Great Article on Derrick Johnson

Mr.Dibbs

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DRAFT 2005: Friday night fights helped prep UT linebacker for NFL
link:http://sports.espn.go.com/espn/wire?section=nfl&id=2042530

Associated Press
National Football League News Wire

AUSTIN, Texas -- The sniffly 9-year-old begged his mother not to make him get out of the car.

"Don't make me go, Mama," Derrick Johnson cried while tugging his mother's skirt. "I don't want to play football."

Beverly Johnson was having none of that: "Stop acting like a little girl!" she said. "You're going."

So he did, trudging across the practice field on a walk that eventually led to stardom as a linebacker at the University of Texas. Now considered one of the best players to ever wear the burnt orange, Johnson is projected to be one of the first defensive players selected Saturday in the NFL draft.

The Nagurski and Butkus awards winner who set an NCAA record with nine forced fumbles last season, he can laugh now about his wimpy beginning.

"I didn't like the coach. He was always yelling. I wasn't used to that," Johnson said. "It turned out pretty good."

Added Beverly Johnson: "It took him about three or four times before he realized the coach wasn't going to chew him up and spit him out."

Once he got over the coaching thing, it was clear her son was faster and more physical than the other kids.

"Football is in his blood," said older brother Dwight Johnson, who was a defensive tackle at Baylor and played with the Philadelphia Eagles and New York Giants. "We trained him like a pit bull to have a killer instinct."

Dwight Johnson said Derrick always was a scrapper. When Derrick was about 2, his brother would take him for walks around the neighborhood where a friend had a little brother about his age. The two older boys would set their brothers to wrestling.

"They'd be slamming each other down," Dwight said. "Mama would ask later, 'What are all those scratches on my baby's face?"

Before long, the Johnson brothers were staging "Friday Night Fights" in the yard to toughen up Derrick. Derrick would strap on gloves and duke it out with other kids. Dwight Johnson said the fights never got vicious, but there was more than one split lip.

"We were just country boys," having fun, he said. "Derrick would be this little boy with these big old gloves on."

A skinny kid in middle school and high school -- his brothers used to eat food off his plate -- Johnson quickly grew up to lay big hits on his opponents.

By his senior year at Waco High School, he was a prep All-American and his speed and knack for making the big play quickly earned him a spot on the field at Texas as a freshman. As a junior, he was projected as a first-round draft pick, but was having too much fun to leave college early.

Instead, he spent his final season learning from Greg Robinson, who spent a year as the Longhorns' defensive co-coordinator before becoming the head coach at Syracuse.

Robinson, who coached 14 seasons in the NFL, taught Johnson how to corral the speed and natural instincts that sometimes caused him to overrun plays. At one of their first meetings, Robinson played Johnson a video of 30 plays from the 2003 season, half of which showed him making a mistake.

Johnson welcomed the criticism.

"I looked at it as positive," he said. "I didn't need to look at the good plays."

Johnson soaked up everything he could from Robinson. He finished his career with 458 tackles and is set to be the first UT linebacker drafted in the first round since Tommy Nobis was the No. 1 pick by the Atlanta Falcons in 1966.

Scouts love his speed and ability to create turnovers.

NFL.com's draft analysis calls him a "natural leader with exceptional quickness" and says he is "regarded as one of the finest pass defenders to ever play linebacker in the collegiate ranks."

He had 18 tackles in a win over Oklahoma State. On one play he ran about 60 yards to catch a ball carrier, reminding NFL chief draft consultant Gil Brandt of Lawrence Taylor.

"It took me back to the 1970s," Brandt said. "Taylor made the same kind of play."

Yet for all the tussles of "Friday Night Fights" and the big hits under the lights at Royal-Memorial Stadium, some scouts question whether he's willing to take on blocks of a 300-pound guard or tackle.

"Johnson is more of a drag-down tackler than one who will collide on impact," the same NFL.com report reads.

Johnson dismisses that. In his college debut, his first big play came when he smashed through a blocker and broke up a screen pass.

"I blew up some lineman to make the tackle," he said. "They've got to nitpick something. The old saying is 'The higher you are on the ladder, the more people will see you and say things about you."

Most of what they're saying is good. Very good.
 

azdad1978

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swd1974 said:
I read an article, I believe, that said he disappeared in their 2 biggest games. What happened? Injury?
He disappeared against the Sooners and their bowl game with the Wolverines. But aside from those two games he was a tackling machine who can cover TE and RB and blitz the edge.
 

CaptTurbo

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azdad1978 said:
He disappeared against the Sooners and their bowl game with the Wolverines. But aside from those two games he was a tackling machine who can cover TE and RB and blitz the edge.


OK. What worries me about college is this. In those 2 games was he up against blockers that were soon the be nfl caliber. In the other games he was going up against John Smith who will begin his career at McDonalds upon graduation? And thats why he disappeared in those games?
 

Duckjake

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azdad1978 said:
He disappeared against the Sooners and their bowl game with the Wolverines. But aside from those two games he was a tackling machine who can cover TE and RB and blitz the edge.

I wouldn't call 16 tackles, a forced fumble and an interception "disappearing against the Sooners."

And if I'm not mistaken, Crimson Warrior could probably verify this, OU had one of, if not the best offensive lines in the country.
 
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Russ Smith

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swd1974 said:
OK. What worries me about college is this. In those 2 games was he up against blockers that were soon the be nfl caliber. In the other games he was going up against John Smith who will begin his career at McDonalds upon graduation? And thats why he disappeared in those games?

Against Michigan he had only 1 solo and one assist, and a forced fumble. For the most part Michigan ran away from his side but yeah that's not a big game from a great player and if you watched that game only you would think he was overrated.

As Duckjake said against OU he had 16 tackles, one forced fumble and one INT, 1tackle for loss not exactly disappearing.

Junior year against OU 9 tackles, 1 TFL. IN the bowl game that year 9 tackles 2 TFL, 1 pass breakup one pass batted down.
 

Redsz

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That's one heck of a dissapearing act. I hope Wendell Bryant will 'dissapear' like that for us this year!
 

SuperSpck

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Keep in mind as well, if we are lucky enough to draft him he's not going to be "the man" at LB, he'll get to learn the system from a man with a similar style of play in Dansby, so any dissapearing acts he pulls will be maginalized. Pull the trigger, take the risk, make Johnson a Cardinal.
 

ajcardfan

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SuperSpck said:
Keep in mind as well, if we are lucky enough to draft him he's not going to be "the man" at LB, he'll get to learn the system from a man with a similar style of play in Dansby, so any dissapearing acts he pulls will be maginalized. Pull the trigger, take the risk, make Johnson a Cardinal.

Darling has a year left on his deal. So, there would not be pressure to have him on the field every single play like has so often been the case in the past with our top picks. He could get a year to adjust to playing the NFL run game and be used as the weapon he is as a blitzer and pass defender.
 

SuperSpck

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I love it, situational only, blitz blitz and blitz again! DROY! Draft Johnson! Draft Sproles!
 

Pariah

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I wouldn't jump off a ledge if we drafted Johnson, but I wouldn't be all that excited about it, either.

I really do worry about him getting tied up in blocks and not being able to be as effective as he was at Texas.
 

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