Micah Johnson has traded in the hand-in-the-dirt life for a headset and a whistle — but he isn’t going anywhere.

After 13 seasons of wrecking game plans across the Canadian Football League, the three-time Grey Cup champion has officially retired as a player and is stepping straight into the Saskatchewan Roughriders’ coaching ranks as the club’s new defensive line coach.

If this feels like a natural progression, that’s because it is.

Johnson walks away from the game as one of the most respected interior defenders of his era — a force defined not just by power and production, but by intelligence, durability and leadership. His résumé speaks loudly: three Grey Cup rings, five All-CFL selections, seven divisional All-CFL nods, and a career spent commanding double- and triple-teams so others could feast.

Before becoming a CFL staple, Johnson’s professional journey began south of the border. He made his NFL regular-season debut with the Miami Dolphins in 2010, before moving north in 2013 and joining the Calgary Stampeders. It didn’t take long for him to find his footing in the Canadian game.

Over six seasons in Calgary (2013–18), Johnson became one of the league’s premier defensive tackles, helping anchor multiple Grey Cup runs and championship wins in 2014 and 2018. In 81 games with the Stamps, he piled up 158 defensive tackles, 41 sacks and two interceptions — while collecting two of his three Grey Cup titles.

In 2019, Johnson arrived in Saskatchewan as a marquee free-agent signing and quickly became the heartbeat of the Roughriders’ defensive front. Across five seasons in Green and White (2019, 2021, 2023–25), he appeared in 80 games and showed little interest in slowing down with age.

In fact, he did the opposite.

Johnson earned back-to-back All-CFL honours in 2024 and 2025, becoming the first 37-year-old defensive player in league history to be named All-CFL. Last season, he recorded six sacks for the second straight year, added 20 defensive tackles and helped anchor one of the league’s most formidable run defences. In 2024, he dressed for all 18 games, recording 28 tackles, four tackles for loss, and six sacks.

And to underline his versatility, Johnson wasn’t finished there.

Beginning in 2024, he took on expanded duties — including stepping in as an emergency offensive lineman during the Labour Day Classic, where he played two-and-a-half quarters at right guard. In 2025, he became a key piece of Saskatchewan’s short-yardage package, helping quarterback Tommy Stevens convert an eye-popping 33 of 36 short-yardage attempts (91.7 per cent) during the regular season. Johnson also cleared the lane for Stevens’ first touchdown run in the Roughriders’ 2025 Grey Cup victory.

Before his return to Saskatchewan in 2023, Johnson spent the 2022 season with the Hamilton Tiger-Cats, playing 16 games and recording 24 defensive tackles, five tackles for loss and seven sacks.

When the final numbers are tallied, Johnson retires having played 177 regular-season games across three CFL teams, amassing 309 defensive tackles and 71 sacks. But as anyone who watched him week after week knows, the numbers only tell part of the story.

Routinely drawing extra attention in the middle, Johnson’s presence opened doors for teammates — a ripple effect that helped Saskatchewan finish third in the CFL in sacks in 2025 and second in the West in 2024.

Off the field, Johnson’s impact has been just as meaningful. A longtime leader and student of the game, he also served as a Player Ambassador with the Saskatchewan Roughrider Foundation, travelling the province to promote mental wellness and literacy through the Win with Wellness and Rider Reading programs — work he will continue through the 2025 off-season.

Johnson and his family, who moved to Regina full-time in 2023, will remain firmly rooted in the community. And now, the same voice that once commanded the huddle will be shaping the next generation from the sideline.