Angelo Cataldi Doesn't Care If AJ Brown Is Happy — And Neither Should You
Philadelphia sports legend Angelo Cataldi joined The National Football Show and delivered a reminder Eagles fans need to hear: stop worrying about whether millionaire athletes are happy.
Angelo Cataldi Doesn't Care If AJ Brown Is Happy — And Neither Should You
The Old-School Standard
Angelo Cataldi has been covering Philadelphia sports longer than most current Eagles players have been alive. When he joined The National Football Show, he didn't mince words about the AJ Brown situation: "I don't care if they're happy. I never cared if they're happy. I never befriended a player at any point in my life."
That's not a hot take. That's a professional standard that Philadelphia sports media has been abandoning for years.
The AJ Brown Problem
The Eagles are reportedly asking for a first and second-round pick in an AJ Brown trade. Here's the uncomfortable reality: if Howie Roseman doesn't make that deal this year, he'll never get a first-round pick for Brown again. The value only goes down from here.
Brown's sideline antics, the book-reading, the body language — none of that matters if he's producing at an elite level. But when the production dips and the drama stays? That's when a $30 million receiver becomes a liability instead of an asset.
Philly Media Has Gone Soft
Cataldi dropped another truth bomb that deserves attention: Philadelphia sports media isn't what it used to be. In his words, "Marcus Hayes is the only guy still writing stuff that he knows is going to offend people." Everyone else has gotten too cozy with the teams, too worried about access, too afraid of negative feedback.
The result? Less accountability. Less transparency. And fans who are left guessing about what's really happening inside the NovaCare Complex.
The Bottom Line
Stop worrying about whether AJ Brown is happy. Start worrying about whether AJ Brown is worth $30 million. Those are two very different questions, and only one of them matters for the Eagles' Super Bowl window.
As Cataldi put it: too many people are trying to be friends with too many people. The minute it's over, you're forgotten. That's professional sports. That's Philadelphia.
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The JAKIB Staff
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