Antonio Brown wants his money.

The embattled wide receiver, who was released by the New England Patriots nine days ago, is preparing to file nine simultaneous grievances and appeals, according to ESPN, to recoup more than $61 million he lost from being released by the Patriots and Oakland Raiders, including fines he accrued while with the Raiders.

The nine appeals from one season would be an NFL record, ESPN reports, but the ninth appeal would be if the NFL suspends Brown following its investigation into sexual assault accusations made against him.

Per ESPN, the 31-year-old Brown will attempt to get back the $29 million in guaranteed money he was set to make with Oakland before being fined for conduct detrimental to the team; $215,000 in Raiders fines; his $1 million signing bonus and $860,000 Week 1 pay while with the Raiders; his $9 million signing bonus with the Patriots; his $1 million salary guarantee from New England along with his unpaid Week 3 salary of $64,000; and $20 million for his 2020 Patriots option.

Recent reports suggested Brown was exploring a grievance against the Raiders, but it seems he’s ready to take on them, the Patriots and, if necessary, the league in what could become an ugly legal battle.

The Patriots cut Brown after one game and are trying to avoid paying a $9 million signing bonus after Brown allegedly sent intimidating texts to a second accuser — who came forward to Sports Illustrated — while he was a part of the team. Brown’s former trainer, Britney Taylor, accused Brown of rape in a civil suit filed on Sept. 10, three days after Brown and the Patriots agreed to a deal.

Meanwhile, Brown has been outspoken on social media. Last week, Brown blasted Patriots owner Robert Kraft and former Steelers teammate Ben Roethlisberger in since-deleted tweets, alluding to Kraft’s February charges for soliciting a prostitute and Roethlisberger’s four-game suspension in 2010 for violating the NFL’s personal conduct policy after being accused of sexual assault.

In recent days, Brown has gotten into social-media fights with Rams safety Eric Weddle and Browns quarterback Baker Mayfield.