ARIZONA CARDINALS

NFL.com writer: David Johnson best of 2015 RB class, has no ceiling

May 5, 2017, 10:04 AM | Updated: 1:32 pm

Arizona Cardinals running back David Johnson (31) during an NFL football game against the Washingto...

Arizona Cardinals running back David Johnson (31) during an NFL football game against the Washington Redskins, Sunday, Dec. 4, 2016, in Glendale, Ariz. (AP Photo/Rick Scuteri)

(AP Photo/Rick Scuteri)

Six different running backs were chosen before the Arizona Cardinals grabbed David Johnson with the 86th pick in the 2015 NFL Draft.

Two of the runners picked before Johnson — the Rams’ Todd Gurley and the Chargers’ Melvin Gordon — have reached the Pro Bowl. The other three — a group which includes Ameer Abdullah, who went to the Lions in the second round before the Cardinals could pick him — have had varying degrees of success, though none have established themselves as franchise backs.

Then there’s Johnson, who followed up a good rookie season with a historic 2016 campaign, where he notched 100 yards from scrimmage in an NFL record 15 straight games to start the season while accumulating a franchise record (and league-best) 2,118 scrimmage yards and 20 total touchdowns.

It’s probably safe to say if teams could do it over, Johnson — who suffered an MCL sprain in Week 17 but has completely recovered — would be the first running back off the board.

While not necessarily out-of-the-box thinking, it is amusing in that with as much effort goes into identifying the very best talent, sometimes luck — or situations, or any number of factors — matters more than anything.

At any rate, with it all put together, the way NFL.com’s Gregg Rosenthal sees it, when re-ranking the 2015 RB class, Johnson is head and shoulders above all else. The Northern Iowa product is in the “No ceilings” group, which has just one member.

Rosenthal pointed to Johnson’s performance against the Seattle Seahawks in a Week 16 victory, where he ran for 95 yards and three scores while also catching four passes for 41 yards.

It’s bizarre to think back to the draft profiles and scouts who questioned Johnson’s toughness and power, saying he played running back like a receiver. In the final 20 minutes at Seattle, Johnson touched the ball 13 times for 99 yards and two scores to key an Arizona victory. He did it mostly with power, fighting for extra yards, excelling at resetting and finding a new hole after breaking a tackle. Johnson had 73 touches just against the Seahawks last season, a snapshot of a year in which Johnson answered any questions about his ability to be a workhorse.

What makes Johnson transcendent, however, is how he closed the Seahawks out with two catches. The kill shot came on a go-route where he lined up wide, beating safety Kam Chancellor before coming back to the football like a seasoned wide receiver. Perhaps those scouts now see that playing running back like a receiver is a good idea.

Johnson was the very definition of a workhorse for the Cardinals last season. Of the 782 total receptions or rushing attempts — a number that includes quarterback runs or kneel downs — Johnson was the ball carrier or receiver on 373, or roughly 48 percent.

According to Cardinals coach Bruce Arians, it does not sound like that workload is in danger of being decreased, so it’s reasonable to expect his monster production to continue.

Rosenthal went on to add that it would be unfair to put crazy expectations on Johnson, 25, going forward, but cautioned that it is also unfair to ask defenses to stop the running back’s diverse skill set.

It’s as if the football gods gave Emmitt Smith the receiving ability of Marshall Faulk. Johnson sees the ball on third-and-short and is often the primary receiver on third-and-long. He can run inside but also innately feels when a defender is near, jump-cutting away before the pressure gets there. Opponents rarely hit him squarely.

The writer went on to note that Johnson and the Pittsburgh Steelers’ Le’Veon Bell are the only two players in NFL history to post a season with at least 1,200 rushing yards and 800 receiving yards by their second NFL season, adding that Arizona’s star has a chance to reach uncharted territory.

Comments

Comment guidelines: No name-calling, personal attacks, profanity, or insults. Please keep the conversation civil and help us moderate comments by reporting abuse.
comments powered by Disqus

Arizona Cardinals

Dadrion Taylor-Demerson #DB64 of Texas Tech participates in a drill during the NFL Combine at Lucas...

Kellan Olson

Dadrion Taylor-Demerson manifested getting drafted ‘home’ by Arizona Cardinals

Texas Tech safety Dadrion Taylor-Demerson felt a connection to the Arizona Cardinals in the pre-draft process and it came to fruition.

54 minutes ago

Tip Reiman runs the 40-yard dash at the 2024 NFL Draft Combine...

Tyler Drake

Wolf or Tip? Cardinals rookie TE Tip Reiman prides himself on being a mauler

Arizona Cardinals 2024 third-round pick Tip Reiman isn't one to hide from contact. In fact, he welcomes it with open arms.

2 hours ago

Marvin Harrison Jr. runs after the catch...

Tyler Drake

Petzing: Important Cardinals’ Marvin Harrison Jr. begins NFL career ‘just like anybody else’

It's of the utmost importance Marvin Harrison Jr. is "just like anybody else" joining an NFL offense for the first time.

4 hours ago

...

Arizona Sports Video

Video: Tip Reiman talks being drafted by Arizona Cardinals, goals for season ahead

Arizona Cardinals tight end Tip Reiman joined Wolf & Luke to talk draft night, the process leading up to the draft and what he hopes to bring to the organization.

5 hours ago

...

Arizona Sports Video

Video: Was the Arizona Cardinals’ decision to not pick up Zaven Collins’ option a forgone conclusion?

After Arizona Cardinals general manager Monti Ossenfort told Burns & Gambo that the team was not picking up Zaven Collins' option, Wolf & Luke take a closer look at what it means moving forward.

1 day ago

Tip Reiman catches a pass...

Arizona Sports

Who’s the most intriguing non-1st-round member of Cardinals’ draft class?

Cardinals Corner co-hosts Tyler Drake and Lauren Koval give their most intriguing later-round pick from the Cardinals' 2024 draft class.

1 day ago

NFL.com writer: David Johnson best of 2015 RB class, has no ceiling