The 2026 NFL Draft is in Pittsburgh! This draft season, we’ll be scouting as many of the top prospects that the Pittsburgh Steelers could have their eye on. We’ll break down the prospects themselves, strengths and weaknesses, projected draft capital, and their fit with the Steelers.
The Steelers have built a competitive secondary over the past two offseasons, but don’t have anyone locked down long-term. Star corner Joey Porter Jr. is awaiting a lucrative extension on his rookie contract, and every
other corner on their roster has either just one year left under contract or has a deal that allows the Steelers to move on with few financial repercussions following 2026. Johnson is one of just a handful of first-round prospects who have been brought in for a pre-draft visit, making him a serious contender for Pittsburgh’s top pick.
The basics on Chris Johnson
- Position: Cornerback
- Class: Senior
- Size: 6’03/8, 193 pounds 305/8” arms, 763/8” wingspan
- Age: 21 (11-09-2004)
- Projected draft round: 1st round or early 2nd round
Defensive stats via PFF
Chris Johnson scouting report
One of the things that makes Johnson such an easy prospect to get excited about is that he appears to be a player who is ascending quickly as they gain experience. Despite playing at a non-Power Five school, Johnson was already firmly on the draft community’s radar following an encouraging performance as a first-year starter in 2024. Then he leveled up in 2025.
Johnson was a shutdown corner in every sense of the word last season.
Want a corner that’s good in man coverage? Johnson allowed no touchdowns and just eight receptions all season for 78 yards while playing man coverage. Per PFF’s charting, he had two pass breakups and four forced incompletions, forcing incompletions on 21% of his man coverage targets. And those numbers aren’t juiced from a lack of competitors’ testing him. Competitors targeted Johnson on average every 4.5 snaps the Aztecs played man, but he allowed a reception every 10.8 snaps on average. Opposing quarterbacks had an NFL passer rating of just 54.3 when targeting Johnson.
On the field, that manifests in a player whose special traits are his fluid hips and his excellent footwork. Johnson rarely takes a misstep, and on the few reps when he has, he’s flashed enough speed to recover on the play. He’s got excellent start-and-stop ability, which allows him to mirror-and-match receivers, which Johnson executes perfectly in the first clip in the reel above.
But as good as Johnson is in man, he’s even more dangerous to opposing quarterbacks while playing zone concepts. Johnson allowed just 10 receptions on 22 targets (45.5%) for 107 yards and no scores. He also picked the ball off four times, including two he returned for touchdowns. He averaged a target every 10 coverage snaps in zone and averaged 22 snaps between allowing completions. Johnson played zone for 66.8% of his coverage snaps. For context, the Steelers played zone roughly 68% of the time in 2025.
Johnson uses his vision and preparation to take the best angles in his coverage. Over and over again, when watching Johnson, you’ll see him take a path that fools quarterbacks into testing him, just for him to quickly break on the ball and either cut the pass off from the receiver or make contact through the point of the catch that would send the ball to the grass.
As a tackler, and playing against the run in general, Johnson is solid if unspectacular. His career missed tackle rate (5.4%) is incredibly impressive. Watching Johnson, he gets his marks to the ground, but he doesn’t deliver bone-jarring hits. His size does allow bigger players to move him around some, and jumping to the NFL level will create more opportunities for those kinds of physical mismatches. It’s not something I would be too worried about, but if we’re nitpicking it’s the one area of his profile you could prod at.
Strengths
- Fluid hips, clean footwork, and plus change-of-direction skills make him one of the tightest covers in this class
- Above-average ball skills, has a plan with the ball in his hands (2 pick-6s in 2025, 143 INT return yards ranked third nationally)
- Excellent recognition and anticipation in off-coverage reps
- Coverage and alignment versatility
- Doesn’t hesitate to get in the mix against the run
Weaknesses
- Slender frame allows bigger receivers to outmuscle him at times
- Testing speed is slightly better than on-field long speed
- Despite a stellar missed tackle rate (5.4%), his frame and tackling form can occasionally cause broken tackles against physical runners
- Just two games against Power 4 competition
What others are saying about Chris Johnson
Lance Zierlein, NFL.com
Scheme-versatile cornerback prospect with average size and the ability to play inside or outside. Johnson is consistent in mirroring the release from his pedal and rarely labors when transitioning with route breaks. While many college corners lean on lax officiating to grab and maul, Johnson stays disciplined. He trusts his footwork and technique to remain tight to the route. He attacks the catch point with run-through force and is a tenacious wrap-up tackler who can quickly end plays. Big receivers can steal some high-points, but not enough to cause concern. Johnson’s coverage versatility, toughness and athleticism should make him an early starter for a coverage-hungry team.
Todd McShay, The Ringer
Johnson’s a fudementally sound press corner who uses the proper hand to disrupt recievers at the line of scrimmage, stays balanced when flipping his hips, and doesn’t panic with his back turned to the quarterback. Johnson reads receivers’ breaks, tracks the ball well, takes sound angles, and he doesn’t get pushed around at the top of his routes in off coverage… Kansas City’s Nohl Williams is an interesting comp.
Dan Brugler, The Athletic/The Beast
Johnson offers a combination of instinctive eyes and athletic movement skills that allow him to consistently make plays on the football. He should compete for a starting role on day one, while also making an impact on special teams. He put himself on the NFL radar with a productive junior season and took his game to another level as a senior, earning All-America honors. When he was targeted in 2025, opponents completed just 41.9 percent of throws — Johnson had 13 passes defended and four interceptions and allowed zero touchdowns.
Chris Johnson’s fit with the Steelers
The Steelers’ cornerback room is crowded, even if it could stand to be upgraded behind its top two starters. As such, Johnson would likely find himself starring in a special teams role for most of his rookie season, barring injuries or a too-stellar-to-deny summer. Johnson played all four seasons on special teams, including the gunner role, where he blocked as a junior.
Johnson has limited experience in the slot, but has shone in a small sample size. He could be an instant upgrade over Brandin Echols and Asante Samuel Jr., which could lead to the Steelers rotating him into some slot reps if/when they move Jalen Ramsey around the formation.
Prized free agent Jamel Dean has a history of injuries, and Johnson could compete to step into a starting role in the event that Pittsburgh is without one of its starters for any period of time. Eventually, beyond 2026, Johnson can slide into the starting lineup and form a formidable duo with Porter Jr.
TL;DR: A fluid, turnover-generating corner with plus abilities in press, zone, and off-coverage, Johnson would help solidify the Pittsburgh secondary as a strength for years to come.
What are your thoughts on San Diego State cornerback Chris Johnson? And which draft prospects would you like to see profiled next? Let us know in the comments below!











