Houston Texans Friday Injury Report: Starting WR OUT

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Houston Texans fans like ourselves have been receiving an avalanche of good news related to the Texans team since, like, November. Unfortunately, today is not one of those days. The Houston Texans released their final injury report before the Divisional Round game against the New England Patriots on Sunday, and WR Nico Collins (concussion) is now officially OUT for the game:

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The New England Patriots injury report can be found here.

Nico Collins failed to practice any of the last three days, meaning he was not able to clear steps 4 or 5 of the Return-to-Participation protocol. This comes as extremely disheartening news, as the Texans will be facing their greatest challenge yet, the New England Patriots, without their #1 wide receiver. QB CJ Stroud will have his work cut out for him, and he’ll need to produce while targeting WRs Christian Kirk, Jayden Higgins, and Jaylin Noel. What’s more disheartening, Patriots’ star CB Christian Gonzalez recently cleared concussion protocol and will be active in the Divisional Round game, per NFL Network’s Ian Rapoport:

#Patriots star CB Christian Gonzalez is off the injury report after clearing the concussion protocol. He’ll play.

— Ian Rapoport (@RapSheet) January 16, 2026

In addition to WR Nico Collins missing the trip to New England, the Texans also ruled out WR Justin Watson (concussion) and listed RT Trent Brown (ankle) as questionable. LG Tytus Howard has plenty of experience at Brown’s position, but Houston’s best combination of lineman this year has included Trent Brown as a starter, so missing him in the biggest game would only add onto the difficulties the offense will face.

In a morsel of good news, Houston’s late-season surprise, RB Jawhar Jordan, seems to have recovered enough from his high-ankle sprain (suffered in week 18 vs. Indianapolis Colts) to be an active player against the Patriots. Even though RBs Woody Marks and Nick Chubb precede him on the depth chart, Jordan’s punishing rushing style earned him many fans in his limited action at tail end of the season. Without Collins and possibly without Brown, the Texans offense will need every player they can get on the field to contribute, so Jordan’s return to the lineup is welcome news.

What do you think? Will CJ Stroud suffer greatly without Nico Collins on the field, or will the combination of Christian Kirk and Houston’s ground game tear the Patriots defense a new one? Will Stroud perform like a pro-bowler without Collins, like he did against the San Francisco 49ers in week 8, or will Pats’ CBs Christian Gonzalez and Carlton Davis make him suffer? Let us know in the comments below! For me…I’m very, very worried about how Stroud will look without Collins out there with him, but one game in particular during Stroud’s rookie year gives me confidence that he can handle whatever Carlton Davis throws at him…

This game winning TD is a complete DART to Tank Dell behind Carlton Davis (who got torched all day)

But watch CJ Stroud look off the safety and fit it into a tight window to Tank for the game

Houston we really have a ELITE QB pic.twitter.com/RTL2V1DwWA

— Jacob (@TexansJacob) November 6, 2023

Go Texans!!!!

Source: https://www.battleredblog.com/houst...n-texans-friday-injury-report-starting-wr-out
 
How One Key Texans Player can Beat the Patriots

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Every week, the Battle Red Blog staff get together on Discord and chat during the Texans game, offering conversation and brief analysis of the team as they grind through another game. One expression that has become a mainstay on the chat is “C.H.U.M.,” which is an acronym for “Carlos Hyde Up the Middle.” This acronym came about during the Texans 2019 season, when then head coach/general manager Bill O’Brien seemed determined to jam Texans RB Carlos Hyde straight up the middle of the field nearly every other play on offense, much to the exhaustion of the writers of the Blog. They sought some comedic relief from this frustrating playcalling, and thus, the word CHUM was born. This acronym has continued to be used in the chat to describe practically any uninspiring Texans rush, detaching itself from the player Carlos Hyde and now becoming a generalized term unto its own. CHUM was used to express displeasure in many runs by David Johnson, Rex Burkhead, Dameon Pierce, and more. But, at least to me, CHUM has begun to shed its hard shell, and is now developing a more positive connotation thanks to the growing frequency of impressive runs by rookie RB Woody Marks.

Woody Marks first 100 yard game and a playoff TD ✌️pic.twitter.com/gtE08ePV0u

— USC Analytics (@USCanalytics) January 13, 2026

Woody Marks, a rookie back drafted in the fourth round (116th overall), has seen his role grow week by week as the team realized RB Nick Chubb wouldn’t be a viable cover to Houston’s Joe Mixon-shaped hole on their depth chart. Chubb is still a tough runner to bring down, but he unfortunately does offer the juice that Mixon had in 2024. So, after the first few games of the regular season didn’t go Houston’s way, Marks began to get more opportunities, and he took full advantage of the attention. After a breakout game in week four against the Tennessee Titans that led to Houston’s first win of the 2025 season, Marks would receive at least 30 snaps in nearly every game afterwards, finishing the regular season with 196 carries for 703 yards (3.6 Y/A) and 2 rushing touchdowns, as well as 24 receptions on 36 targets (66.7 Catch%) for 208 yards and 3 receiving touchdowns. He rushed for more than 60 yards in 8 of 12 games he had 10+ carries, and had his first game of the season with 100+ rushing yards in the wildcard round against the Pittsburgh Steelers.

Now, these aren’t the most gaudy numbers for a rookie tailback, I’m not saying that if you’ll squint you’ll see RB Christian McCaffrey, but…Marks has become a bit of an x-factor for the Texans. From his big runs against the Jaguars in the comeback win, to his big-time runs that pushed the dagger into the hearts of the Kansas City Chiefs, to his complete performance against the Steelers most recently, Woody Marks has often been Houston’s best playmaker when the game hangs in the balance. With Marks on the field, and this Texans offensive line lining up against a slightly less threatening Patriots defensive line, I find myself thinking that he may end up being the unlikely star of Houston’s first divisional round win in franchise history. But, before we go into detail on how I suspect Marks will attack the Patriots, let’s give some preface on the defense he’ll be facing:

Christian Barmore & Milton Williams are BOTH top 3 in pressure rate amongst DT’s.

BEASTS. pic.twitter.com/nMbX6bgXtC

— Pats Planet 🪐 (@PatsPlanet_) January 16, 2026

The Patriots defense is a group of very well covering, disciplined, and multi-purpose athletes that rank near the top of the league in turnovers and tackles, and near the bottom in big plays given up and penalties taken. They’ve improved on defense coming into the playoffs thanks to DT Milton Williams returning from injury, and had a field day against the Los Angeles Chargers in the wildcard round. Even though they rarely used the cover 0 defensive scheme during the regular season, the Patriots used it most frequently of all teams in last week’s wildcard round, dialing up heavy pressure on the Chargers’ severely unprepared offensive line and holding them to just 3 points. Unfortunately, Houston’s offense has often struggled to handle that coverage (-0.1 EPA per drop back vs. cover 0).

Although, Houston’s offensive line (as evidenced by last week) is not nearly as bad as Los Angeles’, so I expect the Patriots to dial back their pressure a bit and play a little more coverage. New England actually ranks in the bottom half of all teams in both sacks and pressure rate, and have rather been winning on that side of the ball through solid coverage and excellent tackling from nearly all players on their roster. They rank dead last in the league in missed tackles with only 71 on the season, so it’ll be challenging for Houston’s skill position players to get extra yardage anywhere. In their stadium, and potentially in the snow, the Houston Texans are going to have to earn every inch of each of their offensive drives. So, how is Woody Marks going to attack them? Well, to put it simply: exploding through the holes made by his offensive line!

See, despite all the pomp and circumstance surrounding Patriots DTs Milton Williams and Christian Barmore, they are the heads of a run defense that has still shown a little air between the tackles. Now, they looked great against the run last week against the Chargers and have fared better against opposing tailbacks when Williams is on the field, but the Patriots defense still gave up over 100+ yards on the ground in 9 games this year. When Williams is effectively blocked or double-teamed, opposing RBs are able to attack New England’s defensive backfield, delivering body blows to their linebackers and safeties. The Texans may be able to wear down the Patriots’ defense in the first half, and then really deliver them to the offseason with the same sort of long, grinding drives they executed in Pittsburgh in the second half. Will Houston’s o-line and tight ends be able to open these rushing lanes for Woody Marks all game long against the Patriots like they did against the Steelers? Well, it depends on who you ask, but after last week’s blocking palooza, I’m willing to ride the hot hand and trust in Houston’s blockers to get the job done.

LG Ed Ingram is making himself a lot of future money. pic.twitter.com/kd2SQRxWPI

— big ounce (@_bigounce) January 13, 2026

Woody Marks was great last week, but the blocking in front of him may have been the most surprising revelation. C Jake Andrews, RG Ed Ingram, RT Trent Brown, and even TE Dalton Schultz shredded the Steelers vaunted defensive line, giving Marks and Nick Chubb wide open holes to gash Pittsburgh on early-down runs. Stopping the run had become the Steelers’ specialty over the last month of the regular season, making Houston’s success on the ground in that matchup even more impressive. In fact, Houston’s dominance in this aspect of the football game was the impetus to this article; it caused me to change my tune on what I believe will be Houston’s key to victory against the Patriots. For much of the season, I’ve been calling for Nick Caley to let Stroud throw more and dictate the offense, but right now, I want them to run the ball down New England’s throat. Houston may have been the little smashmouth team that never could for the majority of the season, but that Steelers game laid bare the fact that they’ve clearly turned a corner, and I’m willing to table my immutable love of CJ Stroud to ride the ground game until the wheels fall off.

Marks may not be the bruising tailback that many want him to be, but his aggressively fast rushes often result in big collisions with linebackers or safeties, and he’s no stranger to dishing out punishment. Another layer of his game is beginning to rear its head, too: the outside zone run. As Houston’s offensive line has developed more experience zone blocking, they’ve shown more success getting Marks rushing lanes that he can exploit. Just take a look at this:

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It’s only a modest gain by Marks, but look at all the leverage these lineman are getting at push up to the right side! If Marks would’ve stayed behind some of his blockers, there’s no telling how many yards he’d get. He’s had plenty of success with rushing schemes like this in college, as well, so it’ll only be a matter of time until he’s killing opponents with runs remarkably similar to this one. But, it’s not just zone-blocking, of course. The Texans are still primarily a gap-based rushing team, and looked excellent clearing holes for both Marks and Nick Chubb last week:

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And, I just have to show this play. Look at Texans LT Blake Fisher just push Steelers LB T.J. Watt (with a little help from Dalton Schultz) out of the way for his tailback. This is the second quarter and on a drive where the Steelers are getting gashed by the Texans line and need a stop before it’s too late. This is the moment T.J. Watt, one of the league’s very best defensive lineman, makes a play to keep his team in the game. But, against Fisher and a chip from Schutlz, he was blown off of the play, allowing Marks to get the edge on him and surge upfield for a 20-yard gain:

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This doesn’t feel like the “normal” Texans team we’ve been cheering on all season. This doesn’t feel like the Texans team that couldn’t punch it in inside the five yard line over and over again. Once I saw this line pushing T.J. Watt, Cameron Heyward, and Derrick Harmon around, I knew something had changed. This is a team that has players blocking well individually, blocking well in tandem, and throwing their shoulders around like its nothing. And, to complement that, the Texans have a punishing rookie back in Woody Marks that can hit the hole in a hurry and seems to only get better as time goes on. There’s no telling how long this hot streak will last, but I’m going all in on it, baby! Woody Marks and the o-line in front of him are hitting their stride at the exact right time, and it will be by his legs that Houston will break the glass ceiling and get to their first conference title game in franchise history.

Gimme another 100-yard performance from Marks, and if he can’t do it, let the other x-factor running back give the Patriots a scare: RB Jawhar Jordan. I know I just spent this entire article talking about Marks, but Jawhar Jordan’s return to the healthy lineup could mean another weapon in the backfield for the Patriots to struggle against.

Go Texans!!!

Source: https://www.battleredblog.com/general/73796/how-one-key-texans-player-can-beat-the-patriots
 
Christian Kirk’s Immaculate Performance Spurs Texans Offense

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The difference between an early exit and a deep playoff run is often a player who wasn’t supposed to be part of the story. On Monday’s Wild Card game against the Pittsburgh Steelers, that player was wide receiver Christian Kirk.

For all intents and purposes, Kirk had an underwhelming year as the veteran presence in a young, home-grown WR room. He was sixth on the team in yards, fifth in receptions, and only recorded one touchdown on the season, most of which were career lows.

His role diminished due to several uncontrollable factors. Rookies Jayden Higgins and Jaylin Noel absorbed much of the spotlight, tight end Dalton Schultz had a career season in receptions, and the offense had to run more heavy sets due to poor blocking early in the season.

Then came the playoff game. Nico Collins was struggling to get open against lock down corner Joey Porter Jr. The Texans offense was sputtering more than your grandfather’s chevy due to C.J. Stroud’s nerves and the team’s ill-timed penalties. Houston desperately needed a break-glass option to unlock the Steelers defense and change the narrative of the game.

Texans WR Christian Kirk
🐂 8 REC
🐂 144 YDS
🐂 1 TDpic.twitter.com/MqZe7aLnF1

— Rafters (@RaftersHQ) January 13, 2026

That came in the form of Christian Kirk and his eight catches for 144 yards and a touchdown. Kirk scored a red zone touchdown, an issue which plagued the Texans all season, midway through the second quarter to give them the lead. He made multiple third down receptions to maintain possession and keep the Steelers defense on the field. Those long drives contributed to Pittsburgh’s defense folding at the end of the game en route to a 30-6 drubbing.

The biggest play of his Houston Texans (and possibly) career occurred with six and a half minutes to go in the fourth quarter. Stroud hit Kirk on a slant route against Steelers nickleback Brandin Echols on a big third down. He turned the catch upfield for a first down and 30 yards after the catch. The play put the Texans back in field goal position, but they would later score on a Woody Marks touchdown to seal the game.

With Nico Collins projected to be sidelined with a concussion for the Texans’ divisional matchup against the New England Patriots, Kirk will be called on again to be the focal point of the passing attack. The Patriots should also be without their Pro Bowl CB Christian Gonzalez, a like-for-like absence with Collins. That should move Charles Woods, an undrafted player from the 2024 class to the starting role.

Regardless of whoever lines up at cornerback for the Patriots, Kirk’s playoff emergence could be one of the greatest storylines in franchise history if he’s able to continue his form on Sunday. The Texans will need another big time performance from their vet to beat the 14-3 Patriots.

Source: https://www.battleredblog.com/nfl-p...s-immaculate-performance-spurs-texans-offense
 
Texans Stats: Houston Texans vs New England Patriots

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Let the game begin!

Every week NFL Communications sends out a handful of emails around the coming weekends games. And, for the most part, every week, they ignore the Houston Texans. They celebrate the “stars” like Patrick Mahomes and Josh Allen, spotlight the same sad old franchises like the Dallas Cowboys and give lip service to the trendy names.

Meanwhile, the Texans are the hottest team in the NFL, riding on an opponent-pulverizing 10-game win streak. This week, there are only 8 teams still standing, yet somehow the NFL managed to ignore C.J. Stroud, Will Anderson Jr., Danielle Hunter, Sheldon Rankins, Christian Kirk, Derek Stingley and all the rest of the Texans stars.

As if this team is just another forgettable attempt at making a mediocre football team.

Even the preview snapshot of the actual Texans vs New England Patriots game only mentions the Patriots.

It’s sad, really. Sad that people who make their living hyping the NFL and promoting the excitement of the game can’t take the time to get familiar with the story, before “reporting” on it.

Thankfully, none of that matters when the game starts. What will count takes place on the gridiron. While the NFL Communications team can’t be bothered to spotlight the Texans, the team itself will do all the talking once the game begins.

Maybe it’s due to people leaning too hard on history.

The Texans have never made it to the AFC Championship game.

But, if “never” dictated the future, then Sheldon Rankins wouldn’t have scored a touchdown and a sack in an NFL Playoff game last weekend. Because no player ever did it before.

If “never” dictated the future, the Texans defense wouldn’t be the only team in the Super Bowl era to score multiple defensive touchdowns and allow zero touchdowns against in a playoff game.

If “never” dictated the future, the Texans defense wouldn’t be the only team in NFL playoff history to score on a fumble recovery and an interception in the same quarter.

If “never” dictated the future, the Texans wouldn’t be the first team in the history of ever to allow 175 yards or fewer and score 2 defensive touchdowns in the same playoff game.

If “never” dictated the future, Mike Tomlin’s Pittsburgh Steelers wouldn’t have lost on Monday Night Football in the playoffs for the first time this week.

And this is just stuff from the last 7 days. The number of firsts, records broken, etc. generated by the 2025 Houston Texans this season is impressive, if not staggering.

So, don’t hang your hat on history. The past isn’t going to stop the Texans any more than the Pats will.

Houston Texans – Divisional Round Stats​

  • TEXANS can advance to 1st Conf. Champ. Game in franchise history. Won 12 games in a season for 2nd time in franchise history (2012).
  • QB C.J. STROUD passed for 250 yards & TD in AFC-WC & became 4th QB ever to start & win playoff game in each of 1st 3 seasons. Had 3,041 yards & 19 TD passes in 2025. Aims for 4th in row in playoffs with 245+ pass yards. Has TD pass in 2 of his past 3 postseason games. Had 3 TD passes in last reg. season meeting.
  • RB WOODY MARKS (rookie) had 112 rush yards & TD in AFC-WC. Ranked 6th among rookies with 703 rush yards in 2025. Aims for his 4th in row on road with 75+ scrimmage yards.
  • WR CHRISTIAN KIRK had 144 rec. yards & TD in AFC-WC. Aims for 4th in row in playoffs with TD catch.
  • WR JAYDEN HIGGINS ranked tied-2nd among rookies with 6 rec. TDs in 2025. Had 2nd-most rec. TDs by a rookie in franchise history.
  • TE DALTON SCHULTZ ranked 3rd among TEs in catches (82) & 6th in rec. yards (777) in 2025.
  • DE DANIELLE HUNTER had sack & FF in AFC-WC. Has sack in 4 of his past 5 on road in playoffs. Ranked 3rd in NFL with 15 sacks in 2025, 7th-career season with 10+ sacks.
  • DE WILL ANDERSON had 0.5 sack & FF in AFC-WC & aims for 4th in row in playoffs with 0.5+ sacks.. Had career-high 12 sacks in 2025. Made 2nd-career Pro Bowl in 2025.
  • DT SHELDON RANKINS had 1.5 sacks & FR-TD in AFC-WC & became 1st DT since
  • 1982 with FR-TD & 1+ sack in a playoff game.
  • LB AZEEZ AL-SHAAIR had 6 tackles & TFL in AFC-WC. Made 1st-career Pro Bowl in 2025.
  • CB KAMARI LASSITER had 6 tackles & PD in AFC-WC. Ranked tied-5th in NFL with career-high 17 PD in 2025. Has PD in 2 of his past 3 playoff games.
  • CB DEREK STINGLEY had 15 PD this season, as he & Lassiter were 1 of 2 pairs of teammates each with 15+ PD. Made 2nd-career Pro Bowl in 2025.
  • S CALEN BULLOCK had 1st-career postseason INT in AFC-WC.
Will Anderson Jr. and Danielle Hunter are terrorists

The Texans defense is good enough to beat the Patriots by themselves pic.twitter.com/CWDMCP24Ax

— NFL Draft Files (@NFL_DF) January 15, 2026

And, for those who clearly haven’t been paying attention and don’t think the Texans D is good enough to beat the Patriots, don’t forget they aren’t alone. C.J. Stroud, Woody Marks, Christian Kirk, Jayden Higgins and Ka’imi Fairbairn will have an impact of their own on the other side of the ball.

Pats D Texans D
20th sacks/pass att 8th
19th INT rate 3rd
+3 turnover margin +17

Pats O Texans O
26th sacks/pass att 8th
9th INT rate 8th https://t.co/t1fzYxwoX3

— JaysonBraddock (@JaysonBraddock) January 15, 2026

New England Patriots – Divisional Round Stats​

  • PATRIOTS won 1st playoff game since 2018 & are seeking 1st Conf. Champ game since 8 consec. appearances from 2011-18.
  • QB DRAKE MAYE passed for 268 yards & TD & had 66 rush yards in AFC-WC, his 1st career playoff start. Ranked 3rd with career-high 31 TD passes & 4th with career-high 4,394 pass yards in 2025 & is 6th QB under 24 in NFL history with 4,000+ pass yards & 30+ TD passes in a single season. Became 3rd QB under 24 all-time with 2+ TD passes & 100+ rating in 10 games in a single season. Had 3 TD passes in last reg. season meeting.
  • RB RHAMONDRE STEVENSON had 128 scrimmage yards (75 rec., 53 rush) in AFC WC & had career-high 9 scrimmage TDs this season.
  • RB TREVEYON HENDERSON ranked 2nd among rookies with 911 rush yards & 1,132 scrimmage yards in 2025. Became 3rd rookie in NFL history (Saquon Barkley &
  • HOFer Lenny Moore) with 4+ rush TDs of 50+ yards.
  • WR STEFON DIGGS ranks 3rd since 2015 with 71 receptions & 925 rec. yards in postseason. Had 100+ rec. yards in 2 of his last 3 reg. season games.
  • WR KAYSHON BOUTTE had career-high 6 TD catches in 2025.
  • TE HUNTER HENRY had 64 rec. yards & TD catch in AFC-WC. Had career-high 768 rec. yards & had 7 TD catches this season.
  • LB K’LAVON CHAISSON had 2 sacks & FF in AFC-WC. Had career-high 7.5 sacks, 10 TFL & 2 FFs in 2025.
  • LB CHRISTIAN ELLISS had 7 tackles, PD & FR in AFC-WC.
  • LB ROBERT SPILLANE had 6 tackles & PD in AFC-WC & aims for 4th in row in postseason with 5+ tackles.
  • CB CHRISTIAN GONZALEZ had 2 PD in AFC-WC & had 10 PD in 2025, his 2nd consecutive season with 10+ PD.
  • CB MARCUS JONES had sack, PD & FF in AFC-WC. Had career-high 3 INTs this season.
  • S CRAIG WOODSON (rookie) had team-high 9 tackles & had TFL in AFC-WC.
  • S JAYLINN HAWKINS ranked tied-8th with career-high 4 INTs this season. Had PD in 4 of his last 5 reg. season games.

Now, take note, the 2025 Patriots are a surprisingly good team. Drake Maye is playing at a high level, their defensive tackle tandem are wrecking games and head coach Mike Vrabel is to New England what Demeco Ryans is to Houston: former star player turned into star head coach.

But good rarely beats great and the 2025 Texans defense is great.

Houston Texans vs New England Patriots prediction​


Expect this game to slow burn for the first half and into the 3rd quarter. Vrabel is likely going to pull from the Belichick game plan of scoring early, then scoring last in the 1st half and first in the 2nd. But that’s far easier said than done when Will Anderson Jr and friends are between you and the end zone.

Houston Texans – 27

New England Patriots – 13

#GoTexans

Source: https://www.battleredblog.com/houst...-stats-houston-texans-vs-new-england-patriots
 
Texans season ends with (five) turnovers, lose to Patriots in Divisional Round again 28-16

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It has happened again.

The Houston Texans season ended, as it has in years past, in the divisional round against a team that they have never beaten in the playoffs, the New England Patriots.

The game began poorly after Calen Bullock slipped on the turf, slick with water and snow, allowing a touchdown to put the Patriots up 7-0.

The Texans would respond the way they know best: with a field goal.

The wheels then completely fell off as C.J. Stroud had what can only be called the worst game of his professional career. He threw 20/44 for 212 yards with one touchdown and FOUR(!) interceptions, one of which was returned for a touchdown.

The loss marks the seventh time the Texans have reached the divisional round without a win. But the loss itself might be the least troubling part of the afternoon.

We’ve reached the point where we have to have the “We have to talk about Kevin” talk. This happens after a game where one player or coach has a game where the wheels completely come off. This time, and I can’t believe I’m saying this, we have to talk about C.J. Stroud.

Looking back at his rookie season, he looked unstoppable. In the years following his unbridled success, he has looked more than stoppable. But today the person stopping C.J. Stroud most was C.J. Stroud himself. He made throws that you do not make in good conscience. You do not make those throws unless you are seeing ghosts, or are rattled to the point of incomprehensible (in a “what was that” sense).

There is clearly something wrong here. Something that can only call into doubt whether C.J. Stroud is the future for the Houston Texans. If he is, then this is a blip in the road and he’ll come back better next year. If it’s not, then the Texans are in a weird and highly unenviable place where the defense will keep the team too good to tank, but will struggle to get a high draft pick where the better quarterbacks historically come from.

There can be no doubt, however, that given today’s game, C.J. Stroud absolutely should not get his fifth year extension. He has shown little in the last two years to show he deserves it. He has played like someone who was far above his head in his rookie year and has come crashing down to Earth since.

The question that remains, and it’s one that will be argued about forever, is whether Davis Mills would have made a difference between winning and losing that game. Personally? I don’t think Davis Mills was going to be the difference, given his struggles to complete passes in regular season games. But Stroud showed no reason to give him the second half. But BUT(!) if you do pull him in that situation do you stunt whatever chance for growth he has?

See? I’m only just throwing it out there and I’m already arguing with myself.

This result can only be seen as a setback for a team with Super Bowl ambitions; questions are going to swirl around the single most important position in football, if not in sports. If Stroud is not the guy, what do the Texans do in the alternative? Does Caley pare back whatever the hell his offense was to compensate for Stroud’s shortcomings? Does Caserio pull a rabbit out of his hat and trade for a quarterback somehow or pull a trade for a high draft pick to get a QB there?

I’m not optimistic because I’ve watched this team for too long and see how glacial a pace they make their changes at.

There’s so many questions and I wish I had any answers for you. But I don’t. I have the same questions you do. And they make me sad that I have to continue asking them.

Go on, the rest of the thread is yours to complain in. Please, don’t be a jerk, we’re all upset here.

Source: https://www.battleredblog.com/houst...e-to-patriots-in-divisional-round-again-28-16
 
Texans to pick up fifth year option on C.J. Stroud

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In the aftermath of C.J. Stroud’s worst game as a Texan, the team has decided to head off speculation at the pass and are picking up the fifth year option on his rookie contract. At the very worst, he will be under contract for the next two years. Furthermore, they at least openly admitted that they will talk extension with him this offseason. Obviously, they will talk extension with Will Anderson as well. The pair could be up for the two largest contracts in Houston Texans history.

𝗥𝗨𝗠𝗢𝗥𝗦: The Texans will exercise QB CJ Stroud’s fifth year option and could possibly sign him to an extension this offseason instead of waiting for next offseason, per @RapSheet

They’ll also obviously exercise Will Anderson’s 5th year option and try to work a deal out… pic.twitter.com/Z7pdUW9h35

— JPA (@jasrifootball) January 12, 2026

The report is also being reported at Pro Football Rumors. The negotiations on Anderson would seem to be easy if not painful. He earned first team All-Pro honors for the first time in his young career. He is coming off a game where he had two sacks and a forced fumble. He showed up when the season was on the line and the chips were down. He is likely to get north of 40 million a season if previous precedent holds.

The contract for Stroud is not going to be so easy. Just a quick look at the top ten quarterbacks in average annual value is enough of a sign of where these negotiations are likely to go. Of course, the obvious question is whether they should. You will undoubtedly see some on the list we might think Stroud is better than. How are those teams feeling about those contracts now?

  • Dak Prescott: 60.0 million
  • Joe Burrow: 55.0 million
  • Josh Allen: 55.0 million
  • Jordan Love: 55.0 million
  • Trevor Lawrence: 55.0 million
  • Tua Tagovailoa: 53.1 million
  • Jared Goff: 53.0 million
  • Brock Purdy: 53.0 million
  • Justin Herbert: 52.5 million
  • Lamar Jackson: 52.0 million

Stroud might compare favorably to Tua and Lawrence, but how do those organizations feel about their contracts? These are obviously questions for a different day and fortunately for us, we will have plenty of time to look at them. However, the above salaries should more than inform us on what a Stroud extension is likely to look like. The question is whether he is worth it.

Source: https://www.battleredblog.com/houst...ns-to-pick-up-fifth-year-option-on-c-j-stroud
 
Should CJ Stroud Have Been Benched Against the Patriots?

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I never thought I would be making a post like this! After the Houston Texans’ heartbreaking first half performance against the New England Patriots in the divisional round yesterday, many across the country and across the internet used halftime to propose one major second-half adjustment: benching QB CJ Stroud for backup Davis Mills. You know things aren’t go well with the starter if this is happening in the middle of a playoff game, but this wasn’t really on overreaction by many; Entering halftime, Stroud had already thrown 4 interceptions, an interception returned for a touchdown, and missed multiple completions because of overthrowing or underthrowing his receivers. Despite all of that, Houston entered halftime only down 11 points and still very much alive in the game, so many spectators both at home and on ESPN’s halftime show saw that break as the opportunity to move away from Stroud and towards Mills:

Marcus Spears thinks the Texans need to consider going to Davis Mills at QB in the second half vs the Patriots.

Ryan Clark would stick with C.J. Stroud to try to get big-picture answers. 🏈🎙️ #NFL #NFLPlayoffs https://t.co/litkAwzRrA pic.twitter.com/W4GRmB3Ful

— Awful Announcing (@awfulannouncing) January 18, 2026

Ultimately, Texans head coach DeMeco Ryans elected to stay with Stroud in the second half, where he would perform moderately better, but not well enough to give Houston a chance at a comeback in the fourth quarter.

Ryans was asked about his decision at the postgame press conference to keep Stroud in, stating,

“CJ [Stroud] is our guy. I believe…he can comeback out in the second half, and flip it. I believe that he can play better, and he did that in the second half, he did play better. We had some positive drives there in the second half…as I always tell our guys at halftime, it really-it doesn’t matter what happened in the first half. We have to flush it, remove it, and you just have to go out and finish the right way. And, I tell you, we’ve been there before, we’ve been in situations much more dire than this and we were able to bounce back so, you know in my mind, there was never a doubt in my mind that we wouldn’t be able to overcome it.” – DeMeco Ryans
"C.J. [Stroud] is our guy."

DeMeco Ryans on his QB after the Texans' loss in the playoffs. pic.twitter.com/KRUPqBMlEe

— ESPN (@espn) January 19, 2026

You almost wonder when Ryans states “…we’ve been in situations much more dire than this and we were able to bounce back…” if he was reminiscing on the miraculous fourth-quarter comeback the Texans had against the Jaguars…when Davis Mills was the starter…

Regardless, Ryans clearly believed in Stroud as the leader who could get the Texans back on track, but his poor accuracy continued into the second half, where it ultimately doomed the team to a slow death in the fourth quarter. So, should the Texans have benched CJ Stroud? Well, looking purely at the statline, it’s easy to come to the conclusion that Stroud had worn out his welcome. But, does Davis Mills give Houston a better chance at making a comeback? Well let’s look at both player’s stat lines for the 2025 regular season. I’ll split Stroud’s stats between the time before he suffered a concussion in week 9 against the Denver Broncos and after so we can determine how he performed after Mills had his time as QB1:

CJ STROUD STATS BEFORE CONCUSSION (WEEK 1-9):​

  • 8 Starts, 3-5 Record
  • 161 Cmps on 242 Atts (66.5%)
  • 1702 Yards, 11 Touchdowns, 5 Interceptions
  • 7.0 Y/A
  • 93.4 Passer Rating
  • 17 Sacks for 148 Yards
  • 29 rushing attempt for 189 yards

CJ STROUD STATS AFTER RETURNING FROM CONCUSSION (WEEK 13-18):​

  • 6 Starts, 6-0 Record
  • 112 Cmps on 181 Atts (61.9%)
  • 1,339 Yards, 8 Touchdowns, 3 Interceptions
  • 7.4 Y/A
  • 92.3 Passer Rating
  • 6 Sacks for 41 Yards
  • 19 Rushing Attempts for 20 Yards, 1 Touchdown
  • 2 Fumbles, 1 Recovered

DAVIS MILLS STATS (WEEK 5, 9-12, 18)​

  • 3 Starts, 3-0 Record
  • 91 Cmps on 159 Atts (57.2%)
  • 915 Yards, 5 Touchdowns. 1 Interception
  • 5.8 Y/A
  • 81.6 Passer Rating
  • 8 Sacks for 60 Yards
  • 13 Rushing Attempts for 60 Yards, 1 Touchdown
  • 1 Fumble


Overall, similar statlines both before and after the concussion for Stroud. But, when watching replays of the game, it appears that Stroud was quicker to make decisions after returning than he was before. Additionally, Stroud seemed more comfortable in the pocket upon returning, and more accurate downfield. No doubt, Trent Brown’s elevation to the starting RT job in week 10 and Stroud’s election to spam the ball to WR Nico Collins more in the second half of the season contributed to his higher Y/A stat and lower sack rate.

Davis Mills, however, did more than just an admirable job as the interim QB when Stroud went down. Mills had to win out to keep the Texans alive, and he did just that. In fact, he was the passer that started the trend of heavily targeting Nico Collins, with Stroud only sparingly using Collins before the concussion. Mills has always loved targeting Collins, and excelled doing so again in his brief time starting. Mills even began to show a connection with rookie WR Jayden Higgins during his Jaguars game and the Bills game, using his anticipation and accuracy to layer passes downfield. But, those successes were short lived for Mills, and, as evidenced by the first half of the Jaguars game and the second half of the Bills game, it’s only a matter of time until the opposing defense completely shuts him down. Even worse, Mills can make mistakes like this, too:

Davis Mills' lone interception against Jacksonville.

He telegraphs it, but more of a good play by the defender imo. I would have liked to see Kirk come to the ball more. pic.twitter.com/vcx7GBsWPO

— Jeremy Branham (@JeremyBranham) November 11, 2025

Now, this was Davis Mills’ only interception during the season, so he was able to keep game-changing mistakes at a minimum…unlike Stroud, who was far more mistake prone to end the year. Stroud did make plenty more highlight-worthy throws this season, but also made several more disastrous mistakes than Mills, an unexpected regression in Stroud’s game. While playing relatively cleanly in the Chiefs and Colts games, Stroud was anything but against the Steelers and Patriots, having more interceptions in the last two weeks than he had in the previous six.

Maybe he’s developed a gunslinger mentality, or maybe he’s just not seeing the field as well. Whichever may be reason, these bad plays are enough to bench Stroud when Houston has a defense so good that they can nearly win games on their own. So, despite the highs he offers, Davis Mills may look like a more attractive option just to avoid the lows of those ugly turnovers we all saw last night:

PICK SIX ! @MarcusJonesocho intercepte CJ Stroud et plonge dans l’end zone pour le Touchdown défensif #NEPats

📺 @beinsports_FR 3️⃣ #NFLextra
📱 @DAZN_FR pic.twitter.com/1aWLYC78pU

— NFL France (@NFLFrance) January 18, 2026

Was CJ Stroud to blame for Houston losing last night, or would they have suffered equally as much if Davis Mills had come into the game? Is it worth noting that both Nico Collins and Trent Brown were unavailable for yesterday’s game, and Mills looked lukewarm at best when he was called upon halfway through the Denver Broncos game in week 9, so there’s no guarantee he would have looked much better stepping in at halftime last night. However, one thing he may have avoided is turnovers, and that might have been the only improvement Houston needed to defeat New England and move on to the franchise’s first conference championship game.

What do you think, though? Should DeMeco Ryans have benched CJ Stroud in favor of Davis Mills, or was he right in sticking with the starter? Would Mills have been able to orchestrate a fantastic fourth quarter comeback like he did against the Jaguars, even without Nico Collins or TE Dalton Schultz? Better yet, now that the season is over, should Houston continue to invest in CJ Stroud, or is this the moment to “cut bait?” I wanna see all of the opinions on CJ Stroud below, because I know there’s plenty of fans on both sides of the aisle. Are you ““team CJ Stroud” or, “team Davis Mills?” Let us know your thoughts down in the comments below!

Go Texans!!!

Source: https://www.battleredblog.com/general/73847/should-cj-stroud-have-been-benched-against-the-patriots
 
Value of Things: By the numbers

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Most seasons end in a loss. There are only two ways for that not to happen. Either you win the Super Bowl or you miss the playoffs and win a meaningless game in week 18. Those are your two options. Every other team sees their season end in disappointment and it is the same for the Texans. This one is harder than most, so we will try to stick to the facts and logic, but emotions are what they are.

It was a disastrous game on the offensive end, but we will get to that soon enough. We look at the numbers because the numbers usually tell the story. If you brought these numbers to a visiting alien or someone from another continent that knows nothing about American football, they can probably tell you who won the game. Believe it or not, that is the case more often than not.

The Numbers​

  • Total Yards: Texans 72/241, Patriots 64/248
  • Rushing Yards: Texans 22/48, Patriots 32/105
  • Passing Yards: Texans 50/193, Patriots 32/143
  • Third Downs: Texans 7/17, Patriots 3/14
  • Fourth Downs: Texans 1/2, Patriots 1/2
  • Sacks: Texans 5, Patriots 3
  • Turnovers; Texans 5, Patriots 3
  • Penalties: Texans 4/32, Patriots 3/38
  • Time of Possession: Texans 27:51, Patriots 32.09

The numbers tell the entire story and the story they tell is a rough one. The Texans were either even or ahead of the Patriots IN ALMOST EVERY SINGLE CATEGORY. Take away the turnovers and this was probably either a narrow defeat or a Texans victory. Of course, we will get to those turnovers in a minute, but for those into cliches, this game was right on cue. The team that does the best job of taking care of the football usually wins.

The Good​


When you consider that seven of the points came via pick six, the defense comes out looking in a much better light. They held Drake Maye in check as he did have two touchdown passes and one of them was brilliantly defended by Derek Stingley. It was just a better play by the Patriots. Those things happen in playoff football games. Great players make great plays.

The rest of the numbers say that the Texans sacked five times with a couple of those resulting in strip sacks. They turned the Pats over three times in the game which for most of the 2025-2026 season would be good enough to win. They made the Pats punt a ridiculous eight times. It was not the best performance ever, but it was more than good enough to win the football game.

In particular, Will Anderson was a beast and definitely put his stamp on his contract extension hype video. Daniele Hunter earned his paycheck as well. Kamari Lassiter and Derek Stingley also played their normal games and made it difficult for wide receivers. Henry To’o’To’o and Azeez Al-Shaair also showed up with open field tackles and fumble recoveries (two for Shaair). All of them are coming back to a defense that will begin the 2026 season as the pre-season favorite for the top spot.

The Bad​


The formula for victory was supposed to be the same as last week. The Texans would defend the Patriots tough, force a few turnovers, and grind it out on the ground. The defense did its job. The Texans offensive line and running backs did not do their jobs. This will be one of those chicken or egg kind of deals all offseason. Most people agree we need to add to the interior defensive line, but Woody Marks and Nick Chubb were never supposed to be the primary backs. They performed admirably most of the season, but they were not enough on this day.

The conditions were rough, so the game plan for the Patriots was to make C.J. Stroud beat them. Well, we will get to that disaster soon enough. Usually, I would mention Nick Caley in this space and while this game plan won’t go to Canton for posterity sake (maybe posterior sake), this one is not on him. His performance since the team started 3-5 has been passable. I’m willing to give him room to grow, but we need to have a whole different conversation.

The Ugly​


We need to have a C.J. Stroud conversation. After seven turnovers in two games, it is high time to have it. The Texans cannot give him 50+ million dollars a season this offseason. They just can’t. Now, that doesn’t mean closing the door on him completely. It simply means at the very worst they have to wait another season before making that call. He was off target on far too many throws and probably threw eight or nine turnover worthy throws in the worst performance of his professional career.

I generally hate blaming losses in team sports on one player. We could point to a number of plays by others that could have turned the tide. However, this is a unique instance. The defense played good enough to win. The offense moved the ball just as much as the Pats did. He just made too many mistake for the Texans to win. It’s just as simple as that.

The hard part of this debate is not in deciding whether Stroud is good enough to start in the NFL. It comes in deciding whether he is the right guy for the Texans and DeMeco’s ball control offense. As much as we might question some decisions (like not going for it in the fourth quarter), Ryans deserves to coach the Texans and do it for a long time. He clearly wants to win football games through tough defense and physical, smart football. Stroud slung it around the yard at Ohio State and did in year one. He just isn’t a ball control quarterback.

Maybe it gets better in year two of the Caley experience. Maybe they add some linemen and a running back to improve the ball control aspect of the operation. That doesn’t change the fundamental question. Is Stroud willing to do what it takes to be a consistent game manager? Not every quarterback is and that is okay. There are plenty of teams with gunslingers that are very successful. I hesitate to suggest it, but maybe one of those teams will be interested in Stroud at this point. It is food for thought.

Source: https://www.battleredblog.com/houston-texans-analysis/73831/value-of-things-by-the-numbers
 
Tough way to end the season. As a Jazz fan, I know a thing or two about playoff heartbreak and watching your team fall short when expectations are high.

That said, I think some of the Stroud panic might be a bit overblown. One historically bad game in brutal weather conditions doesn't erase what he's shown he can do. The guy won a playoff game in each of his first three seasons - that's rare company. But I also get the hesitation on throwing 50+ million at him right now after those last two games.

What strikes me looking at those numbers is how close this game actually was if you strip out the turnovers. The defense did exactly what they needed to do. Will Anderson and Hunter were dominant. The formula was there - Stroud just couldn't execute it on that particular day.

The Mills question is interesting. He clearly plays a safer, more conservative style that might have limited the damage. But would he have been able to mount any kind of comeback? His ceiling is so much lower. It's the classic "higher floor vs higher ceiling" debate at the most important position in sports.

I think Ryans made the right call sticking with Stroud, honestly. You have to know what you have in your franchise QB when the pressure is highest. Now they know there's work to do. Whether that's scheme adjustments, better protection, or Stroud just needing to mature in his decision-making - that's the offseason conversation.

The defense is legitimately elite though. That's a foundation you can build on for years.
 
The Day After the Day After: The Houston Texans fall to the New England Patriots 28-16 in their season finale

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The Day After the Day After…when the raw, immediate emotions from the aftermath of a game diminish into the realm of clarity and the proverbial (or literal) hangover no longer haunts the mind. With that, a review of the Divisional Round Weekend:

Arguably the Worst 2nd Quarter for the Offense this Season:
That 2nd Quarter of the Division Round game will haunt everyone associated with the Houston Texans, from the players to coaches to front office and fans. Houston entered that Quarter only trailing 7-3, and it would start so well. They had just recovered a Drake Maye fumble at the NE 27. Six plays later, Houston took a 10-7 lead on a Stroud-to-Kirk 10-Yard TD Pass. Houston even managed to force the Patriots to punt the next drive. Then, it all falls apart. The next play, Stroud, under heavy NE pressure, threw his second INT, a pick-six to Marcus Jones on a horrid throw. The following possession, Houston got the ball out to their 36-yard line, and Stroud had an accurate throw for once to Xaviar Hutchinson, who let the pass deflect off his hands and into the arms of Craig Woodson.

While the defense did not surrender a 1st down on the following drive, Houston did not give them much of a rest, as Stroud missed on 3 straight passes. New England cashed in on the drive with a Maye-to-Diggs 7-yard TD pass. That put New England up 21-10. The next drive, Houston did move the ball into Patriots’ territory, but then Stroud fired his 3rd INT of the quarter on a poorly thrown ball to Hutchinson. That Houston did not allow the Patriots to score on this drive and the next drive is a testament to that defense, but that offense…yuck. In the 2nd Quarter, Houston executed 22 plays for 50 total yards. Stroud went 5 of 14 for 49 yards, 1 TD and 3 INTs. The team rushed 7 times for 1 yard. Houston committed one False Start penalty and had a 20-yard DPI call in their favor. The offense surrendered as many points (7) as the defense (7). Again, that the Patriots were only up 11 at the break must go to the efforts of the Houston D. For a winnable game, this quarter is going to make for a lot of sleepless nights this offseason.

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Defensive Domination: If you love defense, then this was your game. 8 total turnovers (5 INTs), 8 total sacks, 15 TFLs, teams a combined 10 for 31 on 3rd downs, a defensive score, 20 passes defended, 13 punts, teams a collective 2 of 5 in the Red Zone and neither team gained more than 250 total yards. This is to say nothing of all the defensive pressures and defensive win rates likely to come out of this game. For the Houston fan, that the defense showed up is no shock. However, much credit must be given to the Patriots’ defenders. For the New England fans, you could be forgiven if you had flashbacks to some of the early 2000s Belichick teams with how they thwarted the road team.

Solid Special Teams: While the offensive struggles and the defensive prowess dominated the narrative of the game, the Texans did bring their special teams to this game. At the very least, they didn’t cost the squad like they did last season at Kansas City. Fairbairn kicked well in difficult conditions. Townsend generally punted well (5 punts for a 58.8 average and 1 inside the 20), save for an early punt where he outkicked the coverage and set up a long punt return by Marcus Jones. Tremon Smith had an excellent play to pin the Patriots deep inside their 5, giving Houston one last effective chance to stay in the game. The kick returns/punt returns weren’t game-breaking, but they didn’t cost Houston. If the offense had not had their nightmare day, perhaps this unit could have been enough for Houston to win.

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THE DECISIVE PLAY:

5:30, 3rd Quarter: HOU Ball at the NE 17, 2nd and 8. Woody Marks runs for no gain off right tackle, fumbles, recovered by Chris Woodson.


As [DURGA] awful as that 2nd Quarter was for Houston, they were only down 11 to start the 2nd half. Houston cut it to a one-score game (21-13) on their opening possession, albeit with a short FG after a massive Pats pass deflection on a 3rd and short inside the Red Zone. The rested defense got back on to the field, where Will Anderson Jr. got a strip sack of Maye, giving Houston the ball inside the NE 33. Houston drove the ball inside the NE 20, and with one TD could undo all of the bad of the 2nd Quarter and flip the pressure all on to the Pats. To start this play, Stroud went with a shotgun handoff to Marks, but immediate interior pressure from the Patriots DL line forced Marks to bounce to the outside right. In that chaos, the ball got punched out and advanced forward to Woodson, who collected another Texans’ turnover at the NE 12. While Houston would force a punt and they did score a subsequent FG to cut the game to 21-16, that lost scoring opportunity after getting a short field seemed to take something out of the Texans. In retrospect, a TD would have been massive as there was the chance to tie, which Ryans would likely have taken, but even another FG there would have been a major momentum boost. While the 2nd Quarter was where Houston fell behind, their errors in the 3rd, primarily this play, ensured that Houston could not win.

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FUN WITH NUMBERS:

7:
Total Number of CJ Stroud turnovers these playoffs: In two combined playoff games, CJ Stroud had 5 INTs and 2 lost fumbles. Those numbers could have been much worse. That is a reason why the Texans just logged their 7th straight Divisional Playoff Round loss. Of those, this might be the most painful as it seemed arguably the most likely one that Houston could and should have won. The number 7 is not popular with Houston right now. For what it is worth, opponents only scored 10 combined points on those 7 turnovers, but that is cancelled out with two of those turnovers in the opponent’s Red Zone, costing Houston critical points, especially here.

0:00: Amount of time that Houston has led in the 2nd half of their Divisional Round Playoff Games: Real easy to go 0-7 in games where you never have a 2nd Half lead.

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GAME BALLS:

DE Will Anderson Jr.
: (3 Tackles (all solo), 3 Sacks, 2 TFLs, 2 FFs) He and Danielle Hunter gave the Patriots all they could handle in pass protection. Anderson is also the franchise leader in postseason sacks (8.0), overtaking Whitney Mercilus (6.5) in this game.

CB Kamari Lassiter: (5 Tackles (4 solo), 3 PDs). His pass defense on Stefon Diggs in the 2nd Quarter, where he offered tight coverage and pass deflections did much to keep Houston in the game.

PK Ka’imi Fairbairn: (3/3 FGs, 1/1 XPs). Rebounded well from last year’s debacle at Kansas City.

Patriots LB Coach/Acting DC Zak Kuhr: His squad has only surrendered 1 TD in 2 playoff games, to go along with 9 sacks and 6 turnovers. Expect a lot of calls to make him a full-time DC somewhere in 2026.

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SHOULD BE FORCED TO LISTEN ON REPEAT TO BEN AFFLECK’S LAME JOKE ATTEMPTS AT THE ROAST OF TOM BRADY WHILE CLEANING UP ALL THE RANCID REMAINS OF SAM ADAMS AND CLAM CHOWDER AT GILLETTE STADIUM.

QB CJ Stroud:
Going to be the longest offseason of this young man’s life.

WR Xaviar Hutchinson:As bad as Stroud was, Hutchinson does not escape blame. On the 2nd Stroud INT of the 2nd Quarter, he botched a catchable ball. Arguably that INT did much to destroy Stroud’s confidence for the rest of that Quarter. Hutchinson had some other drops on in the game that reinforce his addition to this roster.

Texans’ Interior Offensive Line: Maybe lost in all of the Stroud meltdown focus is that the Texans interior provided no help to Stroud either. Houston’s RBs only got 37 yards on 20 carries, and a lot of the pressure that bedeviled Stroud came from the interior. Sure the team had some major injuries, but the line did nothing to help Stroud.

Thus concludes the 24th season in franchise history. Once again, we will “wait until next year” for Houston to once again try to bring a Lombardi trophy home, or at least, a chance to actually get to a conference title game.

Source: https://www.battleredblog.com/houst...england-patriots-28-16-in-their-season-finale
 
Texans at Patriots Division Round live game discussion thread

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American Hero Case Keenum. | Photo by Hannah Foslien/Getty Images

So…here we are again. On the road in a divisional round game against a team the Houston Texans have struggled against historically in the playoffs.

We’re all too familiar with this scenario.

But the Texans have something this year that they haven’t in previous years: the most dominant defense in the NFL.

This is not Tom Brady’s Patriots. This is not Bill Belichick’s Patriots. This is a Patriots team that won 14 games against a last place schedule. This is a beatable team. It can happen.

And then all that stands in the way of the Texans first Super Bowl would be a trip to Denver. Oh, and Bo Nix is done for the rest of the season for the Broncos. Did I mention that?

It is not unthinkable that whoever wins today’s game has an inside track on getting to the Super Bowl now.

Here’s what you need to know to watch tonight’s game:

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Who: Houston Texans (13-5) at New England Patriots (15-3)

What: Division Round

Where: Gillette Stadium – Foxborough, MA

When: Sunday January 18, 2:00 p.m. CST

Why: Because Denver can also be beaten if the Texans can take care of business today.

TV: ESPN (Joe Buck, Troy Aikman)

Radio: Westwood One

Streaming: ESPN*, Fubo*, Hulu + Live Sports*, NFL+*, SlingTV*, YouTubeTV* (*subscription required)

Enjoy the game, y’all.

May the way of DeMeco lead to the Super Bowl.

Go, Texans!

Source: https://www.battleredblog.com/gener...ts-division-round-live-game-discussion-thread
 
Instant reactions after Texans third consecutive Divisional Round loss

Tough losses necessitate tough questions. That’s exactly what I asked when I requested instant reactions and opinions on QB C.J. Stroud directly after Houston’s embarrassing loss to the Patriots in the Divisional Round.

What are your instant reactions to the Pats beat down of the Texans? What’s the outlook for Stroud and what needs to be addressed this offseason?

Note: the first four responses were all written before Houston announced they would be picking up C.J. Stroud’s fifth year option

Clayton A.:

After losing 41-28 in 2012 and 36-14 in 2016, the Texans continue the yearly tradition of falling to (insert opponent here) in the AFC Divisional round. This now makes it 0-3 all time between the Patriots and Texans in the playoffs (specifically, in this round). The defense performed valiantly for 19 weeks of NFL football, being the engine of a team that endured an 0-3 start, a new offensive coordinator, new offensive line, and new skill position players.

With that said, it truly is sad to arrive at the conclusion that the Texans are yet again a QB away from true Super Bowl contention. After an elite rookie seaon, Stroud has gotten every excuse in the book for why he’s yet to recapture his poise and proficiency from 2023. After seven turnovers combined against the Steelers and Patriots, Houston again finds itself with a very real quarterback problem.

I don’t know what the thinking is in the front office, but Stroud has lost virtually all equity in various corners of the fanbase.

VBallRetired:

I think you have to consider all options. The most likely option is punting an extension to next offseason but if a team offers a first round and a mid round pick they have to consider it. I personally don’t think he’s the dude for THIS team and this offense. Sure, they could fire Caley, but they are just going to run a ball control offense. He’s not THAT guy. I could see him succeeding in a more wide open offense, but that’s never going to happen in Houston.

Of course, then you get the question of which QB to start. There’s really not any in the draft after Mendoza and even he might not be worthy of number one overall. I readily admit that’s a problem in this scenario. They would either roll with Davis Mills or look for a journeyman veteran to get you through. This is why I think they ultimately kick the can down the road. I personally have seen enough of Stroud to conclude he’s not THE guy. Paying him $50+ million would set this franchise back years.

FizzyJoe:

Really heartbreaking loss overall, as I believe this was the best Texans team to make the Divisional Round of the DeMeco Ryans/C.J. Stroud era, and maybe, just maybe the best Texans team ever. I know it’s hard to look at them like that after last night, but this defense was historically good at all three levels.

The offense, despite relying heavily on rookie left tackle Aireontay Ersery, three new free agent starters (Jake Andrews, Ed Ingram, and Trent Brown), and a bevy of rookie skill position players, still came on strong in the final month of the season and looked capable of almost anything.

Last night, the quarterback that we were certain was the franchise leader just a couple months ago put everything in question…which is shocking. Even with how bad that sounded, I’m going to stick to my guns with Stroud and hope that these last two weeks were just an aberration for him, not the norm. I think he’ll be better next season with more time behind this offensive line and Houston addressing its biggest holes on offense.

An extension would’ve been nice to handle this year, but I would pick up Stroud’s fifth-year option and table extension talks to later this year. As for key positions that need addressed on offense I think: G, TE, RB, S, T – in that order. You can’t expect Trent Brown, as good as he was, to be a long term solution at RT, so I think Tytus Howard should move back there, and the Texans should embrace what they stubbornly ignored last year and either pay for a good LG or draft one. TE was also a position of need this year, especially after Schultz went down yesterday. Lastly, another good RB to compliment Woody Marks would be ideal, either through the draft or free agency. Houston wanted to be a smash mouth team this year and couldn’t do it, but with a better interior line, RBs, and TEs, they should be able to succeed. Also, pay the crap out of Ed Ingram.

L4Blitzer:

This one outright stings! Of all the Texans’ Divisional Round games, this seemed the most winnable. The defense was the best in franchise history. All the team had to do was avoid too many derps on offense. Oops. Sure Stroud will take most of the deserved blame, but he is not alone. Key drops by receivers like Hutchinson did not help, nor did struggles by the interior O-line.

The defense did well to keep Houston close, but even they had their failings. Injuries certainly had their impact, but you have to play with the players you have, especially this time of year.

This is going to be an intriguing offseason. Most of the key defenders are locked for one more year. There will be some cap gymnastics needed, and the squad will once again need to address the offensive line (especially the interior).

Yet, the biggest question is the one that we won’t know until next season: what is Stroud? Is he the franchise guy, a solid but not spectacular QB (Schaub 2.0), or is he on the path to David Carr 2.0; a QB that had flashes, but somehow was broken by Houston’s historic offensive struggles? Until then, we do the same thing we always do: Wait until next year.

Kenneth L.:

A third-straight exit in the quarterfinals establishes a baseline for performance, but sets the bar extremely high for 2026. Obviously, that game didn’t go how anyone expected it to go, and Stroud will have to face a reckoning for the poor performance. Not only Stroud, but this entire offense needs to evolve structurally, strategically, and mentally. Houston tried to square peg a round hole for 20+ weeks and it finally came to pass that it wasn’t going to work.

Houston has enough draft capital and enough actual capital to put the right pieces together to resolve its problems. My outlook is that 2026 is the most critical season in Houston Texans football since 2012. They must make an AFC Championship game or there will be a windfall.

Source: https://www.battleredblog.com/houst...exans-third-consecutive-divisional-round-loss
 
Value of Things: Texans day of reckoning

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It started innocently enough. Landy Locker asked whether Nick Caley could grow as a play caller and whether he would get an opportunity to do that. DeMeco Ryans gave a seemingly innocuous response that is actually very telling. For much of the season, he gave full throated defenses of Caley as an offensive coordinator. In this go around he simply gave the boilerplate response that all of the coaches would be evaluated and they would come to decisions on them later.

No single person in the building has had more scrutiny than Nick Caley. Those of us here at BRB have certainly had our say and I might be chief among those. However, asking the Caley question is putting the cart before the horse. There is a much larger question that needs to be asked before they get there and they only have a matter of days and not weeks and months.

Is C.J. Stroud the quarterback to lead this team to a championship?​


It’s a basic question, but it is probably the most difficult one this organization has faced in its history. What is more than certain that THIS version of Stroud is not it. Stroud is not a game manager. If you look at his career at Ohio State and in his rookie season, Stroud made waves as a gunslinger. The numbers pop off the charts and we could certainly roll tape of his performance against the Tampa Bay Buccaneers during his rookie season for more proof that.

Is that version of Stroud still in there and can it be unlocked? Those are hard questions to answer and no one outside the building can answer it. What we can say is that Nick Caley and his offense is not the offense that is going to do that. However, it is not as simple as firing Caley and bringing in someone else. There are layers of questions that need to be answered.

Does DeMeco want to commit to that kind of offense?​


There are two very defensible positions here. Either Ryans wants to run a ball control offense and allow his defense to win football games or he can commit to getting the best version of Stroud and this offense. Both of those are viable options. The Texans won ten consecutive games playing ball control and conservative offense. It should be noted that Caley succeeded at the basic tenets of this system. The Texans turned it over fewer times during the regular season than any team in the NFL. They cut their sacks in half from the previous season. They ended up typing for the franchise record for wins in a season.

Yet, there is a reason why Stroud looked fantastic in some games and shaky in others. In some games, he seemed to play within the system and when he did it was a thing of beauty. In other games he held onto the ball too long because he was constantly looking for the big play. It is fair to ask whether that will always be a part of his game. It is just one man’s opinion, but I think that will always be who Stroud is.

The other option is to work an offense around who Stroud is. That has to include not only his programming to go for the big play, but also other strengths and weaknesses he brings to the table. Caley’s offense supposedly called on Stroud to make more calls at the line of scrimmage. He was supposed to change protections and possibly the plays themselves. Either Caley was late in calling plays in or Stroud struggled to get them communicated. Either way, a simpler system that calls for fewer decisions would be best.

The Money Issue​


The Texans don’t have to make a decision on Stroud for another year, but there are already reports of possible negotiations. A large part of the question is whether Stroud is capable of leading a flawed roster to a championship. Is flawed a strong term? Yes, but all rosters with expensive quarterbacks are flawed. The salary cap prevents you from spending the kind of money you want to spend on every position group. Something has to give.

Different organizations handle that in different ways. Some teams load up on the offensive side of the ball and hope for the best on defense. The Cowboys and Bengals are examples here. Other teams cut back around the quarterback at wide receiver, the offensive line, or in the running back room. Teams like the Chiefs, Bills, and Chargers have done that. Obviously, all of those options bring mixed results that largely depend on how well the team can hit on middle round draft choices and whether the quarterback can elevate the play of those around him.

What is plain is that it is very difficult to run an effective ball control offense unless you can spend on all the elements. The Texans are playing a shell game where they saved on the offensive line and in the running back room. Playing more ball control means committing more to those positions. That can be through the draft, but it also could be through free agency. It will be hard to pay those guys AND Stroud in the same offseason. This doesn’t even mention paying Will Anderson as well.

Prediction?​


As I write this, I don’t know where the Texans are going to land on these issues. I suspect we won’t know until the end of the week on Caley and we might never know on Stroud until he either gets his contract extension or he gets a ticket out of town. The good news is that the status quo probably has some positive inertia in its favor. Nick Caley will get better as a play caller in year two. Stroud will get slightly better in his system in year two. So, I could see some wisdom in kicking the can down the road.

The ultimate question is whether incremental improvement is enough. I could see yourself talking yourself into it. Take away the pick six and it is a one score game. Make the game even on turnovers and you are still allowing for two Stroud picks and the Marks fumble. That might have been enough to change the whole game. Yet, we are forgetting that every game and every season is its own animal. The Texans defense may never be this good again. That is just something we have to accept. So, incremental improvement might not be enough to get them over the top. These are just some of the many considerations. It will be interesting to see where the Texans land.

Source: https://www.battleredblog.com/houston-texans-analysis/73879/value-of-things-texans-day-of-reckoning
 
The C.J. Stroud Hypothesis

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A standard high school football offensive playbook is usually somewhere between a dozen and a hundred pages long (based on how serious the school takes the game). Throughout those pages, many have options on each such as route trees, shifts, motions, run/play action decisions and more. If each variation had its own page, they’d number closer to a thousand.

That’s a lot to learn.

At the NCAA level, that playbook jumps from roughly a 1/4” thick to 1-2” full of even more detailed pages.

Once you hit the NFL, the playbook is often so thick each position group gets a broken down section tailored for just their role that’s thicker than the NCAA full monty.

Point being, that’s a LOT to learn, remember and recall while under pressure, in game, after some nasty linebacker just knocked the slobber out of you a moment earlier.

NFL offensive and defensive schemes run from the stripped down, basic sets seen in preseason games to highly complex entities that might give some folks at NASA a run for the detail orientation and complexity cash.

When a team hires a rookie offensive coordinator, the hope is that person has learned under the tutelage of a veteran OC. They know how to ease players into the playbook, instead of hitting them day one with the thickest book they’ve ever seen in their lives. And, they’re experts at teaching it to their players and position coaches.

Not too many rookie experts out there.

When a team brings in a new quarterback, the hope is that person can rapidly learn and ultimately command, the OC’s playbook as if he wrote it himself.

NFL history is littered with examples of this OC/QB connection misfiring.

One of the more famous examples this century was Brad Childress when he was the head coach of the Minnesota Vikings. Childress prided himself on the complexity of his offensive scheme, failing to see that the players didn’t get it, and, even worse, he often had the wrong players to execute his vision.

Put a pocket passer in a run-and-shoot offense and you get bad results. Speak to a guy who came up in the Shanahan tree in a language Mike Tomlin (who coached under Childress) uses and you create confusion.

Most recently in Houston’s history: the 5-7 step drop back offense engineered by George Godsey, if memory serves. A large, immobile quarterback, expected to take the first 75% of his post-snap time simply to drop back and set was insane. It was like watching a baby giraffe backpedal from a herd of hungry lions over and over again.

Now, we have Nick Caley’s run-first/smash mouth offensive scheme. Enter Stroud, a guy who flourished in a balanced, complimentary scheme at Ohio State under Brian Hartline. Stroud also did well under former OC Bobby Slowik’s initial, stripped down offense, but floundered once Slowik opened up the full playbook. Note, Slowik’s own shortcomings in both play calling and in-game adjustments didn’t help.

The 2025 Houston Texans season​


To say this iteration of the Texans offense sputtered out of the gate is an understatement. Caley seemed so far out of his depth, the shore was nowhere in sight. Worse, Stroud looked lost and confused early and often. Now, if you’re going to employ a run-first, smash mouth offense and your RB1/lead smash mouther mysteriously undergoes a medical incident and vanishes, you better adapt. Caley likely was fired up to have Joe Mixon, and when he didn’t, he just went “next man up”, which clearly didn’t work.

But, take a minute and look in Stroud’s eyes. Find any clip from the early 2025 season and you don’t see the eyes of someone who confidently mastered the current playbook. You get a view of someone who seems more like they’re fighting for survival at Fake-it-til-you-make-it-U.

We can infer from Caley’s early press conferences that he also seemed lost, defensive that his grand plan was sinking fast, and unable to find his way out of the hole he dug. His inability to intelligently articulate his thoughts to the local press likely mirrored that same inability to communicate his shiny, new Sean McVay/Josh McDaniels playbook to the players, especially Stroud.

Then, the thing so many OCs dream of happened. Head coach Demeco Ryans and defensive coordinator Matt Burke showed the world the elite creation that was the 2025 Houston Texans defense. Make no mistake, if the defense had simply been average/middle of the road, there would be a lot of different conversations happening in NRG right now.

Now, we’ve established that Caley, a rookie coordinator, failed to set his offense up for success.

What actually happened though? Was Caley’s initial playbook too complex? Was it poorly communicated and taught to the players? A coaches job, after all, is first and foremost to teach the players how to execute the scheme and gameplan.

And, how does Caley react when he faces communication breakdowns? Does he wipe aside personal accountability and tell Stroud to figure it out? Or does he dig deep within himself and solve the problem, then implement a fix?

We likely will never know. What we do know is Caley’s play calling/in game adjustment style was often just as bad as his predecessors.

Caley’s “claim to fame” is having coached New England Patriots all-pro tight end Rob Gronkowski to his elite status. Anyone who has ever heard Gronk talk and then listened to C.J. Stroud should immediately realize they are very, VERY different people, likely to respond to very, VERY different input/feedback/communication styles. Coaches like Childress who expect the players to adapt to them fail guys like Stroud. Coaches who adapt to the players end up with rings and trophies (see Tomlin above).

Does C.J. Stroud suck?​


The “hawt take” knee-jerk nonsense filling the NFL ether this week is that C.J. Stroud does indeed suck. Let’s face it, Caley didn’t throw those interceptions last weekend. However, this is the same C.J. Stroud who holds the Ohio State record for most passing yards in a game. The same Stroud who won NFL offensive rookie of the year. The same Stroud who, in just 3 seasons, has already won the 2nd most games of any Texans quarterback in history.

Chances are, Stroud does not, indeed “suck” unless we’re all at the bar throwing pretzels at the TV cause he just lost a playoff game to the Patriots 5 seconds ago. But, cooler heads prevail.

Tossing Stroud aside now and grabbing another quarterback is very off-brand for Demeco Ryans and the Houston Texans organization. And, as the saying goes these days #InDemecoWeTrust

Does Nick Caley suck?​


Despite my oft times vocal disdain of Caley’s performance in 2025, he did start to right the ship towards the end of the season. Replacing him now would mean 2026 places Stroud in yet another new system, expects him to learn yet another 5” thick playbook and hoping against hope the new OC doesn’t suck as well. As we’ve all learned, prior success doesn’t always guarantee future wins in the NFL.

Do I wish Houston would have gone elsewhere a year ago for a new OC? Absolutely. Pairing a great offensive mind with what Ryans and Burke have been able to do with the defense would turn the Texans into a dynasty. And, who wouldn’t want that? I mean, come on…

Houston Texans 2026 offseason​


If Caley can take what he learned in 2025 and build on it, that’s promising. If Caley can grow as a teacher, learn from Ryans on being a leader of men and ensure his players get it, that’s all anyone can ask.

If general manager Nick Caserio can bring in the personnel necessary to properly execute Caley’s scheme, let’s go. It’s not like the offensive needs much, especially if Tank Dell is back and doesn’t turn into a pumpkin shaped Will Fuller V at midnight.

If the defense can even achieve 75% of what it did in 2025, added to Caley and Caserio’s efforts, then 2026 will finally be the year the Texans break thru the glass ceiling.

Ditching Stroud now is going backwards. Ditching Caley now (unless Kyle Shanahan or someone of his stature decides they really want to be the Texans OC…) is going backwards.

This team has improved each year under Coach Ryans. If Stroud can fully grasp Caley’s playbook, Caley can improve his play calling and in-game adapting, and the wheels don’t fall off the bus somewhere else, maybe, just maybe, the NFL powers-that-will be allow the Texans a starring role in the 2026 script.

Source: https://www.battleredblog.com/houston-texans-analysis/73889/the-c-j-stroud-hypothesis
 
Houston Texans Position Outlook: Quarterback

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If you told most people in 2023 that there would be real doubt surrounding C.J. Stroud’s future as a top-tier NFL quarterback, you would’ve been called insane.

Since his historic rookie season, Stroud has been chasing that same level of play — and he hasn’t consistently looked like the same quarterback. There are still moments almost every game where you’re left in disbelief at how special some of his throws are, but the overall standard hasn’t matched what he set for himself.

There’s a very real case for why the drop-off has happened over the past two seasons. A duct-taped offensive line, a nonexistent run game at times, and questionable play-calling have all played a role. Those are valid explanations and issues the Texans must address this offseason. But at the end of the day, Stroud has missed throws he should be making.

It’s not every snap, but too often he’ll have a receiver open or a chance to extend the play with his legs, only to hesitate and make the wrong decision. It feels like he’s second-guessing himself far more than he did early in his career.

Stroud also looks jittery in the pocket, which has led to inconsistent ball placement. While the offensive line improved from last season, it was still well below league average — and that’s something Houston has to fix.

That said, there’s still plenty of reason for optimism. Stroud can absolutely turn things around in 2026. The Texans will be getting Tank Dell back, own multiple premium draft picks, and remain an attractive destination for free agents — especially with DeMeco Ryans at the helm.

Stroud himself has acknowledged that Houston could’ve made a Super Bowl run this year if he’d taken better care of the football. He’s owned that and has already said correcting those issues will be a major focus this offseason.

If you judge Stroud solely off this year’s playoff games, it’s understandable why some fans are questioning whether he can deliver in big moments. But he’s still just 24 years old and has already accomplished more than many established quarterbacks around the league.

It’s likely the Texans hold off on a contract extension this offseason, making 2026 a true prove-it year for Stroud. Whether that pressure brings out the best in him is one of the biggest storylines Houston will face moving forward.

Source: https://www.battleredblog.com/houst...2/houston-texans-position-outlook-quarterback
 
Houston Texans – Top 3 Offseason Targets

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It’s never fun when your team loses in the playoffs. When they win, you can gloss over all of the mistakes with the satisfaction of victory. But, when they lose, all those miscues become the center of everyone’s attention once the game – and season – is over. Every mistake will be combed over in excessive detail by fans and analysts alike, desperate for a reason behind another playoff exit.

But, in the days immediately following such a big loss, especially one with as many hiccups as the Houston Texans’ 28-16 loss to the New England Patriots, identifying mistakes and issues can feel like spotting shrapnel in a war zone.

What caused the Texans to lose to the Patriots?

The first issue that leaps into your mind is the biggest one: QB CJ Stroud. His statline tells the ugly story of this game, and his lowlights in the first half make it look even worse. He was supposed to be the franchise quarterback to deliver Houston from mediocrity! Flashing his potential in year one and then never again, like a cruel joke played on those that thought the franchise had finally found their leader. But why? Why has Stroud gotten worse?

And then, the avalanche washes over you-

It’s got to be this offensive line. Stroud has had too many line combinations this year and he couldn’t handle the whole lineup shuffling because of RT Trent Brown’s injury.

…No, it’s the ground game! RBs Woody Marks and Nick Chubb only get 31 yards on 18 carries against the Patriots? That’s a disaster…but, the receivers weren’t great, either! Houston needed WRs Jayden Higgins and Christian Kirk to be sparkling stars in Stroud’s visor, and they failed.

…Is it right to expect so much of them, though? Is it too much for me to expect Higgins and Kirk to step up against such a high level defense? Maybe it’s really the injury bug that killed the Texans…but the quarterback is supposed to compensate for those injuries! Ugh!


All of Houston’s compounding issues this game ultimately orbit around the quarterback playing poorly. CJ Stroud is the sun that the offense revolves around, so when he’s having a cloudy day, they all are. So…do you bench him? Should the Texans have tapped QB Davis Mills to be the starter after halftime? Well, if you listen to DeMeco Ryans postgame conference after the loss, he had full confidence in Stroud remaining the starter:

"C.J. [Stroud] is our guy."

DeMeco Ryans on his QB after the Texans' loss in the playoffs. pic.twitter.com/KRUPqBMlEe

— ESPN (@espn) January 19, 2026

To Ryans’ credit, Stroud did play better in the second half, but not by very much. He remained iffy inside the pocket and couldn’t hit his receivers in the hands to save his life. Is that enough to bench him? Well, a perspective I’ve come around to is: if all of these small issues surrounding the offense on Sunday were enough to overwhelm Stroud, they likely would be enough to stop backup QB Davis Mills from looking any better. Even if Stroud was taken out of the game immediately following the pick-six in the second quarter, Mills would not be able to rely on his rapport with Christian Kirk and Jayden Higgins to carry him to a comeback, and the Patriots would be even more likely to stack the box with him in the game. So, looking past the quarterback controversy (which has already been covered on this site), what can the Houston Texans make as their primary targets in the offseason? For me, there are three major spots of deficiency that can be significantly improved before kickoff of the 2026 NFL season:

1. Running Back​


Of all the mysterious football injuries that have plagued star caliber players and confused the public at large, RB Joe Mixon’s undisclosed foot/ankle injury has to be one of the most prolific. Now nearly 6 months separated from the initial reports of Mixon struggling to practice in training camp, we still have very little information as to what has ailed him and why it kept him off the field for the entire 2025 season. If you’re to take General Manager Nick Caserio’s testimony mere minutes into his Wednesday press conference, the Texans had little understanding of the injury, as well:

“So, as it pertains to Joe [Mixon]…so, here’s what I would say, it was a very…unique situation…I don’t think anybody really had any clarity, honestly, from the start of the year until now. I’d say Joe worked very very hard to try to get himself ready to play football. It just never manifested itself and came to fruitition…probably have an opportunity to kind of see where he is in the offseason, um, relative to next year. But again…it was as unique a situation an injury as I’ve been associated with…it’s just kind of a freak thing…He didn’t do anything off the field…it wasn’t like he was riding a snowmobile or anything like that. It was just more of a medical condition or situation that really didn’t improve as much of the as everybody would have hoped…I’d never seen the condition. ” – Nick Caserio
#Texans GM Nick Caserio said Joe Mixon’s mysterious injury — which caused him to miss the entire season — was a freak thing he’s never seen before and not off-the-field related, like a snowmobile accident, jumping off a building, or anything wild like that. pic.twitter.com/3LtdqvNujR

— Ari Meirov (@MySportsUpdate) January 22, 2026

A whole lot of words to say not very much, and I guess that sums up the breadth of knowledge the Texans are willing to share regarding Mixon. Whether he was in a snowmobile or…jumping off a building…or not, this injury Mixon is suffering from was not significant enough to prevent him from trying to return midseason, but still too much to muster a comeback in time for Houston’s divisional round exit. A very odd situation indeed, and a perfect excuse for Houston to target RB either in free agency and/or the NFL draft in April.

Without Mixon, Houston’s rushing offense was stuck in neutral for much of the season, and, at times, completely nonexistent. Veteran RB Nick Chubb would start as the Texans first fill-in for a bruising tailback, but he would eventually be usurped by one of Houston’s best rookies: Woody Marks. Marks was not the punisher that Mixon could be, but he was all the more elusive as he marched his way towards the starting job halfway through the season. By the end of the regular season, Marks finished his first year as a Texan with 911 yards from scrimmage (703 rushing, 208 receiving), behind only WR Nico Collins in yardage on the team. Despite not being the offense’s strong suit, Marks made the rushing game functional and occasionally great…but it’s going to require more than just him to make the ground game truly deadly.

Nick Chubb is not immediately expected to return from free agency after an underwhelming year, so the compliment to Marks is completely unknown. Backup RBs Jawhar Jordan and British Brooks showed real promise in limited action, but they would not challenge an incoming veteran or top 100-pick for the backup spot behind Marks. Hopefully, with a small stable of reliable RBs, the ground-game should flourish once again. My personal favorite targets both in free agency and the draft are:

Top Running Backs in 2026 NFL Free Agency:

  • RB Kenneth Walker III – Seattle Seahawks
  • RB Breece Hall – New York Jets
  • RB Tyler Allgeier – Atlanta Falcons

Top Running Back Prospects in 2026 NFL Draft:

  • RB Emmett Johnson – Nebraska
  • RB Kaytron Allen – Penn State
  • RB Mike Washington Jr. – Arkansas
Check out Kaytron “Fatman” Allen demonstrating why he is going to be one of the top RBs in this years draft.

Solid vision, burst, contact balance and just enough wiggle in open space to be dangerous. pic.twitter.com/NweHdo3i6R

— Newt Westen (@NFLDraft_Westen) January 20, 2026

2. Guard (LG in particular)​


Tytus Howard, Kenyon Green, Kendrick Green, Juice Scruggs, Jarrett Patterson, Laken Tomlinson – these are the names of all of the players the Houston Texans have had at LG in the last two seasons. Kenyon Green is Nick Caserio’s only first round bust, Kendrick Green was an interim player at the position, and Scruggs and Patterson were centers called upon due to a lack of depth at guard. Tomlinson was brought into the building in 2025 to provide stability at the position, but would lose his starting job to Tytus Howard, who is normally the starting RT but kicked it inside thanks to a healthy RT Trent Brown manning the bookend. This stream of interchanging players and position-blending is not a recipe for success, nor is it helpful to QB CJ Stroud, and we all bore witness to the impact of not having a true starter at LG in the divisional round against the Patriots when the interior line was torn to shreds by DT Milton Williams.

Milton Williams STRAINING against a double-team and gets in on the tackle for no gain. https://t.co/QysCk0H6HE pic.twitter.com/2cHytkHabc

— Nate Tice (@Nate_Tice) January 19, 2026

Nick Caserio’s strange method of addressing the offensive line – scooping up random middling starters and disappointing young players in free agency – did yield new starters at C (Jake Andrews) and RG (Ed Ingram), much to my surprise. However, LG remains his Achilles heel, and I’d rather see him address it with a top-50 draft pick than go hunting through the bargain-bin of other teams’ rosters, again. After the success of Ed Ingram, though, I fear he may be emboldened by his rather scattershot philosophy. But, Caserio is not exactly predictable either, so regardless of what direction he decides to walk backwards into, I hope he considers these options:

Top Guards in 2026 NFL Free Agency:

  • LG David Edwards – Buffalo Bills
  • LG Isaac Seumalo – Pittsburgh Steelers
  • LG Alijah Vera-Tucker – New York Jets

Top Guard Prospects in 2026 NFL Draft:

  • LG Olaivavega Ioane – Penn State
  • T/G Francis Mauigoa – Miami
  • RG Keylan Rutledge – Georgia Tech
Keylan Rutledge is the physical mauler that everyone wants to see in 1v1s at the Senior Bowl 🦍 https://t.co/I3D9OlfYdn pic.twitter.com/mI3kc3XqK8

— NFL Draft Files (@NFL_DF) December 2, 2025

3. Tight End​


In the modern NFL, having multiple good tight ends almost feels like cheating. To have multiple players on the field that can either block or go out as a receiver adds so much versatility to an offense that one of the NFL’s most popular developments in the passing attack has been running a play quest the tight end pretends to be a blocker, only for them to turn around and play receiver a few seconds after the ball is snapped (this trend is also spreading to RBs as well, which we saw with Woody Marks in the Chiefs game.) Having a tight end leak out of the backfield after chipping a defender is one of the easiest ways to rack up cheap yards on offense, which is why you see teams like the Buffalo Bills and Green Bay Packers building their offenses around multiple tight end sets. Texans offensive coordinator Nick Caley actually employed some of these concepts last year when he was the passing game coordinator for the L.A. Rams, but they were a bit more of a rarity in Houston in 2025. Dalton Schultz was still a major part of the offense in 2025, but he was only occasionally used as a decoy blocker or receiver. Due to the broken foot injury backup TE Cade Stover suffered in week 1 that put him on IR, and the season-ending injury TE Brevin Jordan suffered in August, many of those multiple TE formations got buried in the back of Caley’s playbook, never to see the light of day…until 2026!

This is the key to Houston unlocking their offense once again. They’ve already signaled interest in versatile TEs by re-signing Jordan to a one-year deal just a month ago whilst he’s still in recovery from his second season-ending torn ACL in a row. Even with the extension, there’s no doubt Nick Caserio has taken notice of Jordan’s lack of availability, so I expect some Jordan-like reinforcements to arrive in Houston either in free agency or the draft so that a few injuries to this position group won’t turn it into a Schultz-only show. My favorite targets are:

Top Tight Ends in 2026 NFL Free Agency:

  • TE David Njoku – Cleveland Browns
  • TE Kyle Pitts – Atlanta Falcons
  • TE Isaiah Likely – Baltimore Ravens

Top Tight Ends in 2026 NFL Draft:

  • TE Kenyon Sadiq – Oregon
  • TE Eli Stowers – Vanderbilt
  • TE Tanner Koziol – Houston
Tanner Koziol is 6’7, has a monster catch radius, and wins 61% of his contested targets.

Potential red zone MACHINE in the NFL 👀 https://t.co/u0bQadKddO pic.twitter.com/3KRfrVSQCz

— NFL Draft Files (@NFL_DF) December 8, 2025


And that’s my list of way-too-early free agent and draft targets for the Houston Texans! I really believe the season-ending injuries to both Joe Mixon and Brevin Jordan amputated the kind of offense Nick Caley was looking to implement – one that can run over opposing defenses to set up the play-action passes and keep the defense guessing with multiple tight ends. I would have loved to have seen a 2025 Texans offense with a healthy Mixon and Jordan, but that is not the hand we were dealt. Houston isn’t the only team to have suffered debilitating injuries at the onset of the regular season, so they should have been prepared for this scenario. Hopefully, with a more loaded backfield, o-line, and tight end’s room, the Texans will be able to waltz past any major injury unscathed in 2026.

What do you think, though? Should the Texans target these spots on offense during the offseason, or is there a more important position for the team to focus on? Is there any position on the defense you’d rather see addressed, like LB or S? Or, are you still looking for a the player to follow up CJ Stroud? Let us know your thoughts down in the comments below!

Go Texans!!!

Source: https://www.battleredblog.com/general/73896/houston-texans-top-3-offseason-targets
 
Value of Things: A Theoretical C.J. Stroud contract

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I made a statement in the last VOT that this decision will be the hardest decision in franchise history. The Texans paid their last franchise quarterback a lot of money, but the decision to pay him was not difficult. Everyone in the organization and city agreed at the time that he was a franchise quarterback. Everyone does not agree this time around. There is obviously what the going rate says about what quarterbacks should make and there is what performance would say.

You can split the NFL into three tiers. There are the top ten quarterbacks in salary and performance. For the most part they match, but that is not universally true. It could be easy to say that if your quarterback is not a top ten quarterback then he shouldn’t be paid like a top ten quarterback. The last tier is the tier of young quarterbacks that haven’t been paid yet or teams that are simply punting on quarterback until they can find a better one in free agency or the draft.

We are concerned with the middle group. These are guys that are entrenched in their locations, but they were not paid top dollar for one reason or another. In some cases, they signed their deals before the last couple of seasons when salaries exploded. In others cases they just weren’t considered top tier quarterbacks. If we include Stroud in that group then there are ten such quarterbacks.

A large part of my communication with David Mulugheta (Stroud’s agent) would be that he doesn’t want to negotiate based on where Stroud is right now. That would put Stroud firmly in the group of quarterbacks underneath the top ten. In this table, we will look at completion percentage, yards per game, yards per attempt, TD%, and INT%. We can determine where Stroud fits within that group and then look at player salaries for the group. There are a number of different ways to play this and I think what you will see is that all of them will arrive at a similar place and similar number.

GamesPCTYPGYPATD%INT%
Matthew Stafford4864.4259.07.65.51.7
Baker Mayfield5166.3239.97.35.72.2
Sam Darnold3566.7247.58.15.82.5
Patrick Mahomes4666.0254.37.04.52.1
Kirk Cousins3066.3252.07.34.52.5
C.J. Stroud4663.8236.47.54.31.7
Geno Smith4767.7233.47.23.92.7
Kyler Murray3067.8220.46.83.82.0
Aaron Rodgers3464.2212.36.74.81.7
Daniel Jones2966.1209.76.93.32.4

There are any number of ways to look at this data, but we should begin by removing Stroud entirely and looking at the average amongst the remaining nine quarterbacks. We calculate average in two different ways. We can look at the numerical mean (mathematical average) or the median (the number in the middle). We then can compare Stroud’s numbers with those averages

  • Mean: 38.9 games, 66.2 PCT, 236.5 YPG, 7.2 YPA, 4.6 TD%, 2.2 INT%
  • Median: 35 games, 66.3 PCT, 239.9 YPG, 7.3 YPA, 4.5 TD%, 2.1 INT%

So, based on these numbers, Stroud finishes better than average in about half the categories and below average in the other half. That would seem to indicate he is right around average. If we look at his composite ranking then he would rank in a tie for fifth with Kirk Cousins. So, if we were following Bill James’ similarity scores model then he would be closest to Cousins.

  • Mean AAV: 34.5 million
  • Median AAV: 37.5 million
  • 5th place AAV: 37.5 million
  • Kirk Cousins AAV: 45.0 million

If we were to assume that the top ten quarterbacks in salary are all better than Stroud and these quarterbacks are the next tier then Stroud fits somewhere nicely around the middle of the league. Obviously, some of the younger quarterbacks like Drake Maye and Bo Nix might be better if we were to break them down as well, but some quarterbacks on top might be worse. He is an average NFL starting quarterback no matter which way you slice it.

Putting it all together​


The numbers above represent a minimum and maximum for Stroud in a contract. The minimum probably sits at 35 million and the maximum sits at 45 million. If I were Mulugheta I would likely choose to wait another year to see what happens with average salaries and hope that Stroud can put up better numbers and move himself up that ladder.

If I were the Texans I might go as high as 45 million in AAV. That would mean he would be getting the same pay as Kirk Cousins and Patrick Mahomes. Mulugheta could spin that however he wants, but if I were Nick Caserio I would probably keep the contract at about 40 million now and explain that we would prefer to wait a season and negotiate off of a happier ending. Based on these numbers alone (and forgetting the way it ended) it would seem foolish to offer 50 million per season or more. Of course, that is why I am sitting here and why the people are NRG are sitting where they are.

Source: https://www.battleredblog.com/houst...e-of-things-a-theoretical-c-j-stroud-contract
 
The Day After The Day After (Plus 1): Thoughts on the Houston Texans and Conference Championship Weekend

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The Day After the Day After…when the raw, immediate emotions from the aftermath of a game diminish into the realm of clarity and the proverbial (or literal) hangover no longer haunts the mind. With that, a review of Conference Championship Weekend:

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A painful weekend for Texans’ fans: It is said that perhaps the four cruelest words ever said were “what might have been” After this weekend, more than few Texans’ fans might agree with that sentiment. For the AFC Championship game, the Patriots, fresh off their victory over Houston, continued their most improbable playoff run since their 1985 version, knocking off the Broncos 10-7 in a defensive slugfest/kicking optional game. It didn’t help the Broncos that they trotted out Jarrett Stidham, making his first career start. Still, Denver will rue this game, with the questionable play-calls and all the missed FGs. Thus, the Patriots claimed their 10th Lamar Hunt Trophy this decade.

However, for Houston, who has never won one, much less had the chance to win one, this result must have stung. What if Houston doesn’t turn the ball over 5 times at New England? New England wasn’t all that much more dominant than Houston, only that Houston shot themselves in the foot more than New England blasted them. As for Denver, yes, the Broncos won in Houston, but would that Broncos team on Sunday have really been enough to overcome Houston, especially if Houston could avoid the dumb mistakes? Fairbairn kicking FGs would have been more effective than either kicker this day, even with the conditions. Regardless, Houston, much like all the other felled AFC teams, must grit their teeth and watch New England try for yet another ring.

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The Redemption of Sam Darnold and hope for the Texans: In the other game this past Sunday, the Seattle Seahawks set up a rematch of Super Bowl XLIX (yes, the jokes about running on the 1-yard line are flying fast and furious) by overcoming the LA Rams in a barnburner of a NFC championship game, 31-27. A key to Seattle’s win was the play of Sam Darnold, who went 25-of-36 for 346 yards and 3 TDs. The much-maligned QB managed to come through in this playoff run, albeit one helped by a ferocious defense, a strong running game, and the massive home-field advantage of Lumen Field. Mocked for failed clutch performances (see the last two games of the previous season) as well as his career long struggles, Darnold, at least to this point, showed why the Jets thought he might make a franchise QB. This isn’t to say he couldn’t turn into another Kerry Collins, but after this week, Darnold has earned the right to tell his critics what they do with themselves.

What does this have to do with the Texans? Well, consider the current situation for another top-3 drafted QB. CJ Stroud is persona non grata with many in the Texans’ fanbase, especially after this particular playoff run. Much like Darnold, Stroud has shown that pressure can get to him, and he is facing questions about his performance in clutch situations. Yet, unlike Darnold, Stroud has won in multiple playoff appearances. At least for the next season or so, he should have a strong defense to lean on, and the improvement in the running game is not impossible for Houston. If Stroud can recapture his better moments, a Darnold-esque run is not that far-fetched in the future. It would help if Houston could get actual homefield advantage for one or more rounds in the playoffs, but that is what the offseason is for, to try to set up for such a run.

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The Coaching Cycle Keeps Rolling: While the last game in New England left a bitter taste in many a fan’s mouth, the bigger picture is that Houston finished 12-5 with a 3rd straight appearance in the NFL Divisional Playoff Round. Thus, teams with coaching vacancies are looking at members of the Houston coaching staff. Since the firing/hiring season for coaches started, several Houston coaches interviewed for various coaching openings, usually for the chance to move to higher profile/higher paying positions. Defensive Coordinator Matt Burke logged head coaching interviews with the Arizona Cardinals. Defensive Backs Coach Dino Vasso interviewed with the Tennessee Titans for their open Defensive Coordinator position. Earlier this week, reports surfaced that QB Coach Jerrod Johnson would interview for the Eagles Offensive Coordinator position.

To this point, the Texans have not fired any coaches. Questions about Nick Caley after a less-than-stellar debut season as offensive coordinator haunted the team after their run ended, but according to the Texans, Caley is slated to return to Houston. As for those coaches who have interviewed, the loss of Burke and or Vasso would likely sting the most for the franchise. For Vasso, the Texans’ secondary was one of the best in the league, with All-Pro Derek Stingley Jr, and Pro Bowl selectees Calen Bullock and Kamari Lassiter helping to log 19 INTs and surrendering the 7th fewest passing yards and only 20 TDs this season. Likely Houston is keeping lists of potential replacements for any of these coaches, should they leave for greener pastures.

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FUN WITH NUMBERS:

0-4:
Houston’s record against the NFL’s final four this season. Not exactly the greatest endorsement for Houston that they couldn’t beat any of the teams that got to the Conference Title Games. Perhaps that helps with the pain. Doesn’t help that only the Denver game was at Houston, the others on the road.

7.2: Margin of defeat in those 4 games. The New England game skews that number a little bit, but setting aside a 12-point loss that wasn’t as decisive as the score indicates, Houston only lost to the other three teams by a collective 17 points. They were close. Sure, that only counts in horseshoes and nukes, but you can understand if the Texans braintrust thinks that the team wasn’t that far off of a title run.

7: Total Pro Bowlers on the squad. Ok, the Pro Bowl isn’t what it used to be, but with Bullock and Lassiter named as alternates, that gives the squad 6 members on the squad, and unlike some others (Shedeur Sanders, cough, cough, Shedeur Sanders), these guys earned that consideration. That six are defenders…well, did you see that defense this season?

GAME BALLS:

All Emergency Responders and Technicians Working to Restore Power, Clear Roads and Helping People Get Through This Winter Storm.
Been a rough week weather-wise for a lot of folks, Texans fans and others. It isn’t much, but we have to give them some type of credit.

DECLARATIONS OF IDIOCY:

No one has really earned that this week. Any candidates for that designation have already received their cyber beatdowns, especially in Denver and Los Angeles. Moving along…

Next up, if so inclined, the next NFL-ish event is the Pro Bowl Skills Challenge on Tuesday, February 3 at 5:30 CST on ESPN/Disney XD.

Source: https://www.battleredblog.com/houst...on-texans-and-conference-championship-weekend
 
The Tank Dell Effect

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In the previous iteration of the Houston Texans, before Watson unmasked himself, the offense excelled when Will Fuller V was streaking down the field like his nicknamesake The Flash.

Under Demeco Ryans, Tank Dell fills that role for the team. In ‘23 & ‘24, Dell combined for 156 targets, 98 receptions, 1376 yards, 69 first downs and 10 scores. He also had 10 rushing attempts for 94 yards. With Dell on the field, and the ball in C.J. Stroud’s hands, anything seemed possible.

Unfortunately, like Fuller V, Dell has yet to survive a single NFL campaign. His latest season, 2024, ended prematurely when Dell suffered a very nasty knee injury while scoring a rather spectacular touchdown.

Texans WR Tank Dell is going to be carted to the locker room with a knee injury after scoring on this play:

pic.twitter.com/4irMJNGOkA

— Adam Schefter (@AdamSchefter) December 21, 2024
ESPN – KANSAS CITY, Mo. — Houston Texans wideout Tank Dell was carted off the field with what coach DeMeco Ryans called a “significant” knee injury after he caught a touchdown pass during Saturday’s 27-19 loss to the Kansas City Chiefs.

Dell was taken to University of Kansas Hospital, a Level 1 trauma center about 12 miles from Arrowhead Stadium. Ryans said Sunday that Dell was flying back to Houston but still set to meet with doctors for evaluation.

A source told ESPN that Dell dislocated his kneecap, confirming an NFL Network report. Any other potential injuries to the knee weren’t immediately known.

On the Texans’ first possession of the second half, quarterback C.J. Stroud threw a 30-yard touchdown pass to Dell to cut Kansas City’s lead to 17-16. But on the reception, Texans wideout Jared Wayne collided with Dell’s lower leg deep in the end zone, and Dell immediately grabbed his leg but otherwise barely moved.

It’s pretty easy to make an argument that had Dell not been injured, Houston goes on to win that game and have better fortune in the 2024 NFL playoffs.

And, beyond that, what would the 2025 Texan campaign have looked like? Particularly the final game against the New England Patriots where Stroud had what could easily be characterized as his worst professional outing. Without WR1 Nico Collins, TE1 Dalton Schultz and Dell, plus starting RT Trent Brown, Stroud seemed to come apart at the seams as the game went on.

Recently, Texans general manager Nick Caserio gave an end-of-season presser, detailing all sorts of Texans tidbits.

Yahoo Sports – “[To be determined],” Caserio said of Dell possibly returning to form. “We have the resources available. I would anticipate him being available for offseason. Have a better idea when you get on field what that actually looks like, Knowing Tank, cautiously optimistic he can be Tank Dell.”

Dell wasted no time jumping back into the spotlight, backing his close friend Stroud after the historically disappointing AFC Division Round disaster.

Tank Dell said people can say what they want about C.J. Stroud, but when they get back out there together on the field he said “It’s going to be special.” pic.twitter.com/xoHQBumgXO

— Jonathan M Alexander (@jonmalexander) January 28, 2026

When you compare their 17-game averages via Pro-Football-Reference, Dell and Fuller V certainly share a lot of killer traits:

Dell: 106 Targets, 67 Receptions, 936 yards, 14.0 yard/catch average, 47 first downs, 7 touchdowns

Fuller V: 105 Targets, 66 Receptions, 969 yards, 14.7 yard/catch average, 44 first downs, 7 touchdowns

In an almost eerie similarity, neither played more than 14 games in a season – so far.

I happened to be at NRG the day Will Fuller first arrived, roughly 24 hours after the Texans drafted the speedster. What immediately jumped out at me when he climbed out of the Escalade and onto H-Town ground was how skinny his legs were. I mentioned how impressed I was that a guy that thin could survive the brutality of hit after hit from NFL defenders, not truly realizing how the young man would only average 9 games in his 6-year NFL career.

Fuller’s first season saw 14 total games, with 10 the second and 7 the third.

Dell played 11 games his rookie year, 14 in the second season and zero his third year.

If one of the most exciting players in Texans history hopes to elevate the offense in 2026, his durability will have to buck the odds.

Not to mention how will he integrate into Nick Caley’s “hammer the A-gap” offense? Caley certainly hasn’t helped players juke the injury bug.

Thankfully, it’s the Texans off-season, where hope springs eternal! And, we can all dream of Dell catching the game winning pass in next year’s Super Bowl.

Houston Texans fans: Waiting for Next Season Since 2002 ™ ©

Source: https://www.battleredblog.com/houston-texans-analysis/73928/the-tank-dell-effect
 
Texans Fire 3 Assistant Coaches

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The Houston Texans have made their first significant staff changes of the 2026 offseason. KPRC’s Aaron Wilson reports that the team is moving on from tight ends coach Jake Moreland, assistant linebacker coach Ben Bolling, and offensive assistant Mike Snyder:

Sources: #Texans fire tight ends coach Jake Moreland, move on from assistant linebackers coach Ben Bolling, not renewing offensive assistant Mike Snyder @KPRC2 https://t.co/4AFhuazmb4 https://t.co/GSyvfuVa8L

— Aaron Wilson (@AaronWilson_NFL) January 28, 2026

All three coaches have spent multiple years on Houston’s staff, and now all will be casualties of the 2025 season.

Jake Moreland had just finished his third year as the tight ends coach for the Houston Texans in 2025, leading starting TE Dalton Schultz to his most productive season with the Texans. Schultz finished the season with 82 receptions on 106 targets (77.4 Ctch%) for 777 yards and 3 touchdowns. Schultz never broke 100+ receiving yards in a game in 2025, but was instrumental in keeping the Texans on the field against the Jacksonville Jaguars, Tennessee Titans, and Indianapolis Colts. Besides Schutlz, backup TE Cade Stover had 12 receptions on 16 targets (75 Ctch%) for 76 yards, a disappointing showing by Houston’s #2 TE, but he demonstrated moderate improvement in blocking and when the Texans ran the tush push play on 4th-and-short.

Before joining the Texans in 2023, Moreland spent one year as the Denver Broncos tight ends coach, one year as the New York Jets assistant offensive line coach, and a combined 18 years as a coach in the collegiate ranks for Elmhurst college (2003), Saint Joseph’s (2004), Western Michigan (2005-11, 2017-20), Air Force (2012-14, 2016), and Syracuse (2015). Before his coaching career, Moreland was one of Western Michigan’s most prolific tight ends in school history, and went on to play two seasons in the NFL, one for the New York Jets (2000) and one for the Cleveland Browns (2001). Even though the tight ends’ room was not the most productive in 2025, I find Moreland’s departure a bit head scratching. Under his tutelage, Dalton Schultz had three great years in Houston and became one of QB CJ Stroud’s favorite targets. It would have been interesting to see if Moreland would have held onto his position as tight ends coach if TE Brevin Jordan had remained healthy for the 2025 season and functioned as the extra blocking/receiving tight end the Texans were searching for. Instead of Jordan, Moreland had to rely more on Stover and trade acquisition Harrison Bryant, who played adequately, but clearly not well enough to give Moreland job security.

A day at practice with offensive line coach and alum Jake Moreland (@coachjakemo). #LetsRide #BeABronco #WeWillReign pic.twitter.com/JhM9X4QtSB

— Western Michigan Football (@WMU_Football) March 21, 2017

Mike Snyder is the least tenured of the three coaches fired yesterday, just finishing his second season with Houston as an offensive assistant. There was no cutting around the disappointment on offense this season, as the team finished 13th in points, 18th in yards, and 29th in red zone scoring percentage (45.9%). Snyder is credited with working with the wide receivers in 2024, where Nico Collins tallied 1,006 receiving yards and earned his first pro-bowl nod, Tank Dell tallied 667 receiving yards before his injury, and free agent acquisition Stefon Diggs totaled 496 receiving yards before his injury.

Before joining the Texans in 2024, Snyder served as a football analyst for the Atlanta Falcons (2022-2023), and the assistant quarterbacks coach (2021) and offensive quality control coach for the Chicago Bears (2018-2021). Like Moreland, it can be debated whether or not Snyder deserved to be let go, but after the very disappointing finish in the divisional round against the New England Patriots, few NFL coaching staffs would survive without a few heads rolling.

Ben Bolling is, at least to me, the most surprising termination of the group. Bolling, a former wide receivers and safeties coach at Campbell University, was a part of Houston’s defensive coaching staff since general manager Nick Caserio’s first year with the Texans in 2021. Serving as a defensive assistant in his first four years with the Texans, Bolling was present at the foundation of the current regime’s magnum opus: the defense. That side of the ball improved year after year, and after being promoted assistant linebacker coach in 2025, Bolling contributed to one of the best position groups in the country.

Both starting LBs, Azeez Al-Shaair and Henry To’oTo’o, expedited Houston’s ascension to the defensive throne by having career years, each just a season removed from their previous highs in 2024. Al-Shaair finished his 2025 campaign with 16 starts, a team-leading 103 tackles, 1 tackle for loss, 2 QB hits, 9 pass deflections, 2 interceptions, 1 forced fumble, and 1 fumble recovery. With a season like that, Al-Shaair earned his first pro-bowl selection of his career in 2025, cementing him as one of Houston’s best defenders. To’oTo’o finished his third year in the NFL with 14 starts, 95 tackles, 9 tackles for loss, 4 QB hits, 2.5 sacks, 4 pass deflections, and 1 fumble recovery. Both were stars at their positions last season, and both improved on their #1 issues: pass coverage. To’oTo’o’s pass coverage was Patriots QB Drake Maye’s kryptonite in the divisional round game, so it’s unfortunate that not only was that performance not enough to win the game, but also not enough to save Bolling’s job.

The play I mentioned during the game in which To'oTo'o blew up Jonathan Taylor in pass pro pic.twitter.com/vx94Szrats

— JaysonBraddock (@JaysonBraddock) December 1, 2025

What do you think of these firings, though? Were you prepared for some departures on both sides of the ball, or did Bolling’s departure surprise you as much as it did me? Was there someone else you’d rather have seen gone, or even someone you hope they pick up in place of these coaches? Let us know your thoughts down in the comments below!

Go Texans!

Source: https://www.battleredblog.com/general/73931/texans-fire-3-assistant-coaches
 
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