Career
He is currently the radio color commentator for the Philadelphia Flyers on 97.5 The Fanatic, after spending 14 seasons with the Flyers television team Coates played five National Hockey League games with the Detroit Red Wings during the 1976-1977 season during a career mostly spent in the minors. Coates" professional hockey career began when he signed with the Philadelphia Flyers in 1973 as a free agent after four seasons with the Michigan Technical Huskies.
After playing in four seasons in the Flyers" minor league system, he was dealt to the Detroit Red Wings along with Terry Murray, Bob Ritchie, and Dave Kelly in exchange for Rick Lapointe and Mike Korney during the 1976-1977 season.
In five games for the Red Wings that season, he scored one goal for his only National Hockey League point. He spent the next three years playing in the Central Hockey League (CHL) and the American Hockey League (AHL) before retiring.
Coates started his broadcasting career with the Flyers in 1980 as a radio color commentator, and switched over to television in 1999. He spent the next 14 seasons on television as a color commentator and between-the-benches reporter for the Flyers before moving back to radio at the start of the 2014-2015 season.
"Coatesy"s Corner"
From 1999 to 2011, Coates was the host of a short segment that aired during the first intermission of local Flyers television broadcasts, filmed prior to the game.
These segments included interviews, explanations of National Hockey League rules, analysis of current National Hockey League events, and sometimes skits with Flyers players for comedic purposes. During the 2010-2011 season, Coatesy"s Corner began to air less and less and was eventually officially retired by the end of the season. Personal Coates currently resides in Egg Harbor Township, New Jersey.