Current:Home > NewsLions hopeful C.J. Gardner-Johnson avoided serious knee injury during training camp -WealthPro Academy
Lions hopeful C.J. Gardner-Johnson avoided serious knee injury during training camp
View
Date:2025-04-11 15:02:13
The Detroit Lions are hopeful they avoided a disastrous injury.
Defensive back C.J. Gardner-Johnson suffered a non-contact injury midway through the Lions' second training camp practice Monday when he tried to weave his way through the line on a handoff to rookie Jahmyr Gibbs.
Gardner-Johnson underwent further testing Monday, though Lions trainers were optimistic the injury was not season-ending after tending to him on the field. ESPN reported an MRI showed Gardner-Johnson suffered no structural damage to his knee.
"Sad, man," said Lions cornerback Jerry Jacobs, who tore the anterior cruciate ligament in his left knee in a game against the Denver Broncos in 2021, the second significant knee injury he suffered in his career. "I can’t really have no words for it. When I seen it, I just prayed for him and you can’t really do too much because he’s down. You can’t really say nothing to someone like that going through something like that. You can say something, but it’s just not really going to feel great because he wants to be out here with us so I’m just going to pray for him and just make sure everything all right for him."
NFL RECORD PROJECTIONS:Which teams will lead the way to Super Bowl 58?
NEVER MISS A SNAP:Sign up to get the latest NFL news and features sent directly to your inbox
Gardner-Johnson immediately started pounding on his right knee as he lay on the ground, and remained down for more than five minutes until two trainers helped him to his feet. He could not put pressure on his right leg and was carted off the field after teammates Jared Goff, Halapoulivaati Vaitai and Isaiah Buggs came over to offer him words of encouragement.
Gardner-Johnson signed a one-year free agent deal with the Lions in March after tying for the NFL lead with six interceptions last season and helping the Philadelphia Eagles reach the Super Bowl. He is expected to play a significant role in the Lions' revamped secondary under his former position coach with the New Orleans Saints, defensive coordinator Aaron Glenn.
Gardner-Johnson took first-team reps at safety and slot cornerback the past two days and is already considered one of the emotional leaders of the Lions defense.
"He’s got a great energy and that energy trails on to us," Jacobs said. "With all us, we’re going to miss him. Not saying it’s a big injury, I don’t know what it is, but if he got down for a couple weeks we’re just going to miss him because the energy ain’t the same without him in the room."
Fellow cornerback Emmanuel Moseley, who tore his ACL with the San Francisco 49ers last season, underwent a clean-up procedure on the knee recently and has been excused from the start of training camp. Moseley, expected to compete with Jacobs for the starting job opposite Cam Sutton, will go on the physically unable to perform list once he reports.
Despite their injury woes, the Lions have good depth at the safety and nickel positions that Gardner-Johnson plays. Tracy Walker, in his return from a torn Achilles, and Kerby Joseph, who led the Lions with four interceptions last season, have taken most of the first-team reps at safety this summer, and Will Harris and rookie Brian Branch are capable slot cornerbacks.
Harris made 10 starts and had his first career interception for the Lions last season, while Branch, a second-round pick, had a strong training camp debut Sunday.
Harris played slot corner in the Lions' first-team nickel package in a seven-on-seven period after Gardner-Johnson suffered his injury Monday, and Branch had a pass breakup later in the same period on an Adrian Martinez pass to Dylan Drummond.
"If someone goes down, another guy’s going to step up and that can be just as good as a player that actually went down," Glenn told the Detroit Free Press, part of the USA TODAY Network, last month. "That goes to show what happened with Tracy last year. Tracy goes down, we had to force Kerby to go in and play and he had some lumps early and it wasn’t easy for him, but as he continued to grow and understand, he got better. So I don’t think we have this year, one of our safeties goes down, man, we got another guy right behind him that’s ready to go. Same thing with the nickel, we got a guy right ready to go. Same thing at the corner."
Contact Dave Birkett at [email protected]. Follow him on Twitter @davebirkett.
veryGood! (31)
Related
- Meta donates $1 million to Trump’s inauguration fund
- New Zealand’s new government promises tax cuts, more police and less bureaucracy
- Biden tells Americans we have to bring the nation together in Thanksgiving comments
- Tackling climate change and alleviating hunger: States recycle and donate food headed to landfills
- Warm inflation data keep S&P 500, Dow, Nasdaq under wraps before Fed meeting next week
- No. 7 Texas overwhelms Texas Tech 57-7 to reach Big 12 championship game
- 4 injured during shooting in Memphis where 2 suspects fled on foot, police say
- Terry Richardson hit with second sexual assault lawsuit as NY Adult Survivors Act expires
- McKinsey to pay $650 million after advising opioid maker on how to 'turbocharge' sales
- The casting director for 'Elf' would pick this other 'SNL' alum to star in a remake
Ranking
- Finally, good retirement news! Southwest pilots' plan is a bright spot, experts say
- 5 people dead in a Thanksgiving van crash on a south Georgia highway
- Inside the Kardashian-Jenner Family Thanksgiving Celebration
- 5 people dead in a Thanksgiving van crash on a south Georgia highway
- South Korea's acting president moves to reassure allies, calm markets after Yoon impeachment
- Internet casinos thrive in 6 states. So why hasn’t it caught on more widely in the US?
- A historic theater is fighting a plan for a new courthouse in Georgia’s second-largest city
- Families of hostages not slated for release from Gaza during current truce face enduring nightmare
Recommendation
Average rate on 30
Sean 'Diddy' Combs accused of 1991 sexual assault of college student in second lawsuit
These artificial intelligence (AI) stocks are better buys than Nvidia
Kentucky residents can return home on Thanksgiving after derailed train spills chemicals, forces evacuations
What to watch: O Jolie night
Washington Commanders fire defensive coaches Jack Del Rio, Brent Vieselmeyer
NFL players decide most annoying fan bases in anonymous poll
Dolly Parton Dazzles in a Dallas Cowboys Cheerleader Outfit While Performing Thanksgiving Halftime Show