Pittsburgh Steelers great Terry Bradshaw “wouldn’t throw” a pass to Antonio Brown, he said this week amid rape allegations made against the embattled receiver.

“I can’t stand players like Antonio Brown,” the Hall of Fame quarterback told the Pittsburgh Tribune-Review Friday. “Winning football games is all about the team and all about players caring about one another and everybody pulling together, not pulling apart.”

Brown is accused of rape in a civil lawsuit filed in Florida by his former trainer, Britney Taylor. The star has denied the allegations.

Brown was shipped from the Steel City to the Oakland Raiders in March, was released by the Raiders last week after sparring with the front office following a summer of melodrama. He was promptly picked up by the New England Patriots, and will make his debut with the squad Sunday against Miami.

“I had no idea they [Steelers] catered to Brown as much as they supposedly did,” said Bradshaw, who led the Steelers to four Super Bowl titles.

Bradshaw, 71, said he wouldn’t tolerate the antics of AB, which included taunting Oakland general manager Mike Mayock and head coach Jon Gruden via social media.

“I will not put up with that kind of behavior. You don’t win with it,” Bradshaw, a Fox football analyst, told the outlet.

Bradshaw suggested players like Brown cost the Steelers a few rings.

“Why haven’t we won more Super Bowls? There is talent, [but] it’s just guys like him. Let him go and his brand and whatever it is he’s doing.”