Jerrod Johnson

QB · Texas AM
Johnson could have gone almost anywhere because of his status as a top 100 national recruit as an athlete/quarterback out of Humble (where Larry Johnson was a principal, coach, and pillar of the community), but he chose to go to College Station so he could follow in his father's footsteps. Johnson took advantage of his limited chances to play as a redshirt freshman, leading the team to scores in six of the eight drives (over five games) in which he played. Coaches moved him to receiver for his sophomore season (two catches for 41 yards in the team's three games), but he was forced to move back to quarterback earlier than expected when senior Stephen McGee was lost to injury; he threw for 2,435 yards, 21 scores and 10 interceptions starting the last 10 games of the year. The starting job was all his in 2009, and he came through with a second-team All-Big 12 junior year, completing 59.6 percent of his throws for 3,579 yards, 30 touchdowns against just eight interceptions, and rushing for 506 yards and eight scores. Johnson's breakout performance on the national stage came against Texas on Thanksgiving night, when he threw for 342 yards, four touchdowns and ran for another 97 yards in the close loss to the then-No. 3 Longhorns. In that game, Johnson showed scouts his strong arm and ability to burn defenses with long runs when they laid back in zone coverage. He also displayed a wind-up in his delivery along with poor footwork, little patience in the pocket, and only average accuracy on throws he'll need to make at the next level. Although Johnson's the sort of strong, high-character leader NFL teams like, they will need to see improvement throughout his game before they consider him a potential starter or worth a pick in the top 100 overall selections.