Chris Johnson (running back)

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Chris Johnson
refer to caption
Johnson with the Tennessee Titans
No. 23 Arizona Cardinals
Position: Running back
Personal information
Date of birth: (1985-09-23) September 23, 1985 (age 39)
Place of birth: Orlando, Florida
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Career information
High school: Orlando (FL) Olympia
College: East Carolina
NFL draft: 2008 / Round: 1 / Pick: 24
Career history
Roster status: Active
Career highlights and awards
NFL
College
Career NFL statistics as of 2015
Rushing yards: 9,442
Rushing average: 4.5
Rushing TDs: 54
Receiving yards: 2,212
Receiving TDs: 9
Player stats at NFL.com

Christopher Duan Johnson (born September 23, 1985) is an American football running back for the Arizona Cardinals of the National Football League (NFL). He was drafted by the Tennessee Titans in the first round of the 2008 NFL Draft. He played college football at East Carolina. Johnson has also played for the New York Jets.

Unheralded out of Orlando, Florida, Johnson emerged as a senior for East Carolina University where he broke out for 2,960 all-purpose yards and 24 touchdowns. He was drafted by the Tennessee Titans 24th overall in 2008, after running a record-tying 4.24 seconds in the 40-yard dash at the NFL Combine.[1] In his second year of professional football, he won the NFL rushing title with 2,006 yards (the sixth of only seven players ever to break 2,000), and broke Marshall Faulk's record of total yards from scrimmage with 2,509.[2] This earned him the nickname CJ2K. He has been to three Pro Bowls and was the NFL's Offensive Player of the Year in 2009.

Early years

Johnson was born in Orlando, Florida. He played football at Olympia High School in Orlando. Considered only a two-star recruit by Rivals.com, Johnson was not ranked among the nation's top running back prospects in 2004.[3] He selected East Carolina over Eastern Kentucky and UConn.

Track and field

Johnson was also a standout track star at Olympia High School. In his senior year, he finished second in the 100 metres at the 2004 Florida 4A state championships behind 2008 Olympic bronze medalist Walter Dix.[4] In addition, Johnson also finished his senior season posting personal bests of 10.50 (the nation's 10th fastest in 2004)[5] and 21.28 (the nation's 24th fastest in 2004) in the 100 metres and 200 metres respectively.

In his junior year he qualified for the finals of the Florida State meet with a preliminary time of 10.83 seconds. Walter Dix won the event with a 10.46 in the finals, Johnson placed 4th with a time of 10.66. He anchored the 4 x 100 meters relay team that won Golden South and Golden West National Championships.

His personal bests are 10.38 seconds[6] in the 100 meters and 21.28 seconds in the 200 meters.[7]

College career

2004 season

Johnson enrolled in East Carolina University, and was a member of the East Carolina Pirates football team. He made an immediate impact in all 11 games, as he eventually started seven games on the season. He finished the season on the Conference USA All-Freshman squad as a running back. He recorded a reception in 10 straight games which was a team-best. He finished the season with 561 yards rushing and 765 yards on kick returns for 1,562 all-purpose yards, all team-highs. He finished the season by being ranked 24th in the nation for all-purpose yardage, and also rushed for five touchdowns. He finished the season with eight school game or season records for a freshman and finished the year with 32 catches for 236 yards and two touchdowns, second on the team. In his collegiate debut against West Virginia, Johnson returned five kickoffs for a total of 100 yards. Against Louisville, Johnson returned seven kickoffs for 102 yards. In a victory over Tulane, he set season-highs with 31 carries for 158 yards and two scores. Against South Florida, Johnson totaled 212 all-purpose yards and scored ECU's only offensive touchdown on an 18-yard reception. In the season finale against NC State, Johnson totaled a season-high 144 kickoff return yards.

2005 season

After his memorable freshman season, Johnson started all 11 games at tailback in his sophomore season. He led the team with 684 yards on 176 carries and six touchdowns, while also recording 35 receptions for 356 yards and two scores and 459 kickoff return yards. He was also the team leader with 1,499 all-purpose yards and set a school record with 67 career receptions as a running back. Against the West Virginia Mountaineers, Johnson rushed for 92 yards on 22 carries, both team highs. In the Southern Mississippi game, Johnson returned four kickoffs for 100 yards. The Rice victory, Johnson totaled 129 receiving yards, including an 81-yard touchdown reception. His 100-yard receiving game teamed-up with Aundrae Allison's 109 yards marked the first dual 100-yard receiving game since 1999 for the Pirates. In the Tulsa game, Johnson did not record a reception which ended his consecutive streak at 18 games. However, in the following game against Marshall, Johnson carried the ball 18 times for 106 yards and a career-high 3 touchdowns.

2006 season

After missing spring practice due to neck surgery, Johnson returned in his junior season with 972 all-purpose yards. In the down season, Johnson totaled 314 rushing yards, 176 receiving yards, and 482 kickoff return yards. He played in 12 games on the season but only made 5 starts. He was selected to the All-Conference USA first-team as a return specialist after the season. He also broke the school career record for receiving yards as a running back with 768 yards, but only had one 100-yard rushing game on the year and only had four rushing scores. In the season opener, against Navy, Johnson only recorded 54 all-purpose yards with one rushing touchdown. In the UAB game, Johnson had 112 all-purpose yards. In the Memphis game, Johnson recorded his only 100-yard rushing game with 106 yards on 22 carries for two touchdowns. He finished the game with 180 all-purpose yards. Johnson had a foot injury that limited his action in the West Virginia game, and caused him to miss the Virginia game. In the SMU game, Johnson returned a kickoff for a career-long 51 yards. Then, in the Southern Miss game, Johnson recorded 136 all-purpose yards that included a 96-yard kickoff return for a touchdown, his second career return touchdown. The return also made national recognition on ESPN's top plays. Against Rice, Johnson carried the ball 12 times for 83 yards.

2007 season

Johnson rushing the ball on a play during the 2007 Hawaii Bowl.

After an average junior season, Johnson entered his senior season as a preseason All-Conference USA first-team as a return specialist. However, he finished the season as a first-team selection as returner and second-team selection as a running back. Johnson began the season with a rushing score in the 17–7 loss to Virginia Tech. He followed that performance up with a career-high 136 yards on 5 receptions for two touchdowns, including a 78-yard touchdown reception, and also a rushing touchdown against North Carolina. In the 48–7 loss to West Virginia, Johnson rushed for 76 yards on 14 carries and also scored ECU's only touchdown of the game. After a slow start rushing on the season, Johnson rushed for 147 yards on 24 carries with two touchdowns against Houston in the 37–35 victory. In the Central Florida victory, Johnson rushed for 89 yards with two scores, caught 5 receptions for 89 yards and a touchdown, and returned four kickoffs for 194 yards with a 96-yard touchdown return. He finished the game with a then career-high 272 all-purpose yards and four touchdowns. The next game, against UTEP, Johnson rushed for 126 yards on 23 carries. Then, in the 56–40 victory over Memphis, Johnson rushed for a career-high 301 yards and four touchdowns. He also had four kick returns for 95 yards for a then career-high 396 all-purpose yards and four touchdowns in the game. In the following loss to Marshall, Johnson rushed for 72 yards and a score and 45 receiving yards for a total of 117 all-purpose yards. Then in the 35–12 victory over Tulane, Johnson rushed for 155 yards on 27 carries for two scores and caught four passes for 85 yards and another score for 240 all-purpose yards and three scores.

In Johnson's final collegiate game, the 2007 Hawai'i Bowl against Boise State, Johnson rushed for 223 yards on 28 carries and a touchdown as the Pirates won, 41–38. Johnson also had three receptions for 32 yards and a score and had six kick returns for 153 yards for a career-high and NCAA FBS record of 408 all-purpose yards and two scores.

College statistics

Source:[8]

  Rushing Receiving Kick Returns
Season Team GP Att Yds Avg Yds/G Long TD Rec Yds Avg Long TD KR YDS AVG Long TD
2004 ECU 11 134 561 4.2 51.0 86 5 32 236 7.4 29 2 37 765 20.7 39 0
2005 ECU 11 176 684 3.9 62.2 39 6 35 356 10.2 81 2 21 459 21.9 43 0
2006 ECU 12 78 314 4.0 26.2 43 4 21 176 8.4 17 0 22 482 21.9 96 1
2007 ECU 13 236 1,423 6.0 109.5 102 17 37 528 14.3 78 6 36 1,009 28.0 99 1
Total 47 624 2,982 4.8 63.4 86 32 125 1,296 10.4 81 10 116 2,715 23.4 96 2

Professional career

2008 NFL Draft

Prior to the NFL Scouting Combine, Johnson was projected as a second- to third-round draft pick in the 2008 NFL Draft.[9] However, at the combine he registered a time of 4.24 seconds and tied the all-time mark set by Rondel Melendez, a wide receiver from Eastern Kentucky, in 1999—the first year the combine used electronic timers.[10] Johnson was also fifth highest among running backs in the vertical jump with a 35-inch jump. His 10-foot, 10-inch broad jump was third best among the running backs.[11]

Pre-draft measurables
Ht Wt Arm length Hand size 40-yd dash 10-yd split 20-yd split 20-ss 3-cone Vert Broad BP Wonderlic
5 ft 11 in 191 lb 30¼ in 7 1/4 in 4.24 s 1.40 s 2.41 s 35 in 10 ft 10 in 0 reps 10/21
All values from NFL Combine;[12] Wonderlic test taken twice[13]

Tennessee Titans

2008 season

Johnson was drafted by the Tennessee Titans in the first round (24th overall) of the 2008 NFL Draft. He was the highest East Carolina player selected in the NFL Draft since Robert Jones went 24th overall in the 1992 NFL Draft.

On July 26, he signed a five-year, $12 million contract with $7 million guaranteed.[14]

He had his professional debut with the Tennessee Titans on September 7, 2008 where he played in the season opener against the Jacksonville Jaguars, which the Titans won 17–10. Johnson rushed for 93 yards on 15 carries and had 3 receptions for 34 yards and a touchdown. In only his second career game, Johnson ran for 109 yards on 19 carries, including a 51-yard run, and 2 receptions for 12 yards.

On September 28, Johnson rushed for the first touchdown of his career against the Minnesota Vikings. Johnson finished the game with 75 all-purpose yards (61 rushing, 14 receiving) and 2 TD's. In only his 6th NFL Game Johnson rushed for 168 yards and a touchdown on only 18 carries against the Kansas City Chiefs on October 19, 2008. Chris Johnson finished the season with 1,228 yards on 251 carries for a 4.9 ypc and 43 receptions for 260 yards and 10 total TDs in 15 games. He led all rookies in rushing yards per game with 81.9 ypg.

Johnson finished second in AP Rookie of the Year voting to Matt Ryan and was elected to the 2009 Pro Bowl.

Johnson split carries with RB LenDale White for the duration of the 2008 season. White finished the 2008 season with 773 yards on 200 carries for a 3.9 ypc and 15 rushing touchdowns. They nicknamed this RB tandem "Smash and Dash." Smash referred to White due to his power, and Dash referred to Johnson due to his unusual quickness and speed. Entering into the 2009 season, however, Johnson dismissed the nickname of "Smash and Dash" and named himself "Every Coach's Dream."

Johnson at Titans 2009 Training Camp.

2009 season

Some consider the 2009 season of Chris Johnson to be one of the best ever in NFL history for a running back.[15] He rushed for 2,006 yards[16] to become one of only seven players in NFL history to be in the 2000 rushing yards club. He averaged 5.6 yards per carry and 125.4 yards per game to lead the league.[17] He had 2,509 total yards from scrimmage, breaking Marshall Faulk's single-season record. He was named the NFL's Offensive Player of the Year in 2009. After his 2009 season, the media referred to him as "CJ2K".

2010 season

To start the 2010 NFL Season the Tennessee Titans took on the Oakland Raiders at LP Field. Chris Johnson scored on a 76-yard TD run in the second quarter and again on a 4-yard run in the third. Johnson had a slow start to the game but ended it with 142 yards on 27 carries with a yard per carry average of 5.3 yards.

Johnson running against the Philadelphia Eagles in 2010.

The next week the Titans took on the Pittsburgh Steelers. The Steelers ended Johnson's streak of 100 yard games and limited him to only 34 yards. He did have an 85-yard touchdown run but it was called back on a holding penalty. The Titans then took on the New York Giants. Johnson had 124 yards on 34 carries. He would next have yet another 100 yard game against the Dallas Cowboys gaining 131 yards on 19 carries along with two touchdowns one of which ended up being the game winner with 3:28 left. After dreadful performances against the Houston Texans and Jacksonville Jaguars, Johnson bounced back to rush for 110 yard and 1 TD against the Colts. On January 14, 2011, Johnson was selected to the 2011 Pro Bowl, his third in three years.

2011 season

During the summer training camp prior to the 2011 season, Johnson initially did not show up to camp, pending contract negotiations. Johnson felt he was due a considerably larger sum of money. As the leading rusher since 2008 (4,598 yards) he was set to make $1.065 million in 2011, under existing contract terms (approximately 10% of the money paid to the second-place rusher for the same period).[18] On September 1, Johnson became the highest paid running back, agreeing to a four-year, $53.5 million contract extension, including $30 million guaranteed, with the Titans, ending his holdout.[19]

In early November, a report surfaced that Johnson could be released by the Titans prior to the fifth day of the 2012 league year, which begins every March.[20] At the time of the report, Johnson was having the worst season of his career with just 302 rushing yards and one touchdown on 107 carries through the season's first seven games. Johnson's contract calls for an $8 million salary in 2012 that became guaranteed in March; he also will receive a guaranteed salary of $9 million since the fifth day of the 2013 league year passed. If the Titans had released Johnson prior the March 2012 deadline, they would have saved $17 million and Johnson would have become a free agent.

During the 2011 season, Johnson struggled throughout the season under offensive coordinator Chris Palmer. After a frustrating season, Johnson elected to participate in the Titans' off-season training program in preparation for the 2012 season.

2012 season

After participating in the Titan summer training camp prior to the 2012 season, Johnson initially struggled during his first two games of the 2012 season gaining just 21 yards on a total of 19 rushing attempts, highlighted by an 11 carry-4 yard effort against the New England Patriots. During recent interviews Johnson appeared to be frustrated with the new direction Titan's offensive coordinator Chris Palmer is running, electing to bring a more run-and-shoot offensive scheme to the Titans and not focusing on establishing the rushing attack. Palmer was fired later on in the season. In week 4 he finally showed his abilities with 25 carries for 141 yards, but Tennessee still lost 38-14. He followed that up with only 24 yards on 15 carries against the Minnesota Vikings. On Thursday Night Football he ran for 91 yards on 19 carries against the Pittsburgh Steelers in a 26-23 victory. He followed that up with a great game against the Buffalo Bills in which he ran for 195 yards and 2 touchdowns on only 18 carries. With an 83-yard touchdown, Johnson broke an NFL record with his fourth rushing touchdown of 80 yards or more. The Tennessee Titans won the game 35-34. He then ran for 99 yards on 21 carries in an overtime loss to the Indianapolis Colts, 19-13. He got off to a relatively slow start against the Chicago Bears, fumbling twice. In the fourth quarter he ran for an 80-yard touchdown, extending his record with 5 80-yard touchdowns. He finished with 16 carries for 141 yards, but the Titans still lost 51-20. In the next game he ran for 126 yards on 23 carries and a 17-yard touchdown ending the Miami Dolphins streak of 22 consecutive games without allowing a 100-yard rusher. He then ran for 80 yards on 21 carries against the Jacksonville Jaguars, however the Titans lost 24-19. In the next week against the Houston Texans he got a 26-yard run on Tennessee's opening drive but finished with only 51 yards on 13 carries. After the game he said he was frustrated with the lack of carries. In week 14 against the Colts he struggled to get anything going only running for 44 yards on 19 carries. In week 15 on Monday Night Football Johnson had a franchise-record 94-yard touchdown run, the longest of his career and the second longest in Monday Night Football History. He finished with 122 yards on 21 carries. The Titans beat the New York Jets 14-10. He has season stats of 244 carries for 1,159 yards and 5 touchdowns through Week 15.

2013 season

Johnson rushed for 1,077 yards on 279 carries with six touchdowns in 16 games.

On April 4, 2014 the Titans released Johnson.[21]

New York Jets

2014 season

Johnson agreed to a three-year contract worth $9 million per year with the New York Jets on April 16, 2014.[22] Johnson finished the season with 153 carries for 663 yards and one touchdown.[23]

The Jets declined the second year of Johnson's contract on February 15, 2015 making him a free agent in the 2015 offseason.[23]

Arizona Cardinals

2015 season

On August 17, 2015, Johnson agreed to a one-year, $2 million contract with the Arizona Cardinals.[24] Johnson was having a great season and was in the top 3 in rushing yards for more than half the season, looking like the young, spry CJ2K in Tennessee. On November 29, 2015, Johnson suffered a fractured tibia during the Week 12 matchup against the San Francisco 49ers.[25] He was then placed on the injured reserve with a designation to return list on December 1, 2015.[26] Johnson finished the 2015 regular season with 196 carries for 814 yards and 3 touchdowns.

2016 season

Johnson re-signed with the Cardinals on a one-year, $3 million contract on March 17, 2016.[27]

NFL records

  • He is the only player in NFL history with a touchdown of 50 yards, 60 yards, and 90 yards, in one game. A 57-yard rush, a 69-yard reception, and a 91-yard rush. (week 2 vs Texans, 2009)
  • Most total scrimmage yards in one single season: 2,509 (2009)
  • He is the only player in NFL history with 6 TD runs of over 80 yards. No other player has more than three.
  • He is the only player in NFL history to run for 3 80-yard TD runs in a single season on more than one occasion (2009, 2012).
  • He became the first player in NFL history with six consecutive games of 125+ rushing yards and a 5.0+ yards per carry average in each of those games (Breaking Jim Brown's record set in 1958 of five consecutive games).
  • In 2009, he became the first player in NFL history with at least 2,000 rushing yards and 500 receiving yards in the same season.
  • With his three touchdown runs of 85 or more yards in 2009 (91, 89, 85), and one in 2012 (94), he is the only player in NFL history to register four career touchdown runs of 85 or more yards. No other player has more than two such career touchdown runs.
  • Johnson rushed for more than 100 yards in 12 consecutive games (10/18/09 - 9/12/10), which ranks second in NFL history (Barry Sanders, 14).

Titans franchise records

  • Most rushing yards in a single season: 2,006 (2009)
  • Longest rushing play: 94 (tied)

Career statistics

Source: NFL.com

  Rushing Receiving Fumbles
Season Team GP Att Yds Avg Yds/G Long TD Rec Yds Long TD Fum Lost
2008 TEN 15 251 1,228 4.9 81.9 66T 9 43 260 25 1 1 1
2009 TEN 16 358 2,006 5.6 125.4 91T 14 50 503 69T 2 3 3
2010 TEN 16 316 1,364 4.3 85.2 76T 11 44 245 25 1 3 2
2011 TEN 16 262 1,047 4.0 65.4 48T 4 57 418 34 0 3 1
2012 TEN 16 276 1,243 4.5 77.7 94T 6 34 219 22 0 5 4
2013 TEN 16 279 1,077 3.9 67.3 30T 6 42 345 66T 4 3 2
2014 NYJ 16 155 663 4.3 41.4 47 1 24 151 26 1 0 0
2015 ARI 11 196 814 4.2 74.0 62 3 6 58 40 0 2 2
Career total 122 2093 9442 4.5 77.4 94T 54 302 2212 69T 9 21 16

Personal life

In the early morning of March 8, 2015, Johnson was shot in the shoulder during a drive-by in Orlando, Florida in which the driver of the vehicle, Dreekius Oricko Johnson, was killed. Reggie Johnson, who also was in the car, sustained injuries to the shoulder, leg, and hand.[28]

In 2013, Johnson appeared on an episode of Ink Master as a special guest judge. Before the 2013 NFL season Johnson participated in the National Geographic’s “Man v. Cheetah” documentary. On the show Johnson raced a cheetah on a 220-foot-long course with a wall separating them. The cheetah won.[29]

References

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  4. FHSAA 3A-4A Outdoor State Finals- 4A Boys Complete Results – flrunners.com. Fl.milesplit.us. Retrieved on 2012-06-02.
  5. Track & Field News: Lists: 2004: Men's High School. Trackandfieldnews.com. Retrieved on 2012-06-02.
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  11. Top Performers. Nfl.com. Retrieved on 2012-06-02.
  12. Chris Johnson, East Carolina, RB : 2008 NFL Draft Scout Player Profile. Nfldraftscout.com (2006-09-21). Retrieved on 2012-06-02.
  13. NFL Combine Participants. Nfl.com. Retrieved on 2012-06-02.
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  15. Chris Johnson's 2009: Best ever season by a running back? – Shutdown Corner – NFL Blog – Yahoo! Sports. Sports.yahoo.com (2012-02-05). Retrieved on 2012-06-02.
  16. Chris Johnson Stats – Tennessee Titans – ESPN. Espn.go.com. Retrieved on 2012-06-02.
  17. Chris Johnson NFL & AFL Football Statistics. Pro-Football-Reference.com (1985-09-23). Retrieved on 2012-06-02.
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  21. [1]. ESPN.com. Retrieved on 2014-04-04.
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  23. 23.0 23.1 Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
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  28. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  29. http://todaysloser.com/chris-johnson-loses-his-race-against-a-cheetah/

External links