Nov. 18, a Tuesday morning, and Ben Tate III's phone is ringing. He looks down and it's work on the caller ID.
For an NFL player, Tuesdays are off days. Work doesn't call on Tuesday. Unless it's serious.
"I don't remember who it was," said Tate, a Browns running back at the time. "They just said the GM [Ray Farmer] and the head coach [Mike Pettine] needed to talk to me at the facility."
Tate said he was surprised initially and even wondered aloud to his girlfriend, Tasha Malek, why Farmer and Pettine would want to talk to him on a Tuesday.
"But I had an eerie feeling something was wrong," Tate said. "The night before, during our Monday meeting, the head coach was just basically going nuts in our meeting. Saying, 'We're going to cut people and people are going to be shocked and blah, blah, blah.' "
Signed by the Browns to a two-year, $6.2 million deal in March, Tate was gone after eight games, only two of which included 20 or more carries for a solid 5-11, 214-pounder. His locker belongings were packed up for him and, well, that was that.
"If you don't want me, that's fine with me because I know I can still play and there are 31 other teams out there," Tate said. "And it wasn't like I was a guy who had off-the-field issues or I caused trouble, so I knew as far as that slate, I knew I was clean."
Waiting game
Tate returned to the house he had just bought in Berea, Ohio, and entered the NFL's official 24-hour waiver period at 4 p.m. Because he's young (26) and still in his productive and/or potential years, Tate knew his life would be moving very quickly very soon.