Rookie WR Johnson showcasing ‘sweet feet’
LATROBE — If the Pittsburgh Steelers hadn’t already nicknamed their new offensive line coach “Sweet Feet,” they would surely use it on their rookie wide receiver Diontae Johnson.
The surprise third-round draft pick out of Toledo started camp slowly with ugly drops each day — this after an injury-plagued and poorly conditioned spring.
But in the last two practices — both in pads — Johnson has showcased his sweet feet for at least three big plays:
n In “Seven Shots” on Sunday, Johnson shook safety Kameron Kelly with a quick and subtle move that was so sweet he was five feet open along the back line for an easy touchdown pass from Mason Rudolph.
n On Monday, Johnson caught a slant inside from Rudolph and immediately came to a dead stop to let cornerback Justin Layne pass by. Johnson then cut outside for a big gain down the sideline.
n And in the next period, Johnson made that same cut the opposite way. He took a short out, stopped, and let Kelly run by him before cutting back, inside this time, for a big gain through the middle.
All of this after a surprisingly stout blocking period to open practice when his 183 pounds shoved Brian Allen, P.J. Locke and Marcelis Branch around seemingly at his will.
After a sluggish start with the Steelers, Johnson is making the scouts and coaches — who said they HAD to draft him before well-known prospects such as Hakeem Butler — look pretty smart.
“Yeah, thereĢƵ no doubt he can play,” said offensive coordinator Randy Fichtner. “The thing about having a past, I know the day that AB got here; I know the day Emmanuel (Sanders) got here; I know the workout Mike Wallace had. I was there at all their pro days. I watched them then, I saw them in the draft, I saw them when they got here Day One, and I saw what they were when they left. And the truth with every single one of them is that it never really lights up like you want at that position in Game One. Or if they are playing, they’re not playing like a 1, 2, or 3, more like a 3.5 or 4. But you have to play. The more Diontae plays and the more time spends with our strength coach and adds that natural 10 pounds of strength, he’ll come in just like some of those guys.”
Of the three receivers Fichtner mentioned, Johnson compares physically to to Antonio Brown, who came out of a MAC school at 5-10, 186 with a 4.48 40.
Johnson came out of his MAC school at 5-10, 183 with a 4.53 40.
“Now in no way am I ever comparing them,” Fichtner said. “I’m just using experiences. And the experience is that AB wasn’t quite ready to be in our receivers mix full-time, and yet he returned a kickoff against Tennessee early in his career, and then he was good on punt returns, and then he did a lot of nice things, and then in game 10, 11 or 13, he started making some plays as a receiver, and then he catches this ball against his helmet and puts us in the Super Bowl. From there he became Antonio Brown. So I’m not under the illusion that 18 (Johnson) has to go out there in Game One and whup Stephen Gilmore. We’ve got veteran guys. We’ve got more guys. But we might have to suck up three or four plays in a game where we go ‘Oh, man, hereĢƵ a rookie.’ But there’ll be a point where itĢƵ going to click and everythingĢƵ going to be there — the physical part, the mental part — and then all of the sudden I think you’re going to see the talent just flow and heĢƵ not going to be unlike any of those others. The good problem would be several years from now we’ll be trying to figure out how we’re going to keep him. ThatĢƵ how I feel about him, because I really feel that heĢƵ got really good talent.”
The problem in the spring was that Johnson was poorly conditioned due to the draft circuit, and when his hamstring tightened, the coaching staff cut his workload way down. They wanted him to be healthy enough to get in shape over the summer and report to training camp ready to go.
He did exactly that, but, as Fichnter pointed out, he still wasn’t in NFL shape.
“Diontae started getting tired (Sunday) at the end,” Fichtner said. “His finish wasn’t quite like some of the pros were, so heĢƵ got a long way to go in that regard. But you see heĢƵ a natural talent. HeĢƵ an extension-catcher. HeĢƵ quick in and out of cuts. He does very similar things to those past guys who were built very similarly when they were young. I can’t say that he can ever be some of those guys, but he has the right stuff to do that. I just know those guys worked their ass off.
“But, he did make it through the whole practice. He didn’t give into it. He wanted to. He looked at me right there at the end of team (scrimmage) and was like ‘Coach I’m tired, man.’ I asked about his hammies and he said ‘I’m fine, just tired.’ I told him ‘You’ve got to finish. We’ve got three more plays.’ We pushed him to finish and he realized he didn’t die.”
The next day Johnson was even better. He not only finished, he finished strong. Johnson was running the final routes with and against third-teamers well past when the clock on the wall said 0:00. Johnson didn’t even look to Fichtner for relief.
Afterwards, Johnson did pushups with the wide receiver group and then raced up the hill past autograph seekers to get in a lift before dinner. He even did a brief interview on the fly.
“ItĢƵ coming,” he said. “I’ve been able to get my legs up under me with these pads on, and every day my windĢƵ picking up. Getting my wind, thatĢƵ my main focus.”
That and learning the playbook, which he says will make his play even smoother.
Fichtner went deep to describe how smooth a receiver Johnson already is.
“When the ballĢƵ in the air, heĢƵ not a drifter,” Fichtner said. “HeĢƵ always shaving towards the football, and when you shave to the football naturally, like Santonio Holmes, AB, Hines, that means you’re extremely confident in your ability to snatch the football, because itĢƵ getting you closer to that ball quicker, with extension, and not only did we buy a half a yard with the DB, but if I’m an extension catcher I’ve gained another yard, OK? So, he does that naturally.
“I know separationĢƵ tough. And thatĢƵ where that strength comes into play and thatĢƵ where that toughness comes into play and you’ve gotta be strong. I would love if we could fast-forward a year of him with (strength coach) Garrett Giemont. I would say, whoa, OK. Now we have a player.”
After a shaky start, it looks like they might at that.