He’s only at 42 on this countdown but Micah Johnson might be atop of the CFL’s Most Intimidating Players list.
Photo courtesy: Scott Grant/CFLPhotoArchive.com
The fiery trademark glare that evokes comparisons as football’s answer to the Maurice “Rocket” Richard is matched by the now-B.C. Lion and his ability to elude offensive linemen and sack opposing quarterbacks.
He joined the Saskatchewan Roughriders after former head coach, defensive coordinator and general manager Chris Jones had already left for the NFL, but Johnson would have fit with players Jones likes to recruit.
After starring at Fort Campbell High School as a running back and linebacker, Johnson was selected as Mr. Football in Kentucky. He chose to attend the University of Kentucky over the University of Georgia and Notre Dame. Johnson discovered that finding a job, much less stardom, would be a lot tougher in the pros.
He went unselected in the 2010 NFL Draft and was cut by five different teams who decided they were better off without him in their linebacking crew. The New York Giants, Miami Dolphins, Kansas City Chiefs, Cincinnati Bengals, and Green Bay Packers said thanks but no thanks.
Too big to be a linebacker or running back at six-foot-two and 277 pounds, Johnson’s football career appeared headed for the scrap heap. The lightbulb didn’t really go on until he showed up in Canada in the spring of 2013.
Already 25 years old and running out of pro football chances fast, the Calgary Stampeders staff observed that Johnson’s rare combination of size and speed would make him a perfect fit for the interior of their defensive line, despite his lack of experience at rushing the quarterback and stopping the run.
The move paid off for both sides as the Stamps suffocating pass rush, led by Johnson, would play a key role in Calgary’s incredible six-year run of five first-place finishes, four Grey Cup appearances and two championships and a partridge in a pear tree.
Johnson racked up three CFL all-star nods and parlayed that into a big money free agent contract with the Saskatchewan Roughriders for 2019. A slow start, hampered by injuries, was made up down the stretch with four quarterback sacks in the Riders’ final six games, helping Saskatchewan finish first in the West Division.
Despite holding the Winnipeg Blue Bombers to just 20 points in the Western Final, it wasn’t enough to beat Zach Collaros — or the crossbar — on the final play. After watching Winnipeg win the Cup, Johnson opted for a reset with the B.C. Lions during the off-season.
That plan has been interrupted by the pandemic but hopes on the west coast remain that the soon-to-be 33-year-old will have enough left in the tank to put up at least a strong season or two for Rick Campbell’s defence for an organization in desperate need of some new energy.
Johnson has spent his entire career so far playing on a team with no less than 13 wins in a season and either Dave or Craig Dickenson on its coaching staff. It was Dave who once called him “a running back in a defensive lineman’s body.”
That reckless abandon and shifty ability to elude offensive blockers has propelled Johnson to the CFL’s All-Decade team and also No. 42 on our top 100 CFL Players list.
3DownNation is unveiling its list of the top 100 active CFL players, a project that will run through December 31, 2020. To read the criteria for player eligibility, click here. The list to date can be found below.