Chris Johnson set for induction into Tennessee Sports HOF

Former Titans RB Chris Johnson will be inducted into the Tennessee Sports Hall of Fame in 2024.

Former Tennessee Titans running back Chris Johnson is set to be inducted into the Tennessee Sports Hall of Fame as part of the class of 2024.

According to Jim Wyatt of Titans Online, the Tennessee Sports Hall of Fame announced on Thursday that CJ2K would be the latest former Titans player inducted.

“Chris Johnson took the sports world by storm with his explosive plays and blinding speed,” executive director Brad Willis said. “His 2009 record-setting season will be long remembered by sports fans across the state of Tennessee.”

The aforementioned 2009 season saw Johnson join the 2,000-yard club after he rushed for 2,006 yards. He also added 503 receiving yards, which gave him 2,509 scrimmage yards in total, an NFL record.

Johnson joins five other former Titans who have been inducted, a list that includes Blaine Bishop, Keith Bulluck, Eddie George, Steve McNair and Frank Wycheck.

The Tennessee Sports Hall of Fame induction ceremony will take place on Saturday, July 20, at the Omni Nashville Downtown.

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Every player in Boston Celtics history who wore No. 12

Today’s installment focuses on the 34 players who wore No. 12 over the years as of September 2023.

The Boston Celtics have more retired jerseys than any other team in the NBA, but that doesn’t mean the rest of their jerseys have little history of interest tied to them.

In fact, with 17 titles to their name and decades of competitive basketball played in them, their unretired jersey numbers pack in some of the most history not hanging from the rafters of any team in the league. To that end, we have launched our accounting of that history, with every player in every jersey worn by more than one Celtics player in the storied franchise’s history accounted for.

Today’s installment focuses on the 34 players who wore No. 12 over the years as of September 2023.

Every player in Boston Celtics history who wore No. 86

This is every player in Boston’s history who wore the Celtics’ No. 86 jersey for at least one game as of Aug. 2023.

The Boston Celtics have more retired jerseys than any other team in the NBA, but that doesn’t mean the rest of their jerseys have little history of interest tied to them.

In fact, with 17 titles to their name and decades of competitive basketball played in them, their unretired jersey numbers pack in some of the most history not hanging from the rafters of any team in the league. To that end, we have launched our accounting of that history, with every player in every jersey worn by more than one Celtics player in the storied franchise’s history accounted for.

Today’s installment focuses on the two players who wore No. 86 over the years as of Aug. 2023.

On this day: Pierce signs with Celts to retire; Eric Williams born

On this day in 2017, Celtics legend Paul Pierce signed with Boston to retire a Celtic, and former wing Eric Williams was born.

On this day in Boston Celtics history, iconic Hall of Fame small forward Paul Pierce signed a deal to rejoin the team long enough to retire a Celtic in 2017, a franchise he had played with for 15 seasons before being traded to the Brooklyn Nets in 2013.

After his time with the Nets, Pierce would play stints with the Washington Wizards and Los Angeles Clippers before his symbolic return to the franchise that drafted him with the 10th overall pick of the 1998 NBA draft out of Kansas. Pierce would win a title with Boston in 2008 along with Finals MVP, make 10 All-Star teams, four All-NBA teams, and All-Rookie first team in 1999 among several other honors.

He averaged 21.8 points, 6 rebounds, and 3.9 assists while with the team.

Texas named a finalist for 2023 four-star guard Chris Johnson

The Longhorns may be able to add the former Kansas commit to their class of 2023.

Texas head coach Rodney Terry has found success in the transfer portal this offseason, but hasn’t been able to retain his high school commitments. Continue reading “Texas named a finalist for 2023 four-star guard Chris Johnson”

Should Titans put Brett Kern in Ring of Honor?

Shaun Calderon shares his thoughts on whether or not the Titans should Brett Kern in the Ring of Honor.

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If there’s one gripe I personally have when it comes to the Tennessee Titans’ organization, it’s the fact that the team rarely honors the truly great players of the last 24 years.

To be fair, the franchise under Amy Adams-Strunk has done a much better job of honoring the players of the past in the form of homecoming week, 12th Titan, etc.

Yet, for whatever reason, when it comes to adding anybody to the Ring of Honor and retiring their numbers, the team practically refuses to celebrate anyone outside of those who contributed to the early Titans teams.

Obviously, retiring numbers is an entirely different conversation since technically there are only 100 available at the very most.

Therefore, that type of honor should be reserved for the true legends of the franchise, such as Warren Moon, Steve McNair, Eddie George and, eventually, Derrick Henry.

Tennessee’s Ring of Honor has several worthy candidates who continuously get overlooked for whatever reason. Unfortunately, that waiting room may have just grown by one more now that Titans legendary punter Brett Kern officially announced his retirement.

After 15 seasons (13 in Tennessee), the Toledo product was given a worthy send-off earlier this week that included lengthy tributes and his own press conference.

During his peak, Kern was a three-time Pro Bowler and a two-time All-Pro who had mastered the ability to direct his kicks wherever he pleased.

On top of being a sniper with his leg, more often than not, he was as clutch as anybody whenever the team needed him to be. Kern even played a large role in going up to New England and ending arguably the greatest dynasty in all of professional sports during the Titans’ 2019 Wild Card win over the Pats.

Logan Ryan may have gotten the final interception, but make no mistake about it, it was Kern’s 10-second punt that pinned the Patriots inside their one-yard line that officially put the final nail in the dynasty’s coffin.

That type of moment, combined with Kern’s laundry list of accomplishments, should be everything he needs to find himself in the Titans’ Ring of Honor.

The real question is, does he deserve it more than former Titans who are also in the aforementioned waiting room, like Chris Johnson, Keith Bulluck, Jevon Kearse, Michael Roos and Taylor Lewan?

In my opinion, all of those players, along with Kern, should at least be in the Ring of Honor, but whether or not they will be remains to be seen.

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On this day: ground broken on ‘new’ Boston Garden; Gray traded; Lee, Johnson born; Philip, Mahoney pass

On this day, construction began on the building that would replace the old Boston Garden.

On this day in Boston Celtics history, in 1993, ground was broken on what would become the team’s home in the modern era, the so-called “new” Boston Garden currently referred to as TD Garden.

Boston had previously played in the building built in 1928 that began its life as the “Boston Madison Square Garden” (it had been designed by boxing promoter Tex Rickard, the intellectual author of the third iteration of the New York City arena of the same name sans ‘Boston,’ thus the name later shortened to ‘Boston Garden’) from its founding in 1946 as one of the premier teams of the Basketball Association of America (BAA – a precursor league of the NBA) up until 1995.

The Celtics had been looking for a new arena back into the 1970s, nearly moving to Revere, Massachusetts before Delaware North — the company that owns the building and the NHL team the Boston Bruins — secured permission and funding for building TD Garden.

Ex-Titans RB Chris Johnson to be inducted into Senior Bowl HOF

Former Titans RB Chris Johnson will be inducted into the Senior Bowl Hall of Fame.

Former Tennessee Titans running back Chris Johnson is one of five current or former NFL players who are set to be inducted into the Senior Bowl Hall of Fame.

According to Senior Bowl executive director Jim Nagy, Johnson will be inducted along with former Philadelphia Eagles running back Brian Westbrook, current Eagles right tackle Lane Johnson, former Green Bay Packers outside linebacker Clay Matthews and former Baltimore Ravens offensive lineman Marshal Yanda.

“It was such a great honor to get invited to the Senior Bowl and represent East Carolina,” Johnson said. “It felt good to know the Senior Bowl thought I belonged there and I was excited to compete against all the top players in the country.  It was an experience that I’ll never forget.”

After taking part in the 2008 Senior Bowl, Johnson was taken in the first round (No. 24 overall) of the NFL draft that year by the Titans, where he spent six seasons and tallied a 1,000-yard campaign in each, including a historic 2,000-yard season in 2009 that gave him the nickname “CJ2K”.

For his efforts, Johnson was a First-Team All-Pro once and a three-time Pro Bowler in that span.

After his stint in Nashville, Johnson spent four more years in the NFL after that, including one with the New York Jets and three with the Arizona Cardinals.

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Chris Johnson: Titans should not trade Derrick Henry

Former Titans RB Chris Johnson thinks the team should hang on to Derrick Henry.

With questions abound about what the Tennessee Titans will do during the 2023 offseason, rumors have swirled that the team may or may not have interest in trading running back Derrick Henry.

First, Bally Sports’ Michael Silver reported that the Titans were shopping Henry while down the NFL Combine. Then, CBS Sports’ Jonathan Jones refuted that report, saying the Titans are not shopping Henry.

Yet another report from MMQB’s Albert Breer said the Titans were not “shopping” henry but instead “listening” to teams about a trade.

Any team can listen to another team’s offer simply by picking up the phone. The shopping part would indicate the team is actively seeking to trade said player.

In terms of the Titans possibly trading Henry, former running back Chris Johnson doesn’t think it’s a move Tennessee should make. He believes the team is still capable of competing and should be adding pieces instead.

Here’s what CJ2K said about the topic, per The 33rd Team.

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