He also led a secondary
ranked 19th in the nation in 2007 -- among all colleges -- with 197.2 passing
yards allowed per game.
And
this may be the first you've heard of him.
Call
it small-school bias or simple oversight, but it's hard to understand how
a player with all of Johnson's accomplishments can go unnoticed. If pundits
aren't talking about Miami's Kenny Phillips as the NCAA's
top safety, they might name-drop North Carolina State's DaJuan Morgan or Notre Dame's Tom
Zbikowski as worthy prospects, as well.
You will find little mention of the young man that at least one expert calls
"the best safety in this draft."
When
I caught up with Johnson, he was calling from the airport on a Sunday afternoon
-- waiting for a flight to Tennessee
to visit the Titans' organization. This is one of many NFL visits the Arkansas native has planned with NFL teams -- inside
the league, the secret is out. Visits to Cleveland, Baltimore, Atlanta, St. Louis and the New York Giants are on Johnson's short-term
itinerary, and it's more and more likely that he'll hear his name called somewhere
in the first 45 spots of the 2008 NFL Draft.
The
22-year-old Johnson was born in Arkansas.
His mother ran track for the University
of Arkansas, and his father played NBA basketball
for 10 years. "He played for the San Antonio Spurs, mainly, and the Toronto Raptors. Also the Milwaukee Bucks when he first came into the league,"
Johnson said. With an impressive athletic pedigree, it was no surprise that
Johnson starred at Rison High as a safety and running back. As a sophomore
in 2002, he helped his team to an undefeated season and grabbed All-State
and All-Conference honors, and he played through an ankle sprain in doing
so. Johnson also started on his high school's state championship basketball
team in 2000.
The
surprise was that Johnson wasn't heavily recruited out of Rison, and the evaluation
of one early possible college was a real head-shaker. "I was recruited
by Tulsa really hard, though they
backed off a little bit because they thought I was a 'late bloomer' coming
out of high school," he said. "I went to Arkansas State because they showed the most interest in me."
After
redshirting in 2003, he saw the field in 2004 as a free safety.
"There's a little more responsibility -- there are more keys to read,"
he said, when asked about the transition to the college level. "The game's
a little bit faster, but I was comfortable with the transition. You have to
play fundamentally sound (all the time)."
The
stats bore out his comfort level. Johnson won Freshman All-American honors
from the College Sports Report with 94 tackles and four interceptions. A move
to strong safety in 2005 just increased the accolades, though Johnson doesn't
necessarily attribute this to a position switch. "
I just progressed as a player. Strong or free safety, I was making
the same plays, but I just progressed as a player. I actually thought I did
better in the freshman year that other years I played."
He
did, however, put up perhaps his most impressive game to date -- a 25-tackle
effort against North Texas in the November 26 regular-season
finale. "A lot of people don't know that I was playing with a sprained
MCL in that game. But I had to play, and I knew that I had to step up for
the team so that we could get the Sun Belt Conference Championship. I just
took it upon myself to step it up, kick it into overdrive and lead the team.
I'm not saying that it was just me, but I knew that I had to do my part --
and a little bit more." The Indians lost the New Orleans Bowl to Southern Miss in December, but the school's first winning record in a decade meant
a lot.
2006
and 2007 saw Johnson's teams facing some tough competition, and he was up
for the challenge. In his senior season, he really turned some heads with
performances against Texas and Tennessee. It was in watching film of the Indians-Longhorns
2007 season opener that Greg Cosell, Executive Producer of ESPN's State Farm NFL Matchup,
first became aware of Johnson's abilities. After seeing his 14-tackle, one
interception performance, Cosell believed Johnson
to be "the best athlete on the field". The third game against Tennessee was equally impressive -- Johnson registered
eight tackles, forced a fumble, and intercepted another pass. His six senior
picks brought his collegiate total to 13, and his total of 363 tackles is
the Sun Belt Conference's all-time best.
At
the end of his collegiate career, Tyrell Johnson had put together a resume
that should have overcome the lack of recognition afforded to most small-school
players. But as Johnson said, "You have to work twice as hard as the
guy from Miami to get noticed. I've
always strived to be the best, and I had to prove that I could be consistent
in all four of my years there. My junior year, I didn't put up the numbers
that people expected of me, and that knocked me down a little bit. I had to
work extra hard in my senior season to overcome that."
What
about the impression that competition against supposedly inferior talent is
cause for concern when rating a draft-eligible player? I've never understood
why people knock the level of competition," Johnson said. "I've
played against the big schools, like you said, and every year, we're playing
two or three of the Top 25 teams. That takes a lot out of you.
"The
biggest difference to me is the depth that the bigger schools have, especially
among the defensive and offensive lines. The skill positions might be the
same, but while their second or third string might be just as good as their
first string -- at a smaller school, there's a big dropoff
if the first-string (player) gets hurt."
Cosell told me that the level of competition a player faces
is far less relevant that one might expect when analyzing players. "I
watch NFL coaching tape all the time," he said. "When I watch a
guy play, I'm watching for attributes and traits that project and transition
to the NFL. The nature of the opponent is not important to me. If I see really
good lateral quickness, or really good range or speed, I can transition a
guy to the NFL. And I think that Tyrell Johnson has the attributes to be a
quality starting safety in the NFL. After watching Johnson more today, and
having seen (Miami's) Kenny Phillips,
I believe that Johnson is a better safety prospect than Phillips is.
"I
believe he's the best safety in this draft. He can play deep, as a single
high safety or in a two-deep shell, or he can play in the box. That's where
he played the majority of the time when Arkansas
State played Tennessee. He has great versatility in that area, and he's good in
both.
"He's
very smooth and fluid as an athlete. He plays with excellent balance and body
control, which is very important for a safety when he's trying to come up
and make tackles. So many safeties just fly up, and they don't make the tackle,
because they're out of control. I thought he was extremely good playing downhill
from a deep safety position -- he was always in position to tackle. His speed
stood out in terms of pursuit. He showed sideline-to-sideline range when he
was tracking ballcarriers and running them down.
He covered a lot of ground effortlessly."
As
a bit of a hybrid safety who has played strong and
free positions in different coverages, Johnson says that the big hit and the
pass breakup are equally thrilling. "A big hit is like a slam dunk --
you automatically get juiced up for that. But a nice-looking layup, or a finger roll, that's like a good pass defense.
It's about the same to me."
In
certain coverages, safeties have to be extremely versatile in their responsibilities,
and that's what Johnson experienced much of the time. "If a receiver
went off motion, or a tight end flipped, instead of running all the way across
the field, me and the other safety (FS Khayyam Burns)
would just switch responsibilities. It's interchangeable -- we learned both
positions."
Cosell concurred when asked about Johnson's versatility,
but added that he's probably a better downhill player at this point. "He's
better moving forward than playing over the top. He was (playing as) a two-deep
safety (at certain times), and there were a couple of plays in which it was
evident that he needs some work on recognition and reaction. My guess is that
he hasn't played as much two-deep as he has down near the line of scrimmage.
He was much more instinctive reading things in front of him than he was playing
the pass over the top.
"He
did align over the slot in coverage at times, and he has the physical attributes
to play man coverage over the slot against bigger receivers. He's not going
to line up in the slot and play against super-quick guys, but he can play
man coverage against bigger, less sudden slot receivers. He needs technique
work in that area, but everyone who comes into the NFL needs technique work."
Johnson
impressed yet again at the Scouting Combine, leading all safeties tested with
27 bench press reps at 225 pounds and a 10'7" broad jump. He finished
in the top five in the 40 (4.42) and vertical jump (32") as well. Even
here, Johnson was out to prove a point. "It was special -- it was chaos,"
he said of his Combine experience. "They set it up to see who can handle
everything; not getting enough sleep, other excuses not to step up and perform.
"I thought I handled it pretty well -- put up big numbers, which I'd
been trained to do. A lot of people were knocking my speed. I knew I had to
run fast, because some people were saying that I don't play as fast as my
speed. I don't know what they're talking about, because I'm fast! I should
have run a 4.3, because a lot of people think I'm a 4.5 guy, but I'm a 4.3
guy. I guess when you watch the film and I'm doing a lot of stuff where it
doesn't look fast ... I don't know. I had to prove that I was faster than
what the stereotype was."
Though
his numbers were impressive, Johnson wasn't happy with the vertical. "I
only jumped 32 at the Combine, but I jumped a 39 at my Pro Day, and I usually
jump a 38. That disappointed me the most. I heard them talking about the vertical
jump being messed up somehow. I wasn't going to get into it too much, because
I knew that I had another chance to prove myself at my Pro Day. I knew I could
jump higher than that, so I just kept it to myself and proved it."
The
next thing to prove is that he can be a quality player at the NFL level. NFLDraftScout.com
Senior Analyst Rob Rang, who included Johnson on his "Rang's
Gang" all-star team this year, agrees with Cosell's
positive assessment about Johnson's future prospects. He added a thing or
two about Johnson's underrated status.
"Despite
earning Sun Belt Conference first team honors three years in a row and winning
conference Defensive Player of the Year honors in 2007, the most high profile
all-star game Johnson was invited to was the Hula
Bowl," Rang wrote. "Scouts characterized Johnson as an instinctive
player with only average athleticism. While he impressed at the Hula Bowl,
it wasn't against the elite talent needed to ease scouts' concerns about his
level of competition. In his only opportunity to compete against the elite
-- at the Combine -- Johnson may have posted the most impressive (and least
talked about) workout of the year. Every year there is a 'surprise' second-round
pick or two… Johnson is a candidate for such honors."
In
Cosell's mind, Johnson may have already left the "sleeper"
label behind. Breakout status could be next, and it would not surprise him
if Johnson was a late first- or early second-round pick.
As
for the young man himself, Tyrell Johnson's racking up the frequent flyer
miles, making sure to give back -- he's a firm believer in stepping up for
those who need help -- and thinking about what will make him a difference-maker
in the NFL. "I have the physical tools and the mental tools, and the
willingness to prepare myself. I think that translates well to the NFL. Just
like in college, I'm looking to help a team right away with my willingness
to prepare and my will to win."
Now
that you've heard of Tyrell Johnson, prepare to see him. Every Sunday.
Doug Farrar is the Editor-in-Chief of Seahawks.NET,
a staff writer for Football
Outsiders, and he writes NFL previews for the New
York Sun. Feel free to e-mail Doug here.