HOUSTON — Somewhere in
his life, Houston Texans wide receiver Andre
Johnson must have missed a memo.
In the evolution of this grand game that occupies so
much of our fall weekends, it was determined that the
pass catchers are supposed to make a spectacle of
themselves every time they make a great play or score a
touchdown.
Not Johnson.
He treated Sunday afternoon like just another day at
the office, catching 11 passes for 141 yards in
Houston's closer-than-it-should-have-been, 28-21
triumph over winless Detroit at Reliant Stadium.
"I've been given a lot of opportunities the last three
games and made the best of them," Johnson said after
finishing his third consecutive game with more than 100
yards in receptions.
He could have said that it's about time the Texans
recognized his vast talents, or that if they want to
win, they better give him the ball.
Not Johnson.
"I've never been a person who complains," he said.
"Whatever's given to me, I take it and make the best of
it. I don't need that attention."
And this guy played in college at the University of
Miami, the same school that introduced swagger into the
vernacular of college football and produced such
demonstrative athletes as Michael Irvin, Warren Sapp
and Ray Lewis.
Cincinnati's Chad Johnson and Dallas' Terrell Owens
seem to talk more than they play football. Andre
Johnson may be the antithesis of those receivers, but
he won't disparage them.
"I think it's just people's personalities," he said.
"I'm going to go home and turn on ESPN and see who
dances.
"They're just having fun because it's their
personalities."
Andre said he and Chad, who also grew up in Miami but
are not related, are good friends.
Andre Johnson would prefer to talk about his teammates
when the Texans win. Tight end Owen Daniels caught six
passes for 66 yards and two touchdowns Sunday.
"Owen is showing he's one of the top tight ends in the
league," Johnson said.
The Texans' coaches and players know how much Johnson
means to this team.
"He's a special player on his way to a special season,"
coach Gary Kubiak said of Johnson, who has grabbed 45
passes for 629 yards in six games. "He's got a lot of
confidence right now and we've expanded his role."
Kubiak said he talked with Johnson after the second
game of the season, when the Texans lost to Tennessee
31-12 and he missed some plays.
Johnson listened and responded.
"I expect a great deal out of him and we're getting
it," Kubiak said. "He's the heart and soul of this
place."
Johnson is the most effective offensive weapon in
franchise history, and defenses still appear clueless
about how to stop him.
"They reminded me of the Indianapolis defense," he said
of the Lions. "They had holes, but you had to find the
spots because they're well disciplined."
"It surprised me how he caught so many balls (today)
after the week he had (last Sunday)," Texans guard
Chester Pitts said of Johnson, who caught 10 passes for
178 yards the week before against Miami. "When you're
that caliber of player, it doesn't matter what they do.
He's as good as they come."
(statesman.com)