sacking
Ben Roethlisberger of the
Pittsburgh Steelers in 2006.
Terrell Suggs looks on.
Baltimore Ravens Johnson was selected in the fourth round (109th overall) of the
2003 NFL draft by the
Baltimore Ravens. In his rookie season he played in 15 games and started one contest, recording 18 tackles in the process for
Baltimore. He started his first NFL game on November 30 versus the
San Francisco 49ers. The following season, he played in 16 games posting 30 tackles. That season, he also recorded his first career interception which he returned for his first
NFL touchdown versus the
Miami Dolphins on January 2. In 2005, he again saw action in all 16 games and this time he started 12 of them. He finished the season with 61 tackles and 1.5 sacks. In the 2006 season, his fourth with the team, he played in all 16 games starting two and finished the campaign with 35 tackles. On March 3, 2007, Johnson signed a 5-year $21.7 million deal with the Ravens that included $8.1 million in bonuses/guaranteed money. In 2007 Johnson started all 16 games for the first time in his career and finished the season with a career-high 94 tackles (59 solo), despite being slowed for much of the year with a broken thumb. The next season, 2008, he again started all 16 games for the finishing with 82 tackles (46 solo), a career-high 5 sacks, 4 passes defensed, 2 forced fumbles, and 1 fumble recovery as part of the NFL's second ranked defense. In 2009, Johnson was named in
Pro Football Weekly's list of the ten most underrated players in the
NFL. He made 50 tackles (36 solo), 6 sacks, 1 forced fumble, and 2 interceptions in the
2009 NFL season. In 2010, Johnson surpassed
Peter Boulware's franchise record for consecutive starts (111), starting his 115th consecutive game in a divisional round match-up vs. the rival
Pittsburgh Steelers. In 2011, Johnson won NFL Defensive Player of the Week after recovering a fumble and returning it for a touchdown in a
Sunday Night Football win against the
New York Jets after
Haloti Ngata sacked
New York City quarterback Mark Sanchez. He left Baltimore having played in a team-record 129-straight regular-season games, including 80 consecutive starts.
San Diego Chargers On March 14, 2012, Johnson agreed to a four-year deal with the
San Diego Chargers. Johnson brought stability to the strong-side ’backer position for the Chargers, he also served as a valued mentor for fellow strong-side linebacker,
Melvin Ingram, the Chargers’ top pick in the
2012 NFL draft, and he finished his first season in San Diego with 47 tackles and 1.5 sacks. But more importantly, Johnson's consistency and effort helped the Bolts rank ninth in the NFL in total defense and sixth against the run. He was voted along with teammate
Malcom Floyd as the Chargers' Most Inspirational Player in
2014. Johnson announced his retirement on February 24, 2015. ==NFL career statistics==