Bengals fans get to see a side of right tackle Trent Brown they've never seen before

   
 

Trent Brown became one of the largest players in Cincinnati Bengals history the moment he signed a one-year contract this offseason. 

Bengals fans get to see a side of right tackle Trent Brown they've never seen before

6-8 and 380 pounds is huge on the football field, and it looks just as big on horseback.

Cincinnati's X/Twitter account posted a video from Brown's instagram, in which he's riding one of the horses at his ranch. 

That's a lot of human that trusty steed is supporting. Shoutout to the horse's workout routine.

Long before Brown joined the Cincinnati Bengals or played football at the highest level, he was born in Bastrop, Texas, a small town just outside of the state capital of Austin. 

Brown's a Texas guy through and through, so seeing him on a horse shouldn't be too much of a surprise after you see it the first time.

But seeing it for the first time? It's kind of amazing.

Brown's ranch is located in his home town, and he started an Instagram account for it earlier this year not long after he signed with the Bengals in free agency.

This is Brown's 11th year in the league, and Cincinnati is the fourth city he's called home in his extensive career. He's projected to start at right tackle for the Bengals, but might have to fend off first-round pick Amarius Mims for the job during training camp.

While Brown was present at mandatory minicamp, he unexpectedly missed OTAs due to an undisclosed family emergency. This gave Mims more reps in his first offseason, which may've got him closer to unseating Brown for the right tackle gig.

No matter who starts in Week 1, Brown's roster spot should be very safe. The Bengals are a better team with Brown as depth rather than releasing him for cap space. How his former Patriots teammate Matt Judon reacted to losing Brown to the Bengals should tell you all you need to know.

All of that is two months away. When Brown returns to training camp, we have to learn more about his ranching time in the offseason.