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CHRIS JOHNSON ANNOUNCES ALS DIAGNOSIS AT 40

By Chief Editor | 6/29/2026

Chris Johnson, the former NFL running back who holds the NFL Combine record for the fastest 40 at 4.24 seconds and rushed for 2,006 yards in 2009, announced an ALS diagnosis at 40 alongside his wife Brittany on Good Morning America in 2026. Amyotrophic lateral sclerosis is a progressive neurodegenerative disease with no cure and a median survival of two to five years from diagnosis. Johnson and his wife chose to disclose the diagnosis publicly, controlling the narrative before any outside source could shape it.

Key Points

4.24. That is the number Chris Johnson ran at the 2008 NFL Combine, the fastest recorded 40 in the event's history. Eighteen years later, Johnson and his wife Brittany sat across from Robin Roberts on Good Morning America and told the country that he has ALS. The man the NFL Combine has never clocked faster is facing amyotrophic lateral sclerosis. The body that built those records is the same body where motor neurons are now deteriorating. Speed cannot negotiate with neurology. ## 4.24. The Combine Still Has Not Seen Faster. Chris Johnson was selected by the Tennessee Titans with the 24th pick in the 2008 NFL Draft. The Combine number had overridden every concern about his frame: he stood under six feet tall and weighed 197 pounds. Nobody at the event had ever run the 40 faster. Nobody has since. By his second professional season, Johnson had become the sixth player in NFL history to rush for 2,000 yards in a season. The 2009 final count: 2,006 rushing yards, 14 touchdowns, and the Offensive Player of the Year award, earned at 23 years old. He made the Pro Bowl four times. He finished with 11,458 career rushing yards across eight seasons with the Titans, Jets, Cardinals, and Patriots. Running back is a position built on the willingness to absorb contact while moving faster than anyone assigned to stop you. Johnson was elite at both. At the same moment Lionel Messi is [scoring in his seventh consecutive World Cup match at 39](/quick/messi-scores-in-7-straight-world-cup-games-at-39-mqxb1wi0), demonstrating what elite performance looks like deep into a career arc, Johnson is confronting something that operates on a completely different clock. The juxtaposition belongs in the cultural record. ## ALS Attacks Motor Neurons First. Amyotrophic lateral sclerosis is a progressive neurodegenerative disease. It degrades motor neurons, the nerve cells that carry signals from brain to voluntary muscle. As those signals weaken, movement deteriorates. Muscles atrophy. Function declines. There is no cure, and the median survival from diagnosis is two to five years, though outliers exist in both directions. In the United States, the disease carries the name of Lou Gehrig, the New York Yankees first baseman who announced his illness to 61,808 people at Yankee Stadium on July 4, 1939. Gehrig described himself as the luckiest man on the face of the earth and died two years later at 37. His consecutive game streak, 2,130 games, stood for 56 years before Cal Ripken Jr. surpassed it in 1995. The achievement lasted well beyond the person who built it. ALS has no relationship to athletic conditioning. Johnson's 4.24 provided no immunity. He is 40 years old. ## Brittany Johnson Was in That Chair Too. Chris and Brittany Johnson announced this together, on national television, in front of a morning audience. That choice is worth considering separately from the diagnosis itself. Going public with a terminal illness is not required of anyone. The decision to appear on Good Morning America with your spouse beside you, to name the thing in front of millions, is a deliberate act of claiming the narrative before someone else does. It says: we are not hiding. It says: you are hearing this from us, not from a leak or a secondhand source. It says: we have chosen to be real with you. Most athletes in that position do not have the trust reserve to do that. The contract between a public athlete and the public that follows them has historically been transactional: the athlete performs, the people watch, the relationship ends when the performance ends. Johnson chose something different. ## The Archive That Follows the Athlete. Sports journalism is structurally built for recovery narratives. Injured, rehabilitated, returned. The infrastructure of the coverage assumes the body cooperates with the arc eventually. ALS does not participate in that structure. There is no return. [Daniel Arsham's ongoing drawings of sports moments as seen on television](/quick/arsham-tv-sports-drawings-june-2026-b7k4m2rq) treat broadcast footage as archaeology already in progress, the athletic act transformed into a future artifact while the athlete is still alive. That cultural instinct, to convert the person into a document, is worth examining when the person in question has received a terminal diagnosis. Johnson's season of 2,006 yards is permanent. The 4.24 is in the record. Those facts exist separately from the body that generated them. That separation, between the person and the documented achievement, is what a disease like ALS makes visible in a way retirement never fully does. Johnson and his wife went first in the room. They named it themselves, on television, before anyone else could frame it. The document now exists alongside the performance records. Both are real. Both will outlast the season.

Topics: chris-johnson, als, amyotrophic-lateral-sclerosis, tennessee-titans, nfl, good-morning-america, athlete-health, culture, sports, nfl-combine

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