The 2010 NFL Draft isn’t remembered all that fondly in Buffalo, NY.

The Bills’ first-round pick, running back C.J. Spiller, was a solid player, but he wasn’t with the team for all that long. The team allowed Spiller to walk in free agency after acquiring LeSean McCoy in the 2015 offseason.

The rest of Buffalo’s 2010 class is a who’s who of role players and busts. Defensive tackle Torell Troup, the team’s second-round pick, started just two games throughout his two years with the Bills. Third-round pick Alex Carrington started eight games throughout his four years with the team.

Marcus Easley, Ed Wang, Arthur Moats, Danny Batten, Levi Brown, and Kyle Calloway round out the list of players that Buffalo took in the 2010 draft.

However, had one player answered his phone, the Bills’ 2010 draft class could have been so much more memorable.

If you don’t like having salt poured in your wounds, you may want to look away.

In a recent YouTube video uploaded by the Pittsburgh Steelers, wide receiver Antonio Brown revealed that Buffalo called his brother on the third day of the 2010 draft in an attempt to get in contact with the Central Michigan prospect. However, before his brother could hand him the phone, Brown received a phone call from the Steelers, a team that he fell in love with in the pre-draft process. Brown chose to take the phone call from the Pittsburgh-area code, and the rest is history.

“The Buffalo Bills called my brother’s phone,” Brown said in the video. “My brother was like, ‘Uh, hey, this is Buffalo.’ I literally grabbed the phone, and then once I did like this, I look down and there was a 412 number. And then I was like, ‘uh,’ and I picked up that one. It was, I think coach [Mike] Tomlin, and I was like ‘about time.'”

The Steelers would go on to pick Brown with the 195th pick in the draft. The Bills, who owned the 192nd pick in the draft, selected South Dakota State linebacker Danny Batten.

Brown has caught 733 passes for 9,910 yards throughout his career. Batten recorded 25 tackles in his career. Brown is a six-time Pro Bowler. Batten was out of the league by 2012.

Now, you can’t blame Brown for taking Pittsburgh’s phone call instead of Buffalo’s. The Bills, who owned a then ten-year playoff drought, were coming off of a 6-10 season. Their starting quarterback was Ryan Fitzpatrick. When asked to choose between Buffalo and the Ben Roethlisberger-led Steelers, Brown likely didn’t have to think twice.

One cannot even guarantee that Brown would have panned out with the Bills. However, it’s still fun to think about what could’ve been.