USA TODAY US Edition

’Tis the season of NFL damage control

- Jarrett Bell Columnist USA TODAY

JuJu Smith-Schuster walked it back – and not on TikTok. Dwayne Haskins apologized.

Guess that’s the spirit of the season. With the slumping Steelers and survivalis­t Washington Football Team both heading into Week 16 with the opportunit­y to claim division titles with victories on Sunday, it was rather striking that the big buzz involves how two of their highest-profiled players were allin Wednesday for mea culpa moments. Immaturity, meet Damage Control. Smith-Schuster, the dean of Pittsburgh’s young receivers corps, declared shortly after a players-only meeting he will no longer perform the silly pregame ritual of dancing on team logos. He said something about not wanting to be a distractio­n to his teammates and, surely, coach Mike Tomlin, who were suddenly fielding questions about the mefirst antics of the talented Smith-Schuster while they try to snap out of the funk of a three-game losing streak.

Haskins, who took first-team reps Wednesday as uncertaint­y envelops the possibilit­y of Alex Smith healing enough from a calf injury to start this weekend, went public in owning up to his boneheaded actions Sunday night, when he celebrated his girlfriend’s birthday in the company of dozens of others at a nightclub – and without wearing a mask, an in-your-face symbol of defiance to the NFL’s COVID-19 protocols. As if no one would notice. Why did he do it? “Because, for someone’s birthday,” said Haskins, 23, whose honest response came nowhere close to explaining why he would put his team, his team’s playoff hopes and even the NFL at risk with the finish line in sight.

So for a birthday party he was willing to jeopardize his job, future, earning power and reputation?

Memo to Haskins: Don’t take your opportunit­y for granted. Be smart. When people care about you, they want to protect you from pitfalls. Maybe insist you sit out the party. Hope it’s deep enough that she’d be there if disaster strikes your promising career and mega paydays.

Haskins apologized to his team and had a heart-to-heart with his down-toearth coach, Ron Rivera. He seemed contrite in speaking with reporters. Haskins wasn’t scheduled for a media session, but something struck him as he drove from the team’s headquarte­rs after practice. He called the team’s media relations staff and essentiall­y demanded Zoom time to clear the air.

He felt humbled. Teammates, Haskins added, were supportive, which echoed Rivera’s version of the reaction. “He’s one of us,” Rivera said.

Too bad Haskins, drafted in the first round in 2019 to be the franchise quarterbac­k, wasn’t willing to take one for the team when he drew his second red flag this season for COVID-19 violations. You’d think he would know better.

Then again, maybe the teaching moment from this week will stick.

“I need to stop getting in my own way,” Haskins maintained.

How can he be trusted from here? “I’ll earn that with my actions and my play,” he insisted.

Maybe the team has dodged a bullet. We’ll see. Haskins said that he’s tested negative all week on the COVID-19 rapid tests. But it’s still too early for definitive conclusion­s, given cases where the coronaviru­s incubates before it is discovered. And for all that Washington (6-8) has done to possibly win the NFC East with a win against Rivera’s old team, the Panthers, it would just be dumb luck for the team to be stricken by an outbreak.

Smith-Schuster, meanwhile, allowed that he’s reversing course – last week, on the heels of the embarrassi­ng loss at Buffalo, he told Pittsburgh media the dancing would go on – for the betterment of the team.

“I was dancing when we were undefeated,” he said, referring to the 11-0 start. “I was dancing when we lost three games. I’m not going to change the person who I am.”

Smith-Schuster, 28, has certainly represente­d fresh, young swag since joining the Steelers in 2017 as a secondroun­d pick. As a rookie he drew attention for the wholesome appeal of riding a bike to work. He’s been featured on NFL commercial­s geared to attracting younger fans. He’s come up with creative end-zone TD celebratio­ns. He’s a magnet on social media, which includes frequent posts on TikTok, including locker room performanc­es and the buffoonish series of pregame dances.

While savvy veteran cornerback Joe Haden expressed support of SmithSchus­ter in a Twitter post, accurately maintainin­g the pregame dancing is the least of the Steelers’ problems, it’s the optics. The Steelers have lost three in a row and the receivers corps that SmithSchus­ter leads has been underwhelm­ing, leading the league in dropped passes, according to Pro Football Focus.

And Smith-Schuster’s fumble Monday night in Cincinnati, when the ball was forced loose on a spectacula­r openfield hit by Vonn Bell, was one of the three first-half turnovers that led to 17 Bengals points. It was the same Bell who days before the game called SmithSchus­ter’s pregame antics “disrespect­ful.” Like bulletin-board material that can fire up opponents.

Granted, Smith-Schuster has danced on the Steelers’ logo, too. But dancing on the other team’s logo crosses a serious line of respect. It’s essentiall­y taunting.

Cam Heyward, the respected veteran defensive lineman, expressed wonder to reporters that Smith-Schuster’s dancing would be such a hot-button issue, given other issues of importance that have defined 2020. Yet Heyward didn’t hide his preference. “I’d rather you dance over the Super Bowl logo, when we’re done,” Heyward said.

And making matters worse, SmithSchus­ter revealed that he isn’t getting paid by TikTok. What a shame. He’s been acting a fool for free.

Now there’s all this heat, to boot. Haskins can relate. Assessing the damage of the week, he admitted, “It was all self-provoked.”

Hopefully, in the holiday spirit, there’s a gift of maturity with that reflection.

 ?? EMILEE CHINN/AP ?? JuJu Smith-Schuster danced on the Bengals’ logo, before fumbling later in the loss, Monday.
EMILEE CHINN/AP JuJu Smith-Schuster danced on the Bengals’ logo, before fumbling later in the loss, Monday.
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