Eagles' Johnson stands by 'fear-based' jab at Patriots

Philadelphia Eagles offensive tackle Lane Johnson during a press conference in advance of Super Bowl LII against the New England Patriots at Mall of America on Jan. 31.
Philadelphia Eagles offensive tackle Lane Johnson during a press conference in advance of Super Bowl LII against the New England Patriots at Mall of America on Jan. 31.
Philadelphia Eagles offensive tackle Lane Johnson stood by his comments of calling the New England Patriots a "fear-based organization" during a return appearance on Barstool Sports' "Pardon My Take" podcast. "Here's the whole deal," Johnson said. "I think a lot of guys just want to be happy playing football. ... The Patriots obviously won five Super Bowls, so it's the Patriot Way to win the Super Bowl. Does that mean that everybody has to act the same way? Do the same thing? Is that necessarily the guidelines to win the Super Bowl?" In his initial interview, Johnson ruffled a lot of feathers by saying that he'd "much rather have fun and win a Super Bowl than be miserable and win five Super Bowls." Several former Patriots -- including ESPN analyst Tedy Bruschi -- took issue with Johnson's comments, which were made a few days after the Eagles posted a 41-33 win over New England in Super Bowl LII. "Lane Johnson, I don't know what he's talking about," Bruschi said on ESPN's First Take at the time. "I had a lot of fun. There were so many times that we would speak out in meetings, the entire team would erupt out in laughter, we're playing music on the team plane. We had so much fun, in the ones that I was there. I cannot understand what he's saying there." Johnson responded on Twitter by saying "Once a company man always a company man Tedy." The 27-year-old Johnson continued to address the topic on the more recent version of the podcast. "They kept interviewing ex-Patriots players," Johnson said. "What do you think they're going to say? 'I (expletive) hated it there'? No. 'I won Super Bowls. We had a great time.' They're not going to bad-mouth their coach. They're not going to say what they really want to say. Do you think that's going to happen? Hell no, it's not going to happen." Johnson's initial comments also prompted many Patriots fans to take him to task over social media. "I just (expletive) in everybody's Cheerios," Johnson said. "And everybody in Boston -- hey, I've got hate mail I still haven't read. I'm looking forward to reading it."

Latest Player Notes

How a Wisconsin legend got his German protégé into Badgers pro day

Mar 15, 2024 Marlon Werthmann put his life on hold for the opportunity in front of him Friday at the McClain Center.Werthmann ...

Why former Wisconsin football running back Braelon Allen didn't run the 40 at pro day

Mar 15, 2024 Braelon Allen’s sweat covered his shirt and dripped off his beard as he approached a group of reporters Friday.The ...

How can UW recruit its best class ever? It starts with these five prospects

By Andy Yamashita Seattle Times staff reporter Jedd Fisch has lofty recruiting goals at Washington. He didn’t waste any ...

Texas football kicks off spring practice Tuesday. We answer 24 questions for the 2024 team

Things certainly look fresh for the 2024 college football season, especially on the Texas campus.There’s a new conference ...

College Football Playoff: Conferences solve their differences (for now) and agree on general framework for 2026 and beyond

The FBS conferences and Notre Dame agreed on Friday to continue the College Football Playoff beyond the 2025 season, signing ...

Ball security, leadership key as Aztecs look to identify starting quarterback

San Diego State seemingly auditions a new starting quarterback on an annual basis.In the past 12 years, the Aztecs have opened ...

Results and more: A look at what happened at Penn State football’s Pro Day inside Holuba Hall

Most of those at Penn State’s Pro Day Friday were relatively quiet throughout the afternoon’s workouts, but there was one ...

Defense dominates first two weeks of Oregon State spring practice as Beavers ready for 2-week breather

CORVALLIS – Oregon State hit the break of spring practices Saturday, not exactly the midpoint but a good place to assess ...

Dillon Gabriel to have similar input, autonomy as Bo Nix had in Oregon’s offense

Published Mar. 16, 2024, 6:26 p.m.By James CrepeaEUGENE — Dillon Gabriel will have much of the same autonomy as Bo Nix did ...

Two transfers, one underclassman who impressed in Missouri football's spring game

With that, spring camp’s a wrap.Missouri football held its Black & Gold spring game Saturday in front of a healthy crowd ...
See More Player Notes