Pre-draft Prior to the
NFL Scouting Combine, Johnson was projected as a second- to third-round draft pick in the
2008 NFL draft. However, at the combine he registered a time of 4.24 seconds and tied the all-time mark set by
Rondel Menendez, a
wide receiver from
Eastern Kentucky, in 1999—the first year the combine used electronic timers (his record was later broken by
John Ross in 2017 with a time of 4.22). Johnson was also fifth highest among running backs in the
vertical jump with a 35-inch jump. His 10-foot, 10-inch broad jump was third best among the running backs.
Tennessee Titans 2008–2010: Peak career Johnson was selected by the
Tennessee Titans in the first round (24th overall) of the
2008 NFL draft. He was the highest
East Carolina player selected in the NFL Draft since linebacker
Robert Jones went 24th overall in the
1992 NFL draft. On July 26, he signed a five-year, $12 million contract with $7 million guaranteed. Johnson had his professional debut with the Titans on September 7, 2008, where he played in the season opener against the
Jacksonville Jaguars, which the Titans won 17–10. Johnson rushed for 93 yards on 15 carries and had three receptions for 34 yards and a touchdown. In only his second career game, Johnson ran for 109 yards on 19 carries, including a 51-yard run, and two receptions for 12 yards against the
Cincinnati Bengals. On September 28, Johnson rushed for the first touchdown of his career against the
Minnesota Vikings. Johnson finished the game with 75 all-purpose yards (61 rushing, 14 receiving) and two touchdowns. In only his sixth professional game, he rushed for 168 yards and a touchdown on only 18 carries against the
Kansas City Chiefs on October 19, 2008. Johnson finished the season with 1,228 yards on 251 carries for a 4.9 ypc and 43 receptions for 260 yards and 10 total touchdowns in 15 games. He led all rookies in rushing yards per game with 81.9 ypg. Johnson finished second in AP Rookie of the Year voting to
Matt Ryan and was elected to the
2009 Pro Bowl. Johnson split carries with running back
LenDale White for the duration of the 2008 season. White finished the 2008 season with 773 yards on 200 carries for a 3.9 ypc and 15 rushing touchdowns. They nicknamed this RB tandem "
Smash and Dash." Smash referred to White due to his power, and Dash referred to Johnson due to his unusual quickness and speed. Entering into the 2009 season, however, Johnson dismissed the nickname of "Smash and Dash" and named himself "Every Coach's Dream." Some consider Johnson's 2009 season to be one of the best ever in NFL history for a running back. He started the season off with 57 rushing yards in a 13–10 loss to the
Pittsburgh Steelers. In the next game, a 34–31 loss to the
Houston Texans, he had 16 carries for 197 rushing yards and two rushing touchdowns to go along with nine receptions for 87 yards and a receiving touchdown. Over the next three games, he combined for 214 rushing yards. In the next game, a 59–0 loss to the
New England Patriots, he had 128 rushing yards. In the next game, a 30–13 victory over the
Jacksonville Jaguars, he had 24 carries for 228 rushing yards and two rushing touchdowns. He followed that up with 135 rushing yards and two rushing touchdowns against the
San Francisco 49ers. The next week, against the
Buffalo Bills, he had 132 rushing yards and his third consecutive game with two rushing touchdowns to go along with nine receptions for 100 yards. In the next game, against the Houston Texans, he was held out of the endzone but had 151 rushing yards on 29 carries. He followed that up with 154 rushing yards and a rushing touchdown in the 20–17 victory over the
Arizona Cardinals. On December 13, against the
St. Louis Rams, he had 117 rushing yards and two rushing touchdowns to go along with three receptions for 69 yards and a receiving touchdown in the 47–7 victory. In Week 16, on Christmas Day, he had 142 rushing yards and a touchdown in a loss to the
San Diego Chargers. In the regular season finale against the Seattle Seahawks, he had 36 carries for 134 yards and two touchdowns in the 17–13 victory. Overall, he rushed for 2,006 yards and finished the year with 11 consecutive games with at least 100 rushing yards to become one of only eight, now nine, players in NFL history to be in the
2,000 rushing yards club. He averaged 5.6 yards per carry and 125.4 yards per game to lead the league. He had 2,509 total
yards from scrimmage, breaking
Marshall Faulk's single-season record. He was named the NFL's Offensive Player of the Year in 2009. After his 2009 season, he was named to his second Pro Bowl and the media referred to him as "CJ2K". To start the 2010 NFL season, the Titans took on the
Oakland Raiders at
LP Field. Johnson scored on a 76-yard touchdown run in the second quarter and again on a 4-yard run in the third. Johnson had a slow start to the game but finished with 142 yards on 27 carries with a yard per carry average of 5.3 yards to bring his streak of 100-yard rushing games to 12. in 2010. The next week, the Titans took on the
Pittsburgh Steelers. The Steelers ended Johnson's streak of 100 yard games and limited him to only 34 yards. He did have an 85-yard touchdown run but it was called back on a holding penalty. The Titans then took on the
New York Giants. Johnson had 125 yards on 32 carries. He would next have yet another 100 yard game against the
Dallas Cowboys gaining 131 yards on 19 carries along with two touchdowns one of which ended up being the game winner with 3:28 left. In the next game, against the
Jacksonville Jaguars, he had 111 rushing yards and a rushing touchdown. On November 14, against the
Miami Dolphins, he had 117 rushing yard and a rushing touchdown. In the next game, a 19–16 loss to the
Washington Redskins, he had 130 rushing yards. After dreadful performances against the
Houston Texans and Jacksonville Jaguars, Johnson bounced back to rush for 110 yard and one touchdown against the
Indianapolis Colts. In Week 15, in the second game against the Houston Texans, he had 130 rushing yards and a rushing touchdown in the 31–17 victory. Overall, he finished the 2010 season with 1,364 rushing yards and 11 rushing touchdowns. On January 14, 2011, Johnson was selected to the
2011 Pro Bowl, his third in three years. He was ranked 13th by his fellow players on the
NFL Top 100 Players of 2011.
2011–2013: Mid-career During the summer training camp prior to the 2011 season, Johnson initially did not show up to camp, pending contract negotiations. Johnson felt he was due a considerably larger sum of money. As the leading rusher since 2008 (4,598 yards) he was set to make $1.065 million in 2011, under existing contract terms (approximately 10% of the money paid to the second-place rusher for the same period). On September 1, Johnson became the highest paid running back in the NFL, agreeing to a four-year, $53.5 million contract extension through to the 2016 season, including $30 million guaranteed, with the Titans, ending his holdout. In early November, a report surfaced that Johnson could be released by the Titans prior to the fifth day of the 2012 league year, which begins every March. At the time of the report, Johnson was having the worst season of his career with just 302 rushing yards and one touchdown on 107 carries through the season's first seven games. Johnson's contract calls for an $8 million salary in 2012 that became guaranteed in March; he also will receive a guaranteed salary of $9 million since the fifth day of the 2013 league year passed. If the Titans had released Johnson prior the March 2012 deadline, they would have saved $17 million and Johnson would have become a free agent. On November 13, he had 130 rushing yards and a rushing touchdown against the Carolina Panthers. Two weeks later, he had 190 rushing yards against the Tampa Bay Buccaneers. in the next game, against the
Buffalo Bills, he had 153 rushing yards and two rushing touchdowns. During the 2011 season, Johnson struggled throughout the season under offensive coordinator Chris Palmer. However, he still finished with 1,047 rushing yards and four rushing touchdowns. After a frustrating season, Johnson elected to participate in the Titans' off-season training program in preparation for the 2012 season. He was ranked 100th by his fellow players on the NFL Top 100 Players of 2012. After participating in the Titans' summer training camp prior to the 2012 season, Johnson initially struggled during his first two games of the 2012 season gaining just 21 yards on a total of 19 rushing attempts, highlighted by an 11 carry, 4-yard effort against the
New England Patriots. During recent interviews, Johnson appeared to be frustrated with the new direction Titan's offensive coordinator
Chris Palmer is running, electing to bring a more run-and-shoot offensive scheme to the Titans and not focusing on establishing the rushing attack. Palmer was fired later on in the season. In Week 4, he finally showed his abilities with 25 carries for 141 yards, but Tennessee still lost 38–14 to the
Houston Texans. He followed that up with only 24 yards on 15 carries against the
Minnesota Vikings. On
Thursday Night Football, he ran for 91 yards on 19 carries against the
Pittsburgh Steelers in a 26–23 victory. He followed that up with a great game against the
Buffalo Bills in which he ran for 195 yards and 2 touchdowns on only 18 carries. With an 83-yard touchdown, Johnson broke an NFL record with his fourth rushing touchdown of 80 yards or more. The Titans won the game, 35–34. He then ran for 99 yards on 21 carries in an overtime loss to the
Indianapolis Colts, 19–13. He got off to a relatively slow start against the
Chicago Bears, fumbling twice. In the fourth quarter, he ran for an 80-yard touchdown, extending his record with his fifth 80-yard touchdowns. He finished with 16 carries for 141 yards, but the Titans still lost 51–20. In the next game, he ran for 126 yards on 23 carries and a 17-yard touchdown ending the
Miami Dolphins streak of 22 consecutive games without allowing a 100-yard rusher. He then ran for 80 yards on 21 carries against the
Jacksonville Jaguars, however the Titans lost, 24–19. In the next week against the Houston Texans, he got a 26-yard run on Tennessee's opening drive but finished with only 51 yards on 13 carries. After the game, he said he was frustrated with the lack of carries. In week 14 against the Colts, he struggled to get anything going only running for 44 yards on 19 carries. In week 15 on
Monday Night Football, Johnson had a franchise-record 94-yard touchdown run, the longest of his career and the second longest in
Monday Night Football history. He finished with 122 yards on 21 carries. The Titans beat the
New York Jets, 14–10. Overall, he finished the 2012 season with 1,243 rushing yards and six rushing touchdowns. Johnson started the 2013 season with 25 carries for 70 yards in a 16–9 victory over the
Pittsburgh Steelers. On November 3, against the
St. Louis Rams, he had 150 rushing yards and two rushing touchdowns. On November 14, he had 86 rushing yards and two rushing touchdowns against the
Indianapolis Colts. In the regular season finale against the
Houston Texans, he had 127 rushing yards and a rushing touchdown in the 16–10 victory. He rushed for 1,077 yards on 279 carries with six touchdowns in 16 games. The 2013 season was less productive statistically for Johnson than any other year of his career up to that point. On April 4, 2014, the Titans released Johnson.
New York Jets Johnson agreed to a three-year contract worth $9 million per year with the
New York Jets on April 16, 2014. Johnson finished the 2014 season with 153 carries for a career-low 663 yards and one touchdown. The Jets declined the second year of Johnson's contract on February 15, 2015, making him a free agent in the 2015 offseason. Johnson was having a great season and was in the top three in rushing yards for more than half of the season, looking like his great past performance in Tennessee. Some of his notable games included a 110-yard, two-touchdown performance against the
San Francisco 49ers and 122 yards, and on October 26, a touchdown against the
Baltimore Ravens. On November 29, 2015, Johnson suffered a fractured tibia during the Week 12 matchup against the
San Francisco 49ers. He was then placed on the injured reserve with a designation to return list on December 1, 2015. Johnson finished the 2015 regular season with 196 carries for 814 yards and three touchdowns, along with being named a Pro Bowl alternate.
2016–2017: Final years Johnson re-signed with the Cardinals on a one-year, $3 million contract on March 17, 2016. The emergence of
David Johnson as a star running back for the Cardinals limited Chris Johnson's use. On October 4, 2016, he was placed on injured reserve with a groin injury. He finished the season with 95 rushing yards and a rushing touchdown on 25 carries. On July 20, 2017, the Cardinals re-signed Johnson on a one-year contract. He was released on September 1, 2017. On September 12, 2017, Johnson re-signed with the
Arizona Cardinals. Johnson was released by the team on October 10, 2017. He had played in four games in the 2017 season and had 114 rushing yards on 45 carries.
Retirement On November 5, 2018, Johnson announced his retirement from the NFL after 10 seasons in the league. On April 24, 2019, Johnson signed a one-day contract to retire as a member of the Tennessee Titans. ==Career statistics==