The news hit Texans fans and
Fantasy owners hard when in mid-May, Houston head
coach Gary Kubiak announced that Andre Johnson's
left knee needed arthroscopic surgery. The star
wide receiver wasn't comfortable with how his knee
was feeling during a minicamp session and the club
opted to clean it out.
About two weeks later, Johnson stood up in front of
fans during the team's All-Access event and proclaimed
himself ready for 2008.
"If you are worried about my knee, my knee is doing
fine," Johnson said. "But we are really excited about
this season and hopefully we have a lot of great things
to come."
Everyone from team doctors to coaches say that Johnson
won't miss a single snap at training camp this summer,
but the knee problem underscores what seems to be the
only weakness in Johnson's game.
At 6-foot-3 and over 220 pounds, Johnson is the
proverbial prototype NFL wide receiver. He's got
incredible hands. He has great speed for a guy his
size. He can jump with the best of them. He can play
against press coverage just as well as zone schemes.
And there isn't a down and distance that Johnson isn't
qualified to be on the field for.
The only knock is that when he plays hurt, his stats
disappear. Some players can play through significant
injuries and not lose a beat. Johnson can't do it. In
2005, for example, Johnson was plagued by shoulder and
calf injuries. Though he started 13 games, he posted
his worst yards-per-catch average (10.9) with just two
touchdowns and a career-low four grabs for 20 or more
yards.
The Texans learned their lesson after that. When
Johnson went down with the left knee injury (which is
still lingering), he sat for seven consecutive games.
Once he was deemed healthy, he was back on the field
and his numbers were incredible.
In the nine games Johnson played in 2007, he scored in
seven of them for eight total touchdowns. Of those nine
games, he caught passes from QB Matt Schaub in four of
them (Schaub was hurt in a fifth game). In those four
games with Schaub, Johnson averaged 5.7 catches for
104.7 yards (three 120-yard games) with four total
touchdowns. Though he continued to score with backup QB
Sage Rosenfels under center, Johnson's yardage totals
dipped (86.4 average in five games).
Like Johnson, Schaub also got nicked up in his first
year as the Texans' starting quarterback. A concussion
sidelined him for a short stint in the first half of
the season and a left shoulder dislocation ended his
'07 campaign four games early. And like Johnson,
Schaub's numbers were off without him (236.6 yards per
in games with 15-plus pass attempts, two touchdowns)
than with him (250.3 yards per in four games, seven
touchdowns).
Johnson told CBSSports.com in April that he's been
working with Schaub to get his timing down with him and
that he should be fine.
"He got banged up this past season," Johnson said of
his QB. "I was too, but we're all just looking forward
to this season and trying to be better than we were
last year."
For the Texans to be better than they were in '07, two
things need to happen: They need to stay healthy, and
they need to make some noise in the ultra-competitive
AFC South.
"We're in a tough division with some great teams, and
it's going to be a big test for us," Johnson said. "But
it was a big test just for us to get to .500. We took
that step, and we're just going to try keep taking
steps."
The good news for Johnson and the Texans is that none
of their three AFC South rivals dramatically improved
their secondaries. Drayton Florence signing with
Jacksonville was the only significant signing -- none
of them even drafted a defensive back high.
So with the division's defenses standing pat against
the pass, Johnson knows what people -- fans and Fantasy
owners alike -- will expect from him. Thinking he'll
top 100 catches and 1,200 yards isn't crazy … so
long as you also remember that Johnson could be absent
for your lineup due to injuries.
"Expectations are always high. That's how you have to
come into the season," Johnson said. "We're just going
to do everything we can to achieve our goals."
(fantasynews.sportsline.com)