Blue & Gold Illustrated: America's Foremost Authority on Notre Dame Football
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www.BLUEANDGOLD.com JUNE/JULY 2021 7 BY PATRICK ENGEL J ordan Johnson was many things in his one year at Notre Dame. A gifted five-star recruit. The future at an important position. A freshman whose acclimation to new settings featured some bumps. A shiny toy that never came out of the box. A cen- terpiece of fan and media fixation. And now, a marriage between player and program that just didn't work out. It ends with Johnson's likely depar- ture. Notre Dame's highest-rated 2020 signee announced May 3 his intent to transfer elsewhere. He played two catch-less games in 2020 and worked mainly as a second-teamer this spring. All of the good was enough for John- son to become a lightning-rod topic when his DNPs piled up while the Irish's 2020 receiving corps operated as a solid-but-unspectacular piece of an efficient yet not overly explosive offense. It was also not nearly enough to out- weigh the reasons for those 2020 DNPs and early 2021 trajectory as a backup. Those won't be publicly known in full. What became clear enough over time, though, was that he required more de- velopment than his five-star ranking indicated and the discussion around his freshman year consumed more oxygen than it deserved. With his exit, that development won't happen at Notre Dame. Why his Irish résumé reads 26 snaps, zero catches and a spring game with one target is a question for the Irish staff. It also seems like a question without an obvious, singular answer or cause. Depending on which tweet replies or message board thread you saw since last fall, Johnson's transfer is a referendum on Notre Dame's re- ceiver situation and the opportunity it gives freshmen. Others insist John- son is simply a reminder that on an individual scale, a star ranking is hardly a set-in-stone forecast for a player's freshman year or his career. Start with the first. Aren't coaches supposed to help young players un- derstand and execute their on-field responsibilities? Isn't it their job to make players' jobs easier? Sure, John- son's career should be topic of intro- spection for Notre Dame's coaches. But for whatever they could have done to help Johnson play last fall, it wasn't going to address his col- lege-life acclimation struggles. And sometimes, that has to be the priority. Especially for a freshman. Especially for a place that sells its educational benefits like Notre Dame. "There are other things that are im- portant here at the university, and we all know that," head coach Brian Kelly said in October. "He has been focused heavily on making the tran- sition. The things that are really dif- ficult are in the classroom. "We all see he has the skill set. Now we'll have to build on that." And if it took a year to get that down, it's hardly a calamity when looking at college football overall. An impact freshman year from a top receiver re- cruit is the exception, not the norm. Johnson was Rivals' No. 5 wide re- ceiver and No. 28 overall player in the 2020 class. From 2017-20, there were 30 receivers who were ranked in the top 50 in their respective years. Six of them caught more than 25 passes as freshmen. Thirteen caught single digit passes their first year. There were more players who had fewer than five receptions as freshmen than players who had at least 40. Johnson is one of three in that group who didn't record a catch as a freshman. Given all that, panic with Johnson after his anonymous 2020 season was a bit extreme. But some concern rested in his apparent struggles this spring. Many of his top-50 receiver peers had bigger sophomore years after quiet freshman seasons. John- son's 2021, albeit early with time for growth, had more signs of another season largely spent in the shadows than one with steps forward. He hadn't taken many first-team reps at a position with openings. Kelly imploring the still-unproven senior re- ceivers to elevate their game wasn't a great sign for Johnson's 2021 involve- ment. Neither was his spring game, where his most visible moment was a second-quarter screen called for him. Sophomore quarterback Drew Pyne never threw the ball because Johnson blocked a cornerback instead of run- ning the route. It resulted in a sack. Johnson also missed a few prac- tices toward the end of spring due to some minor injuries. "That's going to slow his develop- ment down," offensive coordinator Tommy Rees said in April. Added Kelly earlier this spring: "Jordan Johnson is getting better, there's no doubt. He has to continue to get better with the little things." That was never as easy as it sounds for Johnson at Notre Dame. Perhaps his hop into the transfer portal is the change that helps him — and identifies what could or couldn't have happened to make it occur in South Bend. ✦ UNDER THE DOME EARLY EXIT Wide receiver Jordan Johnson's transfer ends a bumpy year for the five-star prospect Johnson, the highest-rated player in Notre Dame's 2020 recruiting class, announced May 3 that he was leaving the program after one season. PHOTO COURTESY NOTRE DAME ATHLETICS