PITTSBURGH -- JuJu Smith-Schuster has celebrated touchdowns with the "Dragon Ball Z" fireball and a game of hide and seek with Le'Veon Bell.

His next challenge might be more difficult.

Smith-Schuster said his goal is to get Ben Roethlisberger to join himself, Antonio Brown, Bell and others as part of a choreographed celebration.

Rookie JuJu Smith-Schuster will do anything he can to get his QB into one of his next TD celebrations. AP Photo/Don Wright

"The ultimate celebration is to get Ben in there," Smith-Schuster said. "If Ben gets in there, I'll give Ben my next check. Obviously he doesn't need it."

Smith-Schuster is right. Roethlisberger's five-year contract averages out to $20 million per year. Smith-Schuster's rookie deal pays about $27,000 a week in 2017 salary. Might be half that after taxes. Luckily for Smith-Schuster, the rookie’s $1.19 million signing bonus isn’t part of his weekly paycheck.

An example of Smith-Schuster's 20-year-old exuberance: He once asked Roethlisberger, whose locker is next to his, whether he could view his paycheck. When Roethlisberger obliged, Smith-Schuster giggled at the sight.

Roethlisberger has maintained he will always celebrate with his offensive line after a touchdown, not in the end zone as part of a celebration. Maybe JuJu can sway him with his next celebration, which he won't outline just yet.

"This is how I can relate to the fans -- me, Bell, AB, anybody on our offense or defense," Smith-Schuster said about creative touchdown celebrations. "Just having fun. ... I thank the NFL for allowing us to celebrate. It's the best thing ever."