Myles Garrett is trying to “make the most” out of his indefinite suspension for whacking the Steelers’ Mason Rudolph in the head with the quarterback’s own helmet earlier this month.
“It’s a time,” Garrett told Cleveland.com at a Thanksgiving charity event Wednesday, his first public appearance since the brawl. “You have ups and downs in your life and right now I’m giving back and [spending time] with my family and friends and I’m making the most out of that.’’
Neither Garrett nor Rudolph, benched for poor play, will be on the field when the Browns and Steelers rematch Sunday in Pittsburgh.
Garrett appealed his suspension to no avail, and will miss the rest of this season and playoffs.
The defensive end will have to meet with commissioner Roger Goodell this offseason in order to be re-instated for the start of the 2020 season.
Goodell previously hinted that Garrett could avoid harsher penalty by expressing remorse for his scary actions.
Rudolph, who escaped the incident without injury, was fined $50,000 by the NFL for unsportsmanlike conduct. He had been scuffling with Garrett on the field before the helmet swing.



