Chris Johnson, the former Tennessee Titans star known across the league as “CJ2K,” revealed on Good Morning America that he has ALS at 39.
Johnson said the disease has advanced to the point that he needed a speech generation device for the interview with Michael Strahan. Speaking with his wife, Brittany, beside him, Johnson described the moment he learned the diagnosis: "Honestly, I don't know if you ever fully process it," Johnson said in an interview alongside his wife, Brittany.
"At first, you're in shock. Then you realize you have two choices.
You can give up, or you can fight. I chose to fight."
He also said there is no history of ALS in his family.
The Titans responded with support from owner Amy Adams Strunk, who posted a statement on social media praising Johnson’s leadership inside the Tennessee locker room and his influence throughout the Nashville community. Strunk said the organization will "support Chris every step of the way throughout his journey."
ALS, or amyotrophic lateral sclerosis, is a disease that attacks nerve cells in the brain and spinal cord. As motor neurons die, everyday functions such as walking, chewing and breathing become harder, and the illness typically keeps advancing until death. There is no known cure.
Johnson’s place in Titans history is already secure. The former first-round pick out of East Carolina arrived with a then-record 4.24 40-yard dash at the NFL Combine and lived up to the hype. He spent six of his 10 NFL seasons in Tennessee, finishing fourth in franchise history in rushing yards and second in rushing yards per game, trailing only Hall of Famer Earl Campbell.
His production was massive: just under 10,000 yards from scrimmage and 58 touchdowns with the Titans. And his second season remains the kind of year that still jumps off the page, when he joined the small group of just nine players ever to rush for 2,000 yards in a season.
Now, Johnson begins a very different fight, one that will have the full backing of the Titans and plenty of support from the fan base he gave so many unforgettable moments to during his career.
In Other News...
New NCAA Rule Could Change Minnesota's Future Faster Than Expected
The NCAAs new 5-for-5 eligibility model is the kind of change that can ripple through a roster well before it actually takes effect, and Minnesota is one of the teams most likely to feel it. The Division I Cabinet unanimously approved a rule that gives athletes a five-year window to compete starting from full-time enrollment, while wiping away the old season limits, redshirt structure and most eligibility-extension waivers. For the Gophers, the timing matters because the rule is set to apply to student-athletes who enroll full time in fall 2027 and after, with the old waiver provisions winding down before that.
Minnesotas long-term planning could look very different if this becomes the new normal, especially for a roster that could have several important pieces lined up for another cycle of development. A few players in the program are already on paths that could point toward the NFL, but the new setup also gives the Gophers more flexibility if a season does not go the way those players expect. For a team that has built around retention, it is easy to see why this one could alter future roster math faster than anyone in Dinkytown first expected. [Read more 🡒]
P.J. Fleck Faces A Familiar Gophers Question With Higher Stakes
As Minnesota looks ahead to 2026, the conversation around P.J. Fleck and the Gophers sounds familiar for a reason: the program has enough stability to feel dangerous, but not quite enough certainty to make the jump everyone keeps waiting for. The pieces are there to outline a respectable season, and there are enough returning strengths and manageable stretches on the schedule to keep hope alive, even if the margin for real breakthrough still feels thin.
The road to something bigger will not be simple. Several of the toughest tests sit away from home, and any serious push beyond the usual range would likely demand a clean run at home, including wins over Michigan and Iowa, just to stay in the mix. The most realistic read still points toward another solid year rather than a true leap, which leaves Minnesota in that awkward space where progress is visible, but the next step remains the hard part. [Read more 🡒]
