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Courtesy Woody Woodburn South
Bay Daily Breeze
By all rights, Julius Erving should be brought
up on charges for identity theft. He assumed the nickname "Dr.
J" largely on the basis that he could hang in the air for a
couple seconds on the way to a slam dunk.
Well, decades earlier the original "Dr. J"
used to float airborne like he had helium in his shoes. In fact,
he routinely stayed up the clouds for up to 20 hours!
Dr. John L. Johnson, you see, flew in helium
blimps during World War II. Specifically, he was a U.S. Navy
airship command pilot on anti-submarine patrol over the ocean off
Brazil. He was also a hero closer to home, and closer to the
ground as a star running back and middle linebacker for UCLA in
the early 1940's -- and later was an assistant coach for the
Bruins' 1954 national championship team.
This was back when football players wore flimsy
leather helmets that Johnson jokes you could fold in half and
stuff in your back pocket. It was an era when football pants were
made of moleskin and sweat-soaked wool jerseys would weigh an
extra 15 pounds by game's end on a hot afternoon. The shoulder
pads were thinner than cardboard and if you still had all your
front teeth, the head coach knew you weren't very good.
"We didn't have facemasks,"
Johnson said the other day. "Everyone had some front teeth
knocked out or his nose broken -- or both."
The UCLA coaches knew the rawhide-tough kid
from Bakersfield could play.
Johnson's nose miraculously remained
straight, but he notes, "I've got a mouthful of gold."
Johnson played two ways, of course, offense and
defense -- and special teams, too. Everyone who'd lost a few front
teeth did. Heck, he went right back into the game once after
losing part of his smile.
The captain of UCLA's freshman team in 1939,
Johnson lost more than a couple teeth in 1940 -- he lost the
entire season after making a tackle in a spring intrasquad
scrimmage. The great running back Kenny Washington bounced right
back up after the play but Johnson stayed down with a separated
shoulder and had to redshirt the year.
Johnson remembers going up against another
great UCLA runner: Jackie Robinson.
"I played against him every day,"
Johnson said, adding with a laugh, "and I haven't tackled him
yet. He was the greatest athlete I ever saw, by far."
Johnson smiled, reminded of another
memory, and continued: "At UCLA, the baseball field was next
to the track. I threw the discus, and during meets Jackie used to
come to the track between innings and take one jump in the long
jump, in his baseball uniform you understand, and win it and go
back to his baseball game."
By his own admission, Johnson, who was listed
at 5-foot-10 and 180 pounds, wasn't a great athlete.
"I wasn't big," he said, "but
I was fearless and I went all out every play."
These are the same traits he would later search
for, like a prospector looking for gold nuggets, during a full
quarter-century as an NFL scout.
"You can pretty well tell about a
player ability-wise, but you can't tell how much he wants it,"
Johnson explained. "You can't measure heart. A lot of players
don't have size or speed, but make it because they want it so bad
and go all out every play."
Was he that kind of player?
"I like to think I was,"
comes the answer, followed by a laugh and then this: "I
definitely had the lack of speed and lack of size."
Don't be fooled by his modesty. Johnson was an
impact player. As a senior in 1946 -- he served four years in the
Navy following his junior year -- he was an All-Coast selection
and at the inaugural Hula Bowl for all-star seniors he scored two
touchdowns to earn the game's Most Valuable Player award. It was
enough to get the Baltimore Colts to give him a $3,000 contract in
1947, plus a $1,500 signing bonus.
"I thought I was wealthy,"
said Johnson, noting he was eventually cut and only got to keep
the bonus. "Suddenly I was a third as wealthy as I thought."
He jokes about it now, but at the time it was a
crushing blow, worse than the blow from Washington that separated
his shoulder and cost him a full college season. This separated
Johnson from his dream of being a pro football player.
"I thought that was the worst thing that
ever happened to me in my lifetime," Johnson shared. He
paused, and after thinking about his lifetime since, added this:
"But it turned out to be the best thing
because as a result, I went back to school and got two more
degrees, and became a graduate assistant with (UCLA head
football coach) Red Sanders, and then joined his staff full time
in 1950.
"Yes, my whole life changed after the
Colts cut me -- and changed for the better."
Once a player, John Johnson became a coach
happily ever after.
"Coaching I guess is in my blood,"
he will tell you.
His 15-year stint at UCLA included coaching the
defensive secondary on the 1954 national championship team that
starred, among 11 future NFL players, running back Sam "First
Down" Brown.
"I've seen all the great teams
UCLA has ever had, and that team was the best of them all,"
Johnson insists. "Coaching that team is the greatest honor
I've ever had."
Truth is, the real honor has been to play for
him. Indeed, to this day his former athletes stay in contact with
him, causing Johnson to say thoughtfully:
"That means a lot to me because
I'm more interested in what kind of people they are now than what
kind of players they were."
He is not talking only about football players.
At UCLA, Johnson was also the assistant golf coach in 1962 and
1963, and then the head coach in 1964. Fittingly, football led to
his golfing gig.
"I learned to play golf at UCLA
because Red Sanders was a golf fanatic," Johnson explained. "He
had a sand trap at the football field and would hit shots before
practice."
Johnson, who earned his doctorate in education
and administration in 1964, eventually left UCLA to become the
athletic director at Cal Poly Pomona in 1966. Two years later, he
took on a challenge as daunting as trying to tackle Kenny
Washington in practice: he became Cal State Dominguez Hills' first
athletic director.
"When I started here there were
600 students, no campus and no athletic budget," he said. "But
I loved it because it was a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity to
start an athletic program from zero."
This time he tackled Jackie Robinson, so to
speak. He not only created the school's first intercollegiate team
-- men's golf -- he raised funds for it and coached it. And kept
adding more sports thereafter.
Under his guidance, the golf team was once
ranked as high as No. 6 in the nation and has featured three
All-Americans: Scott McDonald, Patrick Burke (who played for three
years on the PGA Tour) and Scott Hughey (who played on the PGA
Senior Tour).
In addition to still coaching the golf team,
Johnson continues to teach a full array of graduate and
undergraduate classes in the physical education department.
"When you consider everything,"
said assistant athletic director Patrick Guillen, "Dr. J
truly is a Southland living legend."
The living legend's office walls are covered
with photographs and framed newspaper clippings of his former
athletes and teams. Fifty-five years of memories won't fit on four
small walls, so Dr. J shares stories from his mental scrapbook.
"Let me tell you about John
McKay," he said. "He was coaching at the Hula Bowl and I
was an assistant. Of course he was USC's head coach and I was with
the Bruins then, and after the game the first thing he said to me
was, 'Give me the playbook.' He was the funniest guy."
Johnson turns a mental page to Vince Lombardi,
whom he met while serving as a scout for the Green Bay Packers:
"He was the most intense man I
had ever met in my life. He still is."
He turns the mental page to Otto Graham and the
50th anniversary of the Hula Bowl, to a flag football game of
legends, a senior-bowl-turned-senior-citizen-bowl in 1997:
"My team had Paul Hornung and
Larry Csonka, but we didn't have a quarterback. So I played
quarterback and threw two touchdown passes and we won, 14-0. It
was the finest achievement of my athletic career -- I beat the
all-time MVP Hall of Famer Otto Graham!"
Turn a page in his mind: "Dr. J"
helped create the Japan Bowl in 1976.
Keep turning: He served as an NFL scout from
1965-1990 for the Green Bay Packers, Minnesota Vikings, Detroit
Lions, Miami Dolphins, Buffalo Bills, Denver Broncos and San Diego
Chargers.
More pages, these in Johnson's passport stamped
in Australia, New Zealand, Japan, Sweden, Germany, Holland,
England, Scotland and Ireland, all places where he has coached
American teams and given football clinics.
Too, there are the pages in the 10
books Johnson has written, including Golf: The Game For
Everyone, How To Watch Football and even a James Bond-like
thriller Airship Nazi Hunter.
Asked where his energy comes from, Johnson, who
dodges questions about his exact age as nimbly as he used to avoid
would-be tacklers, runs his right hand through a full head of gray
hair and answers:
"Teaching and coaching keeps you
around young people, and that keeps you young."
Of course, Father Time is impossible to fake
out forever. This August past, Coach Johnson underwent
hip-replacement surgery. But a couple weeks later, the original "Dr.
J" was soaring again, relatively speaking, by climbing
stairs.
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