The Register-Guard

Lions to induct Johnson into their ring of honor

- Ahmad Garnett

Calvin Johnson will officially earn the highest honor from the Detroit Lions this season.

The team on Monday announced they will induct Johnson, a 2021 Pro Football Hall of Fame wide receiver, into the Pride of the Lions during halftime of their Week 4 game on Monday Night Football, Sept. 30 vs. the Seattle Seahawks.

“We are thrilled to add Calvin Johnson Jr. to the Pride of the Lions,” Rod Wood, Lions president and CEO, said in a statement. “His commitment on the field and to the city of Detroit are legendary and this is a well-deserved honor. We are proud that he will be forever memorializ­ed inside Ford Field and as a Detroit Lion.”

Johnson is the 21st member of the Lions’ honor roll. Lomas Brown was the most recent inductee in 2023.

Nicknamed Megatron after the “Transforme­rs” character, Johnson was drafted in 2007 at No. 2 overall out of Georgia Tech. He spent his entire nine-year career with the Lions, appearing in 135 regular season games and catching 731 receptions for 11,619 yards and 83 touchdowns. He is the franchise leader in all three categories.

He played at least 13 games in every season, including all 16 in his final season at age 30.

Johnson was part of two playoff teams (2011, 2014) and the league’s first-ever 0-16 team (2008).

Johnson still holds the NFL singleseas­on receiving yardage record of 1,964 yards from his 2012 season.

Johnson, now 38, was inducted into the Pro Football Hall of Fame in 2021, becoming the seventh receiver in NFL history, and second player in Lions history, to be named a first-ballot inductee. Johnson was selected to six Pro Bowls in 2010-15, and was first-team All-Pro in 2011-13.

He was one of four receivers named to the NFL’s 2010s All-Decade Team.

He abruptly retired after a 7-9 season in 2015, leading to a more than halfdecade long feud with the Lions, who asked him to repay a $1.6 million portion of his signing bonus, which went against NFL protocol. (The Lions had done the same to Barry Sanders after his retirement in 1999.)

Johnson and the organizati­on remained at odds through his Hall of Fame enshrineme­nt in 2021, but their relationsh­ip has greatly improved recently. He attended multiple home games at Ford Field last season, and participat­ed in the club’s new uniform reveal in April.

Johnson said in June he has no issues with the organizati­on.

“I think the biggest thing for me was when I had a conversati­on with Rod to clear the air,” he said. “I’ve talked with (owner) Sheila (Hamp) over the years. I’m good with everybody. I’m good with (general manager) Brad (Holmes). I’m excited for the team. That’s definitely, we’re on the up and up, I guess you could say, from that aspect.”

Johnson has stayed connected to Detroit since his retirement, frequently showing up for charity golf tournament­s and hosting an annual football camp for youth.

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 ?? KIRTHMOND F. DOZIER/DETROIT FREE PRESS FILE ?? The Lions’ Calvin Johnson looks over his shoulder after catching a touchdown pass in September 2014.
KIRTHMOND F. DOZIER/DETROIT FREE PRESS FILE The Lions’ Calvin Johnson looks over his shoulder after catching a touchdown pass in September 2014.

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