Steelers’ win was a teachable moment for Sammie Coates
PITTSBURGH — On the list of contributors to SundayĢƵ victory, Landry Jones would rank somewhere way, way down that list, like, slightly above the game-day inactives and the hot dog vendor in Section 531.
The backup quarterback took just two snaps from victory formation, dropping to take a knee both times for a loss of 2 yards. But itĢƵ what Jones did on the sideline that may have helped the Steelers most in their 31-13 win over the New York Jets.
After Sammie Coates dropped a trio of passes, including a would-be 1-yard touchdown late in the second quarter, the receiver twice sought out Jones’ help, his right arm specifically. He said he just needed Jones to throw him a few passes on the sideline after suffering a cut to his hand that required stitches earlier in the game. Coates said he just needed to get a feel for the ball again.
“ThatĢƵ my biggest problem, not looking the ball in,” Coates said. “Something I can grow from.”
Sunday was a teachable moment for Coates, but allĢƵ well that begins well and ends well.
The beneficiary of double coverage on Antonio Brown, Coates had six receptions for 135 yards, a career high, and a pair of touchdowns, the firsts of his career. The 23-year-oldĢƵ first catch, an exquisitely thrown 72-yard bomb from Ben Roethlisberger on the Steelers’ third play from scrimmage, went for a touchdown. His last catch was a 5-yard TD grab with 1:46 remaining.
Coates’ feet have never been a question — the second-year pro has world-class speed to match his size and athleticism — but those pesky hands have been known to cause some dropped passes. On Sunday, he refused to use the cut as an excuse, and his coach wasn’t having it either.
“Hey, I’m not into that,” Mike Tomlin said. “I’m not into the excuses. His performance is his performance. He had some up plays, he had some down plays.
“ItĢƵ good to learn while we win, and thatĢƵ all I’m going to say about that.”
Even after the three drops, Ben Roethlisberger didn’t shy away from throwing Coates’ way again. Coates was tied for the team lead with 11 targets, six of them coming in the second half.
“I loved to let him know that my confidence isn’t going to waver in him if he has a couple of drops,” Roethlisberger said.
Markus Wheaton could relate to Coates’ day. The fourth-year pro had three drops, including what should have been a touchdown early in the Steelers’ lopsided Week 3 loss at Philadelphia.
Last week, Wheaton bounced back with a two-point conversion grab and a touchdown reception.
“ItĢƵ frustrating, itĢƵ frustrating,” Wheaton said. “You work too hard to go out and perform like that, but (Coates) bounced back. HeĢƵ a good player. All good payers bounce back. He’ll be good.”
ItĢƵ become trendy on social media to pose the question “Martavis who?” after every one of Coates’ receptions – he has five straight games of at least one reception of 40-plus and leads the NFL at 22.2 yard per reception – but heĢƵ not at BryantĢƵ level yet.
If heĢƵ going to keep the trust of Roethlisberger and Tomlin, he knows he must hang on to the ball and be more than just a guy who can run really fast in a straight line. Asked how many plays he left on the field Sunday, Coates said flatly: “A lot.”
“I worry about what I left on the field and work on that and grow from what I left on the field, not what I did, because itĢƵ part of my game,” he said. “I’m supposed to do that.”