Titans RB Johnson named AP's top offensive player
That blur speeding away from opposing defenses and running off with
The Associated Press 2009 NFL Offensive Player of the Year award is
Chris Johnson.
Considered the fastest man in pro football, Johnson was
uncatchable in setting a league mark for yards from scrimmage
(2,509) and becoming the sixth player with a 2,000-yard rushing
season.
He is the first NFL player to finish with at least 2,000
yards rushing and 500 receiving (503).
That earned the second-year pro 38 1/2 votes Wednesday from a
nationwide panel of 50 sports writers and broadcasters who cover
the NFL. Johnson easily beat New Orleans quarterback Drew Brees,
who received nine votes.
"I kind of realize what I did and I feel like I had a dream
season," said Johnson, who scored 16 touchdowns (14 rushing),
second to Minnesota's Adrian Peterson, and tied the NFL mark with
six consecutive games rushing for at least 125 yards.
Johnson, who has run a 4.2 40 and believes he'll remain the
NFL's fastest player unless a team signs Usain Bolt, has bigger
dreams, too: breaking Eric Dickerson's single-season rushing record
of 2,105 yards, and winning the league MVP award.
"I didn't even get one vote at all (for MVP)," Johnson said.
"Like the season I had, it seemed like, 'What more do they want me
to do?' That just felt like rookie of the year; it's a quarterback
thing I guess."
Atlanta QB Matt Ryan beat out Johnson for 2008 Offensive
Rookie of the Year.
Of course, if Johnson keeps posting phenomenal numbers, all
kinds of honors and records should keep coming.
"That gives me something to look forward to next year," he
said before focusing on Dickerson's mark. "You go for 2,000 yards.
I don't know what you can really say that makes you want to work
harder or anything like that, so it's kind of a good thing and a
bad thing me not getting the record."
Johnson's production was even more impressive considering the
Titans began the season with six straight losses. He was a key
reason for Tennessee's turnaround to 8-8.
Johnson became the first player to run for three TDs of 85
yards or longer in a season; no NFL player had even done that in a
career. He'll start next season with a streak of 11 100-yard
rushing games; Barry Sanders holds the record with 14 in 1997.
In November, Johnson rushed for 800 yards, the best month of
any running back in NFL history. By then, it was a one-man show in
the Tennessee backfield; as a rookie, Johnson split duties with
LenDale White, and rushed for 1,228 yards and nine TDs. This
season, White got only 64 carries a year after running for 15
touchdowns in 2008.
"I took a backseat to greatness," White noted.
"I'm just happy to be a part of it, to make history with
him," Titans quarterback Vince Young added. "He's going to be a
great player. This is just his second year, that's the crazy part."
No one has rushed for 2,000 yards twice in a career. Titans
coach Jeff Fisher says it would be unwise to bet against Johnson
setting that precedent, too.
"I think he's one player that has a chance to do it again.
He's young," Fisher said. "He's special. He has the potential to go
the distance and change games and do those kinds of things."
League MVP Peyton Manning of Indianapolis drew 1 1/2 votes,
and San Diego QB Philip Rivers got one.
Johnson is the first Titan to win the honor, but the third
player in franchise history. Quarterback Warren Moon won in 1990 as
a Houston Oiler, and Earl Campbell took the award from 1978-80 with
the Oilers.