent intimidating text messages to a different woman who had accused him of sexual assault. The Patriots released him on Sept. 20, 2019, and during his free agency, the N.F.L. levied the eight-game suspension.