Texans' QB mystery should be resolved by 3rd preseason game
By John McClain
August 13, 2015 Updated: August 13, 2015 9:51pm
If I'm Texans coach Bill O'Brien and I'm deciding how to use my quarterbacks in preseason, I'm starting Brian Hoyer against San Francisco and Ryan Mallett against Denver.
Then I'm announcing my starting quarterback before the nationally televised third preseason game at New Orleans.
Hoyer should start the preseason opener Saturday night at NRG Stadium because this is his first season with the Texans, and the coaches need to see what he can do with the starters.
They saw Mallett for two games last year - a solid performance in a victory over Hoyer and the Cleveland Browns, plus an injury-plagued loss to Cincinnati before he underwent season-ending surgery to repair a torn pectoral muscle.
If Hoyer earns the starting job, the Texans need the quarterback who began his Cleveland career with a 9-3 record: Hoyer the Destroyer, as they called him at that time.
The Texans don't want the Hoyer who was merely destroyed in a 1-3 finish in which he threw one touchdown pass and eight interceptions before being replaced by Johnny Manziel.
O'Brien gets irritated when he hears fans and media ridicule his quarterbacks, particularly Hoyer. He insists his quarterbacks are better than most believe.
I believe, based on last season's 9-7 record compiled as O'Brien and offensive coordinator George Godsey went through four quarterbacks (including three starters), they deserve the benefit of the doubt.
In other words, let O'Brien and Godsey make the decision and then see how it plays out. If the starter is successful, he'll be praised. If he's not, he'll be criticized. That's about as fair as fair can be, right?
O'Brien showed last season when he benched Ryan Fitzpatrick for Mallett that he's not afraid to hurt a quarterback's feelings by making a move he believes is necessary.
If Hoyer becomes the starter and plays as he did during his 9-3 start with the Browns, including 3-0 in 2013 before he suffered a season-ending knee injury, here's what they'll get:
In his first 12 starts at Cleveland, the Browns failed to score at least 21 points two times. They averaged 24.5 points.
Hoyer completed 219 of 371 passes (58.7 percent) for 2,827 yards and 15 touchdowns. He threw seven interceptions.
Obviously, Hoyer had to do something right to compile those statistics and help his team win six more than it lost.
Those who already have written off Hoyer as a piece of junk can't discount what he did during those 12 games.
Hoyer is the first to admit he was terrible after last season's 6-3 start. And it began with the loss at home to the Texans. It was a mudslide for the remainder of the season.
At 27, Mallett is two years younger than Hoyer. Because he has played so little in his career, no one knows just how good, bad or average he can be. Because of his great size and arm strength to go with what he flashed during those two starts last season, Mallett has more of an upside than Hoyer.
The quarterbacks have handled their competition with class. They never say the wrong thing, because they don't want to be misinterpreted in their responses to questions about the competition.
As O'Brien tells us almost every day, they've worked hard and performed well in practice, and it's still too close to call.
As we draw closer to decision time, one thing is for certain: The Texans are a lot better off at quarterback than they were at this time last year.