The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Ex-Tech star balances other pursuits since NFL retirement

Editor’s note: This is the second part of a Q&A with Calvin Johnson. The first part ran in Wednesday’s AJC.

- By Ken Sugiura ksugiura@ajc.com

When Calvin Johnson retired from the Detroit Lions in 2016, he was 30 years old.

That’s a pretty long retire- ment. The Georgia Tech great has filled the time with purpose, lending more time to his foundation, starting a consultanc­y for former athletes, working with receivers from the pro to high-school levels and spending more time with family.

Johnson has a 4-year-old son, Caleb, and married Brit- tney McNorton, a former Lions staff member, in 2016, months after his retirement. He spoke on those topics, as well as a few thoughts about Georgia Tech, in an inter- view with the AJC this past Saturday before a gala din- ner at the Georgia Tech Hotel and Conference Center that served as a fundraiser for his Calvin Johnson Jr. Founda- tion. Questions and answers were edited for clarity and brevity.

Q: Is your private coaching what you consider your primary occupation right now?

A: No. Real estate, that kind of takes up (my time). Me and two friends of mine — one is actually an old team- mate, Rob Sims — we started Locker Room Consulting, which is basically a platform for players, but it’s by play- ers, too. You hear the statis- tics about guys that lose their money shortly after their careers (end), they’re going bankrupt and stuff like that. We want to be able to provide advice for these guys.

Q: What are your plans for graduation (from Tech)?

A: One thing I’ve found out, you’ve got to take a lot of the classes at Tech. I’m still in Michigan, so it’s tough. I heard they’re getting better with their transfer programs as far as taking classes from other schools. We’ve just got to see where they’re at now. Things could have changed in the last year and a half since I’ve tried.

Q: Have you started preparing your induction speech (for the College Football Hall of Fame)?

A: No. (Laughs). I don’t even think about it, hon- estly. When the time comes, it comes. Q: much Do Whenever you during watch the I Tech can season? catch play A: ’em crazy? on Since TV. You I’ve know been what’s done playing, I haven’t watched as much football. I find other things to do with my time, especially now that I’ve got a little man. I do try to keep in touch, see where they’re at, follow along, see if they’re going to make a bowl game. I keep tabs on ’em, no doubt.

Q: If you were a high school kid coming out, do you think Georgia Tech is the place you’d end up again?

A: Right now, they don’t really throw the ball. So if you’re trying to make plays in the receiving game, 10 throws a game, that’s not going to really (do it). Unless they’re throwing all 10 to you, like they did (former All-Amer- ican receiver Demaryius Thomas).

Q: Looking back at your career at Tech, if you had one game you could re-live again, what would it be?

A: That’s a good question. Clemson, probably. (John- son caught the game-winning touchdown pass with 11 seconds ago at Clemson in 2004.) That was just my second game. That was so early, but that environmen­t, what we did that night, the feelings we had.

Q: And if you had one game to replay to change the outcome?

A: I had the North Carolina State game where the thing touched my fingertips. (A home loss in 2005 to N.C. State in which a would-be touchdown pass to him in the final minute was intercepte­d after deflecting off his hands.) We should have had that one.

Q: What is Caleb like?

A: He’s 4 years old. He’s getting to that point where he’s starting to break through. You feel like he’s a genius because he’s just picking up so much, so fast. He’s a bright kid, and I’m very proud.

Q: What is he good at, or what does he like to do?

A: He’s good at running his mouth. He’s good at sweettalki­ng anybody into anything he wants.

Q: Do you fall prey?

A: No, it doesn’t work with me. It works with all the ladies, though.

Q: Do you have a plan to move back down here? A: This is home. We’re just looking for a home.

Q: Do you know where you’d want to live?

A: We’ve narrowed it down, but it just all depends on what we find, what works out, the school system. So many things that play into it.

Q: It’s funny, having a kid, you’re thinking not just for yourself.

A: Exactly. You’ve got to think about those things.

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