NaJee Thompson is so fast that he already had an NFL-ready nickname before Matt Daniels, the Vikings' moniker-maker extraordinaire, could spring one on him.
"I came in telling Hat I like to be called Flash," said Thompson, the undrafted rookie from Georgia Southern, referring to Daniels, the Vikings special teams coordinator, by his nickname. "I got that from some reporters back home in South Carolina. It means a lot to me."
Score one for the Fourth Estate in general and longtime Boiling Springs, S.C., sportswriter James McBee in particular because this young man can fly. In 14 special teams snaps in his NFL preseason debut in Seattle last week, Thompson's speed leapt off the screen on at least two occasions as a gunner — once when he separated from a blocker and tackled a punt returner for no gain and once when he chased down a punt and downed it at the 2-yard line.
"I used to joke with NaJee, saying he looked like a flash going by," said McBee, who covers Boiling Springs High School for the Boiling Springs Sports Journal website.
"First time I ever saw him, they elevated him from the JV squad, and he's wearing No. 82 at defensive back. I said, 'Who the heck is the DB wearing 82 and why is he up here on varsity?' Then I saw his speed and said, 'Oh.'"
The gridiron isn't where the nickname was solidified forevermore. That came May 12, 2018, in Columbia, S.C., when Thompson won the Class 5A 200-meter championship in 21.06 seconds, a state record, breaking the mark set by Tavien Feaster, the former Clemson and South Carolina running back who has bounced around the NFL and CFL the past four seasons.
"I still have a screenshot of the 'Flash Thompson' article," said Thompson, 23, as he scrolls through his phone and produces the front page of the sports section of the Spartanburg Herald Journal. There's a photo of him crossing the finish line under a big headline that reads, "Flash Thompson."
Jed Blackwell wrote that article, using the nickname for Thompson that McBee had spread locally to other scribes.