Cincy’s Johnson shows up, sits out


The disgruntled wideout is either ailing, or bailing on his team.

CINCINNATI (AP) — Chad Johnson showed up for the start of the Cincinnati Bengals’ mandatory minicamp Thursday. Beyond that, nothing was clear.

The disgruntled receiver didn’t participate in the morning workout after telling the team he’s got an ailment — fittingly, there were conflicting descriptions of what was wrong.

After the team asserted that he had refused to practice, Johnson went out for the afternoon workout, caught a few passes during drills, then removed his helmet and covered his head with a white towel, a signal that he was done.

The impasse goes on. And his coaches and teammates are tired of it.

Johnson was the center of attention Thursday from the moment he joined his teammates on the practice field — 12 minutes after the session started — until the day ended with no resolution to the overriding question for the Pro Bowl receiver and his team.

Can this get resolved without getting even uglier?

“It depends on how it’s approached by both sides — how he approaches it, how they approach it,” said receiver T.J. Houshmandzadeh, who is Johnson’s closest friend on the team. “If it will be a problem, if it won’t be a problem, it’s hard to tell. Training camp is so far away.”

Since the end of last season, the 30-year-old Johnson has been pushing for a trade. He stopped talking to the local media after his look-at-me antics were criticized during the Bengals’ 7-9 season. Agent Drew Rosenhaus tried to strong-arm the Bengals into trading him before the draft, but they refused.

Then, Johnson claimed he would sit out the season. Bengals coach Marvin Lewis called his bluff, urging him to go ahead and do so.

Johnson skipped the voluntary offseason workouts, but was required under threat of fine to attend the three-day minicamp that started Thursday. He showed up, and the intrigue began.

The team released a statement saying he had passed his physical, didn’t report any problems to the doctor, and was cleared for practice.

“Later, after the physical was concluded, Chad told our training staff that his back was sore,” the team’s statement said. “He refused to practice.”

Refusing to practice left Johnson subject to discipline. He had a brief chat with Lewis on the practice field before the afternoon workout, then caught a few passes in drills before taking the rest of the workout off.

In the meantime, Rosenhaus disputed the team’s assessment. He said Johnson has a sore back, but that’s not why he’s sitting out. The agent said Johnson has an ankle problem that could require surgery.

In response, the club acknowledged that Johnson was bothered by a sore ankle last year and that the team recommended he have surgery to clean it out at the end of the season.