The Palm Beach Post

D-line takes hit as Johnson leaves program

- By Matt Porter Palm Beach Post Staff Writer

CORAL GABLES — Miami’s defensive line of the future will not include D J Johnson.

Johnson, considered the best defensive recruit Miami signed last season, has left the program. UM confirmed the news in a brief press release distribute­d Tuesday. Also Tuesday, UM confirmed that linebacker Darrion Owens is transferri­ng.

“D J indicated to me that he would like to continue his playing career closer to his family,” coach Mark Richt said in the release.

In a tweet, Johnson said:

“Loved miami, close family members going through severe health issues. Thank you to the miami fan base and staff for embracing me and giving me some great memories and molding me as a better player and growing man. God bless.”

Johnson, a true freshman defensive end from Sacramento, Calif., played in eight games and recorded three tackles in his only season in Coral Gables.

Listed at 6-foot-5 and 240 pounds, he was a four-star prospect who reportedly had more scholarshi­p offers — 100 — than any recruit in the 2017 class. He chose UM over schools like UCLA, USC, Alabama and numerous others, calling it his “dream school.” He briefly left the team in November for personal reasons.

UM, which loses graduating ends Chad Thomas and Trent Harris, returns juniorto-be Joe Jackson (6.5 sacks, 11.5 tackles for

there,” he said in the afterglow of Alabama’s Sugar Bowl semifinal victory over Clemson late Monday night. By virtue of that 24-6 mauling of the playoff ’s top seed, the Crimson Tide will make the short trip again to Atlanta to play for a fifth national title in nine years. No GPS will be required.

Georgia will play in its home state for its first national championsh­ip since 1980, a fateful convergenc­e that may allow entreprene­urs on the “secondary ticket market” to purchase second homes in Monaco. But whose home game is it, really? Alabama played its first game of this season in Atlanta, helping to break in the new Mercedes-Benz Stadium, along the way knocking out FSU’s quarterbac­k for the season and pretty much finishing the Seminoles for the duration.

And now look at the Tide as they circle back around to the same address, intent upon doing some manner of harm to Georgia this time. Leaving on a high on the night of Sept. 2, could they have been certain they would be back Jan. 8, trying to add the best memory yet to their Atlanta scrapbook?

“We were hoping so. That was kind of our plan,” center Bradley Bozeman said.

The prep work for their return was unlike any they had done before. Losing the season’s last game (26-14 to rival Auburn), being shut out of the SEC title game and depending upon some committee to place them in the playoff as they idled — that’s not exactly the Alabama Method.

In the coaches poll, Clemson’s Dabo Swinney didn’t even vote his Alabama alma mater in his top four, putting Ohio State up there instead. And how did that work out?

In the 40-plus days since the Auburn loss, Alabama healed a little and got its head right, that component seldom an issue under Nick Saban.

“I think, as a team, we had a mentality of: Don’t remember the wins, remember the losses,” quarterbac­k Jalen Hurts said. “We never forget what happened, but we wanted to take it in as a learning experience. We had the opportunit­y to do that and display it (against Clemson). We overcame it, and we got them.”

Looking back on Alabama’s semifinal victory over Clemson, it certainly bore an authentic signature. Nothing extravagan­t. Nothing certainly as end-to-end as the earlier Georgia-Oklahoma game. Just pound away with the patience and confidence of a good coal miner, certain that the rock wall must give way eventually. Even one as certifiabl­y stout as Clemson.

“I think we looked like the Alabama team we were supposed to be,” said Minkah Fitzpatric­k, the Tide’s accomplish­ed safety.

It was the kind of win that made Saban famous.

“I’m proud of the way our guys competed in the game. And I think that was the difference in the game — the toughness that we played with, the effort that we played with,” he said afterward.

“We were able to affect their quarterbac­k (five sacks), stop the run. Got off the field early in the game on third down quite a bit (the Tigers were 8 of 19 on third down). We played the kind of game we wanted to play on offense (controlled). We wanted to run the ball. And a 2-yard run wasn’t a bad run because we didn’t want to get in a lot of thirdand-long situations. We did a good job of keeping the ball (a nearly five-minute advantage in time of possession) and scored when we had the opportunit­ies to score (14 points off turnovers).

This is not the best version of Alabama. It does not overwhelm, as past editions. It has betrayed vulnerabil­ity throughout the season, as injuries mounted. If Georgia can avoid the kind of turnovers that sabotaged Clemson, no reason to believe it can’t stay viable to the finish.

Large parts of the country may disagree, but this is the game that had to be. Especially for a Bulldogs program seeking a new level. To claim you have legitimate­ly arrived, it is Alabama that you must stand with, eye-to-eye.

As for the Tide, “If it was a community college, I’d be excited about this game,” safety Tony Brown said. “The fact that it’s Georgia, the fact that it’s going to be SEC vs. SEC, it is going to be a great game,” he said.

That fact that it happens in Atlanta further encourages Bama.

Its reign has outlived one dome there and is already making claim to another. Play this one in an abandoned warehouse, and the Tide might feel right at home, so long as it is somewhere in the friendly confines of Fulton County.

 ?? AL DIAZ / MIAMI HERALD ?? Hurricanes defensive lineman DJ Johnson, a Sacramento, Calif., native told coach Mark Richt he’d like to continue his career closer to his family. Johnson played in eight games this season.
AL DIAZ / MIAMI HERALD Hurricanes defensive lineman DJ Johnson, a Sacramento, Calif., native told coach Mark Richt he’d like to continue his career closer to his family. Johnson played in eight games this season.
 ??  ?? Owens
Owens
 ?? CURTIS COMPTON / ATLANTA JOURNAL-CONSTITUTI­ON ?? Alabama players are used to celebratin­g in Atlanta, as they did after beating Washington in the Chick-fil-A Peach Bowl CFP semifinal at the Georgia Dome in 2016.
CURTIS COMPTON / ATLANTA JOURNAL-CONSTITUTI­ON Alabama players are used to celebratin­g in Atlanta, as they did after beating Washington in the Chick-fil-A Peach Bowl CFP semifinal at the Georgia Dome in 2016.

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