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Home Blogs Houston Diehard Houston Diehard
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Texans blast Jags, finish with franchise-best 8-8 record |
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Written by DiehardChris
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Sunday, 30 December 2007 |
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The Texans overcame a shaky start on Sunday to rise up and crush the Jaguars 42-28. A strong ground attack and a pair of electric kickoff returns by Andre Davis pushed the Texans to their best-ever season record. At 8-8, the team finished right about where most expected them to, and there is still a ton of work to be done before this team will be in a position to make the playoffs.
Don’t believe the media hype. BOTH teams had several players out today.
I’m not one to be a homer, and that’s not going to change today - but I have to address the media blitz today that was pounding us in the face with a hammer labeled “The Jaguars are resting their best players.” Let me cut right to the chase. If you want to see who the Jaguars were playing without - go to ANY football site in existence and there will be an article about it, or watch highlights of the game and listen to the announcers regurgitate the information over and over. Here are the players the Texans were playing without:
Starting QB Matt Schaub
Starting RB Ahman Green
Starting C Steve McKinney
Starting OG Fred Weary
Starting DE Anthony Weaver
Starting SS Glenn Earl
Starting CB Dunta Robinson
Starting KR Jerome Mathis
So it would be nice if the media, who have suddenly made darlings out of the Jaguars, could just shut their mouths about that garbage. The bottom line is - the Texans beat the Jaguars handily, and BOTH TEAMS had a lot of key players not in the starting lineup. Now, to say the game was meaningless to the Jaguars - that’s a fair point that can’t be argued. Some would say that it’s more important to have momentum going into a playoff game than it is to rest your players - hogwash. The Jags would have played far better had they started their full compliment of players, and if the game had been important to them. That’s not the point I have issue with. But this noise about how the Jaguars were somehow at a huge competitive disadvantage because they didn’t play all their best guys is a load of bull.
Rant over. Okay, let’s get back to the actual contest.
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Last Updated ( Sunday, 30 December 2007 )
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Peyton Claus dumps a load of coal on Houston |
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Written by DiehardChris
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Sunday, 23 December 2007 |
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Just when the Texans seemed to be garnering some national attention and respect around the league, they gave it all back Sunday against the Colts, rolling over for a 38-15 loss. After an encouraging start, the Texans went limp on offense, and got slapped around like children on defense. Peyton Manning easily picked apart the Houston secondary, and the Colts ran the ball with ease. Sure, the Texans faced much stiffer competition this week, but Houston has certainly improved enough to at least make a game of it. Instead, it wasn’t even as close as the blowout score indicated.
The Texans reverted back to their old ways.
In all phases of the game, the Texans inexplicably did all the things that have haunted them all season long. Sage Rosenfels faced his toughest competition yet, and instead of vindicating the “give Sage the starting job” crowd, he showed why he’s been a career back-up. Simply put: inconsistency. Sage threw three interceptions, and was not able to lead the Texans on offense save for the impressive opening drive and a garbage time touchdown pass to Andre Johnson.
On defense, it was ugly. Very ugly. In a game that was totally meaningless to the Colts, Peyton Manning absolutely owned the Texans, throwing for 311 yards and three touchdowns, while completing a fantastic 28 of his 35 pass attempts. Peyton made it look easy against what we thought was the best Texans team that has ever played in Indianapolis.
Bad play-calling also made an unwelcome return.
Late in the first half, with two time outs at their disposal, the Texans had the ball near mid-field down 24-7. Clearly, they needed to get at least a field goal to get some positive momentum going for the second half. Instead, they played scared. Fearful of Manning getting the ball back, the Texans ran the ball three straight times, then Rosenfels threw an incompletion to end the drive. Afterwards, the Texans were lucky enough to recover a Reggie Wayne fumble and still had the opportunity to get a field goal before the half, but Kris Brown missed it wide right.
In the second half, while way behind - the Texans continued to go to the running game. Of course, a strong running game is probably the thing that all teams believe is the cornerstone of an effective offense - but at some point you have to look at the scoreboard and try to score as quickly as you can. The Colts not only scored at will, but they also ate up huge chunks of clock… so even if the Texans would have been able to run the ball well in the second half and score as a result of it, the Colts would have dominated the clock. The Colts won the clock battle handily, 35:45 to the Texans’ 24:15.
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Last Updated ( Monday, 24 December 2007 )
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RAGING BULL!! Mario sees red, dominates Denver |
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Written by DiehardChris
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Friday, 14 December 2007 |
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Something about the color red usually brings out the best in the Houston Texans. Thursday night was perhaps the best ever example of that bizarre phenomenon. Mario Williams, clearly sick and tired of all the talk surrounding his draft position, went absolutely ballistic and obliterated the Broncos offensive line for 3.5 sacks. Broncos quarterback Jay Cutler will be waking up in a cold sweat with the Super Mario Brothers theme bouncing around in his head for weeks. (It was either that, or some bad ‘Broncos sent to the glue factory’ line, but I thought that was in bad taste.) The Texans rolled to a 31-13 win on a (sort of) national stage, and technically remain alive in the playoff chase.
It’s mid-December, and the Texans are still in the hunt.
Let’s get this out of the way. The Texans aren’t going to the playoffs this season. Not because they can’t win their last two games, but because there’s just no way all the other contenders are going to lose the rest of their games. Unfortunately, that’s what needs to happen for Houston to make the playoffs, in addition to them winning out over the Colts and Jaguars. The scenario is so ridiculous, I’m not even going to lay it out. Plus, this isn’t a math blog. It’s just not going to happen. What can happen, is that the Texans could finish with their best-ever record if they can at least split the last two games against Indianapolis and Jacksonville, respectively.
Super Phenomenal Mario!
Jay Cutler had only been sacked 17 times this season, but Mario Williams and the Texans’ defense brought him down five times on Thursday. Mario had 3.5 sacks and now leads the AFC with 13. He’s only a half sack behind the NFL leader, Seattle’s Patrick Kerney. As great as Mario was, he was within an eyelash of piling on two or three more sacks in the same game. He was a constant terror Thursday night, and was every bit the #1 pick that everyone hoped he would be. Multiple times during the game, the Houston fans were chanting his name, which in my opinion is the highlight of the 2007 season. Williams clearly was feeding off the energy of the fans, and that performance may have punched his ticket to the Pro Bowl.
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Last Updated ( Monday, 17 December 2007 )
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Rosenfels, defense power Texans past the Bucs |
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Written by DiehardChris
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Sunday, 09 December 2007 |
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Just when the last quarter of the season was looking like a downer, the Texans stepped up and beat the playoff-bound Buccaneers 28-14. With a quick turnaround game coming up Thursday night against the Broncos, Houston is in a good position to get back to .500.
Another excellent effort by the defense.
The defensive line pressured Luke McCown all afternoon, and registered four sacks. This was quite a flash of what could be if the D-line could play to their potential every week. Mario Williams continued his fantastic second half with six more tackles and another sack. He’s had a sack in four straight games, and was breathing down McCown’s neck all day long. C.C. Brown and Will Demps each notched a fumble recovery, and Tampa Bay was an abysmal 3 of 13 on third down, and 0 for 2 on fourth down. The defense gave up 14 points, but 7 of those points were on the offense, as they turned the ball over deep in Houston territory early in the second quarter.
It should also be noted that the defense performed well at the end of each half, something I’ve been very critical of this season. Tampa Bay had the ball at the Houston 48 with 1:51 left in the second quarter, result - three and out. Down by 14, the Bucs got the ball with 3:29 left in the fourth quarter at their own 7. They moved the ball downfield, but the Texans ended up stopping them at the Houston 20 yard-line, and the game was over. The Bucs are certainly not an elite offense in this league, but they are a playoff-bound team that has thus far found ways to win tough games. Not so today.
Mario-haters, it’s over. Officially, it’s time for you to shut up.
Williams has distanced himself from Reggie Bush and Vince Young as the best player of the trio. Clearly, the final judgment won’t be made until their prospective careers are over - but if you’re still running around town screaming that Mario is a bust, you need to be placed in intensive mental care immediately… either that or pack up, move to Tennessee, and spend the rest of your days fetching Vince Young’s newspaper and slippers. Either way, stop it.
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Last Updated ( Sunday, 09 December 2007 )
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Offensive line will once again be a major off-season issue for the Texans |
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Written by DiehardChris
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Wednesday, 05 December 2007 |
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One of the biggest, if not the biggest issue facing the Texans this off-season will be the offensive line. Once universally considered one of the worst units in the league, 2007 so far has gone a long way to proving that a lot of the blame for past problems falls on the shoulders of David Carr. This season through 13 weeks the Texans are 10th best in the league having allowed only 18 sacks, compared to 34 at the same point last year. The total for last season ended up being 41. Gary Kubiak’s goal for the offensive line this year was to keep the sack total under 30, and with four games left the chances of achieving that goal are looking strong.
Getting hit is a part of the QB’s job description
Even with the improved numbers, Matt Schaub has been banged up this season as a result of some hits he’s taken. One thing you could never accuse Carr of was being fragile. Schaub hasn’t shown nearly the same durability or physical toughness as Carr did, but the way David’s play has continued to regress, Texans fans would rather see a one-legged, headless Schaub out there than a 100% healthy white-gloved David Carr.
Schaub is still a young, relatively unexperienced quarterback. He can continue to condition his body and improve his fitness in the off-season, but how much can a quarterback strength-train before it starts to affect the way he throws a football? The Texans need to go into this off-season assuming that with Schaub, they are going to have an efficient and still potentially excellent quarterback who is prone to injury when he takes a hard hit. In a division with such tough defenses, the coaches have to assume that Schaub is going to continue to take hits no matter how well the Texans offensive line plays in the future. It’s just the nature of football. Teams compete, and tough defenses are going to get their shots in even against great offensive lines.
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Last Updated ( Thursday, 06 December 2007 )
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