Receiver Antonio Brown threw a bit of a tantrum on the sideline when he tossed a Gatorade cooler and proceeded to yell at offensive coordinator Todd Haley. He also appeared to be upset at Ben Roethlisberger after the QB missed Brown on a play in which the receiver was wide open, a third-and-2, which resulted in the team having to punt.

On Tuesday, Big Ben spoke to 93.7 The Fan about the incident, and he made it pretty clear he doesn’t want to see that kind of thing from Brown again.

“I don’t know [if] he needs to react that way. He’s superhuman on the football field, and when that happens it almost brings him back to being a mere mortal, if you will. Because it gets in his head and it just messes with all of us a little bit,” Roethlisberger said. “I’m not trying to call AB out. I just think this is causing a distraction that none of us really need.”

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The quarterback clearly doesn’t have a problem with Brown himself. He was praising the receiver in the interview, saying, “AB is the best receiver in the world, maybe one of the best to ever play the game. I’d like to think him and I together may be one of the best quarterback-wide receiver combos to ever play the game.”

But Brown has been in the news for some of his antics in the past. When Brown live-streamed the Steelers’ locker room last season, Roethlisberger said he was “a little disappointed” by Brown’s decision.

During that time there was also a report from NFL Network’s Aditi Kinkhabwala saying Brown’s antics could cost him in contract negotiations in the future. 

Steelers coach Mike Tomlin agreed with Roethlisberger, saying in his press conference a while later that Brown has to control his emotions.

“He’s a competitor, but he has to control it. If he does not, it can work against him, it can work against us,” Tomlin said. “They need to be taught good things, good lessons, ways to conduct themselves as professionals. We all make mistakes. He made a mistake. I’m sure he’s ready to move on from it. But I also think there’s a lesson to be learned or a lesson to be taught there. And I hope that he addresses that element of it as well as he moves forward.”

“Man, this is not Antonio’s first rodeo,” Tomlin added. “I’m not going to waste a lot of time talking to Antonio about not throwing water coolers and so forth. Be a professional.”