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Texans First 5 Draft Picks Played in Senior Bowl

NCAA Football: NCAA Senior Bowl Practice

Vasha Hunt-Imagn Images

Nick Caserio is nothing but consistent

The annual draft pool consists of around 450 athletes from across the country. The players with four or five-star ratings coming out of high school and played in the SEC or BIG10 are well documented. However, art of the NFL Draft is finding budding talent from lesser-known programs who can develop into the next great athlete.

Teams must hone this art to properly identify, curate, and QA talent. This process is what defines great organizations in the league and can make or break teams.

For the Houston Texans under the Nick Caserio regime, there are several trends starting to appear. Last year, I identified six Draft Strategies and Habits that Caserio abides.

1. Double-up on positions of need

2. Trade up to select the player he wants

3. Even distribution between offensive and defensive players (with a skew to offense)

4. Prioritize starting potential over special teams players

5. Preference for Big-Time Schools and Programs

6. Selecting Team Captains

This year was no different. Jaylin Noel, Jaylin Smith, Woody Marks, Graham Mertz, and Luke Lachey were all team captains. All draftees were from Big 12, BIG10, or SEC. We all know how much Caserio traded up this year.

Another new trend was identified; Caserio met with each of the first five players at the Senior Bowl in Mobile, Alabama. Higgins, Ersery, Noel, Smith, and Marks all had private meetings with the Texans. Incredibly, the first five picks from the Texans draft all played for the National Team.

Round 2, No. 34 - Jayden Higgins, WR - Iowa State

Round 2, No. 58 - Aireontae Ersery, OT - Minnesota

Round 3, No. 79 - Jaylin Noel, WR - Iowa State

Round 3, No. 97 - Jaylin Smith, CB - USC

Round 4, No. 116 - Woody Marks, RB - USC

The Texans also brought the left tackle in for a Top 30 Visit. So too was Jaylin Smith. For their newest QB, they met with him at his Florida Pro Day.

Quick healer: Five months after ACL surgery, former Florida QB Graham Mertz threw a 58-pass script at his pro day today with only four balls hitting the ground. #Saints OC Doug Nussmeier was there, as well as QB coaches for Houston, Miami and Dallas. pic.twitter.com/fNfoAwQgdc

— Tom Pelissero (@TomPelissero) March 28, 2025

No initial research shows if the Texans had exclusive access to the team throughout the weekend, but good thing the National Team won handily.

Key Plays from the Senior Bowl:

  • Jayden Higgins caught a long TD on a double pass the first drive of the game
  • Woody Marks only totaled seven yards on five carries, but hauled in two nice catches for 17 yards
  • Jaylin Noel had two drops on touch catches

Though early in the draft process, the Senior Bowl allows for intimate meetings, which Nick Caserio took full advantage of this draft cycle. Compare this to the highly publicized Top 40 Visits right before the draft.

The biggest downside is that the Texans tend to overdraft players relative to their value. Since they close the books on several top prospects early at the Senior Bowl, they have an inaccurate evaluation of the league’s projection on where they should be drafted. Players such as Jaylin Smith and Woody Marks were both considered reaches by analysts. While Houston ensures they get “their guys”, they tend to overpay relative to the league’s evaluation of them.

Source: https://www.battleredblog.com/2025/5/14/24420792/texans-first-five-draft-picks-played-in-senior-bowl
 
Tapped In: Weekly Houston Texans Q&A

AFC Divisional Playoffs: Houston Texans v Kansas City Chiefs

Photo by Aaron M. Sprecher/Getty Images

Houston Texans Q&A.

The Houston Texans are at the point of the offseason where the hype from free agency, along with the NFL Draft has now passed, and we are now only two months away from training camp.

Houston has done a great job of adding talent to the roster on both sides of the ball, along with making the necessary coaching adjustments to maximize their upcoming season. The Texans looked good last year, and it is safe to say that they got even better this offseason, but now it is about putting it all together.

“C.J. Stroud stat predictions for next season?” - @adamx830


Stroud truly has the potential to be one of the best quarterbacks in football on a yearly basis, and Houston needs to continue to build around him.

When it comes to weapons on offense, the Texans have done a good job of surrounding Stroud with talent. But when it comes to the offensive line in particular, it has been a dumpster fire throughout both of his first two years in the league.

Houston knew they needed to make significant changes this offseason, and they did just that with the firing of their offensive line coach, offensive coordinator, and getting rid of the players that did not deserve to be on the roster.

If the Texans can figure out a way to keep Stroud on his feet, and protect him on a consistent basis, he will have all the tools needed to have an incredible year with the new offense.

I believe that he can throw for 30-touchdowns this upcoming season, to go along with 4,300 yards and eight interceptions.

“Woody Marks or Dameon Pierce this season?” - @adilk___


This one is hard to say, considering Marks, who was taken in the fourth-round of the 2025 Draft, has not even made it to training camp yet.

Marks will have every opportunity to get on the field behind Mixon, but you should not fully count out Pierce.

Pierce has been someone that is well liked in the locker room, and has shown explosive flashes each year he has been in the league, but his role is far from determined. The Texans have shown that they value him, but not enough to carve out a consistent role on offense behind veteran Joe Mixon, but on special teams, he was incredible in 2025 returning kicks.

Pierce can catch the ball out of the backfield, but clearly the Texans have not trusted him to do so, which is where Marks enters the picture. He had 47 receptions for 321 yards in 2024 at USC, to go along with over 1,100 yards rushing and nine-touchdowns, and it would not be a surprise to see the talented rookie get some action early in the Texans offense.

If I had to make an early prediction, I am likely going with Marks.

“What do you think our division record will be this season?” -@elliott_houghton_


The Texans are lucky that the AFC South is one of the worst divisions in football as of right now, but the reality is that there is actually an influx of young talent that may give Houston some problems throughout the season.

The Tennessee Titans just used their first-overall pick on Miami quarterback Cam Ward, while also having a relatively new head coach in Brian Callahan. The Titans also have a solid defense, therefore they might be more talented than most think, but I do not see Houston losing to them in 2025.

The Jacksonville Jaguars are set to have an extremely explosive offense this upcoming season with the addition of Travis Hunter, who was their second-overall pick, Pro Bowl wide receiver Brian Thomas Jr, running back Travis Etienne and quarterback Trevor Lawrence.

I am not sold on the Jaguars defense by any means, and they have a brand new head coach in Liam Coen, who has a lot of potential, but we do not know how that team will gel yet. I think Houston could win both games pretty easily, but it would not be a surprise if they dropped one against Jacksonville.

To me, the Indianapolis Colts are easily the second-best team in the division, and they have added some serious talent to the roster this offseason. All that new talent is great, but if you are not sold on your quarterback situation, the entire season could be set up for failure. It remains up in the air as to whether Anthony Richardson or Daniel Jones will start for the team.

I think the Colts could definitely steal a game against the Texans, but overall, Houston is the better team and should get the job done in both games.

Overall, I think the Texans will win six out of the eight divisional matchups.

“Jayden Higgins worth the hype?” - @milothebestbatman


Higgins is someone that is going to come in and immediately make an impact on the Texans offense. Having a 6’4 wide receiver in Nico Collins lined up on one side, and now Higgins lined up on the other side, who is also 6’4, is a recipe for disaster for every single opposing defense in the league.

There are a lot of bigger wide receivers in the league, but there are very few that can move like Higgins, while also having great ball skills. I think by the end of 2025, people will feel like Houston got a steal in the second-round.

“Jaylin Noel starting slot wide receiver?” - @hunterturner35


Like Higgins, Noel’s former teammate at Iowa State, the talented receiver can come in and make plays for Houston’s offense immediately. It’s hard to predict if Noel will start, due to the acquisition of Christian Kirk, who is also a very talented player.

I would say Kirk likely has the edge to start from the jump, but I am a huge fan of Noel’s game and believe he could move more into the rotation as the season goes along, or if he gets off to a fast start, possibly even start early.

Noel is mostly a slot receiver, but he can also move outside, which means there is real potential to be involved early.

Submit your questions to @nickschwagernfl on instagram to be featured!

Source: https://www.battleredblog.com/2025/5/15/24428931/tapped-in-weekly-houston-texans-q-a-nfl
 
Houston Texans Release 2025 Season Schedule

NFL: DEC 15 Dolphins at Texans

Photo by John Rivera/Icon Sportswire via Getty Images

What opponents will the Texans be facing in 2025?

The wait is finally over! The Houston Texans have released their 2025 preseason and regular season schedules, giving fans a first look at what the upcoming 2025 NFL season has to offer.


Say WAZZUPPPPPP to our 2025 Schedule ‼️ pic.twitter.com/nY5Kwh5tWl

— Houston Texans (@HoustonTexans) May 15, 2025

Let’s take a look at the schedule:

PRESEASON:​


Week 1: Houston Texans @ Minnesota Vikings (Aug.. 9, 3 p.m. CST, ABC-13)

Week 2: Houston Texans vs. Carolina Panthers (Aug. 16, 12 p.m. CST, ABC-13)

Week 3: Houston Texans @ Detroit Lions (Aug 23, 12 p.m. CST, ABC-13)

REGULAR SEASON:​


Week 1: Houston Texans @ Los Angeles Rams (Sep. 7, 3:25 p.m. CST, CBS)

Week 2: Houston Texans vs. Tampa Bay Buccaneers (Primetime, Sep. 15, 6 p.m. CST, ABC)

Week 3: Houston Texans @ Jacksonville Jaguars (Sep. 21, 12 p.m. CST, CBS)

Week 4: Houston Texans vs. Tennessee Titans (Sep. 28, 12 p.m. CST, CBS)

Week 5: Houston Texans @ Baltimore Ravens (Oct. 5, 12 p.m. CST, CBS)

Week 6: BYE

Week 7: Houston Texans @ Seattle Seahawks (Primetime, Oct. 15, 9 p. m. CST, ESPN+)

Week 8: Houston Texans vs. San Francisco 49ers (Oct. 26, 12 p.m. CST, Fox)

Week 9: Houston Texans vs. Denver Broncos (Nov. 2, 12 p.m. CST, Fox)

Week 10: Houston Texans vs. Jacksonville Jaguars (Nov. 9, 12 p.m. CST, CBS)

Week 11: Houston Texans @ Tennessee Titans (Nov. 16, 12 p.m. CST, Fox)

Week 12: Houston Texans vs. Buffalo Bills (Primetime, Nov. 20, 7:15 p.m. CST, Amazon Prime)

Week 13: Houston Texans @ Indianapolis Colts (Nov. 30, 12 p.m., CBS)

Week 14: Houston Texans @ Kansas City Chiefs (Primetime, Dec. 7, 7:20 p.m. CST, NBC)

Week 15: Houston Texans vs. Arizona Cardinals (Dec. 14, 12 p.m. CST, Fox)

Week 16: Houston Texans vs. Las Vegas Raiders (Dec. 21, 3:25 p.m. CST, CBS)

Week 17: Houston Texans @ Los Angeles Chargers (Date TBD, Time TBD, Channel TBD)

Week 18: Houston Texans vs Indianapolis Colts (Date TBD, Time TBD, Channel TBD)



#Texans full schedule pic.twitter.com/xBnqthLdxd

— Aaron Wilson (@AaronWilson_NFL) May 15, 2025


And there you have it! The first step to the 2025 season (and, with luck, a Super Bowl championship) is underway. And four, count em’ FOUR, primetime games! If their media presence is any indication, the Houston Texans are in their Super Bowl window, and the pressure of this schedule will either turn them into a diamond or into a piece of coal.

Taking a closer look, it appears that the Texans, in addition to their standard six divisional games, will play against all AFC West teams, NFC West teams, and then fill in the final three spots on the calendar with playoff opponents: the Tampa Bay Buccaneers, Baltimore Ravens, and Buffalo Bills. It’s a hard pill swallowing two very challenging divisions in the AFC and NFC West, but the good news is gets a crucial break with their Week 6 bye, and a 10-day break in between Thursday Night Football against the Buffalo Bills and the following game against the Indianapolis Colts on Nov. 30. It’s a big schedule alright, but I think these four games in particular will define the season: Week 2 vs. Buccaneers, Week 9 vs. Broncos, Week 17 @ Chargers, Week 18 vs. Colts.

What do you think of the schedule, though? Is this the perfect path towards the Super Bowl that you were hoping for, a gauntlet of monstrous proportions, or somewhere in between? Let us know down in the comments below!

GO TEXANS!!!!

Source: https://www.battleredblog.com/2025/5/15/24430585/houston-texans-release-2025-season-schedule
 
Way too early Houston Texans schedule predictions

NFL: Detroit Lions at Houston Texans

Kevin Jairaj-Imagn Images

Sure it’s only May, but what else do you have going on?

Last night the NFL did their best to make a non-event into an event by announcing the schedule for the 2025 season. Odds are, only the real die hards or the random few with absolutely nothing else to do on a Wednesday night tuned in to watch.

For a lot of the rest of us, social media, TV news and/or friends and family let us know. And for the casual football fan, they probably still don’t know what the schedule is or that it was released yesterday.

Anyway...

Here’s a look at the who, when & where of the Texans 2025 schedule:

Week 1 - @ Los Angeles Rams

Week 2 - vs Tamp Bay Buccaneers - on Monday Night Football

Week 3 - @ Jacksonville Jaguars

Week 4 - vs Tennessee Not-The-Oilers

Week 5 - @ Baltimore Ravens

Week 6 - BYE

Week 7 - @ Seattle Seahawks - on Monday Night Football

Week 8 - vs San Francisco 49ers

Week 9 - vs Denver Broncos

Week 10 - vs Glitter Kitties

Week 11 - @ BESFs

Week 12 - vs Buffalo Bills - on Thursday Night Football

Week 13 - @ Indianapolis Colts

Week 14 - @ Kansas City Chiefs - on Thursday Night Football

Week 15 - vs Arizona Cardinals

Week 16 - vs Las Vegas Raiders

Week 17 - @ Los Angeles Chargers

Week 18 - vs Baby Horses - NFL Flex Schedule dependent on playoff implications


The Texans are hosting their first MNF game this season since November 2018.

The first time since the Lamar Miller 97 yard “WIRE TO WIRE” TD against Tennessee pic.twitter.com/nHrgDSpRK9

— Jacob (@TexansJacob) May 14, 2025

If Houston Texans general manager Nick Caserio, head coach Demeco Ryans and the offensive and defensive coaches manage to fix the trenches by week 1, here’s the predictions up to the bye week.

WIN Week 1 - @ Los Angeles Rams - Houston 1-0

WIN Week 2 - vs Tamp Bay Buccaneers - on Monday Night Football - Houston 1-0

WIN Week 3 - @ Jacksonville Jaguars - Houston 1-0

WIN Week 4 - vs Tennessee Not-The-Oilers - Houston 1-0

LOSE Week 5 - @ Baltimore Ravens - Houston 1-0

Week 6 - BYE

This puts the Texans at 4-1 going into the far-too-early Bye Week. If they can make it this far without any significant injuries, that bodes well for a great season.

WIN Week 7 - @ Seattle Seahawks - on Monday Night Football

LOSE Week 8 - vs San Francisco 49ers

WIN Week 9 - vs Denver Broncos

WIN Week 10 - vs Glitter Kitties

WIN Week 11 - @ BESFs

LOSE Week 12 - vs Buffalo Bills - on Thursday Night Football

8-3 isn’t too shabby and should have the Texans well within the AFC playoff conversations at this juncture. Now, Demeco Ryans has reversed the trend of losing to the Buffalo Bills AND the trend of getting demolished on nationally televised games. However, trying to do both in the same day might bring some late season bad luck...


THE PRIMETIME LINEUP pic.twitter.com/mH8zU969wz

— Houston Texans (@HoustonTexans) May 15, 2025

WIN Week 13 - @ Indianapolis Colts

LOSE Week 14 - @ Kansas City Chiefs - on Sunday Night Football

WIN Week 15 - vs Arizona Cardinals

WIN Week 16 - vs Las Vegas Raiders

LOSE Week 17 - @ Los Angeles Chargers

WIN Week 18 - vs Baby Horses - NFL Flex Schedule dependent on playoff implications

12-5 is totally doable and should land the Texans in the playoffs as the AFC South Champions. Granted, they won’t likely sweep all 3 division opponents, but let’s face it the Baby Horses, BESFs and Glitter Kitties aren’t any real threat to do much in 2025.

This should also keep the Texans out of the Wild Card Round, which would be huge. Hosting a playoff game in H-Town in the same season they host a MNF game would do wonders for fan support. And seeing C.J. Stroud and the boys show the world they’re for real on multiple occasions will be awesome.

Source: https://www.battleredblog.com/2025/5/15/24430715/way-too-early-houston-texans-schedule-predictions
 
The Day After the Day After (plus a few): The Houston Texans and the 2025 NFL schedule release.

2025 NFL Draft - Rounds 4-7

Photo by Perry Knotts/Getty Images

We find out when the Texans play their games. Also, this is the last big event before the void of the NFL Calendar. Let’s discuss.

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 2025 NFL Schedule Release:

George Bush Intercontinental Airport
Melissa Phillip/Houston Chronicle via Getty Images

Getting the travel out of the way relatively early: Perhaps Cal made a deal with the NFL so that they could play most of the road slate early, giving him points for Christmas shopping on his credit cards? Of the Texans’ eight road games, four appear in the first six matchups of the season (Week 1 @LAR, Week 3 @JAX, Week 5 @BAL, Week 7@SEA). The bye during Week 6 makes this road stretch just a bit less daunting than the Week 13 @IND and Week 14 @KC matchups. Still, if Houston gets off to a slowish start to the season, all the early road matchups might play a factor.

NFL: NOV 10 Lions at Texans
Photo by Leslie Plaza Johnson/Icon Sportswire via Getty Images

Home Cooking for the Fall/Winter: The early road tripping gets offset by the back-loading of home games to end the season. After the tilt in Seattle, Houston plays four of its next five games at NRG, included three consecutive home dates between Weeks 8-10 (49ers, Broncos, Jags). After the back-to-back road matchups, Houston finishes the season playing three of its final four games at home. However slow a start the team has to begin the season, the back stretch of the schedule sets up nicely for a pre-playoff run. Also, most of those late season games take place indoors, thus, another benefit for a team that generally plays in a warm weather/indoor venue.

AFC Divisional Playoffs: Houston Texans v Kansas City Chiefs
Photo by Aaron M. Sprecher/Getty Images

Apparently the networks aren’t sick of the Texans. Last season, Houston garnered six primetime/stand-alone nationally televised games. They went 2-4 in those matchups, but of those, only the Houston beatdown of the Cowboys and the Christmas Day Massacre against Baltimore were decided by more than single digits, even if quality was debatable (the Bears and Jets matchups might have been close, but hardly representative of quality football). Despite a sophomore slump from Stroud and Houston’s inability to really beat the better teams, the league and its network partners felt that Houston deserved some primetime love. Four primetime games (1 x Thursday Night Game against Buffalo, 1 x Sunday Night Matchup @Kansas City, 2 x Monday Night Football Games (Tampa Bay, @Seattle). The SNF date is subject to change, but hard to see that happening barring a massive collapse by Houston. Given that the date and times for the final two games have yet to happen, perhaps another couple of nationally-televised matchups are in order?

Big 12 Football Pro Day
Photo by Aaron M. Sprecher/Getty Images

What moves still remain? With the schedule out of the way and the mini-camps practically done, we enter into the dark void of the NFL calendar, or the stretch between now and the opening of training camps. Not that teams or players won’t make news (we still have the drama that no one really wants of “Where will Aaron Rodgers sign?”), but for all intents and purposes, the NFL recedes into the background. Yet, that does not mean an end to team actions. For Houston, have we seen the last of their roster moves? Not that too many big-ticket free agents remain, but the Texans still possess some gaps in their lineup, from quality IOL players, to LB and CB depth to uncertainty about the LS snapper position (yes, apparently Houston is learning that this is an actual thing). Would Houston sign any potential post-June 1st cuts this summer? Perhaps a mid-summer trade from out of nowhere? Not assured of happening, but the chance of Houston standing pat is not zero.

Houston Texans v Indianapolis Colts
Photo by Andy Lyons/Getty Images

FUN WITH NUMBERS:

$9.26M:
Approximate Cap Space available for the 2025 Houston Texans: This doesn’t completely include all signees, but the squad does have a little wiggle room for an under-market signing or two. Perhaps Caserio gets another IOL, or, if nothing else, that cap space rolls over into next season, which given the pending extensions of Stroud and Anderson, the team may need all the money it can get.

3: Consecutive seasons that Houston stars the NFL season on the road: Every year that Stroud opens the season as a Texans’ starting QB, it has been in someone else’s house. His rookie year, he debuted at M&T Stadium in Baltimore. Last season, he started his sophomore season at the scene of his biggest regular season win as a rookie (Indianapolis). The team’s record so far: 1-1. Now, they get to open the year back near where Stroud grew up in Los Angeles, CA. Granted, the Rams do not make a great opener historically for Houston. The Texans lost their last LA trip facing the Rams in 2017 (33-7) and have yet to log a win against the Rams since their return to Los Angeles (0-2 against the LA Rams, 1-4 against the Rams franchise as a whole (1st three matchups were when the squad was in St. Louis).

There aren’t really any Game Balls or Awards of Idiocy to provide at this time, although the Colts could be a contender for dumbest schedule release on-line promo, only by having to delete it so quickly after release. Ah well.

Anyway, hope that this entry into the NFL dead zone finds all well, that maybe the diversions of the Astros or other pursuits go well, and see everyone in late July/Early August when training camps open.

Source: https://www.battleredblog.com/2025/...ston-texans-and-the-2025-nfl-schedule-release
 
Trio of Texans named to PFF’s 25 best NFL players under 25 rankings

AFC Wild Card Playoffs: Los Angeles Chargers v Houston Texans

Photo by Alex Slitz/Getty Images

Will Anderson headlines a trio of young Texans stars amongst PFF’s top 25 NFL players under the age of 25.

The Texans have been on a swift upward trajectory within the hierarchy of the NFL after back-to-back season of not only making the playoffs, but winning at least postseason game, as well. Their quick turnaround has been spurred on by some serious hits in recent NFL drafts and there’s a specific trio that continues to garner highlights even during the offseason.

In a new set of rankings by Pro Football Focus, analyst Jonathon Macri ranked his top 25 players in the NFL under the age of 25. Of those 25, the Texans landed three players all within the top 13. They are edge rusher Will Anderson (seventh), quarterback C.J. Stroud (12th), and cornerback Derek Stingley Jr. (13th).

Here’s what Macri had to say about Houston’s batch of young stars:

On Will Anderson

“After being named the Defensive Rookie of the Year in 2023, Anderson improved upon his excellent debut season with a top-10 PFF overall grade (88.8) for the position in 2024. His improvement as a pass rusher translated to production, including 14.5 sacks, up from his eight as a rookie.”

“Anderson also improved his run defense in Year 2, cracking the top 10 in PFF run-defense grade (81.1) for the first time in his career.”

Through his first two seasons, Anderson has racked up 18 sacks and 26 tackles for loss. He’s also been named AP Defensive Rookie of the Year and was named to the Pro Bowl in 2023. After seeing so much early success, and at such a premium position in the NFL, it’s no surprise that Anderson comes in so high on this list.

On C.J. Stroud

“Stroud would likely be higher on this list if not for a Year 2 that didn’t quite live up to expectations based on his Offensive Rookie of the Year performance in 2023. But, with that said, Stroud was still very good, finishing as the 11th-highest-graded passer (tied) in 2024.”

“Due to that solid play, and the nature of the position, Stroud ranks behind only Jayden Daniels on this list in average PFF WAR generated over the past three seasons, and it’s worth noting that he did so on a larger sample size. Stroud will turn just 24 years old during the 2025 season, so it shouldn’t surprise anyone if Year 3 is his best season yet.”

Stroud may have taken a step back as far as his production goes from his rookie campaign to the 2024 season, he still took the Texans to the playoffs and won double-digit games. He’ll need to take his game up another level to get the Texans over the hump, but he’s off to a great start in his NFL career.

On Derek Stingley Jr.

“Stingley endured some struggles and injuries as a rookie in 2022, but over the past two seasons, he has emerged as one of the best cornerbacks in the league — not just among those under the age of 25.”

“The former third-overall pick delivered a top-five PFF coverage grade in 2023 and then finished the 2024 season with the second-best mark, behind only reigning Defensive Player of the Year Pat Surtain II. Stingley also allowed just a 39.6 NFL passer rating when targeted, the best mark in the league in 2024.”

Stingley Jr. got PAID this offseason and he deserved every penny. After notching just one interception as a rookie, he’s gone on to pick off five passes apiece in each of the 2023 and 2024 seasons. He’s also batted down 36 passes, including 18 in his most recent campaign. When looking at his numbers, I’m actually surprised Stingley isn’t much higher on this list.

Source: https://www.battleredblog.com/2025/...rson-cj-stroud-derek-stingley-pff-25-under-25
 
Value of Things: The Missing Piece

NFL: Cleveland Browns at Denver Broncos

Ron Chenoy-Imagn Images

Could a once great back be the missing piece of the offense?

One of my favorite books growing up was a book titled “The Missing Piece” by Shel Silverstein. In fact, I use it now as a teaching tool when I work high school retreats at my church. Obviously, the story has a lot of deep themes that we really shouldn’t get to here, but the title seemed to ring true for me as I think about the Texans offense.

If you asked most Texans fans what they wanted in one additional player they would probably say a center or guard. That’s certainly fair as the offensive line is still a huge question mark for the upcoming season. However, that may not in fact be the team’s biggest need. Good or bad, the Texans have depth at those positions. It may not be good depth, but it is competition and if one guy goes down we can reasonably be sure that another will play at a similar level. It might not be a good level, but it is what it is at this point.

The Texans drafted wide receiver depth and an additional tight end that could make an impact. While the team did draft Woody Marks and he is certain to fill a role this team needs, the depth at running back might be biggest remaining hole. A 17 game schedule is grueling and expecting a starting running back like Joe Mixon to make it through all 17 games and the playoffs is unrealistic. Who takes his place when he is out?

The Case for Nick Chubb​


We need not be pollyanna about this. Last year was a rough year for Chubb. He had gained over 1500 yards in a previous season and near that amount in another. Chubb is likely not that same guy. He averaged 3.3 yards per attempt last season in an injury-riddled campaign. After all, there is a reason why guys are still available in late May.

He suffered a torn MCL and ACL in 2023 and lost the first half of the 2024 season recovering from those injuries. He missed from week 15 on with a foot injury. So, 2024 was a lost season for him. In six previous seasons, he never averaged fewer than 5.0 yards per carry. He is at nearly 7000 career yards despite missing much of the last two seasons.

The Texans have done this before and it worked. They signed Cam Akers who had a similar injury history. In the end, they flipped Akers for a future draft pick. I’m not sure I would have done that at the time, because it showed continued faith in Dameon Pierce. Pierce simply hasn’t stepped up as a consistent backup running back. Thus, the Texans need to augment the room with someone.

Chubb has been a bell cow in the past, so if Mixon were to go down for a few games he could step in and carry the load some. Otherwise, his bullish running style would fit well with Mixon for between five to ten carries a game. One of the best ways to keep C.J. Stroud upright is by asking him to hand the ball to someone else more often.

What about Woody Marks?​


Chubb has never had more than 36 catches in a season even though he was the primary back in Cleveland for five full seasons. He is not a third down back and certainly not a change of pace back. Marks can fill both of those roles. He might also be able to equip himself as a runner, but I don’t want to rest our chances in 2025 on the off-chance that Marks can be a primary running back when Mixon is out.

So, he still would have an important place in this offense. More importantly, he would serve as the primary secondary back when Mixon is out. Most teams need three solid running backs to get through a season and right now this team has one they know and they hope Marks can be the second.

Who is the odd man out?​


53 man rosters are tricky. You need guys that can do multiple things in order to make everything work. Simplistic logic would indicate that Dare Ogunbowale would be the odd man out, but I’m not so sure. He is a good player on special teams and those players are important. However, he proved unplayable at times and that was particularly true when he was asked to pick up pass rushers in the backfield.

Yet, one can’t help but note that Pierce doesn’t seem to have a spot. Yes, he had a great game against the Titans, but they were clearly tanking and the game was academic. He had such a promising rookie season and he seems like a really great guy and teammate. I generally don’t really hate very many people, but most of us have “sports hate” for certain guys. He will never be one of those. I want him to have success in the league, but I think it just won’t be here.

The beauty of a Chubb is that he would probably come for a one year prove it kind of contract. He wants to showcase that he still has it for another team in 2026. We can let him do that here. The worst that can happen is that the injuries zapped every bit of ability he has and you could stick a fork in him. It would be a small risk and minimal cap hit. The best that can happen is that he proves to be close to his old self and you have a huge upgrade at backup running back.

Source: https://www.battleredblog.com/2025/5/20/24433745/value-of-things-the-missing-piece
 
Houston Texas Rookie Film Analysis: Jaylin Noel

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Texans newest slot receiver possesses scary speed and frightening

How did Iowa State’s set the tone on the first play of the 2024 season? With a 55-yard heave to Jaylin Noel in double coverage. That set the tone for an almost 1,200-yard receiving season and eight touchdowns to go along with. The Houston Texans newest third round receiver boasts incredible play making ability and brings a spark to an otherwise weary wide receiver depth chart.

Today I will be breaking down the film on Houston Texans rookie Jaylin Noel. This will be the first in a weekly column on Wednesdays analyzing each selection in the 2025 class and their projected impact in Houston.

This isn’t another Will Fuller V; Noel has more nuance in his releases and route tree than Fuller did out of college. While Fuller was a superior prospect due to his speed and deep route running, Noel brings short area quickness and legitimate dynamism with the ball in his hands.

When given a free release, Noel is the best deep threat in this class who isn’t a 6’3 and above gargantuan. Based on his film, Noel is more suited to win against man coverage than zones due to his routes being predicated on his speed rather than vision.

One of Noels greatest calling cards is four years of production and each year he had more catches, yards, and touchdowns than the prior season. That resonates with Houston as Noel is only further growing into his potential rather than being a one-hit wonder.

One of the better unknown Youtube channels out there, Just The Tape, compiled every catch and target of Noel this past season.

Best Game: Kansas: eight catches for 167 yards and two touchdowns.

Worst Game: UCF: four drops - one led to a pick six, one in the end zone, and one that ended a drive.

The Fit in Houston:

Everyone wants to know if Noel will replace Tank Dell. Dell is recovering from a catastrophic knee injury and Houston would be foolish to reserve a multi-year roster spot for a player coming off consecutive knee surgeries. In a world where Dell is able to fully heal, they will directly compete in three wide receiver packages. Houston featured four WRs less than 1% of plays in 2024... which means one of them will be on the bench watching the other in 2026.

Noel will be emblematic to Bruce Ellington’s 2017 - 2018 run in Houston where he took the top off the defense for DeAndre Hopkins and Will Fuller to run wild underneath.

He will be utilized in early downs to get plus-yardage (anything greater than three yards) with screens, 5-yard out routes, and curl routes. As his game evolves, he will reintroduce his deep speed into the offense to elongate defenses. He will be an immediate juxtaposition to Nico Collins and former Iowa State receiver Jayden Higgins’ size with quick, zipping routes throughout the field.

Strengths:

  • Two-time captain with four years of production
  • Great outbreaking routes; cuts clean at the top of routes
  • Resource on two minute drill
  • Extremely dynamic with the ball in his hands
  • Acceleration off line of scrimmage
  • Punt and kick return ace
  • Uses pacing to bait corners into biting (personal favorite)

Issues:

  • Not fierce at the catch point; low contested catch
  • Needs to improve getting shoulders around on curl routes
  • Low floor, high ceiling on punt returns; had multiple fumbles
  • Uses hands to basket catch deep balls than attack them with his hands
  • Well documented limited catch radius
  • Limited experience against press coverage; will stay in the slot

Overall Analysis:​


Pure slot receiver. He uses his speed to tempo routes and mask his acceleration. Noel is best when in open space; the issue is getting the ball into his hands. Iowa State found creative ways to scheme him into those opportunities, but NFL offenses aren’t drawn up in the same fashion. Offensive Coordinator Nick Caley must implement a plan to unlock Noel, otherwise the rookie becomes window dressing behind Nico Collins, Jayden Higgins, Christian Kirk, and eventually Tank Dell. Expect his rookie season to have several inspiring highlights but muted overall production as he competes with the new free agents and stalwart young vets (John Metchie III and Xavier Hutchinson) for snaps.

Source: https://www.battleredblog.com/2025/5/21/24432903/houston-texas-rookie-film-analysis-jaylin-noel
 
Poll: Which Houston Texans position group still needs help?

AFC Wild Card Playoffs: Los Angeles Chargers v Houston Texans

Photo by Brooke Sutton/Getty Images

1 guess should be obvious

We’ve made it past the initial free agency surge and the 2025 NFL Draft. At this stage, the 2025 depth chart is coming into focus. It’s easy to say the roster is built for this season with a few minor adjustments still coming.

Teams don’t usually make big, blockbuster trades at this point in the year. However, June has been known to see new faces in new places due to free agency rules. And, once cut down day hits, a variety of players will find themselves unemployed before signing on with other teams.

Houston Texans Quarterback:​


C.J. Stroud is a lock, injuries notwithstanding. Behind him (and above him) is Davis Mills. While Mills isn’t one of the best 32 signal callers in the league, he is a solid backup. Graham Mertz and Kedon Slovis will likely vie for the #3 roster spot, if Nick Caserio and Demeco Ryans have a #3 QB on the roster. Otherwise, expect one to hit the practice squad while the other hits the street.

Houston Texans Running Back:​


Joe Mixon is the bell cow. For sure. Dameon Pierce is still hopeful to return to his 1st year form, while current rookie Woody Marks and career situational back Dare Ogunbowale fill out the room. Jakob Johnson is the sole full back on the roster as of this writing.

Houston Texans Wide Receiver:​


Nico Collins. Nuff said. Behind Nico we have Christian Kirk and Tank Dell floating somewhere between the injury tent and the field, rookies Jayden Higgins and Jaylen Noel, journeymen Xavier Hutchinson, John Metchie III, Braxton Berrios, Johnny Johnson III and Xavier Johnson. Seems stacked, but could also be a house of cards.

Houston Texans Tight End:​


Dalton Shultz still has a lock on the TE1 spot. Next in line we have Brevin Jordan, Cade Stover and Luke Lachey. Moving along...

Houston Texans Offensive Line:​


Cam Robinson, Tytus Howard, Jarrett Patterson, Juice Scruggs and Blake Fisher are currently projected as the starters per ESPN.com. After those fellas, we have rookie Aireontae Ersery, the ancient one Trent Brown, Austin Deculus, Laken Tomlinson, Eli Cox, Ed Ingram and a few others who likely won’t survive training camp. Not seeing anything that makes me confident they won’t cause the undoing of the new offense. But, time will tell.

On the other side of the ball, Demeco Ryans has all the tools to straight clown opposing offenses. OC’s for the Indianapolis Colts, Jacksonville Jaguars and BESFs are gonna need to put on their big boy pants before facing this group.

Houston Texans Defensive Line:​


Will Anderson Jr., Danielle Hunter, Tim Settle Jr., Folorunso Fatukasi, Denico Autry, Sheldon Rankins, Mario Edwards Jr., are the projected starters and 2nd level rotation.


#Texans defense will be fun.

DE - WAJ
DT - Tim Settle Jr.
DT - Foley Fatukasi
DE - Danielle Hunter
LB - Azeez Al-Shaair
LB - Henry To’oTo’o / Christian Harris
NB/LB - Jalen Pitre
CB - Derek Stingley Jr.
CB - Kamari Lassiter
S - Calen Bullock
S - C.J. Gardner-Johnson… pic.twitter.com/lAVH1GduQU

— Mr. InvisibleTexan (@InvisibleTexans) May 20, 2025

Houston Texans Linebackers:​


Henry To’oTo’o, Azeez Al-Shaair and Christian Harris are the starters. E.J. Speed and Nick Niemann are the rotational guys. This group is certainly not as stacked as the defensive line. However, Anderson Jr. and Hunter both come off the edge like outside linebackers when the play calls for it.

Houston Texans Cornerbacks:​


Derek Stingley Jr., Kamari Lassiter, Tremon Smith and Ronald Darby make up this group. Sting and Lassiter are pro bowl caliber guys. But if one or both gets injured, this group falls from top tier to average quickly. And, don’t forget nickel backs Jalen Pitre and Jaylin Smith.

Houston Texans Safeties:​


Calen Bullock, C.J. Gardner-Johnson, Jimmie Ward and M.J. Stewart. Bullock and CJGJ, combined with Sting and Lassiter are, without a doubt, the most lethal starting secondary the Houston Texans have ever had. Throw Jalen Pitre in the mix and this should turn into the most locked down pass defense in Houston football history.

This will likely be 95% of the men to take the field this season, barring injuries and mental failures.

Where do you see an area of weakness? Where should Caserio and crew concentrate on further wheeling & dealing to bring in others? Or do you think this is the best depth chart they could assemble in the current NFL climate?

Which brings us to the poll:

Source: https://www.battleredblog.com/2025/...ouston-texans-position-group-still-needs-help
 
Houston Texans that would be perfect for Olympic Flag Football

Miami Dolphins v Houston Texans

Photo by Alex Slitz/Getty Images

Who should represent the Battle Red in LA for the 2028 Olympics?

The NFL just approved players for the 2028 LA Olympics in an honestly shocking unanimous vote by the owners. While the USA are unshockingly first in the world flag football rankings, the inclusion of the NFL’s best talent can’t hurt in the inaguagural season of the sport on the world stage.

The rules are fairly simple for the sport and highly encourage two-way players with short-area speed over the behemoths on the offensive and defensive line. Here are the official rules.

Olympic Flag Football Rules:

  • Field is 70-by-25 yards
  • 10-man roster
  • Possessions start at team’s 5-yard line
  • Centers can become a receiver
  • 5-on-5; includes one QB and one defensive pass rusher
  • Pass rusher starts 7 yards from line of scrimmage
  • Cannot rush within 5 yards of end zone
  • 40-minute games: Two 20-minute halves (including 2-minute warning)
  • Four downs to reach midfield and four downs to score touchdown
  • No run plays within 5 yards of end zone
  • QBs can’t run unless lateraled the ball
  • 6 points for a touchdown, 1 point conversion from 5-yard line, and 2 point conversion from 10-yard line
  • Overtime if score is tied with each team getting equal chance to win

Here was a recent quarterfinals featuring the USA vs Italy in Flag Football.

Tank Dell​


Dell gets the nod over Nico Collins due to his unique athleticism, agility, and shiftiness. He will surely be recovered from his current knee injury by 2028 and back in the saddle by then. I assume Justin Jefferson and Jamarr Chase would be selected over Collins, but Dell brings an elite level of dynamic slot receiver play that compliments the bigger targets of Jefferson and Chase. With such a small field, having Dell who can sneak into tight windows would be an undeniable asset on the journey to a gold medal.

Derek Stingley Jr.​


Secondary players need to have legitimate coverage skills. Stingley Jr. is primarily zone cover cover, but with such a short field he will excel in man coverage. What separates him a part is he’s only 23 and will be in the prime of his career come the Olympics. His five interceptions in each of the last two seasons will be invaluable in a high-octane game such as flag football. It also means he can substitute in as a receiver if needed. Stingley was also chosen in CBS Sports’ Best Possible NFL Flag Football team post.

Calen Bullock​


Bullock standing at 6’3 would be an imposing figure on the backend of the USA defense and would only be 25 during the Olympics. The second-year safety had an outstanding rookie campaign where he also notched five interceptions in 2024. Bullock’s range will make it impossible for opposing offenses to go deep. He can cover a 53-yard field from side to side, so a 25 yard field wouldn't; be an issue.

Tremon Smith​


A much lesser-known name, but Smith is the best utility player on the Texans by far. Smith played QB, safety, and kick return in high school Have a versatile, two-way player is extremely important to a successful 10-man team. Especially if you’re going to bring two QBs (which is the norm), you need at least one player who can go both ways.

Jalen Pitre​


Pitre can provide value in every aspect for a flag football defense. If you need him in man coverage, the six-foot defensive back has you covered. If a robber-esque safety that’s uber-popular in flag football is needed, he can excel in that role. Then, the all important pass rusher has to have downhill speed who isn’t going to let the opposing QB scramble and make plays. I can’t imagine a better player for the Texans to showcase than Pitre on defense.

Brevin Jordan​


Jordan is an NFL-mismatch, but would be an even bigger advantage at the flag football level. I’m selecting Jordan to actually play the center role, This position occupied the middle of the field, doesn’t participate in blocking (because he can’t), and usually posts up in the middle of the field. Jordan is great at boxing out and using his size to dominate opponents. The USA feature a big power-forward type player who dismantled Italy in the above game with his size in the red zone and Jordan can play that role for the USA.

Jaylin Noel​


The final option is Noel who would feature extremely well. Noel’s slants and acceleration would break a part any defense in a short area. Noel also threw the ball multiple times at Iowa State and can be featured in the extremely powerful double pass game. Noel’s phone booth shiftiness will be hard to stop and could prove to be a difference maker in three years.

Non-Honorable Mentions:​


C.J. Stroud doesn’t get the honor or representing the USA due to his proclivity to hold onto the ball. Flag football is predicated on either scrambling or getting the ball out immediately, and there are better QBs at both of those qualities right now. While Will Anderson Jr. or Danielle Hunter are elite defensive ends, they have extremely limited service outside of rushing the passer. Plus, no one is blocking them in flag football, which means a more agile player would be a better fit than these muscled-up ends.

Source: https://www.battleredblog.com/2025/...at-would-be-perfect-for-olympic-flag-football
 
Some Memorial Day thoughts from Battle Red Blog

Flags In Takes Place At Arlington National Cemetery Ahead Of Memorial Day

Photo by Andrew Harnik/Getty Images

We hope you are enjoying the celebratory nature of day, while remembering the reason why it is on the calendar.

This weekend signifies some key things to America. On one hand, it is regarded as the unofficial start to summer. Many schools (grade school/college) ended (or are about to end) their spring/year terms and students return to the world for summer actions. Community pools and summer-associated activities look to this weekend as the kickoff for their season. Setting aside the commercialization of this weekend (is any consumer-based business not running a sale right now?), it can be a moment of joy in a world that is not exactly teaming with reasons for celebrations. Given that this is a football site, Memorial Day also means the promise that just over two months from this weekend, training camps open and the next NFL season awaits.

Yet, there is the other significance of the weekend, one that can get overshadowed by all the hoopla over the start of the “American Summer Season”. Since the end of the US Civil War, and officially since the mid-20th century, the 4th Monday in May equals Memorial Day, when the nation recognizes the sacrifice of those who fought and died under the American flag. From the Revolutionary War to the current day, over 1.2 million Americans paid the ultimate price. There will be the requisite parades, the laying of wreaths and other outward shows of emotion and recognition. While the primary focus for this day is the honored dead, Memorial Day is also a chance to recognize those that fought and survived as well (even as we have another day on the calendar specifically dedicated to veterans in November). A time to rally around the flag, celebrating what is great about America, but mindful of the cost to achieve those celebrations.

Hopefully this finds you able to take advantage of the celebratory nature of the weekend, but also able to reflect and consider the underlying reason for this particular American holiday. This may not be the easiest of times for some, as they reflect on those who can’t join in the celebrations, so be mindful of those folks. In some respects, it can feel a little uncomfortable to outright say “Happy Memorial Day,” given the somber nature of the day. Yet, if you honor the sacrifices paid, then it can be a celebratory remembrance. As always, we at Battle Red Blog ask you to celebrate responsibly. We want to see y’all back here after the holiday in the same or better shape than when the weekend started.

Source: https://www.battleredblog.com/2025/5/26/24437152/some-memorial-day-thoughts-from-battle-red-blog
 
Tapped In: Weekly Houston Texans Q&A

Pittsburgh Steelers v Houston Texans

Photo by Carmen Mandato/Getty Images

We are about 100 days away from the start of the 2025 NFL season, but the good news is that organized training activities are beginning this week for the Houston Texans, therefore a lot of content is coming.

“Are you nervous about the offensive line?” - @chris_perry_1


The short answer to this question is yes, but I think there is a world in which this group could be better than the group last year, but that wouldn’t be saying very much.

There are a few reasons to be optimistic, and one of those reasons is the fact that they fired Bobby Slowik, who was their offensive coordinator, along with Chris Strausser, who was their offensive line coach. That in itself should improve the group tremendously because they do have some talent, and now it is about bringing out the best in them, which did not happen last year.

Another reason for optimism is fact that they actually have options this offseason. Last season, most of the starting spots on the offensive line were predetermined, and now I believe that every spot will be up for grabs.

If this group can even be average, it will be a huge step up from the season prior, and the offense has the chance to be very good.

“Do you truly believe that we have enough weapons at the wide receiver position?” - @jackthadon_32


I am a huge believer in this wide receiver core as it stands. The group has a true number one wide receiver in Nico Collins, a proven veteran in Christian Kirk, and two young options in Jayden Higgins and Jaylin Noel, who possess extreme potential.

Higgins has drawn comparisons to Collins by several of the top draft analysts, which should be downright scary for opposing defenses, and will help a lot with contested catches, and pushing the ball downfield.

Noel is also someone that you should not underestimate, due to his ability to get open quickly, and his ability after the catch.

“Will the Texans sign a free agent running back or trade for a player like Jalen Ramsey?” - @peter_scott_1965


I think it is very possible for the Texans to sign a free agent running back, and there were some rumors linking the team to J.K. Dobbins, who would be a great addition at this point in the offseason.

As far as Ramsey goes, I am almost 100% sure that the team will not trade for him. He is still a good player, but Houston is stacked in the secondary, and it would not be worth it to send draft capital for a player that is not needed.

“Do we have the ability to be the best defense in the league?” - @travis_atwood21


I genuinely believe that Houston’s defense could be one of, if not the best in the league after the 2025 season comes to an end.

Starting at the defensive line, they are stacked with Will Anderson Jr. on one side, and Danielle Hunter on the other side. Add in Sheldon Rankins, Tim Settle, Denico Autry, Darrell Taylor and Derek Barnett to the mix, and that is a scary group.

Linebacker is a bit uncertain, due to Christian Harris missing most of the 2024 season, therefore it is uncertain if he will get that job back from Henry To’oTo’o, who played well in his absence.

Harris has all the potential in the world to be a great player in the league, but he needs to stay healthy, and that has not been the case. You also have Azeez Al-Shaair, who is their middle linebacker, and one of the leaders of the defense. He is a game changer for Houston.

The secondary may be the best in the league. Derek Stingley Jr. and Kamari Lassiter are an outstanding duo, and on the back end you have Jalen Pitre, who just signed a multi-year extension, Calen Bullock, who had five interceptions as a rookie, along with CJ Gardner-Johnson, who was acquired this offseason.

“Who do you think TE2 will be?” - @hawkes1977


I think as of now, it will probably be Brevin Jordan, who unfortunately tore his ACL last year. His presence on the field was definitely missed, and I think he could have a big season in offensive coordinator Nick Caley’s offense.

Cade Stover, who was Houston’s fourth-round pick in the 2024 NFL Draft, is someone with a bit of potential, and you should definitely keep your eye on him as well.

Submit your questions to @nickschwagernfl on instagram to be featured next week!

Source: https://www.battleredblog.com/2025/5/27/24438159/tapped-in-weekly-houston-texans-q-a-nfl
 
Mapping out a C.J. Stroud contract

Golden State Warriors v Houston Rockets - Game One

Photo by Alex Slitz/Getty Images

What might a contract look like for the star QB?

There are two contracts looming for the Houston Texans over the next calendar year. They cannot officially give C.J. Stroud or Will Anderson extensions until after the season. Yet, we can imagine what they might look like by looking at current contracts for current stars at those positions. We will begin with Stroud. It seems at quarterback that the Rubicon appears to be 50 million dollars per season in average annual value. If we look at just those players then we can guess a contract.

More importantly than guessing a contract we should probably also ask what those players have in common in terms of performance. Unfortunately, that is putting the cart before the horse. We should begin with the contracts. In addition to AAV, we will also look at total value and average annual value.

Sometimes these tables get truncated. There are eleven quarterbacks there. There is one notable name missing. While Patrick Mahomes has a 450 million dollar contract, there are more than ten seasons on that contract, so his AAV comes in at below 50 million a season. Sure, some of that might be being the first of these guys to sign, but some of that was him leaving money on the table.

Those guys usually come along once in a generation and the Chiefs were able to talk him into taking a huge total sum. Without an adjustment, it will help them afford more pieces around him as the salary cap continues to go up. The rest all seem to be falling within a familiar zone.

To keep us honest throughout this study we will look at not only the mean but also the median. That will help keep us honest in case one or two numbers skew the aggregate some. Before we get to the performance data we should probably take a look at the contract averages according to the mean and median.

Obviously, an ambitious agent will point out that Dak Prescott is at the 60 million plateau but that is because Jerry Jones is an idiot. The rest of these guys all wound up between 51 and 55 million in AAV. So, Stroud will probably end up somewhere between five years and 255 and 5 years 275 million. Of course, the next question is whether he deserves that kind of money.

When we look at these 11 quarterbacks we should probably look at what they have done over the past two seasons. From there we can establish a median and mean like we did with the salary numbers. Finally, we can convert those numbers back into a per 15 game estimate to see what Stroud would have to do to reach their level.

Again, these numbers are fairly tight across the board with the exception of one player. Trevor Lawrence sticks out like a turd in a punch bowl. That is the main thing everyone is after. They want to avoid paying big money to guys that don’t produce like everyone else making big money. Lawrence hasn’t done that so far. The good news is that he hasn’t actually played under THIS contract yet, so he has an opportunity to make good.

This is why we use a median. When we have one guy well under the rest or one guy well beyond the rest then it tends to skew the mean. Either way, we can look at the mean and median and then convert those into a single season sum to see if those numbers are doable for Stroud.

For many, these numbers won’t mean much of anything. After all, these are players that played in between ten to 17 games per season, so it is hard to imagine them within a single season paradigm. Yet, on average, these guys played in 15 games per season. So, if we convert these numbers into per 15 game numbers then we get a good estimate for the kind of player Stroud would need to be to fit within this group.

In other words, it looks like year one was pretty close to what Stroud needs to do to fit within this group. Naturally, there are the other quarterbacks out there not making 50 million per season that play like they make that much. We are talking guys like Mahomes, Baker Mayfield, Matthew Stafford, and Jayden Daniels. We could be looking at guys like Caleb Williams too if things break right for him.

The question is whether this new offense and new players will be enough to help him get there. It also means he needs to get rid of the ball quicker and make some better decisions along the way. These are things we can hope for in year three, with new linemen, and a new offensive coordinator. There are no guarantees. What do you think? Is Stroud good enough to put up these numbers? Would you give him that much money? Let’s hear from you in the comments.

Source: https://www.battleredblog.com/2025/5/28/24438399/mapping-out-a-c-j-stroud-contract
 
Stock Up, Stock Down for Houston Texans at Voluntary OTAs

NFL: Tennessee Titans at Houston Texans

Thomas Shea-Imagn Images

Which Houston Texans ETF are you buying this offseason?

Voluntary Organized Team Activities (OTAs) have kicked off, and it is the first time the rookies and veterans all are in the same building... or a gigantic bubble for the Texans.

A whirlwind of moves and countermoves have occurred this offseason in Houston, most of which has left the offense starkly different than the one that ended 2024. These decisions have impacted the stock and positioning of those previously on the roster. Like the S&P 500 in recent weeks, the Texans have had a tumultuous offseason of ups and downs on their potential outlook.

As for the players themselves, this article identifies those already on the roster before free agency and the draft who saw their stock change the most due to offseason moves.

Stock Up: Juice Scruggs – Guard/Center​


Scruggs watched as almost every other starter from the 2024 offensive line was shipped off in some fashion. Scruggs’ versatility affords him the opportunity to start at multiple positions across the offensive line - including both recently vacated guard spots. Houston added several uninspiring veterans to bridge the gap at guard, and they failed to add any interior lineman through the draft.

Houston spent the offseason adding uninspiring veterans before ignoring the interior line in the draft altogether, which has cleared a path for start in 2025. While his own play has received its own scorn, the former 2023 second rounder will have another shot to develop into a formidable starter on the offensive line.

Good chance we see the Texans 2025 IOL week 1 look identical to the group they used in W18 & WC with Tytus Howard, Jarrett Patterson & Juice Scruggs starting left to right.

Over those 2 games they allowed a combined 9 pressures & 1 sack with Scruggs & Patterson both being 69+… pic.twitter.com/vefBFjSzlB

— Jacob (@TexansJacob) May 12, 2025

Stock Down: John Mechie III - Wide Reciever​


No player was more adversely affected by free agency and the draft than John Metchie III. The arrivals of Christian Kirk and rookie Jaylin Noel have pushed him further down the depth chart. Of the three, Metchie is the most expendable and can be released without financial consequence. Entering a contract year, he’s lost nearly all leverage in the battle for a role in the offense, let alone a roster spot. His best hope is that Kirk’s recovery takes longer than expected and that Noel requires additional time to develop.

Stock Up: Tim Settle Jr. – Defensive Tackle​


Tim Settle was arguably the most underappreciated Texan last season. By year’s end, he finessed his way into a starting role and logged 160 more snaps than any other defensive tackle on the roster. While Pro Football Focus ranked him 99th out of 219 defensive linemen, Settle quietly finished 24th in the league in total pressures—highlighting his impact beyond the grading system.

It’s apparent Nick Caserio and DeMeco Ryans do not prioritize defensive tackles. They have neglected to invest serious capital in the position for the second straight year. While the public pushed for Houston to add a top-end pick in the draft, they settled with seventh rounder Kyonte Hamilton. The position is crowded with more options than available roster spots, but one of those should be firmly in Settle’s hands.

Stock Down: Kurt Hinish - Defensive Tackle​


Hinish resigned on a one-year deal this offseason. While Tim Settle’s role is firmly in place, Hinish’s stock has tumbled. The offseason initially looked promising for Hinish when Houston waited until the seventh round to add a DT, but immediately after the draft they signed multiple veterans, tanking Hinish’s stock. Caserio chose to run it back with Foley Fatukasi, Mario Edwards, and Sheldon Rankins and resigned all three this offseason (Rankins returning after one season with Cincinnati). Hinish now sits as the fifth or sixth DT on the roster for a position that carries only four players.

Stock Up: Henry To’oTo’o - Linebacker​


Another under appreciated defensive stalwart, To’oTo’o is making a case to be the best Texans day-three draft pick since D.J. Reader in 2016. He has snatched the linebacker role from an injured Christian Harris and played exceptionally well alongside Azeez Al-Shaair.

The ultra productive linebacker saw Houston add only one piece to the position this offseason. Harris, who we will detail below, is To’oTo’o greatest adversary for snaps, but appears to be struggling through a much longer-term recovery than anticipated.

Stock Down: Jimmie Ward​


Ward missed seven games in 2024 due to injury. Subsequently, he watched as Houston traded for C.J. Gardner-Johnson, draft Penn State safety Jaylen Reed, and extend Jalen Pitre in rapid succession. Plus, last year rookie stand out Calen Bullock all but stole the show for Houston in the secondary with five interceptions.

Ward was reported absent from OTAs while healing from foot surgery this offseason. He will be 34 by the time the season starts and could easily be a roster casualty at the expense of younger, healthier options.

Several veterans not at #Texans voluntary OTA, including Joe Mixon, who's been in walking boot recently for injury sources call minor, Dalton Schultz, C.J. Gardner-Johnson, Christian Harris, Jimmie Ward (foot surgery), Brevin Jordan (ACL tear last season), Danielle Hunter, Dameon… pic.twitter.com/Db0CUnEwNs

— Aaron Wilson (@AaronWilson_NFL) May 28, 2025

Stock Up: Dalton Schultz​


Schultz’s much-maligned postseason wasn’t disparaging enough to force the Texans to find another long-term solution at tight end. Houston’s sole addition this offseason was seventh rounder Luke Lachey, whose highest season reception total at Iowa was 28 catches. While Houston did inject a bevy of pass catchers to the offense, Schultz role as a pass catching tight end should be undisturbed in 2025. Combine that with Brevin Jordan’s recovering from ACL surgery in September and second-year tight end Cade Stover far from a finished product, and Schultz’s starting role is all but secure.

Stock Down: Christian Harris​


If Christian Harris was a stock, he’d be Peloton. They really had their moment in the sun, but all of a sudden the world has moved past them and they aren’t as cool and innovative anymore. Harris was once the crown jewel of a young defense and now he is your mother’s porcelain vase gathering dust in the living room of your childhood house.

JUST IN: If you invested $10,000 in Peloton in 2021, today it would be worth around $500.

Peloton Interactive, Inc. is an American exercise equipment and media company based in New York City.

This is not crypto, this is stock.. If you are afraid of losses then you don’t… pic.twitter.com/W2DcM6fO37

— Grok Satoshi (@Groksatoshi) May 28, 2025

On the depth chart, Harris is listed as a backup along with newly acquired E.J. Speed. Speed and Harris possess many of the same traits and one wouldn’t be hard pressed to evaluate Speed as a backup option for Harris. He does benefit from the Texans avoiding LB in the draft, but between the recent injury persistence, signing of speed, and now absence from voluntary OTAs.... his stock is crashing like it’s ‘08. As with Metchie, Harris is entering a contract year and a season with immense competition for playing time.

Honorable mention stock up: LaDarius Henderson, C.J. Stroud

Honorable mention stock down: Davis Mills, Solomon Byrd

Source: https://www.battleredblog.com/2025/...ock-down-for-houston-texans-at-voluntary-otas
 
Poll: Which offensive line position still needs help?

AFC Wild Card Playoffs: Los Angeles Chargers v Houston Texans

Photo by Brooke Sutton/Getty Images

That escalated quickly...

Last week’s poll brought the expected response in a landslide of votes. Most Houston Texans fans are still concerned about the state of the 2025 offensive line.

Despite very promising showings at OTAs this week from the wide receivers, defensive backs, linebackers and quarterback C.J. Stroud, questions remain. Maybe, the biggest difference for the 2025 season is new offensive coordinator Nick Calley. Well, maybe more than maybe.

Regardless, we’re talking big men in the trenches today.


#Texans quarterback C.J. Stroud broke huddle with overhauled OL combination, written in pencil, as there will be a lot of competition. LT Cam Robinson, LG Laken Tomlinson, C Jake Andrews and Jarrett Patterson alternating, RG Tytus Howard, RT Blake Fisher among early looks @KPRC2 pic.twitter.com/QeoltX06Ai

— Aaron Wilson (@AaronWilson_NFL) May 28, 2025

2025 Houston Texans offensive line depth chart - OTA Edition​


LT - Cam Robinson

LG - Laken Tomlinson

C - Jake Andrews

RG - Tytus Howard

RT - Blake Fisher

That’s what you call new places for new, and old, faces. And, quite honestly, none of them chase away all doubt. But, it’s only May, so the next few months will provide the coaching staff a chance to make alterations as necessary. It should also provide valuable snaps as a unit. As the mighty Matt Weston would tell us, the strength of the o-line is working together, not individually.

If this depth chart changes dramatically for minicamps, then again for training camps, it might be a solid expectation that the o-line will struggle for the first half of the season.


Texans OTAs is underway.

DeMeco Ryans talking with the offensive line. pic.twitter.com/98qP703oL4

— Will Kunkel (@WillKunkelFOX) May 28, 2025

But, leader of men Demeco Ryans is on the job. If he and Calley can get this group of big ballers acting as one, the sky is the limit for this offense.

It is the off-season, as we all know, where hope springs eternal. So, let’s just assume this is unit that hits the field in week one.

Cam Robinson will likely get every chance to succeed before the hook happens.

Laken Tomlinson, the former pro bowl guard, is an immediate upgrade.


The Texans got their guard. Laken Tomlinson pic.twitter.com/iifRkj8Aso

— big ounce (@_bigounce) March 11, 2025

Jake Andrews, former New England Patriots lineman, has allegedly supplanted Juice Scruggs in the anchor spot. Time will tell.

Tytus Howard at right guard is a little surprising, although he’s moved around the line more than any Texan in recent memory.

Blake Fisher at right tackle could pay huge dividends. The former Notre Dame monster has been waiting for his chance to grab the brass ring since the Texans took him with the 59th overall pick in 2024.


If the Texans OL continues to play without tenacity it may be time to implement RT Blake Fisher into the lineup

The 21 year old has a nasty streak and could also have positional versatility pic.twitter.com/i90y9h4HLi

— Andrew Bohovich (@DrewScouts) September 23, 2024

Behind these men we have rookie Aireontae Ersery, the aforementioned Scruggs, Trent “been playing pro football since before you were born” Brown, Austin Deculus, Eli Cox, Ed Ingram and a few others. Aside from Ersery, who is hopefully a solid backup as he percolates on the bench for 2026, there’s not much there.

Which brings us to the poll for the week:

Source: https://www.battleredblog.com/2025/5/29/24439210/poll-which-offensive-line-position-still-needs-help
 
Houston Texans will open up salary cap space this weekend

Miami Dolphins v Houston Texans

Photo by Cooper Neill/Getty Images

The Texans will get some short-term salary cap relief this weekend following a contract move with Shaq Mason.

The Houston Texans are among a handful of NFL teams that will receive a significant bump in salary cap space this weekend as the league turns the page from June 1 to June 2. The Texans released offensive lineman Shaq Mason in March with a post-June 1 designation, and the 2025 salary cap space created from that move becomes available on June 2.

What is a post-June 1 designation in the NFL?


The post-June 1 designation is a mechanism in play for NFL teams to use in order to release a player in March, April, or May in a move that simultaneously benefits the player and the team. Once June 2 hits, dead-money cap hits are spread over two seasons instead of accelerated into the current season. Instead of holding on to a player for months you already know you’re going to cut, you release them in March and apply the cap advantage in June.

Players get to sign when there are roster spots and lots of cash available from other teams. Teams don’t have to pay roster bonuses or option bonuses or worry about that player getting hurt and kicking in an injury guarantee.

How does this designation change the Texans salary cap?​


Mason’s existing cap hit was set to be just under $14.6 million in 2025, and that’s what has been sitting on the books since the league year opened in March.

If Davis had just been released normally, his cap hit would fall to $12.482 million — the amount of remaining dead cap on his contract.

With the post-June 1 release, his cap hit will be considerably lower than that roughly $12.5 million dead cap hit, splitting it between 2025 and 2026. His cap number in 2025 will now be $5.158 million with $7.324 million pushed into 2026.

Every dollar paid to a player eventually is counted on the cap. This is just a way to delay it.

Should we expect a Texans roster move with this new cap space?​


The Texans had been right up against the cap, with only $3.8 million in available Top-51 space before the move. Most teams like having $10 million or so available for in-season roster flexibility in the case of injury, so unless we see another cap move — like an easy restructure of Dalton Schultz’s base salary — the Texans will likely be content to stand still with their remaining cap space.

Source: https://www.battleredblog.com/2025/...space-this-weekend-post-june-1-cut-shaq-mason
 
Houston Texans Rookie Film Analysis: Woody Marks

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AP

Houston’s newest running back is unlike anything Houston has seen

Our second installment of this year’s Houston Texans Rookie Film Review covers the fourth round running back Woody Marks out of USC. Last week we featured WR Jaylin Noel’s Film Review.

ESPN Positioned Woody Marks as a “Situational back and backups” in their recent rookie running back role tiers article, which is the fifth tier of running backs listed.

Houston’s history of drafting running backs has been a story of limited investment returning limited earnings. Marks is the next installment of a growing list group of late-round RBs, most of which were never given a fair shot to contribute. Marks stands out from the other picks as possibly the best pass-catching running back Houston has ever drafted.

It’s rare to find a running back who is both willing to run in between the tackles and is exceptional catching the ball. It forces opposing defenses to respect the run while having personnel to avoid him reeling off an eight yard catch on first down. His versatility allows is for him to be a three-down back rather than simply a third-down back.

Here is the 38+ minutes of tape we’ll be dissecting today.

His primary toolkit as a running back includes a jab step to throw off defenders and low running style when bracing for contact. You rarely, if ever, witness “special” plays from Marks but his consistency and hard-nosed mentality balances well with his pass catching capabilities.

He rarely sifts through blocks and instead punches forward like a pin through a wall. NFL.com lists him as a “slashing complementary back”, which is actually spot on given their broad stroking scouting.


USC's Woody Marks is probably the best RB in the #NFLDraft2025 class you haven't seen play. He's BUILT for today's dual-backfield NFL game.

Explosive rusher with 261 career collegiate receptions. Don't sleep. pic.twitter.com/8Az8Fe8MH6

— Ray G (@RayGQue) January 7, 2025

The Fit in Houston:


His ceiling is a feature back for two or three seasons, but his floor is a semi-rotational pass catcher who never establishes himself as an RB2. Texans in an extremely cloudy offense. Joe Mixon is the incumbent, but should only have two, maybe three seasons of lead back left in him. Dameon Pierce has never developed beyond his first season. Then there is a host of unproven young backs from last year’s class who could make a play for a roster spot. Marks can receive immediate playing time by supporting the passing game where he shines the most. With time and experience, Marks can take over the backfield in modern NFL-style running back role where he sports 200 carries and 50 receptions every year of his career.

Strengths:

  • Patience and acceleration are his calling cards
  • Led college football twice at Miss State in receptions
  • Experience in multiple systems between USC and Miss. State’
  • NFL-style vision waiting for blocks to develop
  • Consistently falls forward for extra yardage
  • Deliberate and aggressive when holes open up in run game
  • Turns elusiveness up in passing game
  • One-cut running style is scheme-agnostic
  • One career fumble on 608 carries

Weaknesses:

  • While his open field vision is strong, he can become narrowly focused or “funneled” when he is running into the second level
  • Doesn’t break his runs to the outside and prefers to jolt forward for a few more yards
  • Doesn’t break tackles
  • People say he’s not a home run hitter, but it’s more that he isn't shifty against safeties
  • Pass blocking is poor and can be a career limiting
  • Already 24 years old; entering his prime as a rookie
  • Limited athletic profile; average testing at the NFL Combine

Overall Analysis:


Marks is a one-cut back, possesses elite pass-catching ability, and can be a hard-nosed runner between the tackles. While his toolkit to evade tacklers is limited, he has distinctly progressed in this category since his time at Mississippi State. Cursory scouting analysis will stigmatize him as a scat back, but rather, he is crafted in the mold of more modern three-down running backs such as Chase Brown, Kyren Williams, James Cook, and Bucky Irving.

Comparisons: J.D. McKissic

Source: https://www.battleredblog.com/2025/5/28/24436563/houston-texans-rookie-film-analysis-woody-marks
 
What If: The Houston Texans drafted Derek Carr in 2014?

Las Vegas Raiders v New Orleans Saints

Photo by Cooper Neill/Getty Images

Imagine if playing QB for the Houston Texans became the Carr family business.

Perhaps one of the biggest post-draft NFL headlines centered on New Orleans Saints’ QB Derek Carr’s retirement. Carr left the NFL as a 4-time Pro Bowler, playing for two franchises: Oakland/Las Vegas Raiders and New Orleans Saints. He amassed a 77-92 record (0-1 playoff record), 257 TDs and 112 INTs.

Maybe Carr never lived up to the promise of being a true franchise QB for either the Raiders or the Saints. Yet, his path might have taken a different turn. There was a chance that maybe Derek followed the path of his older brother, David, and called Houston his first professional home. What if Houston decided to make that happen?

The 2014 draft class didn’t have the can’t-miss QB of 2013 (Andrew Luck). The top QB prospects along with Carr: Blake Bortles (UCF), Teddy Bridgewater (Louisville) and former Heisman Trophy Winner Johnny Manziel (Texas A&M). However, most felt DL Jadeveon Clowney (South Carolina) rated the top overall prospect. On night one the draft plays out the same as in reality. Houston goes with Clowney to pair with J.J. Watt to offer one of the most devastating pass rush combinations in the league (that didn’t quite happen). Bortles (3), Manziel (22) and Bridgewater (32) still go in the first round. Thus, when night two opens, Houston against sat in the pole position, able to select the best of the remaining prospects. If Houston wanted a first-round valued QB for a second round price, Carr was right there.

Yet, a couple of things hinders Houston picking Carr. Included in the wreckage of the 2013 was bad offensive line play. The Texans offensive line offered little consistency in 2013, and with a new offensive philosophy, change was inevitable. Plus, BO’B and the new staff felt that Houston lacked a degree of interior toughness in 2013, and bringing in some muscle might fix some long-standing toughness issues.

Then the curse of history. Most remembered older brother David was the first pick of the then-expansion Texans in 2002. Blessed with a rocket arm and good looks, David Carr appeared straight out of central casting for a franchise QB. Unfortunately, Houston forgot the supporting cast of offensive lineman. David Carr suffered five years of pain in Houston, never able to elevate the Texans to where they wanted to go, but also, he left Houston broken after 249 sacks. Thus, the Carr family might have had less-than-warm feelings towards Houston, and the Houston fanbase, disappointed by David Carr’s inability to elevate the team, felt the same about the Carrs.

History is uncertain if the Texans worried too much about the past, but Houston went with OG Xavier Su’a-Filo (XSF) from UCLA, and Derek Carr fell to Oakland a few picks later. XSF graded by some as the best guard in the draft, but he never lived up to the billing. While Carr would not play in Houston, he later confessed that he was “heart-broken” that Houston passed on him.

However, let’s say that Houston decided to go ahead and bring in Derek Carr. For one, Houston possessed a better Oline for Derek vs. David. Additionally, with a QB like Fitzpatrick, Derek didn’t face the pressure David did. In reality, BO’B went with Fitzpatrick over Tom Savage, the fourth round rookie to open 2014. In this timeline, Fitzpatrick still breaks camp as the starter, but perhaps with a shorter leash with Carr in the wings.


Imagine if Carr wore not this red, but the Battle Red version?

In reality, Carr missed out on a decent situation. Houston returned many of the key pieces from their playoff runs in 2011/2012, rendering 2013 a painful anomaly. Carr lacked weapons like WRs Andre Johnson and DeAndre Hopkins and RB Arian Foster. The defense, with players like Watt and Johnathan Joseph, could help a young QB mitigate any offensive mistakes.

Let’s say that 2014 plays out similar in this timeline. Fitzpatrick is playing well and Houston maintains a winning record, but his margin for error is far less. When Houston enters the bye at 4-5, Houston decides to let Carr start at Cleveland, with Carr’s first TD pass going to Watt. However, Carr struggles in a home loss to Cleveland, and BO’B decides to go back to Fitzpatrick. Fitzpatrick plays well, but suffers a season-ending injury at Indy, and Carr takes over for the rest of the year. In this timeline, Keenum returns to the Houston roster, but only as backup depth. Houston still finishes 9-7, Watt still has a season for the ages, and Houston still misses the playoffs.

It is in 2015 where history starts taking a major turn. The Hoyer/Mallett/Savage QB drama that dominated in the real time never happens. Carr enters the 2015 season as the undisputed starter. In the real timeline, Carr puts up 32 TDs to 13 INTs, and leads Oakland to a 7-9 record. Here, Carr puts up similar numbers, only with a better overall defense. Houston manages to win the AFC South, but with a 10-6 record. They still host Kansas City in the Wild Card round, Unfortunately, Watt’s injury, combined with too many early Houston mistakes, sees Houston fall 23-17. A disappointing end to a season, but at least Houston feels they may have something at QB.

In the 2016 offseason, Houston spends big in free agency on OG Jeff Allen and RB Lamar Miller. However, Houston passes on free agent QB Brock Osweiler. The team enters 2016 full of optimism that with Carr and the new additions, they can truly contend for a title. The Texans defense, even without Watt but with Clowney, still ends the season rated #1 in total defense. With two years of NFL experience under his belt, Carr puts up stellar numbers for Houston. Given that in reality, Carr put up 28 TDs to only six INTs, with a 63% completion percentage, you could imagine him matching that on a solid Texans’ offensive squad (recall that the biggest issue with Houston offense that year was the QB spot). In particular, Carr’s game against Oakland in Mexico, where he bests the Brock Osweiler-led Raiders in a 27-20 thriller, throwing three TDs and dicing up the Raiders’ secondary, gives the fanbase unbridled optimism.

Yet, the alternate timeline starts to mirror the real one. In a primetime next-to-the-last-game, Carr throws three first-half TDs in a nationally televised contest to take a big lead over the Bengals. However, to help out the MVP talk, Bill O’Brien leaves Carr in the game to help pad stats. Unfortunately, Carr suffers a catastrophic injury in the fourth quarter of that game, breaking his fibula. Houston still wins the game: 37-21, but loses Carr for the year. Into the void steps Tom Savage. He gets one start before the playoffs. A strong Houston defense covers up a young QB’s mistakes, leading Houston to a solid win over the Miami Dolphins (23-13). However, without Carr, Houston’s offense can’t help out the defense and overcome the New England Patriots, suffering a painful 38-15 defeat.

There remains some bad blood about Houston’s decision in that Bengals’ game. However, even with some social media back-and-forth between the Carrs and various media personalities on social media, the Texans and Derek Carr eagerly await the start of the 2017 season. While Carr has yet to actually win a playoff game for Houston, the Texans feel content to ride with Carr. Contract extension talks are in the works. With the draft coming up, Houston, no longer in desperate need of a QB, nor with a bad QB contract to off-load, keeps their draft capital and enters the 1st round of the draft looking to reinforce other areas. It would be the Oakland Raiders, having off-loaded their toxic contract of Osweiler, that make the stunning draft day move to get Deshaun Watson, with electrifies the Raiders’ fanbase. Some in Houston grumble about keep Carr over Watson, but Carr’s given Houston no reason to move on from him.

Staff photographer
Imagine this taking place not in Houston, but Vegas?

2017 is a season of big expectations. Unfortunately, while Carr continues his stellar play, the Texans suffer some nightmare defensive injuries and the contending Texans just miss the post-season with a 7-9 record. 2018 and 2019 see Houston notch back-to-back division titles, but it is not until 2019 Wild Card, where Carr finds RB Taiwan Jones on a great catch-and-run pass to finally win a playoff game. Unfortunately, those good feelings end the following week, when Houston falls to Kansas City in a straight beatdown, 49-21.

Houston continues to ride with Carr, but all is not well in the Houston front office. The Texans, to try to reinforce a suddenly porous line, make their desperation draft pick trades for players like Laremy Tunsil, which give them a chance in the present, but sacrifice their future. The front-office turmoil wears on the team. The combination of heavy sack totals and lack of team direction lead Carr to start to publicly question the team’s direction. He still plays during the 2020 season, but the team craters to 4-12. At this point, with only one playoff win, and limited time left in the game, Carr starts to demand a trade.

Initially, the Texans regime, under Caserio, does not make a move. Then, the situation in Oakland/Vegas gets interesting. Deshaun Watson, despite playing some breath-taking ball the past few seasons, is unhappy with the direction of the team. After butting heads with the Raiders brain trust over the offensive philosophy, Watson declares he wants out of Vegas. Trade talks are in the works, but then allegations of sexual harassment/abuse by Watson towards women in Oakland and Vegas surfaces. Suddenly, Watson is in a franchise limbo. Yet, the Gruden-led Raiders need a starting QB.

Then, the Oakland brain trust makes a startling move. They trade two first round and two mid-round picks to the Houston Texans for Derek Carr. At one point, the Raiders try to entice Houston to take Watson in the deal, but Houston only agrees to eat most of Carr’s remaining salary. Houston receives draft capital in 2022 and 2023 (the Raiders didn’t want to sacrifice the 2021 picks for some reason). Houston is bad in 2020 and 2021, but with draft capital, they can look to the future.

As for Carr, he plays for the Raiders, but suffers through the brutal firing of Gruden, the coaching upheavals, the inconsistent offensive structure, and is unable to win another playoff game. He still ends his career with the Saints, but remains wistful of his time in Houston. Most Texans’ fans view him as the “good” Carr, but also lament what might-have-been, especially in 2016. Still, the team is excited about their team with Derek Stingley, Jr., C.J. Stroud and Will Anderson Jr, the latter of which comes to Houston via the trade of that Oakland pick in 2023.

That is one way this could have played out. If you have another way, let your (respectful) take be heard below.

Source: https://www.battleredblog.com/2025/...the-houston-texans-drafted-derek-carr-in-2014
 
Houston Texans Rookie Film Analysis: Kyonte Hamilton

NCAA Football: Rate Bowl-Rutgers at Kansas State

Mark J. Rebilas-Imagn Images

Texans seventh rounder senior year film will inspire greatness

Seventh round picks are the scratch-off lottery tickets of the NFL. Turning one into a rotational, or even contributing member of a football team is exceptionally rare. This draft, the Houston Texans are hoping Kyonte Hamilton can scratch and claw his way to a role on this deep Texans defense.

The former Rutgers defensive tackle and 2020 National Preparatory School Wrestling State Champion was selected with the 224th pick in the NFL Draft. He is the second DT in a row that Houston has selected in the seventh round, the other being Marcus Harris from Auburn. Harris was cut in preseason but landed on the Patriots roster. Hamilton is hoping for a different story this season.

This is my third edition of film breakdowns from the Texans 2025 NFL Draft class. So far we’ve covered WR Jaylin Noel and RB Woody Marks, whose film you can see below.

Jaylin Noel

Woody Marks

Today we are flipping the film to the defensive side of the ball. Finding film on Hamilton was devastatingly tough. Hamilton is number 48 and can be found playing across from the center on most snaps.

Tall and well proportioned, Hamilton flashes agility and several pass rush moves once the ball is snapped. I wouldn’t call him dynamic, which is why he fell to the seventh round, but there’s enough tape here for Houston to throw a late round flier his way. He is a well-rounded defensive tackle who had his best statistical season in 2024, but even so didn’t light up the stat sheet at Rutgers.

The biggest red flag was his performance while being double teamed. In the pass rush he all but stopped his feet and looked to bat down passes. In the run game he never corkscrewed between the blockers or created pile ups at the point of attack. Where he does shine is maintaining gap integrity in zone schemes.


You can see the hand swipe from Kyonte Hamilton against the Center and the space he creates to rush upfield for the sack. pic.twitter.com/1k129IMebI

— Thomas Martinez (@BoltsDraftTalk) April 16, 2025

Based on the film, Rutgers defense highly prioritized gap integrity over interior pass rush. This deters Hamilton from going after the QB on a consistent basis. You see this in lower-tier programs where conservative defensive fronts are predicated on containment rather than impacting the game. He won’t shed blockers and prefers to drive through the contact. He has been taught to use his hands, he lacks consistent hand placement, purpose, or how to capitalize when he does win with his hands.

He primarily plays shaded over the center in the A-gap, but I actually enjoy his tape as a defensive end in Rutgers’ heavy set short yardage packages.

The Fit in Houston:


Hamilton fits the mold of well-built, athletic, and effortful defensive tackles that Houston covets. Hamilton adds youth to a well-seasoned DT room. Based on the film, quality of depth at DT, and necessary improvement Hamilton must achieve, I doubt he finds a roster spot in 2025. His “fit” with the Texans is developing on the practice squad where he can improve and wait out several veterans who are a year or two away from retiring.

What does Hamilton have going for him? Age. He’s 22 and the six players above him on the depth chart are on average 28 and a half years old... two being 31 years old. The Texans know they eventually need to inject some youth into this group.

Strengths:

  • Played at DE on heavy sets
  • Utilizes a spin move that can be developed to be more penetrating
  • High motor typical of a Texans defensive tackle
  • Gets hands up to block passes when pass rush fails
  • Sure tackler when RB is in range
  • Consistently wore down opposing guards and centers to make plays late in games

Weaknesses:

  • Lacks upfield vision when in contact; needs to pick head up
  • Shoulders can get turned in the run game forcing him out of the gap
  • Looks stumped against double teams in pass rush
  • For a wrestler, doesn’t use hands to manipulate blockers
  • Can over prioritize gap responsibility vs making a play

Overall Analysis:


Though he has four years of Big 10 experiences, Kyonte Hamilton is not ready for a contributing role with the Houston Texans. There aren't enough tangible moments on film where he is disruptive, particularly on power and gap schemes. He currently sits seventh on the Texans DT depth chart that is filled with experienced and known commodities. I will be surprised if Hamilton comes off of the practice squad this season.

Next week we will be covering off on Jaylin Smith, the cornerback from USC whose role grew considerably this week with Ronald Darby deciding to retire.

Source: https://www.battleredblog.com/2025/6/4/24439512/houston-texans-rookie-film-analysis-kyonte-hamilton
 
Potential for Houston Texans wide receiver Christian Kirk in 2025

Green Bay Packers v Jacksonville Jaguars

Photo by Mike Carlson/Getty Images

A look into why Christian Kirk will succeed for the Texans this upcoming season.

The Houston Texans acquired former Jacksonville Jaguars wide receiver Christian Kirk earlier this offseason, and he could have a monster season in 2025.

Kirk was drafted in the second-round of the 2018 NFL Draft by the Arizona Cardinals, and had a few very solid years there. It wasn’t until 2022, in which Kirk had his true breakout season, catching 84 passes for 1,108 yards, and eight touchdowns for the Jaguars.

After his incredible 2022 season, the talented wide receiver has been banged up each of the last two years, including a broken collarbone in 2024, which limited himself to only eight games played.

The Jaguars felt like they wanted to get younger at the position, and with Kirk not being as available as they would have liked, it made sense for them to move on. The good news is that Houston paid a cheap price for Kirk, and if he can stay healthy in 2025, his potential in offensive coordinator Nick Caley’s scheme will be through the roof.

Kirk is the type of player who just gets open, and that is something Houston lacked in 2025, mostly due to several different injuries.

Houston has one guaranteed starter in the wide receiver room, and that is Nico Collins, who is one of the best players in the league at his position. After that, everything is wide open, and Kirk has the chance to receive an extremely large volume of targets if he can stay on the field.

Collins will receive most of the attention on offense, which will lead to many opportunities for Kirk to make plays consistently.

The Texans drafted two wide receivers early in this past draft, meaning Kirk will definitely have competition, but he should have the upper hand due to his ability when healthy, along with his veteran presence, which will work wonders for quarterback C.J. Stroud, who is entering year three in the league.

It would not be a shock to see Kirk surpass 1,000 yards receiving when the 2025 season is all said and done.

Source: https://www.battleredblog.com/2025/...xans-wide-receiver-christian-kirk-in-2025-nfl
 
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