Time to appreciate Stevie Johnson

By Joel Clarke / Roar Pro

It has become fact that Gary Ablett Jr is the best midfielder in the competition and arguably the best player. His peers say it, experts say it and stats say that no one can lay claims to being better than the little master.

The debate as to who is the second-best midfielder is much harder.

Is it Geelong’s Joel Selwood? Collingwood’s Scott Pendlebury? Essendon’s Jobe Watson? Adelaide’s Patrick Dangerfield?

As good as all those players are and for all they have achieved, there is one player that seemingly gets forgotten about but the time has come to recognise him.

Geelong’s magician Steve Johnson is now the competition’s second-best midfielder.

For the last season and five games, there has been no better or more consistent player than Steve Johnson.

In 2013, he had over 25 disposals in 14 games and over 30 nine times. This came from just 19 games, including finals.

Last year, Johnson went from half-forward who would pinch hit to elite midfielder.

He polled 25 Brownlow votes and could have won if he not missed four games due to suspension.

This year, he ranks only behind Ablett in terms of disposals, but statistics are not everything when judging the best.

In last year’s preliminary final, he was best afield in a losing cause. He had it 32 times and kicked four goals. His first quarter and a half was one of the best in a final.

Had Travis Varcoe kicked the goal to tie the game, we would have all gone back to Johnson, whose left foot kick around the body was as hard a kick as you could attempt in the heat of the moment.

Come yesterday against the same opponent, it was Johnson again that did the damage. 34 disposals and three goals, including the match sealer.

More importantly, it was his clearance work, his clean hands, his decision making and his elite endurance that made him unstoppable from the first minute to last.

At times Johnson can infuriate Geelong supporters, coaches and neutral supporters, but the brilliance that only he can do makes up for it and then some.

Cast your mind back to 2012 and again Geelong versus Hawthorn.

With Geelong down by four points with only 20 seconds remaining, he pulled off a left foot pass off one step pin point to Joel Selwood who would then mark and kick to Tom Hawkins for the match winning goal.

All the plaudits would go to Hawkins, but had the ball been in anyone else’s hands just 20 seconds earlier, the result would have been far different.

Johnson for so long has had to live in the shadows of Ablett, Jimmy Bartel, Selwood, Corey Enright, Cameron Ling, Joel Corey, Matt Scarlett and all the Geelong champions of this dominant era.

However the time has come to appreciate Johnson as not just a champion of Geelong, but one of the competition’s best.

So far, he has kicked 411 goals in 220 matches, won a Norm Smith medal in 2007, is a three-time premiership player and a three-time All-Australian.

Last year, he was over-looked for All-Australian nomination and like so often in the past few years, we have overlooked him as a true great.

The modern game requires big midfielders. With congestion and stoppages, the best midfielders are those that can extract it under extreme physical pressure.

At 189 centimetres and 91 kilograms, Johnson fits the mould.

The game requires an ability to run and Johnson’s endurance has allowed him to become an elite midfielder.

It requires vision, elite decision making and precision skills and despite at times trying for the miraculous rather than the safe option. Johnson’s vision and decision making are without peer and execution of skills under pressure is second to none.

His heroics in the 2011 premiership cannot go unnoticed. Four goals, but it was the timing which was important.

As Tom Hawkins was struggling in front of goal, it was Johnson who took all the pressure off and kicked crucial goals from Hawkins marks.

Great players leave a trademark on the game. His decision to snap from a set shot on an angle rather than the traditional set shot has become the norm for most.

The only missing ingredient is a best and fairest. For someone so talented and gifted, he has never been named the best Geelong player.

On current form, this year may finally be it.

At 30, Johnson may be coming to the best part of his career and is no doubt in the form of his life.

For Geelong supporters and the footy world, if the last year and the start of this year is anything to go by, we are in for some more magical times.

The Crowd Says:

2014-04-25T01:34:42+00:00

Deep Thinker

Guest


The thing I like about Johnson is he is a match winner. Not because of the amount of the ball he gets or his fancy skills. But he steps up in the big moments exactly at the time the team needs a lift. At times where you don't know where Geelong's next goal is coming (which admittedly is not all that often), Stevie J always seems to pop up. It is quite amazing how often it happens. This is where I think he has the edge over guys like Pendlebury and Dangerfield. Not so sure if he has the edge over Selwood in this respect. I think Selwood and Mitchell are just as creative as Johnson with their short passing when they want to be. But they are perhaps a bit more conservative - which makes them more consistent but less dynamic. Not better or worse in my opinion. The player I think is overrated is Jobe. He gets a lot of contested ball, which is great. But seems to kick clangers at the big moments.

2014-04-23T10:48:45+00:00

BigAl

Guest


Totally agree Joel - he does the right thing at the right time way more than any other player I can think of.

2014-04-23T09:55:40+00:00

Gene Anderson-Conklin

Guest


Yeah, I do too, tagger started on Mathew Stokes.

AUTHOR

2014-04-23T06:30:08+00:00

Joel Clarke

Roar Pro


That is the next issue, how he goes with taggers. He played well against Collingwood but not as influential. The tendancy may be to push him back to half forward or play him out of the square as he has the capability based on the fact he played mostly as a forward.

2014-04-23T04:39:34+00:00

Gecko

Guest


Timely and well written article Joel. Brian.... Clarko paid the price for being slow to switch the tagger to Stevie J last weekend. I'd now put Stevie J in the top 10 midfielders, mainly because he's so influential in big games and at big moments. But I'd rate Micthell and Pendlebury in the top 3 because they're just as creative as Stevie J, and a little better at dealing with taggers.

AUTHOR

2014-04-23T04:04:07+00:00

Joel Clarke

Roar Pro


I know who Ross Lyon would tag. Go back to the qualifying fnal last year. Johnson was BOG in first quarter then got the Crowley tag and was shut out of the game.

2014-04-23T03:50:54+00:00

Brian

Guest


Obviously clarko rates selwood higher because he specifically said he limited himself to one tagger and he deliberately put that tag on selwood.

AUTHOR

2014-04-22T23:56:20+00:00

Joel Clarke

Roar Pro


Since he has gone into the midfield, you appreciate just how good he is as a footballer. He has often been over looked because he has made things look easy, but has been one of the best players of the last decade. Helps being in a great team, but even when Ablett was there, was a stage where he was just as good as the little master

2014-04-22T23:34:24+00:00

TomC

Roar Guru


Not interested in the 'second-best midfielder' debate, but Johnson just keeps getting better with age. So much for the drop in output I'd expected from a 30-year old in his thirteenth season. No sign of it. If anything, he's spent more time in the guts from what I've seen.

2014-04-22T23:25:28+00:00

Cat

Roar Guru


based on numbers alone he definitely deserved to be considered, but I think part of the problem is those outside Geelong were still struggling to see why johnson moved to the midfield from his previously dominate position, many thought the move was a mistake, Geelong lost too many goals etc. but now people are realising he is a genuine A grade midfielder as well as A grade small forward. At time with Hawkins back being an issue Geelong did struggle a little to score and the perception was Stevie should have been moved back forward but IMO Geelong did the right thing and stuck with the development they needed and its paying off now.

AUTHOR

2014-04-22T23:19:44+00:00

Joel Clarke

Roar Pro


You got me there. I know it is more than just v Hawthorn. Do you think he deserved AA last year?

2014-04-22T23:11:03+00:00

Cat

Roar Guru


And Selwood missed the brownlow by a single vote. R1 2013 Geelong v. Hawthorn: 2 votes Selwood, 0 votes Johnson. R15 2013 Geelong v, Hawthorn 3 votes Selwood, 0 votes Johnson. It's also more than just v. Hawthorn.

AUTHOR

2014-04-22T22:55:13+00:00

Joel Clarke

Roar Pro


Most inspirational no doubt. Think about the last 2 games against Hawthorn. Johnson averaged 33 disposals and kicked 7 goals. Also last season, may have won the Brownlow if not for suspension.

2014-04-22T22:34:10+00:00

Cat

Roar Guru


Dunno about that, I think Selwood is the best player in the Cats side.

AUTHOR

2014-04-22T22:21:13+00:00

Joel Clarke

Roar Pro


The point about suspensions is fair and maybe the odd staging for free, but for me that is him. Some of the greatest players in the history of the league had a bad temper and would get suspended. Right now, statistically, he is for me second best and as I said, it isn't just about statistics. The fact remains, if you wanted a player to make a match winning play, Johnson would be the man you want the ball with.

2014-04-22T21:47:07+00:00

Cat

Roar Guru


As a diehard Geelong supporter who has a dog named Stevie J, I love the bloke (most of the time), I happy live with his clangers that don't come off because of the absolute brilliant stuff he does pull out of nowhere. What I dislike though is when he gets in his mood for staging for frees, it irritates me to no bloody end, he is good enough to do without that garbage. The other thing is his temper and getting himself suspended seemingly everytime he has a hard tag put on him. It's because of those last two things I can't rate Stevie J anywhere near 2nd best but he is still an elite player, probably in top 10 midfielders.

2014-04-22T15:30:31+00:00

Michael huston

Guest


I'd put him in the elite obviously, but IMO the second-best is Sam Mitchell. His ability to win the ball, evade tags, defy opposition pressure, remain composure, apply pressure, find space in any position on the ground and simply lead his team is seriously under-rated. In a team filled with stars (as opposed to Abletts first few years as a Sun), Mitchells been the solid star. Johnson relies a tad too much on fancy skills and his lack of discipline has been his own downfall. As for whose "the best", you simply can't say. Ablett is ONE of the best, but so is Mitchell, so is Watson, so is Dangerfield, so is Pendlebury, so is Swan etc. Abletts been the go-to man for the Suns for four years now, so naturally hes going to win the ball a lot more than others. Players like Selwood and Mitchell and Pendlebury often get in, do the hard stuff and win the ball. How often do you see Ablett running off the ground with a blood rule as opposed to Selwood or Mitchell?

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