If there’s one thing Rider Nation learned in 2025, it’s this: when Saskatchewan needed a play on second down, KeeSean Johnson was the guy who moved the chains. And now, the Green and White have made sure their most reliable target isn’t going anywhere.

The Saskatchewan Roughriders have signed American receiver KeeSean Johnson on Thursday to a two-year contract extension through the 2027 season, locking up one of the CFL’s premier possession receivers just weeks before he was set to hit free agency.

Johnson was the heartbeat of the Riders’ passing attack in 2025, recording 89 receptions for 1,159 yards and four touchdowns in 16 games. But raw totals only tell part of the story. When the stakes were highest, second-and-long, in tight games, and in tight windows, Johnson was the league’s most efficient answer. He led the CFL with 39 second-down conversions, routinely turning trouble into first downs and first downs into momentum.

In a year where Saskatchewan finished 12-6 and first in the West, Johnson’s dependability was the quiet engine that kept drives alive.

Rider fans got a scare late in the year when Johnson suffered a knee injury in Week 19 against Toronto. The setback cost him two regular-season games and, much more painfully, the West Final and the 112th Grey Cup in Winnipeg.

Johnson hasn’t just been good in Saskatchewan — he’s been steady, productive, and downright dangerous since arriving from the NCAA and NFL pipeline.

2024 (rookie season): 56 receptions, 746 yards, 5 TDs in just 12 games
Two-year CFL totals: 142 receptions, 1,905 yards, 9 TDs in 28 games
Career average: More than 68 yards per game

Not bad for someone who came north looking for opportunity and immediately became one of the CFL’s toughest covers.

Before wearing Green and White, Johnson rewrote the record books at Fresno State, leaving as the program’s all-time leader in:

Receptions (275)
Receiving yards (3,463)

He topped the 1,000-yard mark twice, including a jaw-dropping senior season with 95 catches for 1,340 yards.

NFL scouts took notice, and the Arizona Cardinals drafted him in 2019. He appeared in 18 games while spending time with Arizona, Philadelphia, San Francisco, Atlanta, and Buffalo.

The Riders aren’t just extending a good player. They’re extending the best second-down receiver in the CFL, a go-to target for Trevor Harris, and a veteran presence in an offence looking to defend its championship identity.