MetroWest Daily News: 'A Perfect Fit'
By Lenny Megliola/Daily News columnist
WALTHAM — .Bryant Johnson looked around.
The former Milford High three-sport star was going to play college
football somewhere. Assumption, Northeastern, Stonehill and Bryant
were on his dance card. But in his heart, it was all about Bentley
University.
"I liked the feel of the place," he says.
As luck would have it, "Bentley was the first school to contact me
that I was accepted," says Johnson, a southpaw-slinging
quarterback. The school was a perfect fit. He'd known for a long
time that he wanted to be a business major. What better place than
Bentley?
Johnson led Milford to Super Bowls in consecutive years, both
against South Hadley, which won the first meeting as a crestfallen
Johnson left the game in the first quarter with a pinched nerve in
his back. He never returned.
Johnson was Central Mass. Div. 1 co-MVP his senior year. The
Scarlet Hawks went 11-1, finishing it off with a redemptive win
over South Hadley.
When Johnson arrived at Bentley in 2007 the Falcons had two
established junior quarterbacks. He didn't get into a game. He kept
waiting for his chance. It wasn't exactly jumping out at him, but
he tried to make the most of it. "I thought I grew as a player
sitting and watching the games, then seeing the films. I tried to
show the coaches I'd be ready if they needed me."
Last season, the Falcons were trailing Assumption 20-3. Johnson was
sent in and engineered a 22-20 comeback win. "That game gave me all
the confidence in the world," says Johnson. The next week, he got a
start and was 18-for-32 with two touchdown tosses, but the Falcons
got doused by powerhouse Southern Connecticut.
The next week, he was a backup QB again, finishing the season with
44 completions in 98 attempts, with three TDs and four picks. "The
(quarterbacks) in front of me deserved to be playing," says
Johnson.
But it's Johnson's team now, and the Falcons are 5-0.
"I met with Bryant this summer over dinner," says new head coach
Thom Boerman, who had been a Bentley assistant for 24 years. "We
talked about him taking on leadership (of the team). He fell right
into it. He was ready."
Really ready. The 6-foot-1, 195-pound Johnson has completed 61
percent of his passes (105-for-172), 12 for touchdowns against only
two INTs.
"He has a good pocket presence," says junior wideout Wes Critides,
the ex-Wayland High star who has a team-high five touchdown
receptions. "Bryant's going to deliver the ball where it's supposed
to be. We have a certain level of trust."
Johnson and Critides hooked up on the first play of the game in a
43-17 win over Curry. It went for a 67-yard score.
"I'm kinda about the long ball," says Critides, smiling.
In a 30-20 win over defending Northeast-10 champ AIC last week,
Johnson threw for 246 yards and rushed for 72 more. He tossed the
deciding touchdown pass with 2:16 remaining in the game to former
Natick High standout Mike Slattery, the junior tight end.
"His passes are hard but smooth, I've never caught a ball like his.
He's one of the best quarterbacks I've played with," says Slattery,
who caught passes from Billy Flutie in high school.
"It's been amazing so far," says Johnson. "We set goals high at the
beginning of the season. We knew we had something special. The new
coaches brought a lot of enthusiasm to the program."
Boerman was happy working under legendary Falcon coach Pete Yetten.
"I never wanted to be a head coach," says Boerman. "Pete's
retirement caught me totally by surprise." When the new coach
assembled his players for the first time Boerman, a Maynard native,
says "there was a commitment level you could feel. But I'd be lying
if I told you I thought we'd be 5-0."
The Falcons play Saturday at 3-1 Merrimack, which is averaging 39
points in three Division II games. Bentley will need its defense to
step up.
The Bryant Johnson-led offense hasn't missed a beat.



























