Andre Johnson got the deal he wanted and says he's committed to playing for the Houston Texans for his entire career.

The All-Pro receiver signed a two-year extension Thursday that will keep him in Houston through the 2016 season.

Neither the Texans nor Johnson's agent, Kennard McGuire, would disclose terms. The Houston Chronicle and KRIV-TV reported that Johnson's extension had a maximum value of $38.5 million, including $13 million guaranteed.

Johnson said he was satisfied. "There's nothing I can complain about," he said. "For me to be in the situation I was in, for this to happen, it just speaks a lot to the people we have in the organization and the owner we have. It's a first-class organization. I'm very happy right now."

Johnson has led the league in receiving yards the past two seasons and topped 100 catches in three of the past four. He has the NFL's highest receiving yards average (90.2 per game) since 2006. He made the Pro Bowl in 2005 and '07, then led the league in receptions (115) and receiving yards (1,575) in 2008.

Johnson is the first receiver since Jerry Rice to lead the league in receiving yards in consecutive seasons. He joined Indianapolis' Marvin Harrison as the only other receiver to surpass 1,500 receiving yards in back-to-back years.

Haynesworth has MRI

Washington Redskins coach Mike Shanahan gave yet another reason why he's adamant about having Albert Haynesworth pass the team's conditioning test even as the team ordered an MRI on the defensive tackle's sore left knee.

Haynesworth, says the coach, missed way too many practices last season.

"I've got all the stats in there, how many games he played where he didn't practice throughout the whole week," Shanahan said. "If you don't practice, you're not going to play well . . . My job is to make sure he can play the best once we start our season, and that's to get him in football shape. We'll make sure when he is ready to go, he can go full speed."

The Haynesworth soap opera entered its second week when the knee kept him from taking the conditioning test for the third straight day. That prompted a different sort of test - an MRI - that Shanahan called a "preventive measure." . . . Broncos pass rusher Elvis Dumervil's season might be sacked by a torn chest muscle. A person familiar with the injury to Dumervil, injured Wednesday night, said the reigning NFL sacks king could be sidelined for up to five months, making it difficult for Dumervil to return this season.

- AP

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