Jump to content

Monte Johnson

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Monte Johnson
No. 58
Position:Linebacker
Personal information
Born: (1951-10-26) October 26, 1951 (age 73)
Denver, Colorado, U.S.
Height:6 ft 4 in (1.93 m)
Weight:239 lb (108 kg)
Career information
High school:Lincoln (Bloomington, MN)[1]
College:Nebraska
NFL draft:1973 / round: 2 / pick: 49
Career history
Career highlights and awards
Career NFL statistics
Sacks:2.0
Interceptions:11
Stats at Pro Football Reference

Monte C. Johnson (born October 26, 1951) is an American former football player. Johnson, who never started in college, was selected by the Oakland Raiders during the second round of the 1973 NFL draft as the 49th player selected overall. Johnson attended the University of Nebraska and won two National Championships with Nebraska, and two Super Bowls (XI XV) with the Oakland Raiders. Johnson was the starting middle linebacker in Super Bowl XI when the Raiders defeated the Vikings, was injured in the 1980 season, and as a result did not play in Super Bowl XV, when the Raiders defeated the Eagles. Johnson considers the 1977 AFC Divisional playoff game against the Baltimore Colts, a game known as, "Ghost to the Post", to be his greatest game. Johnson finished the game, which went to double overtime, with 22 tackles despite suffering a broken vertebra during regulation.[2] Johnson became the starting middle linebacker at the beginning of 1975 season. Prior to that his contribution was the backup linebacker at all positions; he had significant playing time in the Raiders 3-4 defense as a blitzing/pass rushing linebacker and pass coverage. During Johnson's eight-year career, the Raiders played or was a member of the team in 11 playoff games including six AFC Championship games and two Super Bowls. Johnson retired from professional football in 1981, after eight seasons in Oakland, as a result of a career-ending knee injury he incurred early in the 1980 season.

After retirement, Johnson moved his family to Atlanta, where he currently lives with his wife Phyl of almost 52 years, and manages his own business, Family Capital Management, a multi-family family office.

References

[edit]
  1. ^ Fowler, Bob (January 7, 1977). "Monte Johnson: All-Bench (Bloomington kid will chase Tark)". The Minneapolis Star.
  2. ^ "Ghost to the Post". NFL's Greatest Games series. NFL Films.